SEDITION-MONGERS
AMD THE COMING ELECTION.
"Soon there will be an election, and 1 don't caveiwheliher ‘a.man is a Liberal, a Labourite", or a Reformer,” said the Hon. W. D. S. MacDonald at the farmers’ banquet last evening, “so long as he is a stout, truthful Britisher. There are insidious activities by certain sedi-tion-mongers in this country—men who lever lifted a hand to . win the war, who tried to prevent others from going, who were doubtful if they were loyal, and who did not care twopence for this country. The disloyal man, the sedition-monger, the biased brain, the prejudiced •'mmd,"“aticl the poisoned tongue should have no place'in this country, because the flower of a whole generation of men have been poured into the furnace of war, and wo do not want those boys who sleep their last sleep bn foreign soil to have their work deprecated by any sedition-monger who comes from another country. The man who does not like this country—well, the sooner be leaves it the bettor.”
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM19190528.2.35
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New Zealand Times, Volume XLIV, Issue 10291, 28 May 1919, Page 5
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168SEDITION-MONGERS New Zealand Times, Volume XLIV, Issue 10291, 28 May 1919, Page 5
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