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STRAIGHT TALK. WHITES IN SOUTH AFRICA.

THE PREROGATIVE OF PARDON, w STATED TO BE USED, INDISCREETLY. By Telegraph.— Press Association.— Copyright. (Received January 25, 9.40 a.m.) CAPETOWN, 24th January. r The whole male population of Bulu- ? wayo, in Rhodesia, met and protested 7 against Lord Gladstone, the High Commissioner, reprieving a native who had been sentenced to death for assaulting a white woman. One speaker pointed out that if Lord ¦Gladstone assumed that South-African conditions were the same as those in England, He must be brought to a i .proper appreciation of the facts, other- >« "wise the whites would take the> law into |t their -own hands.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19110125.2.90

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 20, 25 January 1911, Page 7

Word Count
107

STRAIGHT TALK. WHITES IN SOUTH AFRICA. Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 20, 25 January 1911, Page 7

STRAIGHT TALK. WHITES IN SOUTH AFRICA. Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 20, 25 January 1911, Page 7

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