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BIBLES, in Various Bindings ; Plain and Ornamental At R. LVCAS & SON'S. "PHOTOGRAPHIC ALBUMS, with Calico JL and Leather Joints, for holding 20, 30, 50 F ai.d 100 Portraits, in great variety. R. LUCAS & SON. JOHN T)ERCY, SHARE BROKER, COMMISSION AND CUSTOM-HOUSE AGENT, NELSON. 2512 NELSON AND MOTUEKA. HTTA7COCK tegs to intimate to the • l 8 Public of Nelson and Motueka. that he has COMMENCED BUNKING A CONVEYANCE between the above places, starting from ihe Coach a>'d Horses Hotel, NELSON, on Monda}-s and Thursdays, at 9 a.m., and from Mr. Rumbolt's, MOTUEKA, on Tuesdays and Fridays, at S a.m. Passengers and Parcels booked at the above addresses. Parcels carefully delivered 2765 TO THE ELECTOES OF NEW ZEALAND. "OROTHER "|7 LECTORS —As the Election _D jCj of Members for the Gem ral Assembly will shortly take place, I beg to lay gefore you a series of questions to be put to those bentlemen wLo may be desirous of looking after your interests in the House of Representatives. Most of these questions are selected from a number carefully drawn up by a Committee of intelligent men in England, who had made themselves well acquainted with the laws of their country. 1. — Will you bind yourself to accept from no Minister place, promise, or favor of whatever description, or to look for such ? 2. — Will you oppose every measure for the increase of Customs, and use your best endeavours to lessen or abolish them, and will you seek to establish taxation on the scale of property ? 3. — Do you bind yourself to resist by every means every vote of money incurred or to be incurred for purposes that are not strictly lawful, or strictly necessary ? 4.— Do you hold the duties of a Member of the House of Representatives to consist in protecting the pockets, morals, trade, rights, and liberties of his constituents and the country against Ministers, or in having opinions upon abstract subjects ? s.— Do you conceive the business of a Minister to be the eniorcing of the laws that exist, or the making of new ones ? 6. — Do you hold the duties of a Member to consist in the enquiry into grievances with a view to their redress, or in uniting himself to a party ? 7.— Do you hold that a Member requires any qualifications, such as the knowledge of Constitutional Law, and of the transactions in which the Government involves the country ? And are you possessed of that knowledge ? 8. — Can you declare, on your honor as a gentle man, that you will, on every occasion, without tear or favor, pursue every doubtful case to its issue, ami enforce reparation when wrong has been done ? 9. — Will you do all you can to enforce the attendance of every member in his place whilst business is being carried on ? 10.— Will you, on the proposal of new measures, convene your constitutentE, submit such measures to them, and be guided by their decision thereon in any vote which, you give ? 11. — Will you resist any and every attempt to tamper with trial by jury, either by accepting the verdict of the majority, or by abolishing the grand jury. 12. — Will j'ou try every means to exclude placemen from the House of Representatives ? 1 3.— Will you hold the Minister to be the person whom you are sent neither to support nor oppose, because of his opinions, but to supervise and to control in regard to his acts? 14. — Will you hold yourself to be commissioned to represent, not the opinions of any class, but the grievances and wants of your constituents ; and, as a juryman, bound in your conscience to give a true verdict in all matters submitted to you ? 15. — Do you hold the functions of a Minister to consist in the introduction of speculative measures of legislation, or in the administration of the Colony ? And will you resist every legislative proposal emanating from the Government, on the grounds that it is a falsification of their duties, and consequently a normal obstruction of public business ? 16.— Will you strenuously exert yourself [to get tie nefarious Pension Act abolished ? 2126 AN ELECTOR*

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18701201.2.14.1

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume V, Issue 283, 1 December 1870, Page 4

Word Count
690

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume V, Issue 283, 1 December 1870, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume V, Issue 283, 1 December 1870, Page 4

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