HINE MOA, BASALTIC FORMATION ON THE KAINGAROA ROAD, IN THE INTERIOR. 
CONCLUDING REMARKS. 
HINTS TO INTENDED EMIGRANTS. 
The subject of Emigration is one of the greatest interest to 
thousands in this over-populous country. Archimedes only 
required standing room to move the world; but there is now 
none for numbers at home. To obtain one, the first object 
is to move off to lands which furnish space for exertion, and 
it is to the colonies the attention is naturally directed. Then 
the next enquiry is, What are the inducements to emigrate ? 
The answer is, To find a home ; this is the desired object 
with many; provision for an increasing family is another; 
and, lastly, health is with others the grand desideratum. To gain 
such inquirers, the advocates of each colonization field advance 
their several claims. The American speaks in glowing terms 
of his unbounded realms in the far west, his fertile plains, 
his primaeval forests, his rising cities, his roads, his rivers, 
his free constitution, and so many other advantages, that he 
has no time to tell us of the contraries. Few of those who 
emigrate to America properly reflect on the step they are 
