NEWS BY THE MAIL
Wi take the follow ing items fiom the English iNews Letter, dated Apiil 17th: — nov vltv i\ ii'U,\\i> On Apiil 10th the depi.t itions fiom the vauous public liodics which h.ul ad dicsse-, to picsent to the I'iiiico and lVmccss of Wales assembled at Dublin Castle, whore their lioyal Highnesses ie coiveil the founal cougiatulatums of the pi elates of the chinch, the Aichbi^hop, cleigy, and la-t> of Dublii>, the Chamber of Comiiitrce, the Fieemii'oin, and nnny of the ltamtd and sticntiiie bodies of the city. I» the afternoon tlio Prince, accompanied I>y the Piineebs, l.iid the found ition stono of the new Science and Ait Museum and National Lihiaiy in. L eland, nnd visited the llo\al Uni \eisity, wheic the degiec3 of Doctor of Laws, and Doctor of Music llo,wn» Causa vue confened respectively on the I'lincc pud I'unccss. Aildicssps were read at each place, and biiefly acknowledged by the l'rinee. In the evening a, giand ball was held at tho Castle. Tlie l'lince and Princess of Wales, accompanied by Prince Albeit Victor, left Dublin for Cork on Apiil 13th. An cxtiaordmaiy and regrettable incident happened while their Royal Highnesses were on their way horn the Castle to the Kings1 bruise Terminus. As the a owls were assembled in the streets to witness the departing of the Koyal visitors, Lord Mayor O'Connor diove up in an open caniageand was biased by the people. Ascending the steps of the City Hall, he ahouted at the top of his voice that he would telegraph to Coik and Mallow, and give thiee cheers for Mr Parnell. The vefeience to Cotk and Mallow is explained by the fact that a party of of Nationalist mombeis had gathered there with a view of ci eating an ad\eisc demoiibtiation on the auival of the Royal tiain. .This seems to have been actually done, find considciable disturb ancc of tho pjace is mpeitod. At Cotk ni the e\ emng the most violent language was used, one meinbet of Pailiament not hesitating to my that war «js declared, .uid this would be made clear when the Royal paity visited the city. Notwithstanding that the Major of Coik issued a proclamation pi ohibiting the appearance of bands in public on Apiil H, a mob, muubeiing over 1,000, assembled and matched tlnou«iht the principal thoioughfare3, singing " Uod save Inland," hooting, cheeung, and .smashing the windows of"tlie houses displaj ing bunting in honour of the Royal \ 'Sit. The occupier of one house, whose whose dtawing loom windows were bioken, pic cntcd a gun which caii°td the ciowd to move off with great pi eeipitation. A Luge police foice turned out with batons, nflcs, and Iwyonets. The city -was pati oiled l>y bodies of Constabulary w ho pi evented the people from congiegating. km.'lAMj and in:ii roioMrs. In an excellent aiticle on tins subject, the Quarterly Review for Apiil, quotes the Austialian Handbook, published by (ioidon and (Joteh, and nnke. leference to the old feelings of antipathy to the colonies asoontiasted with their recent action in olfeiing aid to the mother countiy. This antipathy, the leviewer siysj, "was largely the result of the leading of the Manchester— or as we should now say, the Birmingham school of politicians. The leaders of the party were aiways decrying the colonies, always exiggeiating the expense and inconvenience they entailed upon us, always suggesting in one form or other we should be much better o(f without them. The cry of the Manchester politicians always was, ' Your colonies only increase jour responsibilities, and already tlie.se iespoiioibilitie^. .ue too great.' Yet at this moment, but for India and the colonies, Manchi'stei and Lancashiie generally, \ would lie be a fan way to lealne the L'loomj anticipations to which Mr Blight j g've iitteiauce in 1577, when he told the piojilc of Manchester that he had otten thought with sadness of a fojoboding once expiessed to him, that ' the <;iLat warehouses, and factoiiesot Lancasiiue might one day be as complete a Him as Tantallon Castle.'" "We used to bo told that colours do not | pay, never could be made to pay, | ami that Kugkml could not affoul to bo associated with anything of so unpiofitable a natuic .... Now, no , aigument is ntedul, foi most of us eec that without om colonies many blanches of our trade would piacticilly be in a atato of collapse." Aitu 1 it fen ing to the (k-prco-iatoiy lansmgonsfd by Mr i>nght, on the levenuc customs. — "btill