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Business Notice ROYAL MAIL HOTEL POBOMANDBL Courteous Service Moderate Tariff Straight from the Wood! TRY OUR POPULAR IMPERIAL Comfortable Accommodation CLIP. RAE, M R A. G. T. B RYAN ’ BARRISTER AND SOLICITOR, THAMES, Visits Coromandel and Mercury BaJ on second Saturday of each month, Factory meeting day. Attends all Magistrate’s and Warden’s Court sit* tings at Coromandel. Hours: Coromandel 10-11 a.m.; Whitiangh 1 p.m. onwards.

THE EMPIRE’S BEST PAID FIGHTING MEN COME BACK TO ECONOMIC SECURITY X ASK the soldier, the sailor, the airman what he //// » thinks of his pay and allowances. The New I 1 ** Zealand fighting man is the best paid in the I j British Empire. I i And after the war he will come back to a future I ****9 jflan 1 secure and full of opportunity. The opportunity II I mto learn a skilled trade or to complete educa- Illi Ki R. tional studies is his. Finance is available to I KK KK ZB Kg buyhomes and furniture, farms, businesses and I IK U llg tools of trade. Houses for servicemen fire I >9 F uff being built as rapidly as possible. Pensions I "W W for ex-fighting men or their widows are on I KK * Bl a generous scale. Labour’s rehabilitation //// KK K Im plans provide economic security and //// JU W Un ig guaranteed employment gy H J IUI I° r the men and women ' jKff who fought for us. . - ill 6.24 - ‘ NEW VOTERS A Simple Explanation j of the Licensing Poll | Those exercising their votes for the la 1938, 70.96 per cent, of votes were opposed first time have naturally a bigger Ito Prohibition. stake in New Zealand’s future than The trend of opinion is obvious, due to the any other section of the voting public. following reasons: I—New Z«d«nd must keep out prohibition Poll to be taken in conjunction with the General Election ? The reply is that the law which, has so thoroughly demonstrated its stipulates that a referendum on the Licensing calamitous results both economically and question be taken at every General Election, morally. provided that a period of over two years has t elapsed between polls. 2. —New Zealand cannot afford to squander For the information of electors, here is a millions to provide additional proof of an graph showing how the electors voted on acknowledged universal failure. Continuance and Prohibition for the years j . . 1922101938: 3. —A1l the world has rejected prohibition. New Zealand has done so on every 1933 1925 1928 I 1935 1938 ~1 occasion, each time more emphatically I j L J. ~ than the last. ~' 1 let your first vote ““BE FOR CONTINUANCE II| °y [ l*T -STRIKE OUT THE Percentage of Valid Votes Polled TWO BO I lOM LINES for Continuance and Prohibition I ,ote CONTINUANCE

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HPGAZ19430908.2.41.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume 52, Issue 32310, 8 September 1943, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
460

Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume 52, Issue 32310, 8 September 1943, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Hauraki Plains Gazette, Volume 52, Issue 32310, 8 September 1943, Page 7

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