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WHAT OF NEW ZEALAND?

A COMPARISON WITH U, S. A,

In New Zealand we have not the low saloon system. We have not a tithe of the liquor evils that America had. The Trade here is on the whole, decently conducted by decent men; our people compare more than favourably with any in the world for sobriety. Mr Massey said in the House the other day that "it was a fact that New Zeal* and was a temperate country—* probably the most temperate in the world outside France." '

Some rdorms are necessary, of course—and they ate coming l . They mnst come, just as surely as the steady decline in drunkeness during the past ten years has come. Prohibition in New Zealand would be a disaster, just as it was in Amer* ica. It would create a host of law-evaders. It would bring drugs and dope and crime. It would drive the liquor trade underground. It would at« tract criminals and wasters to this country, for there would be ample opportunities for making fortunes out of sly-grog. Let us think well and long before we risk this "experiment." A licensed trade out in the open can be watched, taxed, regulated and controlled, a poU son booze traffic underground would menace the whole well-being of our nation. Vote Continuance.'

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DUNST19221127.2.50

Bibliographic details

Dunstan Times, Issue 3145, 27 November 1922, Page 9 (Supplement)

Word Count
217

WHAT OF NEW ZEALAND? Dunstan Times, Issue 3145, 27 November 1922, Page 9 (Supplement)

WHAT OF NEW ZEALAND? Dunstan Times, Issue 3145, 27 November 1922, Page 9 (Supplement)