2? ; SK the soldier, the sailor, the airman what he //// £% thinks of his pay and allowances. The New //// Zealand fighting man is the best paid in the //// ***" OftTA*. British Empire. //// tt Q « , ~ S 1 iind after the war he will come back to a future //// lj secure and full of opportunity. The opportunity I jS|| _****. ' Q It to learn a skilled trade or to complete educa- J ff Mbes Bjo3 teg li I tional studies is his. Finance is available to //// SB §s ifl Jil|| gag I buy homes and furniture, farms, businesses and J MM SBMB Mm MM m tools of trade. Houses for servicemen are //// tftlF itpll M 1& I being built as rapidly as possible. Pensions j fegg. SI if J| JL I for ex-fighting men or their widows are on j MfW Ms* I a generous scale. Labour's rehabilitation j MM jSi J|[ //// plans provide economic security and j ff JiH Ml Jf I for the men and women ft M ' Ifs The Women Wlio Suffer Most Many tragic stories could be told of cruelty and unhappiness in Auckland homes, caused by drink. Stories of men who may be "jolly good fellows" in the public house bar, but who are drunken brutes at home. The officers of the Society for the Protection of Women and Children, Samaritan officers, and other social workers know that underneath the beauty and glamour of Auckland, there are sordid and pitiful conditions of life for women and children, for which drink is responsible. N@w Comes Woman's OpportunityWomen can end these sordid conditions by abolishing the liquor traffic. Half of the Electors of N.Z. Are Women r - - and they are the Wives, Mothers, or Sweethearts of the other.half. Everv woman knows that drink is largely responsible for the evil conditions which have been prevalent in our cities during recent months, conditions wh.ch have brought sorrow, broken lives, and broken hearts into many homes. Women Con Abolish the Lienor Trafeis Cn, the sake of the women and children who ore suffering, every woman should vote ,o LnS the ifqSor traffic, and urge her menfolk to do the same, , No decent man or woman can vote for continuance of drink-caused evils. VOTi FOR NATIONAL PROHIBITION <1 vote' for National Prohibition STRIKE our THE TWO TOP LINES ' '"""" " M " l * MI ' l ' l^MillBMI1 ' 111 Here in New Zealand we produce the most wonderful food irs the world—MlLK !| and then we don't drink enough of it. ■!. We must take more milk to build hGa r lthy bodics ' stron9 tecth and bones ' " bom°tiH old age. Children need 3 to 4 [ —T" ✓ PgSaßfc' glasses a day; adults need 2. 1 s j he jj a js teeth of New Zealand are ''* lf||ljg| partly due to our neglect of Milk. It may also lead to rickets and bone maiformafjons in children. You can't balance your diet without enough Milk. Of course, it ~"'WHHHHH W* need not be drunk "straight.' With * far some children it is easier to give them | sSPftSii Milk in soups, custards, puddings, and I gg sure your Milk is pasteurised— | [ nothing essential is lost, and your Milk IN 1 is germ-free. If you can't get as much | 1 Milk as you need, use powdered skim 1 \ MlLK—the master key to health. I ~n r A wfalthier nation 2 - a
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Auckland Star, Volume LXXIV, Issue 213, 8 September 1943, Page 7
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552Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LXXIV, Issue 213, 8 September 1943, Page 7
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