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EDUCATION.

THE MOST COSTLY SCHOOL IN THE WORLD. There is a school where the fees are not paid in coin alone; a scjhpol where payment is made in human lives. It is the school for drunkards. Every bar-room is such a school. It is in the bar-rooms of N.Z. where the young men learn to become drunkards. The mothers and fathers, the wives and sweethearts, pay the fees in tears and anguish. In the year 1921, according to the Police Reports, the number of persons not previously convicted of drunkenness but convicted during that year was 5894. What has that meant in the homes concerned ? Can you express it in coin ? Prohibition removes the means pf temptation. As Admiral Sims has said of the U.S.A., “We have shut up the schools for drunkards. We have saved the rising generation from the drink.” Prohibition is just common-sense — just exactly that—removing the danger, abolishing the cause. New Zealanders can shut up the schools for drunkards at the next poll by voting Prohibition.—N.Z. Alliance Publieitv (60).

"We call them cells, but they are really little rooms and better than the rooms at some hotels,” said Miss' M. E. Baughan, in an address at Christchurch on ‘The Phychology of' the Delinquent.’ when referring to the cells at the women’s prisons at Wellington and Addington. Miss Baughan added that these cells or rooms were kept spotlessly clean.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HPGAZ19220906.2.5.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXIII, Issue 4463, 6 September 1922, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
232

Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXIII, Issue 4463, 6 September 1922, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume XXXIII, Issue 4463, 6 September 1922, Page 1

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