THE WOOL CONFERENCE.
DENIAL BY GERMANY.
SPREAD OF AUSTRALIAN SALES
. AN INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENT. United Press Assn. —Elec. Tel. Copyright (Received June 7. 2.30 p.m.) BERLIN, June 6. Dr.' Schacht, in welcoming the delegates to the wool conference, said no doubt needs wool, but a system of barter transactions was not an ideal method of trade, though helpful at the moment. He emphatically denied that Germany had sought to cut herself off from the rest of the world. The conference adopted a resolution, moved by Mr Halgh, president of the British Wool Federation, urging the spreading of Australian sales over nine months, instead of six. The conference also passed an international trade agreement, applicable to imports or transactions in raw wool, which is intended to serve as the basis for decisions of the International Wool Arbitration Board insofar as written, conditions between seller and buyer do not exist.
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Waikato Times, Volume 117, Issue 19596, 7 June 1935, Page 6
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147THE WOOL CONFERENCE. Waikato Times, Volume 117, Issue 19596, 7 June 1935, Page 6
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