DANGER OF PAPER FAMINE. OPPORTUNITY FOR NEW ZEALANDERS. Tho world’3 production of paper in 1913 was 11,420,000 metric tons, but by 1927 this figure had increased to 19,152,000 tons. In spite of this the National Development Bureau in Ottawa reports that “at the end of March, 1930, the Canadian and U.S.A. paper mills had paper stocks on hand equivalent to only 3.7 days average production. ... If these mills coased production even for four days a temporary paper famine would be the result.” This fact offers even further proof that the softwood plantations owned by the Bondholders of N.Z. Perpetual Forests, Ltd., _ will prove highly remunerative from the investors’ point of view.—Advt.
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Manawatu Standard, Volume IV, Issue 220, 18 August 1931, Page 5
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111Page 5 Advertisements Column 5 Manawatu Standard, Volume IV, Issue 220, 18 August 1931, Page 5
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