Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

PASSING NOTES.

Wb would particularly invite correspondence from our readers on all subjects of local and general interest. A newspaper should reflect all shades of opinion on political and social topics, and we wapt tp make the Standard a genuine reflex of popular thoughts and ideas. Send along your letters therefore ; let them be brief and to the point, and kindly don’t forget the old rule, write on one side of the paper only. Don’t be scurrilous or personal, we don’t want any £5OOO libel suits in the Standard Office, but we do want to be “ in touch ” with our readers, and by allowing them the free use of our columns, to assist them in ventilating grievances, redressing abuses and working generally for the good of the Bay. P.S.—Don’t forget to write on one side of the paper only. Otherwise your effusions, be they smart or dull, effective or stupid, will be ruthlessly consigned to the Gehenna of the waste paper basket. Just another word or two about the report that the Standard is connected with the Herald. Once for all it is sheer nonsense. As well say that Gladstone and Lord Salisbury are sworn allies on the Home Rule question, or that Messrs Gannon and McDonald intend to canvass for each other at the forthcoming elections. The report is utterly false, and we wonder that people can be found to swallow holus bolus such a stupid invention of interested opponents. ******* A lot more reports about 30oz. nuggets at the Kimberley Goldfields are current. Don’t you believe them, New Zealanders. Surely enough poor beggars have left their bodies to rot and their bones to bleach on the hideous plains of that terrestrial Hades, Northern Australia, already. A good alluvial goldfield, a “ poor mans’ field,” would be a grand thing indeed, not only.for [Australia, but for

New Zealand, but we are afraid the days of poor men’s fields are over. Put not your faith in telegrams and in the bogus reports of interested (storekeepers ; when Kimberley really turns out “ a boom ” .go there; but fdr the present, £1 a Week and tileker in New Zealand is better than a wh'dle continent of Kiniberleys. * * . . • . . There Can be no doubt whatever that the Protection movement is growing. Down at Wellington, old Jock An.derson, a veteran inlialinger, is to stait 'i Protection weekly, (in onq paper We saw the name prophetically printed (v:eakly) which is to be called The Sentinel. Ballance, Vogel and Stout are to contribute signed articles, and of eonrce, so long as the subsidised ” difea " hold blit, the Sentinel and its VStei-dn pjoghnifol:-, will do well, intend devoting a series of articles to this important hiiestidn of Protection ami Freetrida in future issues, and trust to be able th put the relative merits and defects of each clearly and succinctly before our readers, * * * * * 1 * Bravo for the Salvation Army. They get Sneofeti at [by every pettifogging : would-be wit, but they do s lot ofgoodl Of bourse with their howling and yffiling and generally making of night hideous with their cries, we have no sympathy, but when they show their devotion to the true tenets of the New Testament, going forth into the highways and byways and bringing practical help and comfort instead of dealing out sappy tracts and evangelical treacle, we are heartily with thehi. They are the true friends oi the poor and needy, and aS such .'ate hardly deserving oi the ifiany hard raps they get. In Auckland they have shamed the older denominations by their care for the fallen and the . destitute, and now we see that in Wellington I they intend to “ joolibrate the celebree ’’ by giving a really good feed to a thousand poor children. And there are poor children in Wellington, any amount of them, although perhaps the VVeilingtoiiiafis would not ad mit it.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GSCCG18870609.2.7

Bibliographic details

Gisborne Standard and Cook County Gazette, Volume I, Issue 1, 9 June 1887, Page 2

Word Count
639

PASSING NOTES. Gisborne Standard and Cook County Gazette, Volume I, Issue 1, 9 June 1887, Page 2

PASSING NOTES. Gisborne Standard and Cook County Gazette, Volume I, Issue 1, 9 June 1887, Page 2