' f •■*■ ■ ■ i There may be some doubt as to when the next General j Election will take place. There can be no doubt of the f energy with which it wIIS be fought or of the tremendous j possibilities which will be in the grasp of the victors. The | good general does not leave the planning of his campaign J till the battle-line is formed, and the good soldier does not j leave his arming and equipping till the trumpets call him to j "the lean Socked ranks" of war. J The struggle is too important to be left to chance or f Unprepared effort. On its issue hang the fortunes of the ! Dominion, probably for years to come. Principles and policies 1 of the gravest &n6 most vital importance to you and to every { Elector will have to be settled. Remember, that you will be 1 helping to make New Zealand history, and that New Zealand | will be making world history in Politics and Legislation. This is the time of preparation before the first guns of the engage* } ment open, when every moment should be occupied in the ~* 1 collection of supplies of ammunition and the digging of jj entrenchments. j Remember that every Elector will be expected to take j his or her place in the firing line. Remember that YOUR I vote may be needed to turn the tide of victory or defeat, that I YOUR pSace is up at the front, that your friends and family jj may rally to the flag of YOUR opinion, that YOUR enthusiasm " j may swing into the charge a solid group of the votes of your \ own circle or coterie. • , ' \ In your arguments and discussions, a well-placed fact,'a shrewd reasoning may \ bear fruit. Such facts and reasoning you will find in abundance iu the new Ency- ;. clopaedia Britarmica, and its reputation is such.that a quotation from it is always .., ) admitted to be indisputable. Every social and political question is treated fully and -. > logically by acknowledged masters. With the Encyclopaedia Britannica behind you, : there is no heckling or cross-questioning you cannot hold your own in, no debate in..... ' \ which you are not able to be master of the subject. The reading of the Encyclopaedia, \ Britannica will throw light on every advanced theory 'and proved fact in Economics"' and Legislation. ; Now is the time to learn all you can of the burning questions that will engage ' the Electorate later on. Local or National Prohibition, the whole great Drink Question,' the Land Laws, Socialism and Syndicalism, Strikes and Arbitration, the Defence Act, Army, Navy and Territorials, Railways and Tariffs and Taxes—do you know all there is to know of these? Your vote may be a vital and deciding factor in the struggle." Your knowledge at some point in a critical argument may influence other votes. ■ Just such knowledge as you require—clear, crisp and concise,, full and compre- * ; tensive, of irrefutable authority—just such information as will buttress your arguments ; with unshakable strength, you will find'freely in the new Cambridge' University (11th) : Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. ■ : You may have doubts as to how you will vote at the ' requires no effort to read, ami knowledge of the highest \, forthcoming Election. It may be to your credit if you possible standard is absorbed unconsciously because of :.; have, as showing that you do not approach subjects of tho pleasurable interest in tho reading. ' J importance to the national welfare in any. violently Exactly sueh a work is the new (11th) Edition of fit* ;■ biassed or partisan spirit. But it is .1 duty that you Encyclopaedia Britannica. It fulfills every qualification' ' ;. owe to your country and community that you should which is required of a book of reference for tho proper ■ vote, and it is still more a duty that you should use study of every question on which your vote will 1* ■ j. your vote with full knowledge and intelligence. Study solicited. : every item that forms a plank in your own or the other Tq (]] .,. e wme mmmb m t) , e D(?ftmcc Ac{ . vou " \ party's platform. Arm yourself with fects and authon- nmv mnt {q hmy in , Krvfc , ■ ;. ties, not only for your own guidance but for tho fray - s .„ forcCj . ]ia of wjt hag ;■■ of argument and debate you may be «,rawn into. and what Jt hM articie ..Oonecription" in th* \ For -the study of the various questions that will soon Encyclopaedia Britannica gives you the fsicts you required : :. become prominent there are two methods open to you. 