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CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE

MONOPOLY IN TRANSPORT Wallington, Oct. 28. The greater part of the afternoon •ession of the Associated Chambers of Commerce was occupied with a discussion on the division of the products of A lengthy address on the subject was given by Mr H. S. E. Turner (Christchurch), who, in the course of his remarks, suggested that the Railways Board, with the help of the Transport Board, was trying to establish as nearly as possible a monopoly of transport. He felt sure that the result would be the same as the result of all monopolies—unfair exploitation, joined with inefficiency. Real progress had always been, and would always be, associated with progress in transport, and the object of the Railways Board, if it were pursued diligently and with the powerful support of the Transport Board, would not be in the Interests of progress.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBTRIB19321029.2.76

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXII, Issue 270, 29 October 1932, Page 8

Word Count
143

CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXII, Issue 270, 29 October 1932, Page 8

CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXII, Issue 270, 29 October 1932, Page 8

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