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a particularly sketch by the Oamara troth :— Our now present j did some crowds of parading a^ the street hanging do, swearing, rev togs," and their bands ia are now tramp« carrying their tbe harvest fields, HH^Hoabtiess, to earn enough to retrieve their partially ruined credit and to enable the souls and bodies tit their wives and families to keep on decent terms with each other which union had in many instances been well nigh severed. An experimental tea firm is to be started with Chinese labor, in South Carolina. A review of the business of the country in '79 shows, as usual, that San Franci«co is the only city at which therj is a decrerse in the volune of business. This appears to be due in a degree to the decline in the yield of Nevada mines. The * ! Commercial Bulletin " (\.<w York ) says the agri-. ou'tutural outlook of 1880 ia as favors able as could be desired. Mr Stephen Bourne's paper on extended colonisation being a necessity for the mother country, read before the Eoyal Colonial Institute, has elicited much comment. Sir Henry Barclay supported the idea of direetin<* the stream of emigration to the British Colonies. Mr Foreter, M.P. also advocate.! expended emigration and union between the Colonies and the Empire.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800220.2.12

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume II, 20 February 1880, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
213

Untitled Inangahua Times, Volume II, 20 February 1880, Page 2

Untitled Inangahua Times, Volume II, 20 February 1880, Page 2

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