■ifef>"" ' il|| 1 aßhr ' ' '* ,' '- s w*'™? ■IlF' ' ■ ‘‘ '"v; ; *fe S s % *• s ss s "» s **-s \ ->- - s '’’’ - %«X" V S Z* :|§g®B&S&'’v s s ' s ' '' ' '<■ - \ 4 ''A<a 'X'S V v ' C X'' ' ' - 'v"?^\ \ & /«WF. ' s ' s FJSF : < i*sp BMilfeMiF JMr r Wf-' KWSS‘. ’ c SR J# Who will your farm belong to . . . or the Government ? - ' ■ IF the present Labour Government were to secure another term of office, He considered that State farming under ideal conditions was one of the the last vestige of property rights which farmers now exercise would solutions of the land problem in New Zealand, and there was no reason disappear why they should not show a similar satisfactory state of affairs here in a very short time.” In three short years the socialist policy of the Government has-in spite of its The aboye statements wcrc difcct fwm the May 193 s issue o f « The ‘guaranteed’ price - reduced the dairy farmer to a status inferior to that of a Borer,” the Labour Trades Union journal which has let the cat out of the bag. casual labourer. Already the farmer is compelled to work for the Government, wiU not the Labouf Party adver tising this part of their policy now. which takes, distributes and sells all he produces without any reference to the Thc Election is too near> Y et even were Socialist Candidates to deny it farmer himself. But it plans to go further. point-blank, the truth is still blazoned at the head of every membership card ~ w . of the Labour Party: ‘ the Socialisation of the Means of Production, Distri“The Hon. F. Langstone .Minister for Lands (at th. Easter Labour Con- Exchange • - .he S.«e Ownership of Land, Industry, Transport ference) elaborated for half an hour on th® Government’s land policy, Bankin and particularly the extension of the State farming principle, referring an a g. to the magnificent results from these In th® U.S.S.R. (Russia). Your farm will go to the State—unless you elect a NATIONAL Government. &NMIONAL NP.3.60 for PERSONAL FREEDOM — STABILITY — OPPORTUNITY
SisssßSsisisSissssissiißsisiHssßisssssSsSsSSssSSHaHsSsSsMsistiHiSSHsH A Well- I WWtfc Placed I Service 0- ::: i & * Match Whmtr» CK ::: Vf :: v ***? Tennis Player will ',l -■: admit. This Store*s aim I » e ° render you the best, :!g pig service with Racquets, Ci Balls, Nets, Presses and other Tennis Parapherna- ::: V7** lia from the best known iis mffiarot. dlff® veadp to swaefc® Me Service? Alexander, Dunlop, Spalding, and Slazenger Racquets Same Day Restringing Service Prices from ... > 10/- to 30/isaaTbmwiT&lo. PAEROA
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Bibliographic details
Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume 48, Issue 2818, 5 October 1938, Page 6
Word Count
412Page 6 Advertisements Column 1 Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume 48, Issue 2818, 5 October 1938, Page 6
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