k"-s did they anticipate that m a sciious ensis m our aftaiis, when the world had gol the full measuie ot our htienjjth, as it supposed, and seemed leady to step in and divide our inlieiitance, the colonists would voluntauly take up aims and place themscU es on our our side. It is not only with the little island in the Noithi'iu Sea that you ha\o to reckon, but with us " "For the second time in the covu&e of a few \eais, Europe has been fatal tied to find that the available iitienyth ot the Dm Mi foices was not to be calculated fiom the /lidii/ Lii>l." Refen ing t") I/) id ]|eacan&lield's employment of Sepoys the lev iewer b.iys, *' The nol)le olFets of the colonies- produced an tqiially p«»inaikable and diamatic effect upon the woild ; and if thuso offeis were at fiist tcceived with notlnng more than fngid courtesy by the Uo\ernmont, the eolonikts must be well awaie of the warmth of feding whjch has been kindled towards them among all classes of tho people from one end of the countiy to the other. They may be veiy sure that the enthusiasm which they have aioused will not die out w hi!e the present generation exiats. We shall hear no more in our time of invitations to India ami the colonies to ' take themselves off.' " iJEVTir of Tin, loud m vyou. J'hc Loml Mayor of J/nidon (Mr Aldci' man Nottagc) o.xpiied somewnat suddenly at the Mansion House on .S.ituiday moinmg, Apul 11. Hii Lordship, it appears, caught cold at the IJiighton Volunteer lit \ icw on Ktiatoi Monday, and althont-h he coutiived, witli a great elFoit, to distnbiite the Easter gifts to the Bluecoat Boj s on the following day, he was unable to attend the SyiUl service. The bad eventcpsta gloom over the whole city. A special meeting of the Court of Aldermen was held, when it was announced that the last time a Loid Mayor died during oHiee was as far back as 1770, Pulpit references to the sad eveut weia made in the city on Sunday. OCR MKIU.HANT.MKN IN TIMB Of W Alt. The protection to be accorded to the merchant ships of this country in any coming war willbefjiute difforeut frqm the old convoy aystem. Instead of the merchant ships pioceedingon their voyages under escoitof ships of war, the plan will bo that of sending swift aiu.ed cruiseis to hunt down the same class of vessels engaged in the cuemy's sei vice, This will enhance the value of the great ocean liners, with their highspeed and laige ooal-canying capacity. Should they be menaced by an iionclad, they could seek safety in flight. Their function would be to attack tliobe ships « hi Jj resembled tlien.aclves, and which would be the class debiguul to harass the ineiohant fleet. THE WHOLESALE KVICTION OP MINERS. The mmeis and tlieir families who were evicted at Denaby on Apiil litii, found shelter for the night at Mexboiough, in schools, club- rooms, and even hss desirable places, but it was late at night befoie all were housed even in this makeshift fashion. On the 15th the village of Denaby was almost deserted, most ot the houses beiug empty. Some windowbreaking had been indulged in, but there were no further signs of mischief. I» Mexborough crowds of the evicted men and their wives waited patiently for more than an hour to receive a loaf oi bread and some cheeceat the residence of the curate, the Kcv. T. Horefall. Other mote needy cases received email poitions of meat tbiough the medium of the congregational minister, the ttev. T. J. Leslie. Meet logo- of t\v miuers have been lurid in tiit diatrioi. The proccw of eviotaw wto )}(
extended to othci oollciieiin South "> oikshne, and j^tci.lay the owneis of the Cailtoti Main Colliei> applud to the magistiates at Bamsley for folty ejpctment wauantsag unit then olleis who ai c on stnkc against a icil notion of wages. Tlio magistiates giant.nl the vvaii.uvts asked for. sor\i>KON ion vmvr, siruct,. Our' Plymouth couesponiU-nt tele giapli-5 .