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to tahtel exore!eux tro¥ odt viger al

en of shar vitneost adtamos aut to doaldun ade me ènetaal djel

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angbut to doued sit to voxeloltrent and to Josįɗne adt no

nes amoitesuo terit #liba of an rot aidincognt at di tant tenger

-пuvoo (zinolo) sɗt to back adt vd aægbit, esfe of bones¬bha ed

„done# and no morið vɗ aben adtamen fifty motxennoo ni Juda-

-meron edit to małolatro seravba svlovni edzamor esodd diquons

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the silence of the Judge is open to mis-construction, for the

public is led to assume that the fault lies with the Judge him-

-self. And, with great respect, I decline to allow such an

opinion to get abroad: for it must lead to great dissatisfact-

-ion with the administration of justice among the community.

Such dissatisfaction I know personally to exist.

This is by no means the first time that the

congested state of the work of the Court has compelled me to

make similar statements from the Bench. In doing so I have follow

-ed the example of Sir Alexander Cockburn, who, when Lord Chief

Justice of England never ceased to criticize the Government for

not increasing the number of Judges, a course which he thought

to be imperative for the due administration of justice.

Your Excellency reminds me that the question

has twice recently been under the consideration of the Secretary

aids to moitaoliqgs edt of bremen Attw

,eonebnoqzation aldo to retjem Jostdua set of eigłoning Istan9A

ort tart vonellaard TUDY os tuo talog of womed add avan I

al credit ti bra oli lug end of imotreg od yteb a sved aggbut

-Roo bee gatraed rot no coast naturled et valch ebfetuszzAwITU

**ub destinam sold at de ‚émurod ni yalab Moza to obar el talalq-

con asob I .yalsh dove to

moaser sdt state ot eqhul end to

ont no exulta? odt et nonser ode seusɔad qtub aid ed of sa889

Bambut to tradruim entotttura s ebtrong of theantavoð sɗd to drag

shan ton at tummetata doma 1 .too odd to how mit ditw sɖoo of

odd

of State. I desire to take this opportunity of recording my

great dissatisfaction at the want of official courtesy displayed

to me by the late Governor of the Colony Sir Matthew Nathan

throughout the whole of the period during which the question of

appointing a Third Judge has been under consideration. I have

had a long experience in matters of administration, and I have

never known a case in which when a question affecting the

administration of justice was under consideration, the Governor

has

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