THE FAIRBUEN CASE.
TO THE EDITOR. i l'~ ? fc - may be well to sa y on e or two last words, in reply to the second letter over the signature of T. A. Gubb, which appeared n few days since. It would be eaay to quote with perfect correctness, that both his letters contained statements that were "a quibble and untrue " But any of your readers may see that both letters were meant to be, what they actually are, an attack on the intelligence and integrity of the Bench of Justices at Port Albert; also that their author gives one version' of a single matter of fact, and that the Bench of J.P.'s. here have publicly given one just opposite. The public can of course believe which they please. One word more. Anyone with a single eye, in the true direction, can see that the fact of Fairburn being admitted to bail in Auckland, where he could readily get sureties, is no unfavourable criterion to the hesitancy of the Court here to do likewise, where he could not.— I am, &c., Own Correspondent, P.A.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume XIX, Issue 6394, 16 May 1882, Page 3
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184THE FAIRBUEN CASE. New Zealand Herald, Volume XIX, Issue 6394, 16 May 1882, Page 3
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