-— Theic is no doulit that the command of tlic Kpeu.ilMj tailion m connexion with the An^lo Kalian dilh ulry will devolve cm \dmu >1 Mi <! T. P. Hornby, at ptescnt Commander in Chief at Vortsniouth. lie will hoist his Ihgonboanl the Ueicules, and will have as his flap captain an old associate, Cvptam It. OBrien l'lt/iov, wlio sepcd witli tin-s-line Admiial when he was Commodouon the West Coa^t of Afuca, and who was captain of the AI ■vmdii.i w hen the fleet under the same A-linnal foicid tlie Dardanelles in IS7S. The Iron Duke is likely to hoist the (lag of second in com maud. SCI' NT. IX DKVOXFORT. Such a scene as was witnessed on April 15 in Fore street, Devonpmt, lias not been ousei ved in the mam thoroughfare of the town since the Russian war. Woikmon from all paits of Devon and Cornwall, who wcicaheady named, and othcis who attended with a chance of engagement, sunoundcd the dooky.ud gates, and at one peiiod of the morning at least 300 weve jiuscit. The police had oideis not to admit anyone but men bcanng passes to -,pp the Chief Constructor, and the =u vices of a full foice, under Inspectors Smith and Phillips and Sergeant Mooiman, were needed to cany the instiuctiuiis into elket. Tin: ursst v\ mi i iu'ity. The Official Me^ovyr of the 12th April publishes.! tilegi am f>'om Genet al Komaiod to th« Mniiat.-i of War, dated D.v&h Ivcpn, Apiil 1, explaining the cir uimstance-, winch led to the eugigcii.ent on the Kushk Hner." Wlv n near the budge I saw an eiitieiiclinicut occupied by the Afghans. In oulei to avoid a conflict, I siationod my tioops at a dis tane- of live veists fiom tlie Afghan portion. On the '20th nit. negotiations commenced with Captain Vato. When the Afghans were convinced that we had no intention of attacking them, they daily dicw nearer to our camp. On the 27th they dNpatuhed against our company entrusted with coveting a lcconnoitiing jmty thiee companies with one gun and *ome CAvahy. Their audacity and auogincc went on mci casing little by little until the following day, when they occupied the height winch commanded the left flank of our camp. They commenced to thiovv up euticnehments, established a cavalry post at tlie lcir of oui hue, and placed a. picket at t,un shot distance fiom our foul. On the 'J'lth I sent to the Commander of the Afghan detachment summons giving him till the evenint.' to evacuate the left baiik of the Kushk, and the right bank of the Mmhab as far a3 the]] mouth of the Kushk. I nceived a reply fiom him that, acting upon the advice of the Knglis.li, lie refused to letiie behind the Kushk. I then sent him a private letter, couched in amicable terms. On the 30th ult., in order to suppoifc my demand, I marched with my detachment against the Afghan position, still counting on a pacinVisMie of the difficulty, but the fiie of the Afghan Athlleiy mil tliP. attack of their cav ally compelled me to accept the combat, tlie lesults of which aie already known." !• VSSI.NO TUT, TIME AT SV VKIM. All is quiet. No enemy has been discovered at Otao. At the camp near Hamloub theie is gronse shooting, and at the baac of opeiations at Snaknn cueket matches, races, and pports hive been gok up. Water of lair quality has beeu found at Handoub in piotusion. As a iclief to the tedium of inaction, a race meeting, organised by the Indian Contingent, was held lecently on the haiboui shoie. The progiamme consisted of hoise, mule, and camel races, and steeplechases. The band of tho 2«th Native lufautiy phjed. One of the steeplechases was won by Captain Aiiey of the New South Wales Contingent, while the pii/e for the tamtl Kire, which e\cittd the most amusement, was carried oil' by a Soudan ncgio on a Commissariat camel. Tlie Gencial \\.v» present, and O&in.in Dignja only was wanting to complete the li.umony of the proceedings. UV>*«lA AM) KNfiMSI). The San Fiancisco News Letter of the 2nd May, thus lefers to the Afghan : question :— Glndstonc's statement in the ' lintish House of Commons, on last Monday night, when he rose to ask a vote of uoditot jCU.OOO,OOO \\;w one befoie which the entire civih/ed woild has bowed in admiration. Without savoring of anything appioaching the tone of the bully, his w oids were clear, fcicible and fearless. They silenced the captious cntic3 who had been accusing him of powaidice, and whe» read in St. Petersburg readily convinced the Imperial autocrat and his advisers that they were dealing with a mm of mettle, as well as one in whom humane and liberal feelings weie phenomenally developod. Theie is a widespread misapprehension upon this point. Uhcßutish have always led the w oi hi in the development of free institutions and the higher traits of human ohaiacter. They do so still, and must continue to dq so, qv Uv-c their brightest I ossossiou. Oue hundred years ago a. fraction of the provocation with the JJntish Government has received from Russia, in this matter, would have boon sufHoiont-to-eall