THE STRICKEN TROOPSHIP.
MORE ABOUT THE FOOD. The Parliamentary Committee which inquired a few days ago into the circumstances of the epidemic on the troopship carrying the Fortieth Reinforcements to England, has presented its report to the Minister of Defence, and it will be made public in tJio course of a few days. At the inquiry there was evidence about the f6od on the ship being inadequate. Sir James Allen has had sent to him a letter from a soldier on the ship, a lance-corporal in rank, which deals with the question of the food on the ship. Following are extracts from the letter: "Just finished dinner—soup, meat, vegetables, and pudding. We have no complaints about the food, for it is of the best, though, of course, you will find some who would always complain if they were fed in hotel style." "The nurses are real Britons. It is wonderful how they work, and they cheer the fellows tip so much better than a man." "Towards the end of the voyage the bakers were all ill," and we could get no fresh bread. We had to buy fruit and other things from the canteen." The soldier adds that he left New Zealand weighing list 61b, anil landed weighing 12st 101b.
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Taranaki Daily News, 19 December 1918, Page 5
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210THE STRICKEN TROOPSHIP. Taranaki Daily News, 19 December 1918, Page 5
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