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Demociftif Labour Meetings ("We Fight for New Zealand.") WERE WINNING WELLINGTON! CALLING WELLINGTON SUBURBS LES FRAME speaks Knox Hall, High Street, Lower Hutt at 8 tonight: At; Tawa Flat, Town' Hall, - tomorrow night, At Muritai School, night. ' ■ . CALLING WELLINGTON SOUTH! PRIVATE CHARLIE TEECE will speak each night from Tuesday to Friday. Watch for announcements I - ■..__'■ CALLING WELLINGTON EAST! MAJOR WALTER BISHOP epeaks at the Seatoun Kiosk at 8 next Tuesday night. At the Kilbirnie School on Wednesday night. At the R.S.A., Kilbirnie, on Thursday night. CALLING WELLINGTON WEST! STEVENSON McDOUGALL speaks at thp Parish Hall, Karori, at 8 on Tuesday night. At Vogeltown, Hall, Vogeltown, on Wednesday night. At St. Anne's Hall, Northland, on Thursday night. ■ CALLING HUTT! PAT CONNORS will speak at% Hutt. Central School tonight; at Wilford School, Petohe, on Tuesday; at the Union Clothing Hall, Petone, on .Wednesday night; at the Methodist Sunday School Hall, Lower Hutt, on Thursday night: / CALLING OTAKI! JAMES BARNETT speaks at Manawatu Heads on Monday night; at the Century Hall, Levin, on Tuesday night in conjunction with Mrs. John A. Lee. CALLING WELLINGTON! MRS. JOHN A. LEE will speak at the Wellington Town Hall tonight. Tickets from our committee rooms and at public meetings. MRS. LEE HAS JUST RETURNED FROM A TRIUMPHANT TOUR OF THE SOUTH ISLAND. HEAR THIS DYNAMIC PERSONALITY WHO FIGHTS FOR NEW ZEALAND! .\. . : ■ ■; •"■ ——■■ANDI — ( ■'■ ■ ■ Vote Democratic Soldier Labour I VOTE HERRING FOR NORTH! VOTE TEECE FOR SOUTH! VOTE BISHOP FOR EAST! VOTE McDOUGALL FOR WEST! VOTE CONNORS FOR HUTT! VOTE BARNETT FOR OTAKI! SAVE YOUR HAIR! ■ Do not suffer from Alapeola PatehM, Oily •r Dry Hair, Sul» Irritation, Dandruff, and Falflns Hair. AH disease* «f the soal» trtaUd *""" P. W. OALVIN (Consulting Hair and Scalp Specialist) »7 COURTENAY PLACE. TEL. 85-421. Consultation! Free. ;

Prohibition has always FAILED to perform what it promised Prohibition HAS been tried several times (in several countries) and has NEVER » ~ succeeded in performing what it promised. So tragically has it failed that no country in the whole wide world today has prohibition. Prohibition in the United States of America led to the greatest wave of crime that any country has ever known. It created an army of M bootleggers" and produced widespread disrespect for ••.-.. the law. ■•■'^. •■.•■'■ •■:■'■■■■".■ ■■ •' ■■■.'■■■•. :;.;.. •' . "■■■- '■■■■- ■■.;■■■■ ■ . It resulted in countless victims being killed and blinded with wood alcohol and ■\.?-9thfiE ; ;-pdJSo7lQUsic9n^ -.•■.';:'. . • r'--t':.i-.'-'^.''Sy:: ,\-■;■'■■■ '■ The Chicago Herald and Examiner on 26th May, 1922, (after prohibition had been in force three years) said "It is estimated that there are now in the United States five, million drug addicts*'. Finally, it cost many millions of dollars in attempts at enforcement.' No wonder the repeal of prohibition was an important plank In the Democratic Party's platform in 1932. r ' No wonder that America in the first year of Franklin D. Roosevelt*s Presidency repealed prohibition by the largest majority ever recorded by the American people on any issue (less than 10% of the electors voted for prohibition). Prohibition has failed to add to the happiness, prosperity or well-being of any country or peopje. '";■': Prohibition has failed wherever tried --failed utterly, completely, calamitously. New;'' Zealand cannot afford to "experiment" with prohibition. It HAS BEEN experimented with, and proved a disastrous failure. :

VOTE CONTINUANCE STRIKE OUT THE TWO BOTTOM LINES "Hold Fast to Liberty" HERE'S THE j^ V that Labour Promised f IM*r MilC Under IQ__l? Utfkmh 17*39 Labour IZ*tJ g s TOTAL SALARIES >/«• g±j\*\ #vi\/\ /irr AAA AAA Jl^^ANfc wages £6S»0QO»OO0 £155,000,000 JposfoFHCE £49,400,000 £84,400,000 ' SAVINGS BAKKS . , --.. ■•:;-•';,;.:, fill *^Z* ISa»8O8 366,614 HR^Js^ HOMES ' • • JTrf; number of \: 5 27Q ', ■ 6 395 #& FACTORIES -.- ?***r . , °>*7* |g| I H[llill»i i . ;.Lj.;::/x\TOv.iv.-.r:.vjj.v.T.-".v.-."-..-V-. " i ■—————_____■_____•____________ m&AMO £155,566,000 " ; _ -» _jom

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19430920.2.97.3

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 70, 20 September 1943, Page 7

Word Count
600

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 70, 20 September 1943, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 70, 20 September 1943, Page 7