'j' o j-gfute another argument on the Liquor Question you j You may borrow - or buy many tejtt-booke, pamphlets, mav w ; s i, j 0 ] lavo reliable, information on what the v Blue-books, reports, and various books of reference, Gothenburg System is, and whether competent authorise* .; diligently wado through them and attempt to master i, avo approved it or not. Under "Liquor Laws" the ■■'-.■ ■ their contents, or run hastily over them to pick out Encyclopaedia Britannica gives you the fullest and latest i. the eyes of any items on which you want information; details. And so through the whole range of political ;■■ you may attend meetings and listen to the speakers and an( j legislative questions tho Encyclopaedia Britannira ;. their arguments; you may read regularly tho locaJ and can oe depended on to supply tho truths of ..history, tb* ■: overseas papers and mc-gazices. views of the most advanced thinkers, the hard iacti and ;; That ia one method. Its disadvantages are obtrioue. logic of tho practical workers. . ; It costs much money to buy all the books you want. jj, e arran gemfcnt of its articles and % all-embracing \ ; It requires the highest knowledge to discriminate in the lu(lcx mak<J it B j mp ij e itj. itself to put one's finger un- ' \. buying. It will consume a mountain of time and energy f, os jtatingly on any portion of its contents.' In spite oif i to read or even lightly skim through tfceai. Meetings the enormous bu i k oi its information tho use of thin :.. and speaker* might suit you better, but most of these Jndia (or mh y pnper has brong i lt , tno dj nl(ms j ons o f ; are likely to be biassed, and even if pot you can only tfle work d(wa to g 9 slcndcr vo j umeSj beautifully bound . . ; attend one meeting on one subject each night, and you ; n cUh or , eatkrj md oocm i ttg a total space- of 30 :' may waste time in hearing much that you do not want incheS) orj ju the doubfe . t ier bookcaeo supplied with it, f: to hear, and on which your knowledge is already fairly a floor of lg by 9 incbeSj ond waJl Bpace 34 ; nollcj . .... < complete. To keep in touch with the world's doings it hjgh In the flcxiblo lflatber hhulings £ wlunw my b(J » is always necessary to read papers and periodicals. But doub]cd back cover to eover witnout damagCj and - - j these only supply news on what »of the most recent he]d Jn o)]e baJ]d al)d read ;„ con)forti or it wiu opM '; happening. They tell nothing to-day, for inrtanoe, of ouj . wMe and fla( . m , iahh at m pago wbere ~. }mJ ,- tho conditions of the Anglo-Japanese Treaty or the Pro- be o , )encdi ■■.'!■ hibition laws of Maine. • ■ ' ■; _~ ~ ~ j . . . • The Minimum Price nnd the terms accepted m nnv- ~ The other method is to nave in your possession one , . . ~ ■.-, , ~ ~.. . .... •■. . :■ , , . ~, ~ f. ~ ~ ment bring tho Encyclopaedia Bntanniea withm reach ■ * single work covering fullv every subject m the wide - _ . ~, " ' j worid, everv word of which » authoritative and indisnut- ° f '««*««««•. °» e g u »'f ««» J<» !r orfor | able, in which every debatable subject i. dispassionately the m ™*f° c } oi »«d bookcase, > viewed in tho cold light of Reason, and, where necessary, R » d ma - v com '^ te W*** l f t,w rate °, a P» M » i, treated by acknowledged leaders on tho two sides of • I m " D{h ., or k ° n other coa« BW nttmw, particulars of any question; a work which tells concisely and succinctly *" el, . m]] h ° e«pphed on receipt of your name and the results of various legislative esporinenti in differ-ent " ddre3e on tlle fonn belo,v, countries in the past and pros-J(it; a work which is so Wiißtever party you may support at tho poll, however arranged that every item of its information is pwfeotly your rote may go at the Election, VOTE NOW for the accessible and can be picked out without the waste of greatest political educator in existence:—tho University 'a moment; above all, a work which is written so in- of Oafflbridge'e new (11th) edition of the Encyclopaedia terestihgly, end illustrated so well and profusely, that it ■ Britannica. Send your uame and address ou To THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRUSS, this form if you wish to have 2 Harris StrSBT, WkLMKGTOH. (P.O. Box 142). fuli particulars of the Kacyclopaedia Britannica, prices, and MAMS ....*...........„ ~ ,•_■■■;■ specimen pages of the, work. . . Address ....»..„;,........ ■„. ' "
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19120511.2.83.2
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Dominion, Volume 5, Issue 1437, 11 May 1912, Page 7
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1,490Page 7 Advertisements Column 2 Dominion, Volume 5, Issue 1437, 11 May 1912, Page 7
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