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ELECTION NOTICES. THE PRICE OF A DRINK? it doesn’t seem much, does it? Sixpence for a glass of beer. What’s wrong with that ? BUT IS THAT THE WHOLE COST ? NEW ZEALAND HAS WASTED 540,000,000 in liquor while the nation is at war and while money was, and is, needed for war supplies BUT THAT IS NOT THE WHOLE PRICE. DO YOU THEJ;V d n \,i®d ß and U munlerc C^ S and a boy was killed American Marines. xti-vi A wninv PAN SCREAMING FROM A HOUSE chased by her husband with an A T After She was.iared f- neighbours inlo^^ llttl T rl ae S C &and a and father,’ but mad .•’/unk and dangerous Thathappened in an Auckland Provincial town since the last poll. IHE I RILL Of A di.i.mv. DO YOU REMEMBER THE MURDER OF A WOMAN in Wellington when drink was obtained from a local betel after 0F DRINK WAS DEATH! REMEMBER, too, the damage and death caused by y° THE PRICE OF A DRINK MOUNTS UP. When the Japanese threatened Hung Kung British women, (earing atrocities ’W gained when the Japanese entered the city. V DEATH. THE WORLD SHUDDERED IN HORROR. DESTRUCTION OF ALL INTOXICATING LIQUOR. , . i-rx/i T’nio ■for continuance of the manufacture find sale oFtheTtuff 1 that*cost British ° women their honour, suffering and shame. WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH YOUR BALLOT PAPER NEXT SATURDAY? NEW ZEALAND LABOUR PARTY WAIRARAPA ELECTORATE MR. BEN ROBERTS, M.P. WILL ADDRESS PUBLIC MEETINGS AT THE MAYFAIR THEATRE, UPPER HUTT at 8 p.m. AND ST. JOHN’S HALL. TRENTHAM, at 9 p.m. TONIGHT. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1943 AND AT THE STATE THEATRE, CARTERTON, TOMORROW FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, at 8 p.m. DEMOCRATIC LABOUR PARTY TONIGHT, 8 O’clock. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH iB|||F HALL, BOWEN STREET. gjj ' ' ' You Must Hear These Speakers. H|| HORACE HERRING (Labour M.P. for Mid-Canterbury, 1935-3 S) ||||L L and TWO PROMINENT SPEAKERS, IMIk * * lagl Will Address HMWi» ; WELLINGTON NORTH ELECTORS At the Above Hall, TONIGHT, 8 O’CLOCK. Hear the Democratic Labour Policy ex- ’WgUMF fflsWS pounded, and .learn the reason for the other - -agy parties’ failure to grapple witli the future. '* 'MmmMS A. JUMHW VOTE HERRING’ VOTE HERRING DEMOCRACY OR BUREAUCRACY? The Momentous Issue Of This Election. This advertisement is inserted by a citizen who feels there should be wider realization of the extensive increase of bureaucratic power of certain Government Departments, and who feels that this is the most important election in New Zealand history, with the direct challenge—Democracy or Bureaucracy. WHAT IS BUREAUCRACY? When you have to get permission of a civil servant to import anything, to remit payment, to decide the selling price, to have more than a certain number of fowls or grow more than a few tomatoes, to sell land, to buy a farm, to build a house, to employ anyone, to start a factory or business, to change jobs: in short, when, to do lots of things which you would expect to lie able to do as a FREE MAN, you have to seek permission or direction of a Government servant, then that is BUREAUCRACY. Ask YOUR candidate whether he believes in Rule by Parliament or by Government .Departments, Freedom or Regimentation, Encouragement or Strangulation of Enterprise. Ask him if he favours (after the war) the RESTORATION OF DEMOCRACY!

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19430923.2.5.2

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 308, 23 September 1943, Page 3

Word Count
544

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 308, 23 September 1943, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 308, 23 September 1943, Page 3