I-LECTION NOTJCES. •MAYORAL ELECTION. , FOR W. "-H; "P. ' BARBER,' ..WHO, AS A COUNCILLOR, HAS GIVEN 25 YEARS' UNTIRING SERVICE TO HIS NATIVE CITY. HE HAS' SERVE® YOU WELL, AND WILL CONTINUE TO DO SO. HIS INTERESTS ARE IYOURS.
AND FINALLY: S/TEN AND WOMEN OF TON,Y r ou will be called upon Today to exercise the great power Democracy gives you. In the matter of Council affairs your election vote is all in all to you as a body politic, and is t.lio only 1 say you aro allowed. New ■Zealand to-doy calls upon its manhood to stay the hand of Disruption and Bolshevism, and that call is being directed to the ears of'the Great Middle Classes. It is your duty to select men to your political positions who can guide our destinies dispassionately into the way of peace. This is no time for accentuating Industrial Strife. 'Our aim is to increase our productivity, multiply our exports, and provide tho wherewithal to pay our heavy war burdens. An' overwhelming win for Labour will only darken the doorway to financial channels, s, Listen to the words of Josiah Holland: THE NATION'S PRAYER: God, give us Men! A. time liko this demands • Stroiig minds,' great hearts, Truo'faith and ready hands: Jlen whum the lust of office does.not kill; .Men. whom , the spoils of office cannot buy; . : •, Meii who possess opinion'and a will; Hen who have honour and who will. *.'. not lis;, ~ Men .who c.in stand before a demagogue, And • scorn 1 his treacherous • flatteries without winking; Tall men, sun-crowned, who livi above the fog, In public duty and in private thinking, , Such'' words only provide food for thought. We look in vain for a fulfilnient of this pathetic appeal for noblo men. H. D. BENNETT. MAYORAL ELECTION. TO THE ELECTORS OF GREATER WELLINGTON. THIS is a critical time for our City, and I ask you to consider the . situation very carefully before deciding whom you will vote for. Don't bo misled in the Triangular Mayoral Contest by the pickers- of tickets—"Citizens," "Labour," ."Business," and others. They aro on thin ice. MR. J. I'. LUKE has given all his time to the City during the War period, and should now be given an Qpportunity to again bring forward the Progressive Policy which he commenced in 1914.
VOTE SOLID FOR. j, r. LUKE FOR MAYOR. | Don't swap horses in the middle of the stream. Yours faithfully, . , , C. C. ODLLN,. Cable Street, City. , . FOR FOR S. GEORGE NATHAN, ■> S. GEORGE NATHAN, ■ CITY COUNCIL. - CITY. COUNCIL. 'i —_ VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE FRED CASTLE FRED CASTLE , FRED CASTLE. FOR THE HOSPITAL BOARD. FOR THE HOSPITAL HOARD. FOR MAYORJOHN P. ,LUKE, : TRIED AND TRUSTED. MAYORAL ELECTION. VOTE FOR pAR DE R ' TO-DAY As a Fitting Token for LONG AND VALUABLE SERVICE BENDERED.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19190430.2.3.2
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Dominion, Volume 12, Issue 184, 30 April 1919, Page 2
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463Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 Dominion, Volume 12, Issue 184, 30 April 1919, Page 2
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