IN PASSING.
I nevei- - ; that, word " impossible."— Prof. H. Littlejohn. Gladstone was Christian citizenship personified. —Mr. Lloyd George. It is not man's natural condition to be comfortable.—Sir Dampfylde Fuller. How about tho camera a.s an instrument of torture ?—Mrs. Catherine Masters. You cannot give a message till you have got one to give.—Prof. H. Worthington. In England, to bo a cad is the sin for which there is no forgiveness.—Dean Inge. The English arc the only people who laugh at themselves.—Mr. Frank Swinnerton. Concentrated study of the newspaper is a Christian's study.—Miss Christabel Pankhurst. The modern employer wants to pay as high a wage as the industry will bear.— Mr. W. L. Hickens. The time is ripe for the establishment of technical education for washerwomen. —Prof. W. Davics. If history is to be made of the tittletattle of the Upper Tooting tea-tables, it might be better that history should not be written at all.—Mr. Justice Avory. There is a real danger in the continual talk on the subject of peace in industry; it suggests that tho normal state of industry is war.—Gapt. H. Macmillan, M.P. I do not nri'derstand those people who tell me as leader of the Opposition that, because the Government is doing something, I ought to do tho opposite.—Mr. Ramsay Mac Donald.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19270409.2.196.41.9
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19608, 9 April 1927, Page 7 (Supplement)
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215IN PASSING. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19608, 9 April 1927, Page 7 (Supplement)
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