NEW ZEALAND TRADE.
BRITISH MANUFACTURERS NOT UNMINDFUL. By Telegraph.—Press Assn.—Copyright.' Received June 4, 8.43 p.m. London, June 2. The Board of Trade Journal, referring to New Zealand complaints regarding tlie unsatisfactory nature of Britfch manufacturers' replies to New Zealand agents' inquiries after the armistice as to how they intended to prosecute the post-war trade, emphasises the fact that Britain was turned industrially upside down by the war. The journal asks how British manufacturers could in the circumstances specify the conditions of post-war trade when the supply and prices of materials, amount and cost of lahor, shipping accommodation and freights were all unknown and not calculable. The journal adds: "It is unjust to conclude therefrom that British manufacturers are indifferent to the New Zealand market, and not appreciative of New Zealand condi-tions."—Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.
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Taranaki Daily News, 5 June 1919, Page 5
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133NEW ZEALAND TRADE. Taranaki Daily News, 5 June 1919, Page 5
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