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Barraclongh’s Msgic rfervine for that aching tooth, 1/6.

You Can Pass It On TO YOUR GRANDSON WHEN YOU ARE TOO OLD TO RIDE IT YOU CAN’T WEAR IT OUT. With the unerring good taste of master designers built into ! it, the new RUDGE makes a strong appeal for popular favour. ONLY EASY £79 TERMS ; RATA. Agents for—TAIHAPE, MANGAWEKA. HUNTERVILLE, RATA.

■■DHigillllßlllHlillMßßliH JUDGE PRIESTS JUDGMENT. ■ Volsteadism Increases Crime. j BMBUBBMMBBHMBmfIBanaraaaaKnKKIMHBMHnBBaBnBBan THE INDICTMENT PROVED. I *■'S H .r,.-/ I B I Mr. H. S. Priest, formerly Judge Priest, is a distinguished lawyer: a ft member of the American Bar Association and the Presbyterian Church. ft He was born in 1853, and took his LL.D, degree in 1872. He was appointed a judge in 1894, and is now head of the firm of Priest & Boyle, of § St. Louis. g AN OPEN LETTER TO THE ELECTORS OF NEff ZEALAND. H Saint Louis, ft 20th April, 1925. g The outstanding and self-evident facts of Gorernment by ft enforcement attempting to control private and personal habits are ft these! ft Since January 1820, when arrests and raiding began under the Bl Volstead Act, the official violations used under it has been accom- 3 panied generally by an unprecedented increase in crimes of violence, including highway robbery and bank robbery, remaining largely 1 ss =2E unpunished and still increasing, while the jails and penitentiaries 3 are being crowded with victims of Prohibition enforcement. § Increase of compulsion by Government for the purposes opposed 3 to right and reason has been accompanied by an increase of the most I§ dangerous crimes against life and property, which compulsionists in power do not check. B Prior to 1920 moonshining or illicit distilling was confined to a few remote districts chiefly in the Southern mountains; it is now general in towns and cities, and also in easily accessible rural fig neighbourhoods. When in 1922 enforcements in the Federal Courts boasted a total of less than 2,000 years in prison-sentences, it 3 had left for 1924 to a total of 3,187 years. It boasted the seizures of 9,746 distilleries in 1921, and of 10,392 in 1924, with S no other result than to emphasize the notorious fact that if it = should seize 15,000 this year, a new increase may still be expected for the year following. 3 3 While such official statistics of failure might be multiplied Indefinitely, but public knowledge of the fact of failure does not depend on them. ■ As far as such enforcement can go in compulsion, disregarding personal rights and public liberty, it makes its own failure more odious as it becomes more manifest. g ft Very truly yours, g

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19251023.2.9.1

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LXXXII, Issue 19436, 23 October 1925, Page 3

Word Count
441

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LXXXII, Issue 19436, 23 October 1925, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LXXXII, Issue 19436, 23 October 1925, Page 3