FAMOUS BULLI PASS.
" LADY FULLER " PARK. [raOM OtTR OWN CORRESPONDKNT. ] SYDNEY, June 26. Although Sir George Fuller has retired temporarily at all events to the quiet shades of Opposition, a graceful tribute has been paid to him indirectly by associating tho name of his worthy helpmate with a beauty spot acclaimed by people who have been abroad to be one of Nature's masterpieces—Sublime Point, at the top of the famous Bulli Pass. High above the sea level, it commands one of the finest panoramic views in the world. One of the final arts of the retiring Minister for Lands, Mr. Wearne, wits to purchase, on behalf of the Government, a big area of priviitely-owned land in the vicinity of Sublime Point, secure the reserve for the public for all time, namo it Lady FuUer Parle and hand it over to trustees. Given fine weather, there is hardly an hour of the day when tourists are not contemplating the beauty of this wonderful scene, that, spreads itself thousands of feet below and oat to sea as far as the eye can reaclv—one of Nature's vignettes, in its glorious form and colouring. Few people will know it as Lady Fuller Park. Sublime Point it will always be; but it was a graceful «£t, in setting it apart for the public, to associate with it the memory of the ex-Promicr's good lacy, whose fine womanly qualities have won for her many friends in the community.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXII, Issue 19062, 6 July 1925, Page 7
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242FAMOUS BULLI PASS. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXII, Issue 19062, 6 July 1925, Page 7
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