"Frills.”
(to the editobil Sib,—lt is to be hoped that ths workers of Poverty Bay, will not go into mourning, when they have read and digested tbe doleful intelligence that the ” Employers' Association of Poverty Bay,” arc not sending a delegate to the Labor Conference at Wellington, “ Oh, my 1" it will be heartrending when tbe Conference meets, to find no delegate, from the* self made gods of Poverty Bay. Anfl their only excuse being that they are pledged to support the free laborers, and even don't know the intentions of tBe Unionists, ttr, the above proceedings bring back recollections of the French and Prussian war, when the King of the Island of Samoa sent a message to the British Government informing them the French and Prussians might go on fighting, but he had made up his mind to stand neutral.—l am, Ao. ’ Justice.
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Gisborne Standard and Cook County Gazette, Volume IV, Issue 514, 4 October 1890, Page 2
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144"Frills.” Gisborne Standard and Cook County Gazette, Volume IV, Issue 514, 4 October 1890, Page 2
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