MEAT WORKS TROUBLE.
BUTCHERS GOING SLOW. POSITION IN CANTERBURY. KILLINGS REDUCED BY .HALF. [BY TELEGRAPH. —PRESS ASSOCIATION. ] CHRISTOHURCH. Friday. The secretary of the South Island Freezing Companies Association said today that killings at the works in Canterbury were normal until noon, but were reduced to half the normal rate in the afternoon without notice. If this continued tho works would handle smaller quantities. ! This is bad news for the farmers, who after the dry summer are anxious to quit their fat stock. At the Methven stock sale yesterday there was a state of affairs similar to that at Hawarden. Many lines were passed, and some owners, hearing of the decision of exporters not to buy, turned their flocks back for home before reaching the yards. ANOTHER SALE ABANDONED. i DENIAL OF STRIKE THREAT., [by telegraph.—press association.] ASHBT7RTON. Friday. The Ealing stock sale was abandoned yesterday as the freezing buyers would not buy at per head. An offer to buy at per lb. if the vendors would keep the sheep until the works would accept them was not acceptable to the producers. Union officials at the Fairfield works deny that any, threat of a strike has benn made. They declined to state what steps would be taken to obtam increased pay.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19221, 9 January 1926, Page 8
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210MEAT WORKS TROUBLE. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19221, 9 January 1926, Page 8
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