forth a declaration of war. To day it is not sufliciont, because the pio^iessive poition of the wotld has made, in that time, exactly one hundred years of advancement. Humanity is lising above the biute cteation, and a disposition to leason is regarded as being somewhat higher than a disposition to light. Consequently Gladstone was obliged, by ptinciple, sq to govern his actions that he could say, as he said on Monday last : "In regaul to the B,ad contingency of an outbreak of war or ltipture of relations with llns«ia, that her Majesty's Government has striven to conduct the controveisy ju such a way that if it is, unhappily, ended in a violent rupture, they might at least be able to challenge the vorcliot of civilized mankind whether or not they had done all that men could do, and had used eveiy just and honourable effort to provent tho plunging of two such countries into bloodshed and despair." These were noble words, and they become all the giander when one comprehends tho moral coinage and self-iestraiufc which is required in living up to them wh«n dealing with a dishonourable, untruthful, brutal nation like Russia. Theie need be no appieheu.'uon, however, that Gladstone, in his desire for peace, will sacrifice a single interest h.13 count! y rightfully possesses, or allow her honour to be in any wise tarnished. Upon this point his language on Monday night was equally clear and satisfactoiy. Referring to tho incident of Penjdeb, he said: "Knowing that a blow has been struck at the credit and authority of our ally, we are unable to close the book and to say we will uot look into it any more. Wo must do our best to have right done in tlie matter." There can be no mistake about this utterance. It means that w hen the responsibility for tlie treacherous attack on the Afghan post is so fixed that the Russian faculty for falsehood can ho longer evade th ' issue, reparation must be made for tho outrage. The fact that Russia his not long since declaied war against England te an indication of cowardice on her prut, no matter which way it is looked at. She has pushed forward her frontier hundreds upon hundreds of miles within a coinpaiatively shoit ponod of time. In doing this she has abused, bcate-) and swallowed up numbers of small poweie who wcie unable to cope with her in physical conflict. All this has bee 1 dont for a pui po c— the puipose of ie idling thefioutur of Huti,h India. No v she stands face to lace with a foe who is hei ocp.uU, and she lie^itAtcs, It wo.ild be
uttoily absuul to put this hesitation down to .my othoi mlkcni'c tlnn that ot cow ai dice. Tin. u< u\>. T'lincrnTv. The Kmpoioi of Ucim.uiv has expressed m a decided mannci hi-» opinion that the aggiessiou on the frontier ot \f>»UaiiUtan\v.i&o-i tlie pait of Jlu-sm. After acoufcienceof the Emperor with Pi inco Bismarck, dcspatclies of the utmost import nice were sent to London and to St. Peteisbuig, with the mow ot inducing both Powci, to submit their diflcienueatoaibitiation. \ie\\3on this subi.-ct aie being intei changed also w ith Vienna and Home. The Emperor is e\ ceedingly gueved at the prospect ot tlie lnealwngout ot a war. Should Russia i.LiNist in her present couisr of policy (leimanydedaie, that she will consider the .Skiernievico compact theieby annulled, as ith object was the maintenance ° ThTrost, which is often ufcd as a diplomatic mouthpiece by Pnncc Bismiiick, concludes its article by saying, "In the fhst place our >oh is that o ncutr.it observation. It may be s.J t that the Russians are bound to liisnic Older on then fiontieis, and thcufore must advance until they am coiitciminouswith a regular Government—tliais with BnlMi Tiidia : but it is quite as natural that England may have ica sons for regarding the Russian advaicto their Indian ho-.tiers as danguous to their rule in India. Hence England must tn event t)io Russian aiUance. In the second plan-, if tho pie<-cnt danger of war be ie.ih-cd, the campaign will extend far beyond the limit of any pre vious wu, although the leal liglitmg may only take place in citain fixed points. J'heic is no reason whatever why Em ope should be entangled in the nu ii i el. It is ([Uite iueveleiit who gam's the iit&t advance, or c\in the hist month's battUs. Tie usult will lest nibh the p.utv wlm-h lias (lie "lo.itcsfc nuaiH at hand foi cmjing on the cimp.iiiii, and winch can b.