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For the Man on the Land ! and all who require a strong Reliable Watch that gives faithful service year after year — § Stewart Dawson's EMPIRE LEVER WATCH is the , best possible investment. A highly-finished 15-Jewel Watch, at a keen price. Sturdy Nickel open-face case, 40s. Hunting Case, 455. Thousands sold; many testimonials received. °; d " D " eel *- Stewart Dawson's, Jewellers Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Dunedin. Engage Experienced and Reliable Men. V AUCTION SALES Well Conducted Mean MORE MONEY TO YOU, V \TlT*s& R> C^C% Furniture, Business and Property /i a i xa/m d r. \ ' Auctioneers —— — ; (Incorp. A. L. Wilson & Co.) , w „. . . Tel. 20-617 :: 107 Customhouse Quay, Wellington. HOTEL AND PROBATE VALUERS. BRANCH OFFICES—AUCKLAND: 11 Commerce Street. ' CHRISTCHURCH: 102 Gloucester Street. DUNEDIN: 111 Stuart Street. t AUSTRALIA— SYDNEY: 112 iving Street. NEWCASTLE: Scott Street. MELBOURNE: 214-6 Little Lonsdale Street. BRISBANE: 215-217 Adelaide Street. i PERTH: 39-41 King Street. "* . ADELAIDE: King William Street. . TASMANIA: Hobart. SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1925. THE DEATH CHOICE ♦ ' Why " Antis " Fight Middle Issue THERE is a great argument as to whether the triennial liquor plebiscite should be on the question of life or death of the trade, or on the so-called "triple issue.'.' THE "triple issue" comprehends not only life or death, but * the third possibility of .reform. In other words, on^the triple voting paper, the elector can vote not only "to be" or "not to be." He can also vote "to be better." THEREFORE, eleVly, the argument over the "triple issue" * g6es to the very root of the position of the irreconcilable Prohibitionist. He will not have, any refo.rm issue on the voting j^aper if he can avoid it. HIS aim is to preclude all possibility of reform of the liquor trade. He seeks, by means of the triennial threat and other devices,. to keep the trade m conditions that render selfrct'orm impossible. , ' HIS purpose is not only to prevent any actual reforming being done, but to impede the creation among the electors of a reforming psychology, so far as. alcoholic liquor is concerned. HOW inevitable, it is, then, that the irreconcilable Prohibitionist should try to eliminate the middle choice (State Purchase and Control) from the present ballot paper! His striving to get back to the life-or-death' 1 alternative (and m this case life means only a shackled life) is motived by a will to kill, an intolerance, of cure. BUT the vqters — even hundreds of thousands of the Prohibition voters — are not intolerant of remedy, as is the irreconcilable Prohibitionist. They are Prohibition voters merely because, through hope deferred, they despair of adequate reform. But they are now realising that the cause of the delay of reform is the intolerant conditions imposed by Prohibitionists. :IN the opposite camp stand the " Corporate Controllists. " In- * stead of eliminating the "middle issue," they say better it. Corporate Control is a reform more promising than State Purchase or Control. • CORPORATE Control means an 80 per cent, private shareholding -with a dividend limited to 10 per cent., and a 20 per cent. • Government shareholding, with a Government majority on the directorate. This partnership of State and private ownership would control the whole licensed trade. THIS ia construction. Prohibition is simply destruction. The * Government should insist on a "triple issue" voting paper, including Corporate Contrpl. ' It should also persist with the nine years or. ten years polling period." "■-■.. Under these conditions reform of the liquor trade may have a chance. Under existing conditions it has little or none. Only rabid anti-reformists can stand for the present law. Double-Barrelled Oamaru Oamaru appears to be angry because a Mr. Lough, a a member of the Dunedin committee arranging for entertaining American naval visitors, is reported to have caused laughter by saying: '.'I wouldn't force them to go to a . place like Oamaru!" This is interpreted as a gibe at ' Oamaru 's no-license condition. "Oamaru," writes -a' correspondent,' "has filed its defence under two heads : (1) That a no-license town is just the place to which , bluejackets from •; Prohibited America should be sent, to preserve them from the horrors of drink; . (2) That as a matter of fact,.' just as much liquor : can be obtained m Oamaru as anywhere else. It is sure no. mere one-gun towii that can put up a doublebarrelled defence like that. " . ■> In the finish, Oamaru did receive its American visitors, 300 of them, and they were charmed with the White Stone City, the Cadiz of New Zealand. ' ' . ' ...-

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTR19250822.2.25.4

Bibliographic details

NZ Truth, Issue 1030, 22 August 1925, Page 4

Word Count
734

Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 NZ Truth, Issue 1030, 22 August 1925, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 NZ Truth, Issue 1030, 22 August 1925, Page 4