"NOTHING TO FEAR."
FROM GERMAN SHIPPING. « (I>Y EIiMCTKIO TELEGRAPH COPKBXGHT; X.Unitsd Pbbsi ASSOCIATION.] * (Received 8.50 a.m.) London, July 7. The Financial Times says: "Though tho German determination to secure a large share of the New Zealand trade naturally raises an outcry in Britain, Antipodean shippers complain that the British lines inadequately studied ■ their convenience, especially regarding the ports of call. The English companies have nothing to fear if they study their New Zealand customers' interests. GERMAN CONSUL'S REPLY. \ (Received 9.50 a.m.) Sydney, July 8. The German Consul, replying to'tho Herald's criticisms of the German linos in taking up the New Zealand trade, says: "The whole undertaking is as much a private business as any other. Neither company is receiving any subsidy from the German Government. They take wool not only to German but to other European ports, so opening . Continental markets for the primary producers of the Dominion."
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 65, 8 July 1914, Page 5
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148"NOTHING TO FEAR." Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 65, 8 July 1914, Page 5
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