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f, 1 ^ V FOR YOUR p A MTPV STOCK DP SUMMER I 1^1 NOW ee Cordials From 2/3 Siravita Custard .... 1/3 De Luxe Extract .... 1/7 Spanish Cream, 3 for 1/4$ S.H. Extract 1/3 £ Tcmato Juice . . . . 1/2 £ Blancmange Powder, 1/5 A Salad Dressings, S.H. Custard 1/6 1/1, 1/4, 2/1 Fruit Chutney 2/31* i's Mustard 2/4£ _____ ^enco ^ Fiavoured. 10-^d ZL of MATCHES 1/5 SWEDISH Rest Safety. Ample Stocks SPECIALS UarPICH.ES 2 Peas and Sance 1/9 1/lli Save 3d Save 5id A REAL PANTRY REQUIREMENT SELF-HELP The Store that Brought Prices Down and Keeps Them Down. LEVIN AND OTAKI. — ■ ifp©/- pn[m tumsr% ma Isn't it a gift you'd !ove to receive yourseif? , 0 „ a Christrnas present to be enjoyed the whole year round. Philette is a tiny radio, small enough to be carried about easily . . . but in its colourful, plastic case is a powerful 5-valve set, with a rea! richness of tone. Make a Xmas gift of a Philette to that "someone" who deserves the best. The special Philette rack seems to capturf1 the very spirit of Christrnas. Avaiiable in ivory, Walnut, Mottled Red, and Mottled Green. P8yif 8 BL 8 188 ^18 local dealer: mMmrn 1F3P a. l. robinson j // // Opp. Grand Hotel, //£%/ LEVIN. PKone 518. ' — -s ! THE ELECTIONS ! WHAT IS AT STAKE? i j Mazzini defined democracy as "the progress of all, ; through all, under the leading of the wisest and the best." j That. briefly put, is the issue to be decided at-the I ballot box 011 November 27. The decision will not rest | with those who are devotees of either party, but with ' the "man in the bowler hat" — -the ordinary citizen who j cares more for the welfare of the State than for the j triumph of an ephemeral political organisation. The sal'ety of the State, the y-ood of the whole body ; of citizens and "the progress ov all" depend upon the j prineiples which underlie political action rather than upon the immediate "bread and butter" benefits £hat are so commonly discussed today. Incorporated into our British history, the result of long and at times bloody conflict, are great prineiples of freedom — liberty of conscienee, freedom of thought and action, the right of private judgment and the independence of the individual. The application of these prineiples to national social life resulted in the founding of our British system of justice, our Parliamentary institutions, our national system of education, our political, social and personal freedom, and the development of character that has won for the British er, his sons and his rtaughters, a moral influence throughout the world's peoples. These prineiples were incorporated into the Constitution and the administration of New Zealand by men who were among "the wisest and the best" of their day. Under the application of these prineiples this Dominion has had a century of wonclerful progress. If that progress is to continue the electors must secure the return of "the wisest and the best" to Parliament. Who are they — to which Party clo they belong? They may belong to either Party. They are men who believe in and are prepared to maintain and defend these great British Protestant prineiples. Men without divided allegiance who are proud of the Union Jack. They are known to electors in each electorate. ISSUED BY THE LEGISLATION COMMITTEE OF THE GRAND ORANGE LODGE OF NEW ZEALAND. V r'~ M — , . . • > rl '

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHRONL19461121.2.26.1

Bibliographic details

Chronicle (Levin), 21 November 1946, Page 7

Word Count
560

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Chronicle (Levin), 21 November 1946, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Chronicle (Levin), 21 November 1946, Page 7

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