DISLOYALTY.
A good deal of comment has been provoked at the fact that a synopsis of a private and confidential report, which the Government has refused to place before the House, has been published in an Opposition journal in Wellington. The newspaper must, of course, have been supplied with its information by' some person with a knowledge of the contents of the report. The obvious deduction is that there is in the employ of the Government an individual who is disloyal, and consequently unfit for his position. It will be a very serious thing for the country if public officers are permitted to violate confidences. . For this reason it is to be hoped that the Minister will be able to discover the offender, and deal with h'tm in such a manner as will fl TTppti* tion of the scandal,
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXV, Issue 10713, 12 September 1913, Page 4
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139DISLOYALTY. Wairarapa Age, Volume XXV, Issue 10713, 12 September 1913, Page 4
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