THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES
T'iii! Ar.mTitATioN Court. The Court - can still he useful, and far more useful, if it remains entirely aloof from parties and classes. A' o have only to think wliat the alternative to arbitration proceedings would he—how many more opportunities there would lie for the tyrant, the wrecker, and the scoundrel—to he aware of ihe gravity of the present tendency if it cannot he checked. But confidence ill Hie Court caul, hardly return to the farmer if he does not feel that his misfortunes appeal to it, and arc as strong an argument—from the national standpoint a much stronger argument—as the casual worker’s right to the comfort of oivilisai ion. —Lyttelton Times.
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Hokitika Guardian, 17 March 1927, Page 2
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115THOUGHTS FOR THE TIMES Hokitika Guardian, 17 March 1927, Page 2
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