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IMPERIAL POLITICS.

TARIFF REFORM. London, February 18. Mr Samuel, in a speech at Loftus, said that Mr Bonar Law and his colleagues pretended to throw food taxes over the cliff, well knowing that they might reappear some day, from Australia or elsewhere, at the Colonial Conference, under another name. CONSCRIPTION. Colonel Seely, speaking at Ilkestono, said that the Government would not introduce conscription until it had told the country frankly that it was to save it from a great danger menacing it. It was wrong to gull the people into a system which was alien to their nature. Ho would shortly be announcing a plan for making it easier for worthy men in the ranks to rise from the humblest to the highest places in the al’hly-i

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19130219.2.31

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXV, Issue 43, 19 February 1913, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
127

IMPERIAL POLITICS. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXV, Issue 43, 19 February 1913, Page 5

IMPERIAL POLITICS. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXV, Issue 43, 19 February 1913, Page 5

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