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"five big facts That Mean Everything to You E| « I The BED-ROCK FOUNDATIONS of your country, of your OWN prosleciors ® P erit y' rest u P on tiie SOIL. The Farmer is the backbone of this country. | That is not a political catch-phrase, it is a SOLID FACT. FIVE BIG ESSENTIAL FACTS of our National Existence are: 5 WOOL : MEAT m DAIRY PRODUCE fe GRAIN FRUIT Where would' New Zealand be ;without the BIG FIVE? We could not carry on. So long as the BIG FIVE prosper we can face the TREMENDOUS RESPONSIBILITIES which the war has placed upon us. they prosper the better for the country, and the better for you. A wonderful climate and a splendid soil have combined to make New Zealand—for its size—the Richest and Most Productive Farming Country in c the World. Our BIG FIVE HELPED TO WIN THE WAR , :: :: :: The Big Five are Keeping you in your jobs. :: :: « ELECTORS! Here are ,5 Points for ..you, to repember. when yoii go to the ballot box. 51. When you measure up year Candidates think of.. tSie -. BIG 'FIVE. ffP® 2. To put the Big Five on the 100 per cent, mark of production, you. must BACK UP the MAN on the LAND. 3. Put. the Right Men in, and Back Up the Farmer. ... :! , . 4. Massey's Men are the Right Men for they will give Security..and Progress. 5. Vote Massey and you Stimulate. Production and' ' amongst ••all • Classes. • f YOUR Choice! There are three men. to-day who are asking.-you"for. a mandate to run this country; \z HOLLAND / : WARD :MASSEY •</\ The Extremist . The' Tilled Capitalist The Farmer. i 1. Strikes 1. Wild Gat Sehsnraes 1. -'Practical and Safe * • | 2. to-Sio® Taeties : » '2." .-impossible Promises j, ' j- •'---l.fc. .Against Tnwts fir-Proflte^ 13. Land 'Nationalisation <' 13. Party Strife if' I I 3.v Keeps'his Promises , |4. Bolshevist Ideas J 14. Lives on the Pastjll y t'. 4. Down on Class Privi|Bge \ | 5. Social Revolution;'' j5. .-Weak in Eme'rgend)|-/' /. 5. Ms Things D®ne i/ I | The sum total is HOLLAND'S Sum total of WARDISM'S I Massev's BIG Five. J idea of the Big Five. Big Five. / J Hl_l 111 Mir . raCTrooKJaitTamnsiaiiiiranaomTOwaißOTßasrasßswsainwmsranaOTniOTtMOT^Jl I HOLLAND is for class warfare. Strikes, go-slow WARD is for partv strife, and puts party and MASSEY once worked on a farm for 255. a week. . I Jf ~, .. - ' _ A _ T . * A■ ■' ... , „ xi. t He-worked'hard then. To-day, as Prime Minister, / tactics, and industrial unrest are the DEADLY self first, and everything else after. He thus hampers he is the hardest worked man in the country. But /' ENEMIES OF THE BIG FIVE producing industries the eSorts of those who want to push along and'get ; he gets things done. He understands right down to oJ this country. things done. He is out of touch witii » U r, yet iie would ally himself with it to gain a party, advantage try. He realises that without these this country You know what happens when the agitator works over the men who want to get on with the business of . simply could not carry on. up a strike at the wharves, at the mines, on the rail- the country. How would Ward have grappled with MASSEY is a small farmer. Guthrie, Minister ways, or any class of labour that has to do with" the big 1913 strike that threatened the products that for Lands, is a small farmer. These men realise that ~ „ ~ a i . „ ™ , it is to the small farmer, to closer settlement, to mten- • transport? A dead loss to the producers. And keep this country going? Electors, you KNOW he sivQ {armingi that this country must look for its that means a dead loss to you. would have failed. prosperity. HOLLAND Is Impossible. WARD is living on the past of Ms bygone Leaders, VOTE THEM BOTH OUT Think 'of the Big Five and VOTE IN REFORM - SECURITY - PROGRESS

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19191204.2.4.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 60, 4 December 1919, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
643

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 60, 4 December 1919, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 60, 4 December 1919, Page 2

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