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PRESIDENT HARDING NAILS DOWN THE LIQUOR LIE. The liquor combine asks you to believe that there is more crime in America under prohibition and that the nation vould bo better off if it had unlimited booze. This is what President Harding Bay»\— "In ever/ community mi>n and women have had an opportunity now to know what prohibition means. They know thai debts are more promptly paid; that men t?.ke home the wa'/es that once were wasted in the saloons; that families are better clothed and fed, and more money finds its way into the savings banks. The liquor traffic was destructive of much that was most precious in American life. In the face of so much evidence on that point, what conscientious man would want to let his own selfish desires influence him to vote to bring it back? In another generation I believe that liquor will have disappeared, not merely from our politics, but from our memories.'' Let New Zealand lead the Empire. Vote PROHIBITTON.HAdvt.)

While you are community singing th« cheer germs are busy, go are other germs. Arm yourself with Nai'»l.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19220927.2.15.3

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LIX, Issue 18206, 27 September 1922, Page 6

Word Count
184

Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 New Zealand Herald, Volume LIX, Issue 18206, 27 September 1922, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 New Zealand Herald, Volume LIX, Issue 18206, 27 September 1922, Page 6