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GERMAN-BRITISH TRADE.

NEW ZEALAND'S ATTITUDE.

the barred door POLICY.

By Telegraph—Prow Association— Copyrijht.

(Received June 28, 6.5 p.m.)

London, June 27. In a speech he made at the New Zealand dinner last night, the High Commissioner for New Zealand (Mr. T. Mackenzie) declared that, without unduly pressing the matter, New Zealand could not shut her eyes to the fact that if Germany failed to take her goods and expected England to buy German goods New Zealand would be taking from a nation which barred British commerce article which could bo manufactured in the United Kingdom. The British workmen, moreover, consumed New Zealand's meat, butter, and cheese. Mr. Mackenzie added that British articles were intrinsically of better value than those made in Germany.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19140629.2.48

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, 29 June 1914, Page 7

Word Count
122

GERMAN-BRITISH TRADE. New Zealand Herald, 29 June 1914, Page 7

GERMAN-BRITISH TRADE. New Zealand Herald, 29 June 1914, Page 7