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RUBBER TREASURY NOTES

Prospects of rubber Treasury notes have been opened up by the introduction by Germany of rubber bills of exchange and the dispatch of specimens of the ingenious device to industrialists in England. Made of sheets of the thickness of paper, they are indestructible, save, of course, by fire, and may be cleaned with water, a fertile source of infection being thereby effectively guarded against. The possibilities of the adaptation are, of course, boundless, tho only conceivable objections being the increased cost of production and the greater bulk in the notecase or pocket. What alone might outweigh these considerations, however, is the fact that the British rubber industry would be called upon to supply the demand for the raw material.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM19260416.2.13

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Times, Volume LIII, Issue 12422, 16 April 1926, Page 3

Word Count
122

RUBBER TREASURY NOTES New Zealand Times, Volume LIII, Issue 12422, 16 April 1926, Page 3

RUBBER TREASURY NOTES New Zealand Times, Volume LIII, Issue 12422, 16 April 1926, Page 3

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