Voters m M. \ «w\\ ypwr fmd n^mr / V Here is a Leader you can Trust That is the story in a nutshell. Mr. Coates has a record as a private individual, citizen-soldier, Minister of the Crown and Prime Minister that inspires confidence. Coates has a policy which gives assurance that he is determined to promote the happiness and well-being of the people of this Dominion by every sound and legitimate means at his disposal. — “ What is a Woman’s Vote Worth? A woman, on Election Day, goes to the polling booth, gets her voting paper, enters the secret enclosure, emerges presently with the voting paper in her .hand, drops it into the ballot box, and passes out into the street. Coates won the confidence of his “digger" mates as their leader in France; he has won the confidence of his followers in Parliament. Tried, tested and trusted, he now asks your support and backing in the big and responsible task he has undertaken. WOMEN VOTERS your votes will decide the day. VOTE FOR COATES A Vote for any of these Candidates is a Vote for COATES: • • V Patea: H. G. DICKIE, Hawera. Stratford: E. WALTER, Doug las, Taranaki. Taranaki: C. E. BELLRINGER, New Plymouth. She has voted—she has done something she can’t recall. A woman can recall a hasty word; shie can change her mind a hundred times a day. if she likes. But: she cannot recall her vote once it is in the ballot box. What is a woman’s vote worth? It might be, and could be worth a great deal to her fellow-women—-to the whole of New Zealand. It might mean all the difference between good government and bad. It might easily mean all the difference between prosperity and disaster. If the women voters of this country stand solid they can safeguard the future and straighten out every social problem which affects their interest. One of the conditions that appeals most strongly to women is Order. Women have a real horror of ’disorder, riots, disaffection. They have an instinct for safety and security. They don’t like taking risks. These are natural feelings because they are founded upon woman’s anxiety for the safety of her home and her home life, i lYofl take no risks when you vote for Mr. Coates or for a candidate who is pledged to support Mr. Coates. Do not be side-tracked into voting for any candidate who is not a Coates’ candidate. Cast a vote on polling day that will leave you no room' for anxiety—a vote you will not wish to recall. V Give Coates, the young New Zealander, his chance to carry put his policy for the betterment of all classes. J US
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Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 2 November 1925, Page 9
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566Page 9 Advertisements Column 1 Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 2 November 1925, Page 9
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