WAIMATE PLAINS. [BY ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH.] (OWN CORRESPONDENT.) Pukehinau, Last Night.
Of the 28 men arrested altogether for f enciug, nine were from Waikato and two recognised as belonging to Te Wheoro's tribe. It is said that Te Whetu intends to send men to be arrested till the 10th
"Talking of law," says Pompey, " makes me think of what the 'mortal Cato, who lib mos' a thonsan' years ago, once said : 'De law am like a ground glass window, dat gibs light miff to light Ss poor folk in de dark passages of dis lifet but would puzzle the deblnl hisself to see through it." A visitor, in passing through a penitentiary, came upon a convict named Ice, and asked the keeper what he was confined for. '0," answered the keeper, « ( he froze onto somebody's property. When the daughters are infants mothers are anxious to keep matches out of their reach. It's different wheo they grow up.
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Waikato Times, Volume XV, Issue 1260, 27 July 1880, Page 3
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156WAIMATE PLAINS. [BY ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH.] (OWN CORRESPONDENT.) Pukehinau, Last Night. Waikato Times, Volume XV, Issue 1260, 27 July 1880, Page 3
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