AGRICULTURAL AND PASTORAL
_ ing out of tbem BhouM be modified by ' circumstances as the occasion may arise, and that whilst the rule should never be forgotten, its application -was a matter of time and place. That there are great difficulties in the way of carrying out such a policy as Mr Chamberlain has enunciated is obvious^ and we do not pretend at this stage to cay how they are going to be solved. There is a great deal to consider and thresh out. But we believe Mr Chamberlain has got 6he right idea in his mind, and that Australian and New Zealand pastoralists stouTd throw all their influence into supporting these colonies bearing their part in it, which will mean the imposition of a slightly higher tariff on foreign -manufactures. Mr Chamberlain's is an eminently practical mind, and hi» genius essentially commercial, so that when he giv£3 bis support to the preferential tariff we may feel confident that he sees his -way to puttingthe conception into definite shape.
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Bibliographic details
Otago Witness, Issue 2572, 1 July 1903, Page 24
Word Count
168AGRICULTURAL AND PASTORAL Otago Witness, Issue 2572, 1 July 1903, Page 24
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