THE SOCIALIST POLITICAL ATTITUDE.
(To the Editor.) Sir, —*014 Horse" thanks his poor little effusion will net raise—duet in the City Council’s office, sad prays your active Mp: your editorial pen in a leaderette, to set the Haims. of myself sod my 00-suffereis before the faddic in a forcible and effective manner so that the hot weather shall not be far advanced before the drinking trough te re-erected which need to stand, how long ago! at the angle of the Town Tlafl, and "Old Hone,” before ooncfculmg, neks you, air, to voice our cry for more drinking troughs, and my friend “Hobs,” who runs along and gate as thinrty as 1 do, coning In front the country, will baric approval when I ask him to pnt his name, with my own, la your article. Tom thankfully and hopefully, / OEuD HOUSE.*
(To the Bdltor.i Sir, —la caw aome erroneous conclusions are. drawnfrom the paofnse we of the word “fiodaßrts,” in yonr editorial coianaa yesterday, I desire to point out to poor reader* that the Socialist party has no part or lot in the present political maaoeorrea in either Grey Lynn or BardbU* The BorieHrta ol .ftirVlsnd ban not the slightest deshe ta rob certain aspiring “ Labour” poHtttaanß of any gkwy or gain that may, perhaps, f«U to them, because of their publication of blood-curdling tnueUMc maadfeshoea, in the uttra-reactionary frees. The Socialist party had One candidate is Auckland, Mr. M. J. Savage, whose creep, tioaslly heavy vote rather eutprised and ■tartlad orthodox politician, and with the eondnsion of the Auckland Central campaign -s the political contest in and around Auckland eeaaed to hareany in.twest tor Godm&U. Wanttee, Mawrrftas, aad Labourilia aaesdtta weake of working-dees rrruTirfpatiuu, but the moat hwHßens and deny was an uadonbtadly the latter. One day they hold up their hands in home at a strike, the next ®wy dock of bloodshed in tones faysteriand dkgustfng. because hypocritical. *“• xeewuneads one wane, the •Begad national exeonfiw of the labour past* another, and the *Snanen* shoot in the sriUcnMa for Bkkaoo and the .of the way-hacks. This k “poKtical sagacity, aptttnde and acumen The Übonr party, the final futility, the betrayer of working-rimes confidence, is on the headlong rush towards obscurity. 1 wonder who, where, when, how has the “Unity” eekeme united? They speak with one accord in one place, does this Peneeortal Family.—l am,’ etc., .. p.Bum
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume XLII, Issue 300, 18 December 1911, Page 7
Word Count
396THE SOCIALIST POLITICAL ATTITUDE. Auckland Star, Volume XLII, Issue 300, 18 December 1911, Page 7
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