SOUTH AFRICAN WOOL MARKET
ALLEGED GERMAN MONOPOLY COMPLAINTS WITIIOUT FOUNDATION ■ UP A—By Electric Telegraph—Copyright 1 LONDON, 14th January. Bradford wool circles confirm the Capetown complaints of Germany’s almost monopolistic control of the wool sales. A spokesman at the South African High Commissioner s Office says tljat the South African Department of Commerce and Industries recently investigated the allegations in respect to a German monopoly, but was satisfied that the complaints were without foundation. He added that the German-African Agreement was only prejudicial to others because it introduces strong competition. Ihe spokesman contended that the agreement was valuable to the world’s wool trade as it stimulated consumption.
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Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXII, 16 January 1939, Page 6
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106SOUTH AFRICAN WOOL MARKET Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXII, 16 January 1939, Page 6
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