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Slllll^^ m^^^mf;; ; iTS LIKE . 6&JIING '; :IHH|;' COUPOA& M . KiNSUS R/CHER SUDS '--'y."J-J.-^-. ;^^3)K: LOOK! YOU SAVE TIME AND fl|ji9HKl| ' FUEL AS WELL! You're through W^^^P|^P§mß , . the wash so much sooner with Rinso's :' .^^S^KiiiS^jT richer, thicker suds. They're real; ffm^^^^^^K -hustlers! Instead of the usual 15-20;,;: '|ik|r^^^^^B^Rr ' minutes "boil", 2 minutes i» JHli^pfS^Byiaf enough' when Rinso's in the PWj^SP^^^fcL coPPer *' Wkrt a saving intime ■11^ M ONLY 2 MINUTES BOILING - CLOTHES. LAST LONGER:< With clothes in boiling water for. such m *\^ short time, there's less strain on the fabric. fe^*- MWvmL ° *$lw And that's: "ot the only way Rinso save» '• ■ ftlftffir These rich thick suds cleanse without hard :^^^m^ They save you coupons time and CLOTHES BRILLIANT-WITH RlNs'o pii^fW^ I®^M» ALONE-NO EXTRAS . .... . Z*jUw A Rinso waßh" on the line is a picture t : y^sMpr^ Whites dazzling, colours gay as Spring.: All ":^^^^^^. &Qomi yoiir special washing—precious silks'and ; |^^^^|^ /m*Wv woollies — come up fresh and. lovely after ['■ a quick run through these gentle suds. And Rinso does the whole .; ": .: ■' .^^^^ '■ LEVER BROTHERS (N.Z.) LIMITED-PETONE. Z.*3.27Z lIHiH IWIIEI! MILK

eased quickly by these healing vapours WKffiyqgg Your stuffy nose opens BffiL Jmm up, your dull, achy head P^V^Z^ri clears and stays clear whenyoumeltaspoonfulofVicksVapoßubin a bowl of boiling water and breathe in the steaming medicated vapours. Use this treatment at bedtime and get rid of the clogging catarrh mucus that so often keeps you'awake and restless. For added comfort, also put a little Vapoßub up each nostril. Vick Product, inc.. \ti t «nd St., N.Y.

LIBERTY OR LICENCE LIQUOR INTERESTS SHOUT "LIBERTY." THEY MEAN "LICENCE"—LICENCE TO EXPLOIT THE PUBLIC, FLOUT REGULATIONS, SECURE LARGE PROFITS, AND ALSO THAT DANGEROUS DEMAND FOR THE RIGHT OF THE INDIVIDUAL TO LIVE AND DO AS HE PLEASES IRRESPECTIVE OF THE HARM DONE. DO YOU KNOW THAT this superficial and selfish way of life caused the downfall of France, yet liquor interests continue to propagate this shallow idea of liberty. DO YOU KNOW THAT General Gir 3 ud said:— ; "Following 1918 our idea wasn't to profit by the victory to make a better world; it was to enjoy ourselves . . . The family was disappearing . / . The king of all was the corner cafe. Alcohol merchants did well .. .In a race formerly solid, rustic, tough against fatigue, but where alcohol and syphilis had opened suppurating wounds, the skeleton shrank, the tissues became lax, the resistance disappeared." DO YOU KNOW THAT with no liquor restrictions and (it is said) without drunkenness, this light wine drinking nation became the most alcoholised people in the world and this was a major cause of her collapse. Alcohol saps morale. . PROHIBITORY MEASURES INEVITABLE War always bring prohibitory measures and severe restrictions. The last war produced the following expression of public opinion. j Continuance. State Purchase. Prohibition. ! 264,189 ...... 51% 253,827 ...... 48.99%. 241,251 ..44.36% 32,261 .... ..5.93% 270,250 ...... 49.7% . Prohibition ultimately will come as sure as victory. It will not solve all the problems but it will bring a vfst moral and economic improvement. Prohibiting Licences Has Proved A Success Here A few years ago when Parliamentary returns made this possible, crime statistics were published embracing 17 No-Licence towns, and five Licence towns. 56,000 people in No-Licence districts had only 449 summary convictions (8 per thousand), whereas Licence towns with 14,000 people had 553 (39.5 per thousand). The percentage of crime was thus less than one-quarter in the No-Licence areas. For 1938-40 the No-Licence percentage was 1.1.S per thousand drunkenness convictions and 3.67 for the whole Dominion. %rotect the Boys and Girls. Let them grow up in an environment with little liquor temptation and one-quarter the crime. STRIKE OUT THE TWO TOP HUES "ONLY 3 DAYS TOGO £5,000 . ART IiON I«^^a^ffi^ ■ 18th Sept. 1943 29th Sept. 1943 ajTiJpfcfc^jlj^^ -!i~----^___ |1 Messrs. Hammond & McArthur Ltd., ■' iSjfftaSali^tt^^r^Siil H P.O. Box 110. Wellington. > En^SoßHK^HlCiTil 1 Please send me tickets in "A LOT TO LIFT" Art Union (Tickets 2/6 each). I enclose MUd^HHßsflß'F'"T H4 ■ i Postal, Note for £ ; : , also stamped addressed envelope for reply. (Postage K*JUJSSkSb^K^BM^IIIM H stamps not accepted in payment of tickets.) Ifli iMl^nfllßitj^rFTlTl^' 1 NAME — —■ ■ r2lllH»%li«H I 111 111 ■ (Mr., Mrs. or Miss) ' IVA Wrl|MLju4juiir ™ mIAIALJ' . | address -_—— — mi^jlTO^a y*T»l'i'J

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19430915.2.67.3

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 66, 15 September 1943, Page 7

Word Count
684

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 66, 15 September 1943, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 66, 15 September 1943, Page 7