A NUISANCE.
To the Editor. Sm, —As the press is the only true way of getting our grievances set right, 1 embrace the opportunity. But I bear no malice. Taking a stroll down George street this morning, and jnst passing a house, not one hundred miles from the monumental yard, I suddenly found myself covered with the contents of a basin, much to my disgust, and against nasal organ. Surely this kind in such a climax of idiocy that it is evidently the duty of the authorities to interfere by instituting an enquiry de lunatko. For your own information and that of the public, Mr Editor, I may state that these otherwise harmless individuals arc subject to periodic attacks of that species of insanity known as political mania, under the influence of which they are liable, unless properly treated, to conduct themselves in a most extraordinary and ridiculous manner, their latest and of thing can be stopped. I should have taken it in good humor had I been a candidate for Mayoralty, or any other sportive and payable office. Trusting this will be a sufficient caution for the parties I address it to, —I remain, £c. A Bloated Aristocratic. July 15, 1872.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18720716.2.11.1
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Evening Star, Issue 2935, 16 July 1872, Page 2
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202A NUISANCE. Evening Star, Issue 2935, 16 July 1872, Page 2
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