A COLONIAL ORGANIST.
APPOINTED TO CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL. Received April 2, 8.15 a.m. LONDON, April 1. Mr Sidney Nicholson, a Sydneyite, and son of Sir Charles Nicholson, formerly Speaker of the New South Wales Assembly, has been appointed organist to Canterbury Cathedral out of oris hundred candidates. WOMEN'S VOTE IN AUSTRALIA. WHAT IS DUE TO IT. MR T. PRICE'S OPINION. Received April 2, 9.40 a.m. LONDON, April 1. Tha South Australian Premier, Mr T. Price, interviewed, said: —"The women's vote in Australia has purified politics. No man of shady reputation can hope for return to Parliament. Moral and social questions receive serious attention, and education is steadily watched. All this is due to the silent, sensible, sober influance of women."
At a meeting held last week under the auspices of the United Kingdom Alliance, Mr Price rebuked the suffragettes for interrupting, and were, in the opinion of Australian women, following a wrong line. The above interview was no doubt the outcome of these remarks.
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXI, Issue 9056, 3 April 1908, Page 5
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163A COLONIAL ORGANIST. Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXI, Issue 9056, 3 April 1908, Page 5
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