ES3sssrara3' J To ensure a keen appetite and Hie certainly of good digestion, Mother Scigcl's Syrup is the digestive tonic you should take. It, tones, strengthens and regulates the organs of digestion—stomach, liver, and bowels —and enables them to do their important work efficiently and without strain. Unless your food is properly digested, you cannot obtain from it the nourishment required to repair «ll§§| the daily wear aad tear of life, and you are f||| bound to suffer in health and strength. Put _ jgft Mother Seigel's Syrup to the test at the first * -* fCr sien of stomach or liver trouble, and note the speedy benefits. SHARPENS'APPETITE AMD
jlic opinion is so strongly against prohibition, there is a danger that some electors may feel that their vote will not be required. Avoid this danger of being caught unawares by a minority vote. Remember it Is possible for one vote to carry prohibition to New Zealand's everlasting regret. Don't leave it to the other fellow ——he may be leaving it to you. jjftff> j|L4Pi For thirty years prohibition has lain like a log across the path of true temperance legislation. New Zealand already stands head and shoulders above other countries as a land of temperate and lawabiding citizens. An attempt to impose total abstinence by threat of fines and imprisonment is absolutely unwarranted. Such an attempt insults every free man and woman. No religion excepting Mohammedanism condones prohibition. Christianity condemns it. The principle of persecuting the user instead of punishing the abuser is as un-Christian as it is un-British. Prohibition denies those rights that no free man will yield. It invites lawlessness. It saps the moral fibre by creating a disrespect for a law that cannot be respected, which spreads to laws in general. Prohibition has ever left a trail of unparalleled crime and corruption. It is a law that has caused more wrong-doing 4 Prohibition would cost millions annually. It would immediately throw THOUSANDS OUT OF EMPLOYMENT- causing unrest and business depression. Prohibition is doubly a burden. It cuts off a valuable source of revenue, and on top of that requires a huge expenditure for its administration. It would impose BURDENSOME TAXATION at a time when the most cast it out. . have tried prohibition; already six have No country has ever had prohibition back ! * all, remember—however strongly you feel on the is only your vote that counts. Silence gives consent.
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Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXI, 13 November 1928, Page 9
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399Page 9 Advertisements Column 1 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXI, 13 November 1928, Page 9
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