NED KELY THE BUSHRANGER. [Ruter's Cablegrams.] Melbourne, Last Night.
Ned KeKiT is rapidly gaining strength, and has b«en remored to an ordinary cell. His manner is greatly subdued.
;Hu*sy and Dispatch.— No two things differ more than hurry and dispatch. Hurry is the mark of a weak mind, dispatch, of a strong one. A weak man in office, like a squirrel in a cage, is labouring eternally, but to no purpose, and in constant motion without getting on a jot; like a tarnstile, he is in everybody's way but stops nobody ; he talks a great deal, but s»ys very little } he looks into everyrthing, but sees nothing; and has a hun- * dred irons in the fire, but very few of them are hot; and with those few that are, be only bums his fingers.'
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Waikato Times, Volume XV, Issue 1278, 7 September 1880, Page 3
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134NED KELY THE BUSHRANGER. [Ruter's Cablegrams.] Melbourne, Last Night. Waikato Times, Volume XV, Issue 1278, 7 September 1880, Page 3
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