I '•— , y ,- Airier icarf- cttmriiertSal riteri" are firmly . . convinced that they can capture the trade which Germany did m Australia and New Zealand. In commenting on Consul-General Winslow's report from Auckland, the commercial journal, "Current of Affairs" (New York), observes that it is essential to send out qualified "tradesmen to New Zealand with their samples, prepared to send m orders by. cablegram ' for immediate delivery. Merchants m New Zealand are described as hard-pressed for goods which have not come forward £rom England, "Being out of touch- with v telßwhei , e> they do not know where to turn." It is significantly added : — "Salesmen sent to New Zealand and Australia should have Anglo-Saxon names."
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Bibliographic details
Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLII, Issue 13808, 7 October 1915, Page 4
Word Count
112Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLII, Issue 13808, 7 October 1915, Page 4
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