BRITISH FILM PREFERRED
GERMAN PRISONER’S ADMISSION. A new arrival at a camp for prisoners of war “somewhere in Britain" was being put through the routine search when the guard, to his astonishment, found in one of the German’s pockets a folder, from a roll of panchromatic British film. The prisoner, who spoke good English. seemed surprised when asked why he used British film. He said he always had done so because he liked it better than the German. He probably got the film in one of the countries over-run by the Nazis. It had not been exported to Germany for several years but there Were extensive stocks in France, Holland, Belgium and Denmark. These lost markets have bedn Ift&be than made up for by bigger shipments to the British Empire, the United States, and South America. Another British firm which specialises in photographic paper reports that its exports have been quadrupled during the first four months of the year, breaking new ground in North Borneo, Kenya and Thailand. Australia is taking nine times as much; Brazil five times, India three times, while supplies to South Africa, New Zealand and China have been ,doubled.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 8 September 1941, Page 6
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193BRITISH FILM PREFERRED Wairarapa Times-Age, 8 September 1941, Page 6
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