-,t oigun-p its Icijccs, and for this not onh money and miii but, above all, mental capacity is moc'ssaiy. Those who ftel themsihes compelled to declaie war em seldom calculate" the conquerors of that war M Paul de Ca.ssagnac's paper, the l\,ys cindidly avows .ts sympathies with lliibsia :-" Let us state at once our sympathies aic not with the selfish and anogant people who allowed us to ho oinshud in IS7O. and who thought themsehes heed of tln.ii obligations tow aids us w hen the> sent us a fevv tons ot Chtshiic cheese after the *ioge. Neither ha\e we foi gotten how the assassins o t Napokon 1. allowed our poor Pimco Impiual to be muulcied. '11 our wishes aie for our chivahous enemies of lboJ. OsM\N WillU. There is bonietlung distinctly comic in the mannei in which it is now pioposed to communicate with Osinan Digma. Mot btiiv able to iind him, oi get at him, or cot him to come to oi at us by temstnal means, or tenestiial messengers, si^s the I'lmes coricspondent, it is now mttiuletl to loach him thiough the air. l.ettcis i aie being prepaied by (leneial (.lalmm and Colonel Chennside, addiesbed to O^maii Uigma, inviting him ami Jus fighting men to come to t«ims. llie letteis will be sent up in a balloon and (hopped at Tamai and 'lamanieb. Major Templar has chaige ot this cules tial post-oihee, and it is hoped that the experiment may at least draw some uply from oursti-uigely silent enemy. f AfTl'TlU Ol' A TONVOY. Near Deberet a rebel convoy of camels, sheep, and cattle, escoited by a small body of Hadcndowas, was ovtitaken and captured without a struggle. Many of tlie rebels bolted at the bight of the troopers, but foity pii&oneis were takui, including a number of women and cnildren These, together with over .>OO sheep and oattle, and a number of camels, were safely taken into camp at Hundoub. Despite the belief that Osinan Digna's power has been completely mushed, yreat pieoautions aie ; still being taken for the wfety of the camp at Suakim on tlie route to Handout). No one is allowed either to leave oi enter Suakim w it lion t a pass furnished by the nulitaiy authoiities. Tllh MVltlH TIIKKVTKNKR. Sctly Osuian, near Kaasala, is *=ald to have wiitten to the Mahi, " I have si.\ty thousand men, and will maich against jou if you continuo to distuib the countiy." The Kdmunds Law, (bays an Ainctican papei) inonis to be phuing tad havoc w ith the Moi mons. This is evident fiom the tact that leading taints aie keeping up a pretty continuous weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth m icgdid to its opeiation. The few convi. tionb which have ah cad y been obtained aie trilling matters, except in so far as tliej establish the fact that at last the law s of the country havo risen to bo supciioi to the dictates of the Endowment House, and that hereafter this autocratic enipiie, which was gi owing up in the veiy midst of our republic, must obey the hw, or suffer that punishment which follow & their violation. It ia a leabsation of this fact whioh wa« wrung from the hitheito defiant hierarchy such hcaitremlingly idiotic diatribes against the tyrannical jnterfeience with religious com ictions. Those protests nre of coniee founded on sheer nonsense. No erne has interfered with the religious conwetions of Moimondom. Some bestial social practices they havo indulged in have been stopped, beoause they weic sub voisive of good morals. To claim foi these bestial habits— such habit-, foi example, as a man mairying a woman and her daughter, etc.— the sancity of a religious belief and tlie protection of oui wisely-icligious laws is as absuid as it would be to graft on to aomo theological ideas a beliei in the piopricty of inuulcr. and then claim for its disciples the right to kill when and wheie they wished The present indications aio that the Mormon snake lias been badly scotched, and that, in the couise of timo, his doath will ensiio. I A newspaper in Madrid, called the Conespondeneia, is peculiar in its way. It has the laigi st en dilation of nny paper in the capital, reaching fiom two hundred, thousand to three hundred thousand a day. It has no editor, but a dozen wideawake lepoitciu, who scour the town for overy kind of information. They come to the ollice and drop their manusciipts in a bag, and there they stay till the foreman wants copy. Eveiything is then thrown into the forms without legard in order or anything else, and the paper ia read from end to end iv Epito of the fact. Ouk Oldest Fielu-Mau->hal.