Newspaper Ideas.
There is a general fall in produce values, and this is going tn resit on the community. Farmers will have less to spend, and wHen'tht-y bi'gjn toe< oiomise iottiers must do the .same. Ti.e savings io'f the past are, I owever, available, and will probably see U 3 the vost of the pinch.— F.eeLauce. - The lnailj words, and Hit Ophjr'a last signal were " Kia , 'ora." The Has iiga Bulieun says that it eho i d i-.terest people to know that the pi rase "Kiaora" had'-'gone quite out of the vocabulary of Jlaoris with any pretence to education, Now that the Duke has learned fro. say .'&■'. the. words have been taken upby' the rough and tumble, and are used in .the saoie sense as the equally learned English remark, «' What ho, she bumps! "
The Mataura fensjgn says:- Ac upon the dictates of this newly disc;vet e 1 attribute, several of them (Gove n übi I terms which were their denunciation 6c t'i.j li;iri'd,tha|.;\*-a'rwied th»-feeding bottle -it worshipped v. ith iho ■inpl.»iiirog?p.:rijisten<;e:;i'-<S; , 'e:it, S;jt! We cum >t expect dignity, or deco> - u t\ ■•it ottr lira a, of. B-apresoutruives—the ■'w.-iqle t-ina, fit '.pVevioiu sessions forbid 3 thai.—Ell.rt&uicYe G'SavQian."' The country does.nob ■ require tha 1 ; its !egisla;oM.sjjou.!(l sib up all night to do ihe bu-ine^.. lietter work wo.ald be done ■ i the hours k-pt ware more reasonable.— 'rlsbome Times. It ii the height of abnirdity to i!tr-mp to cast the blamo of working '■ours upon the Pmiiier. He is hum If ■>ne of the greatest,'''safFfj'rjra from the • legislation bj'.'epcliaustion ''process, a-v.l vp doubt nofy would gladly welconie a l n;fo : rirt. ii -M6. t 'giel Advt Gate.
' At the ing of a session the Hue prodigally wastes weeks of its valiiiblij ■ime in an'almost endiesa verbosity, and in the conoliidiug weeks rushes though, its work ..without {,ropt.T conni J-ration of clie iii; asures which are submitted f.r ita consideration.—Brute Herald.
'■ That (he members will lake the proposed £6O increased "h norarium " ;oes without'sayii'g. Tin bick-blocka settler.? will do withoat lieirroad*, bub'each True Patriot will nako a greater and a nobler saeri-ie-? 'ie will, lor the sake of "the 0 h> re,' 1 •ondescenu to add another £6O f> his vard-earncd salary. He will do thh in the name a nil ior the causa ■ f Libjiali mi shades of departed nurty-s, riae up au 1 ;heer...-r-W*nganui Chronicle the ; Maor'h.;d Mini ter of W .rks houldhave soiii" diilicur.v in reouvli g Aa'-fact that lie rejoiced to :ien i h " 1 •Ireds of -your.g i? w Zealanders to bleed ind die for England willi the firs t'at he wa3 n-)f pr-pared ",to disc iri node himself to Ihe oxte,.t of shifting h ; s* quartern a-jr B*/the street for the e >avenience of the ho ; r ap.j'irent to tin English throne. Of' eour.-ie, ths i"ir apparent wouliviiot c) ; fl a wv-T>er."'u-iip, ihb; kind of fiiin; --howa what Imperii!, pa'ro idm i* -wo-th >ti c OTid o',po itici 113 —Melbourne Pu.n:h;
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDA19010716.2.27
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Waimate Daily Advertiser, Volume III, Issue 176, 16 July 1901, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
495Newspaper Ideas. Waimate Daily Advertiser, Volume III, Issue 176, 16 July 1901, Page 4
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.