PROHIBITION
RESULTS IN AMERICA
In the course of an address to women at tho itlne Triangle Hall yesterday afternoon, Mis.s Grace L. Houlder, who has come to the Dominion to assist in the campaign of the New Zealand Alliance, gave an account of the results following the currying of Prohibition in the United States. Since the adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment eight years ago, 95 per cent, of the territory of the United States, she said, had become "dry," and 65 per cent, of the population was enjoying freedom from the handicap of drink. Never was Prohibition sentiment in America stronger than to-day, said Miss Houlder; never in its history was Prohibition more secure. It came because the" people wanted it, and it was staying for the same reason. It had come to stay. It was a fixture in the life and law of the land. No other achievement in human history had conferred such wonderful benefits upon the masses. The huge sums o£ money for- ! merly spent in drink found their way into tho mothers' pockets instead of those of the saloon-keeper. Tremendously improved conditions resulted, better food, better homes, and more comforts. While wages paid to wage-earners increased in 1920, 25 per cent, in comparison with 1918, the cost of living had been reduced over 25 per cent. Saving banks reported an increase o£ twenty-five million new savings bank depositors since Prohibition. Labour bank held to-day over eleven billion dollars of the workers' savings, while sixty million persons held "insurance" of some kind. As an illustration, said Miss Houlder, of the sentiment of America's best womanhood regarding a maintenance of Prohibition, in March this year, at the great annual Congress of the Women's National League of Law Enforcement—at . which twelve million women were represented— strong resolutions declaring uncompromisingly for the Prohibition policy and its enforcement were carried. The National League of Women Voters, the National Y.W.C.A., and Parent-Teacher Association likewise had declared similarly during the months of April and May of this year, while the National Federation of Women's Clubs, with a membership of over seven million women, had recently demanded "hands off Prohibition" and "no interference with the Volstead Act."
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 55, 14 September 1928, Page 11
Word Count
363PROHIBITION Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 55, 14 September 1928, Page 11
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