A NEW ZEALANDER'S IMPRESSIONS.
CHRISTCHURCH. Aug. 13. Mr C. H. Ensor, a Canterbury sheepfarmer who has just returned from Sydney, declares that an ugly feeling prevails, and there is going to be trouble; but the New South Wales Government is going to He firm, though he was afraid the same could not be said of the Queensland Government, if the trouble should spread there. In Queensland shearing was at a standstill, and other trouble seeemd likely there. R-e----verting to the Sydney strike, Mr Ensor said that both sides seemed very determined. The public were up against the strikers; in fact he had never known a strike in which popular opinion was so strong against the strikers. No rioting had occurred, but he would not be surprised if considerable trouble occurred before the strike ended.
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Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LX, Issue 17061, 14 August 1917, Page 5
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134A NEW ZEALANDER'S IMPRESSIONS. Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LX, Issue 17061, 14 August 1917, Page 5
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