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Farms at Reduced Prices. ACRES, all m grass, 6-roomed dwelling, large shed, etc. All XUU ploughable, subdivided into 10 Paddocks. Splendid water. Handy to Railway. Price, £39 per Acre. £BOO cash, balance 7 years al 6 per cent. < _ _ QQ ACRES. Hauraki Plains, all in grass. House, 5 rooms, Cowshed, etc. TVell-drained and subdivided. Price, £45 per acre, Easy Terms. -1-1 K ACRES. Hauraki Plains; 90 Acres grassed. Balance Bush. Road and rive r frontage. Good buying at £2B per Acre. Easy Terms. Camping Season Will Soon Be Here! COME AND LET US SELL YOU A SEASIDE SECTION. SEASIDE COTTAGE, of 4 Rooms, Verandah, Motor Shed; 2-acre Section. Price. £400; £l5O Cash. Balance 3 years at 7 per cent. For TOWN SECTIONS and DWELLINGS. COME AND INSPECT OUR LIST. HOMESEEKERS, READ THIS:— \ (-ROOMED MODERN BUNGALOW, every convenience; 2 large sections. Price, only £1250. This is a snip for anyone wanting a Home. FARMERS’ CO-OP. AUCTIONEERING CO., Lt i POLLEN STREET THAMES.

AN UTTER FUTILITY. PROHIBITION IS NOT TEMPERANCE. A Nation of Hypocrites and Lawbreakers. m The Hon. P. B. O’Sullivan is the Democratic Representative for the Delay Division of ConneotiouS in the U.S.A. House of Representatives. Sixty-Eighth Congress. GEORGE S. GRAHAM. PA.. CHAIRMAN. LEONIDAS C. OYER. MO. ROBERT Y. THOMAS. If- KY. «. D. BOIES. lOWA. HATTON W SUMNERS.TEX. C. A. CHRISTOPHERSON, S. DAK. ANDREW J. MONTAGUE. VA* JAMES W. WISE. GA. JOHN N TILLMAN. ARK. FRED H.DOMINICK.S-C. SAMUEL C. MAJOR. MO. ROYAL* H. WELLER. N.Y. PATRICK B. O'SULLIVAN, CONN. RICHARD YATES. ILL. —IRA G. HERSEV. ME. ISRAEL M. FOSTER. CHIO. CARL C MICHENER. MICH. ANDREW J. HICKEY. IND. . NATHAN a PERLMAN. N.Y. .OSCAR J.LARSON.MINN. IJ.AWIKS KURTZ.M. - ;-.«4iisa*aflst HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES U.S. COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY* * WASHINGTON. D. C. GUILFORD S. JAMESON. CLERK. "'b 15th April, 1925, AN OPEN LETTER TO THE PEOPLE OF NEW ZEALAND, New Zealand has the experiences of this country to guide, her against any unfortunate program of legislation concerning prohibition. The prohibitory movement in America is bu.t another demonstration of* the fact that the enactment into law of any morals-regulating statute is ,an utter futility. Five years of prohibition in this country Serve but to increase our belief that a vital distinction must be made between prohibition and temperance. The nation which, is temperate in its habits will always be more successful than its alcoholic neighbour. The means to be employed to make a nation temperate are not those imposed upon us by the vicious Eighteenth Amendment and the Volsted Act, but rather should they be those of education and moral suasion, Temperance was advancing in America with great strides until 1920. Since that time we have become a nation of hyprocites and law-breakers. All types and all ages are now in the drihking class. The rich, the poor, the young and the old are carrying flasks on their persons, or brewing their concoctions in their homes. In the old days it was an impossibility to observe a ,young boy or a young girl under the influence of liquor. The sight of them in an intoxicated condition is to-day but commonplace. Prohibition is responsible for this and prohibition must pay the penalty at some future date. If the people of New Zealand are far-seeing, they will approach the question of national prohibition in the light of the morbid and disastrous experiences in America. Tours very truly, =^£E££Es3H3s Profit by Experience : CONTINUANCE!

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS19251024.2.48.1

Bibliographic details

Thames Star, Volume LIX, Issue 16627, 24 October 1925, Page 10

Word Count
564

Page 10 Advertisements Column 1 Thames Star, Volume LIX, Issue 16627, 24 October 1925, Page 10

Page 10 Advertisements Column 1 Thames Star, Volume LIX, Issue 16627, 24 October 1925, Page 10