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| | Chapter IV. — The Continuous Ministry Again. | NZETC |
 | | He was a personal friend of most members of the Ministry, and had fought side by side with Sir Robert Stout on several occasions. |
 | | The father of the property tax, the head and front of the Continuous Ministry, and the man who was supposed to be robbing the “unborn millions” of their birthrights, was now to be supported by the very statesman who had denounced him. |
 | | In that case, he said, there could be no heart-burnings; but this scheme also fell to the ground, and the Continuous Ministry was left to take its chances against the full force of the opposition from the South Island, which still insisted that it would have none but Stout and Vogel. |
| www.nzetc.org /tm/scholarly/tei-DruSedd-t1-body-d4.html (4543 words) |
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