EUROPE'S EMPTY LARDER.
DOMINIONS "WILL FILL IT IF SHIPS BE SUPPLIED. (Received 11.35 a.m.) LONDON, June 23. Mr Massey, in an article in the "National News,'' said that there would be no world famine after the war. The [men who were building the ships with such splendid energy, and the men of the Navy whose marvellous devotion to duty had already scotched the submarine menace w_re making that impossible. The mere matter of the production of food presented smaller difficulty, and he could promise that there would be an abundance of meat, wheat, butter, and cheese to fill Europe's empty larder. i "Give us the ships and we will send the food." he concluded.
Mr Massey interviewed the War Office and the Colonial Office respecting New Zealand produce. (A. and N.Z. Cable.)
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Auckland Star, Volume XLIX, Issue 149, 24 June 1918, Page 5
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132EUROPE'S EMPTY LARDER. Auckland Star, Volume XLIX, Issue 149, 24 June 1918, Page 5
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