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A well-kept Lawn adds significance and beauty, to, your home. .' : Other parts of the . garden may b® smart ; neat your Lawn is nicely kept, the home will look smar and fresh. 7 We have ]ust openeid a big range of the BE LAWN MOWERS — PENNSYLVANIA and ATLANTIC . They are ball-bearing, self-sharpening, and beautlint running machines. A child can wor IN’ CASE OE ACCIDENTS, WE CAN SUPPLY ANY SPARE PART REQUIRED. -primes' ltdGISBORNE QUALITY COUNTS Compare the lustre and color of lay’s bread with any other and note the difference. Findlay’s bread is so careiiilly made and properly baked that it retains ps freshness far longer than any other. - Once you have tasted Findlay s white and wholemeal bread, will want no other. WALTER BAKER AND PASTRY COOK. Phone 469.

Co-Lonics Fight. Because they’re always irritable and grouchy.. Feel out of sorts. Tired, Headachy, Livery. And no wonder. A Co-lonic: has a constipated accumulation in the colon (large bowel). Intestinal poisons develop and seep into the system. He soon feels ill, his nerves edgy. Chamberlain's Tablets are the royal road to health. They clear out the colon and eliminate the poisons from the system. They are especially valuable for their effect on the stomach, liver and bowels, strengthening and stimulating those organs in the natural performance of their functions.—Obtainable from E. D. Smith. Chemist. Gisborne. Children like WADE’S WORJVf FIGS. Absolutely harmless. Pleasant to take

Abundant Evitfen S prohibition failure MR. CROWELL is the Assistant Secretary of War in the present administration of the United States- He graduated at the Yale University and became associated with the General Munitions "Board at Washington in 1917. Mr. CroWell has Written a number of Works, and with Mr. Robert Forrest Wilson,, Wrote “ HoW Amer.ca Went to War”in 6 Vo Is., the last of Which "The Armicsof Industries” and "Demobilisation " Was published in 1921. Mr. CroWell resides at Euclid Heights, Cleveland. 930 HANNA BUILD'-JG * CLEVELAND. OM'O 1 Th v e mm -:V ; ' jl|| m m ■ Si m m iM-A i {■ mm m m 1 f\ jf * f « s J.yf,n July Ft ! - \ /I / I r /| A PERSONAL MESSAGE 310 #S : V|ZEAL|nDE%S . / /' ' {■ “if ""* « "p & jp" tt. / orvly possible Jjjfstificaftio| fojr th#' prol^h^ti 1928. _ on of i ox i citing is tha J sush pprohijci tion reduces and/ijfcs Attendant le-fls . I If prohibition fails #f # t|mperancej n|ea^re ; it .h ls let | to stand upon. if#it££ns in th| Un|ted States Ji*tel e/ght years of drastic ' \deraff Prohibition |fford abjjmfan t 'eV^dence of its failure. There/ has b|en a - Jbont inuo\| i fincrease in the yearly rests k'or drunkenness all o|/jKr the United States since 1920; so; that.i|hey ajre now ne%f pre-prohibition levels. Crime, instead of decreasing as the advocates of _ prohibition haJ prophesied, has increased alarmingly. A most discouraging feature of the situation i s Jsfe increase of dr among our youth. This is a master of common country ever. The police of the ci|y of Washington, D. C., may serve as a of what everybody knows is going on everywhere. In ignis city, the capital of,the United States, right under Jse noses of the Federal Authorities charged with the enfore ement of the Prohibitijbn Laws, the average number of persons under |l/years of age for arm kennesjf in the years 1910 to 1917 .46. 7 per year. In .19 26 social workers, police chiefs, j 3 •** and sheriffs from all parts of the country proves bc,yatd. qa-stion that the young generation is drinking to an extent never known under the old laws. jF Happily the general .demoralisation ca.used by this foolish attempt to change over-ntgm, ’b" force the manners' and customs of humanity has aroused/a grtwir.g and insistent cemand for a return to saniwy ay sour.d gover' pent for reasons quite disassociated with froe thirst for liquor, and we ' are j we believe, in sight Jpf some relief from conditions intolerable to patriotic and/whinking Americans. I • wish yomrauccess in your effort in New Zealand to •*, , avoid the ij#iquities of prohibition. ?erv truly ypurs, . Force is folly. For reform Without dangerous reactum-f----m. fM- ■ r~i M If 5 «./• • .. < e . i L UL ~ J■ ,V for iMTSML bQNTINUANC btrikeoutthe Iwq Bottom Linea | « ; •« **- • ••• '• ■•, ' .• ■■ I *h Hal -O' S 3if n \ p T; \ . .■ a: ' ; • , : : -' : , .. . .■■ : " .... . . 1 . - ’ ’

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19281106.2.13.5

Bibliographic details

Gisborne Times, Volume LXVIII, Issue 10736, 6 November 1928, Page 2

Word Count
702

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Gisborne Times, Volume LXVIII, Issue 10736, 6 November 1928, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Gisborne Times, Volume LXVIII, Issue 10736, 6 November 1928, Page 2

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