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The Southern Cross. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Invercargill, Saturday, July, 15. MUCH TALK, LITTLE WORK.

As the outcome of the recent libel action, Mr Cadman and Mr Rees have resigned their seats, and will appeal to the electors. This has furnished the sensation of the session. The Financial Statement is* now being discussed by the House, which appears to have adopted as its motto “make haste slowly” so far as the real business of the country is concerned. Business men and settlers, as they scan the reports of oratorical displays, personal attacks, mutual recriminations, etc., sigh to think of the waste of time and money going on, and declare that if a private concern were fun on the same lines as public business it would speedily come to grief. “ Get to work, gentlemen of the House of Representatives, and do something for your money,” embodies in a sentence the feeling’s of not a few of the electors.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SOCR18930715.2.26

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Southern Cross, Volume 1, Issue 16, 15 July 1893, Page 8

Word count
Tapeke kupu
155

The Southern Cross. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Invercargill, Saturday, July, 15. MUCH TALK, LITTLE WORK. Southern Cross, Volume 1, Issue 16, 15 July 1893, Page 8

The Southern Cross. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Invercargill, Saturday, July, 15. MUCH TALK, LITTLE WORK. Southern Cross, Volume 1, Issue 16, 15 July 1893, Page 8

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