CRIME IN AMERICA.
PRESIDENT COOLIDGE'S ADMISSION The " Morning , Post," June 1, 1925. "President Coolidge, in his Memorial Day address to-day, pleaded for the better enforcement of the law and the universal , observance of the Constitution of the American-peoples*: ;-- - "He compared-the-crime record of the United States jwith that of -Great Britain and older countries, saying that a recent survey which (he had read showed that there were times as many murders in proportion to the population in the United States as there were in England, and five times as many as in France, while there were many times as many burglaries in America as in Great Britain." Thus, on the evidence given by the President of the United States, it is proved that a state of Prohibition ie a state of increased crime And lawlessness. Prohibition does not' destroy ejyil, it multiplies it.—(Ad.) ? : * '
The germs of colds, caiafrH, anilAinfluenza are having a time. Fight them with Nazol, and they will.-.tlis:;-appear.—(Ad.) Paris in war-time contained many spies, one of these was the notorious dancer Olympe (played by Betty CompLives, for Old," f Everybody's, Friday.—(Ad.).
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Auckland Star, Volume LVI, Issue 242, 13 October 1925, Page 10
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182Page 10 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LVI, Issue 242, 13 October 1925, Page 10
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