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OPENING OF MATAU BRIDGE.

chair was owupiedlWCMT^^WAf® '•' fai?wS9& afefttt Shaw, O. M. ni iW#&**s W Mollison, thußiaßm.S» n that has been my tothe list, uSS^SfSSfSt tfc=Mmt°^4^ £sft! ?»tt reason to be prt&f n ? Un ? atl i >nß ' .«** building™ thein* stitntwas, of a new 'nafion. Such Lb been. HfiSSffiif* *£«*»* ambition. ProJE« Jt- v ft?* because it saw all their fighting, but nbY that pleasing social iie would be sorry to see a TTnWtTC twjjf.

therehad been no defiMtepoHtical parties. In the House actuated by the desire of eet&j&Jl he said that a higher idea of hu business thatfTM'ftlKd to lotfer the tone of-Parliament, and to do a?f"#Wsfy-t tiJlolfliaißpewttlKbaelttoMhAtho opinions of -a Urge majority against him, yet he should Tight to the. JaaLrrHft Jiad-nfr^rannailur TWefore, K they were cdnvinojfdfibjkMWr them againatflril^dßfa^d'i»isiJcfliTO?^H

Mattel how tench yotLnre going to give us" S^J^TO^yqrad l f»«T and the sapjtng.rfthe?ftmrtaWuef cood g vermnent.i Therefor* as *membj»iLri the lofln'of tetV#^°^^Sss Dattmtnat hkJiM.tJi Thn t?Ai■ V^ftr■, -;jJNow, the House oE-Jaepresehtafives nucht <moi Mwito«i J Jtfat«u s aKt titiftfe iSGk •great nalaMu be clodocrats, they hacLdone g>od service, m w«r be *oftk ,hkely tnit-he active future this Province would, as it had .been in t&e j»si anZTe ™- would still con'ttflue to come to the J&wafc and do their best for th& country. He was one hffiflWW who rdid hot kind of inatitutioßs they*iive uhder/eo lonfe as.they had<gsooA presiding HisTjympAtbes were as *as those of n&hdh. MacandrewJ, who. be believed would^e the institutions which seemed to b«>*tbUre> I sent wrested from iihem^-He4id-»©«2ew j S?3TOW *>«?* he conld Bay ftrongfaClHia : that to convey hjs sentiments. His opinion was that, those who bad heretofore taken part in.publio matters should continue toHto so. The> should We thm.ttfmoatendeaTSi W retain! S Vk* man3enFSr JSr^IS [ "■■* ™^« s set^era 4 of otag^^n^MhdelhgJ^i contrasted the hundreds—be might say I thousands—of comfortable homesteads 'by which prevailed at the- tinje oC the «!R vent of theearly J!&ae.whohad/ been instrumental H& Ifmmsffl chance t* ha«l mucb pfeasuH?^«eeirig '"■; sion, he mentioned the iiameaaf^tessw Mosery, Anderson, and Shaw, and Uddtd ■ that ttacre. v

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18761215.2.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 4307, 15 December 1876, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
338

OPENING OF MATAU BRIDGE. Evening Star, Issue 4307, 15 December 1876, Page 1

OPENING OF MATAU BRIDGE. Evening Star, Issue 4307, 15 December 1876, Page 1

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