— The Right Hon. Hugh Henry, Lord Strathnaiin, (4.C.8., U.C.S.J., the oldest fieldmatshal in the army, and colonel of the Royal Horse Guards, comploted his 84th year on the Gtb of April, having been born on April 0, 1801. Admiral of the Plket Sir George Saxtorhiß died on April 13, in bis 95th year. Ho entered the navy in ISOI, and took part in the Battle of Trafalgar. Additional Walks yon Tin-, Dockyards. — The Treasury bus granted additional sums of £20,000 to Devonport, £22,500 to Portsmouth, and an aggregate of iu'o,ooo to other dockyards, for uaditional wages for fitting out ships. Eaki. or Selkirk. — liy the death of the Earl of Selkirk at his seat in Kirkcud blight on Satinday Aptil 11, the title becomes extinct Cmn GonnaN.— A meeting of the family and clan of Ooidon was held on April 10, in Abeideen, in view of a n einoral in Scotland to the late Gencial Gordon A lesolution, moved by the Karl of Aberdeen, approving such a mcmoriil, was adopted, and the appoint ment of a committee was decided on. Serious Firk. — A tiro bioke out on .A piil 10, m the spinning depaitment of tho Gieat Western Cotton \Voiks Bristol, wheiG upwards of 1,800 hands are employed. It wus caused by the friction of one of the spinning-mules, and tho file burnt with such lapidity that it could not be subdued until the whole ot tUab portion of the building was clcs-
hoyed, togcthev with the xaluablc lruchineiy ami vottou in piooess. of iimihifaetuic. All hinds wcie in the uoiks wh -n the fiic biokc out, and it was with dithoulty that some ot the people made their escape. The damage 11 climated at about i' 120,000. It is repented in New Voik that (Jfiicial Oianthas wiitten a letter, ad-die<-snd to the piessof the countiy, of whicli tho following i<? a rough diaft : "Ontlemon of the Picss: It is with regret, not entirely unmixed with pleasui'e, that I apologize to you all for the tionUe and expend whirh my untimcl} I leeovery has entailed upon you all. I am assmed, upon reliable anthoiity, that most, if not all of you, have already in type lengthy obittuuy notices, wiitten in anticipation of my Providentally a\ cited demise. It is not every poison who ib vouchsafed the qi tin satis faction of reading his obituary, therefore, gentlemen, I shall feel triad if you one and all will send me proof-sheets of the articles in question. The reason I ask it is this: En 01 sand discrepancies always ,11 c apt to cierp into such articles, and I should only be too happy to de\otc the lemnindcrof my life to conecting them, in oider that when the time actually ani\ps the public may have a true account. — Yonis, etc , U. S. Grant. I\S.— l shall deal altogether with corleeting cnors in facts, and not mtei fere with any sentiments you may have thought fit to expiess." A iciurni of some nngnitudc, though pei haps moie ijtuking than important, is heniL; accomplished in the constitutional oiganism of Hungary. The llnngaiiau Upper House consists of a very laigo nuinbct of bom Icgislatous, and^ a much siuallei limnber of members owing their IfgUlativu ught to a poaitiou in the higher innks of the diurch or the civil adinmistrit.oi. Kveiy'onofa magnate or lord — that is, of a nobleman of the I rank of baion and upwards — becomes a magnate with full lights on attaining bib ur.joiity. The present number embiaces niiitiy hundieds. A bill for the vital refoim of this body was recently introduced in the Home o c Reprosentativ es, consideraMy modified in the House of Magnates*, subjected to a compromise cotnunttec, and finally carried through in the latter House, and is now, .is altered, to go back to the Representatives, w'hcic it is sure of a laige majoiity. The niiiin feature of the reform n tho exclusion from tho ranks of born legislators of all magnates paying less than .'},ooo floiina in yearly taxes. A number, how e\ cr, w ill be elected members for life by their happier fellow-nobles, and a fin ther number imy get re-admit-tance by Government appointment.
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Waikato Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 2014, 4 June 1885, Page 3
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4,635NEWS BY THE MAIL Waikato Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 2014, 4 June 1885, Page 3
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