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EXTRA EDITION.

LIVELY MEETING. «. MR. TAYLOR AND THE REV. W. THOMPSON. SOME PLAIN SPEAKING. FBI TELEGfiAPH — PRESS ASSOCIATION.] REEFTON, This Day. Mr. T. E. Taylor spoke here last night. Among the audience was the Rev. Wm. Thompson, organiser for the Licensed Victuallers. From almost at the outset the meeting developed into a duel between these two. Mr. Taylor said the advertised , statements as to Maine, published 1 on the eve of the last election, were absolutely false. Mr. Thompson: Absolutely true. Mr. Taylor said the man who signed that advertisement knew it to be false. He was an ex-parson who once had j preached righteousness, and now worked for a traffic founded on vice. Mr. Thompson : You miserable coward 1 The proceedings at this stage grew very warm. Mr. Taylor : I never met this man before, but now I have him under the whip. Mr. Thompson : You are a liar and a cad! You broke up my meetings.Mr. Taylor: I never met you before, and never broke ap your meetings. Mr. Thompson : „If not you, it was your party. Mr. Taylor: That is not I. Mr. Taylor termed Mr. Thompson "a renegade parson," and Mr. Thompson said Mr. Taylor was a liar and no gentlenien. Mr. Taylor compared Dr. Salmond's article against prohibition to drawing a salmon, if not a red herring, across the scent. • ' A local solicitor called, on Mr. Taylor to retract, and the proceedings again became lively. Mr. Thompson alleged that Mr. Taylor had connived at the escape of a certain person {named) from justice. Mr._ Taylor challenged Mr. Thompson to write the' charge down, and he (Mr. Taylor), would proceed against him for slandev. It was ihe most exciting meeting held in Reefton for 'years. A resolution was passed, only three voting against, but numbers not voting, affirming the principle of national option Tir recommending it to the Dominion.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19110415.2.85

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 88, 15 April 1911, Page 6

Word Count
313

EXTRA EDITION. Evening Post, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 88, 15 April 1911, Page 6

EXTRA EDITION. Evening Post, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 88, 15 April 1911, Page 6

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