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[Printed by arrangement with the Kaipara No-vLicense League.] jA Reply to the Brewer's Placard : STUDY the Meaning of PROHIBITION ? 1. WHAT THE ISSUES ARE. 2 HOW PROHIBITION 3. The Effects of Proiiibitiofn, DEMANDS HAVE GROWN. local no-license. Under the raw [1910] Licensing Act, the old Takes effect in. 6 months after carried. It issue of Reduction is eliminated. In its place In 1893 No-License meant No Hotel Bars. then abolishes all hotel licenses in the affected is substitued the wider demand for In 1905, public sentiment had grown sufficient- areaj all club charters and private lockers, but Dominion Prohibition. ly to make No-License mean No Hotel Bars and does not stop innocent storage for private conP You will thus have to vote [on two separate l™ sum Ption- "' does not make it an offence to papersl— Locker System remained untouched toast your friends at a wedding, a social, or a • In 1910 the Locker System was abolished and sen d-off. It only says use something other than [a] For or against storage houses for Liquor removed from the alcoholic poison. It no more renders your house T oral No-License and , areas> but No-License did liable to Taid wit hout notice to see if you have Local No License, and not mean No Liquor. unregistered liquor than it is at present liable [b] For or against In 1911, Prohibition means No Liquor. All to be raided to see whether you are manufacturDominion Prohibition. incentive to break the No-License law removed i ng counterfeit coins. It is easy for an innocent from the Dominion, and Temptation out of the man to avoid suspicion At the last poll Prohibitionists made the mean- way for 5 years, namely, from 1915 to 1920. r^^.J.™ 'r,r,^ u .».^^., ing of the law perfectly plain, i.e., that local No- DOMINION PROHIBITION. License meant prohibiting the sale of liquor, and HAVR vflll DRAI iccn THIC Gives 4 years unharassed trade to the Brewers not the private consumption of same. The law 11/iVD YUU KCrAUIoCLI lulO. and Publicans as compensation for the will of modeTa^e^nlerSvate o^SSaT^hSS That the Trade omitted .to state thai 4 full people being carried by a three-fifths majority moderate drinkers private or personal ngnt to ■ rnhibiti nnis vote- It provides for the cancellation of all drink. Do not fall into the trap, that the iree yeais are to De given tnem it rroniDitionis , , ~. dbr „ ii censes an( i t ,,j p ie lavino- fnr the unthinking piectnr carried, as compensation. Consequently only 5 notei, wins ana spirit ana Drewery licenses ana Trade is laying for the unthinking hlector. yeaM of D^minion Prohibitio 4 n is t y o be club charters It totally prohibits thamanufacThe wider issue of Dominion Prohibition pro- j oyed and not 9 years as the trade would have ture, importation, or sale of alcoholic liquors, vides for the entire abolition of the Trade. you in f er# • not of home-made [unfermented] wine, as the trade affirms. INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL EFFECTS 1. £1,000,000 annually saved to the Dominion, being the amount the liquor traffic costs the country in Police, Prisons, Industrial Schools, Charitable Aid, Mental Hospitals, etc. , THIS ANSWERS THE REVENUE QUESTION. 2. The Worker's Earnings saved to his family. Increased prosperity all round.- Increased employment. The 2972 breadwinners in the Trade earning £355,000 (not the Brewer's false statement as printed—ll,ooo breadwinners earning £2,000,000 annually) will find other and more suitable employment. " > 3. Increased business, decreased rates, industrial progress, New Zealand " God's Own Country." SECURE THIS BY STRIKING OUT THE TOP LINE ONLY. " On both Issues STRIKE OUT THE TOP LINE,

STILL CHAMPION / cHAMPIOiI raiser! 50 LBS. % MCHAMPIOIjh Acknowfedged by the Premier (From "N.Z. Times.") ME SEDDON, on Messrs. Hogg & (Jo's Bill ot withdrawal Flour Duty to compete with Flouv Trust, said:— "That there was no necessity for it, as the NORTHERN MILLING CO. was acting as a weight upon the Southern Flourmillers' Trust, and keeping them within reasonable limits." Rally once more round your Protector. Double Hoofed Tent. One foot Space between the Upper and the Tent Eoof. Camping in good Tents is the most enjoyaMe holiday, and the most healthy, SEND FOX TKICE LISTS. All Styles to Select from- Also Camp Furniture. B@m- There is nothing so good for a Wedding as a Marquee. | Eflffl HftAQB Tent and Oover Maker Lij iill 1 48 Queen ? treet< Auckland. ■ ■■■■ Hiv-B (Opposite Smeeton's). — -CALL OK WEITE— f Advertiser' '■ Office, Heleasrilie,

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KWE19111122.2.14.2

Bibliographic details

Kaipara and Waitemata Echo, 22 November 1911, Page 4

Word Count
736

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Kaipara and Waitemata Echo, 22 November 1911, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Kaipara and Waitemata Echo, 22 November 1911, Page 4

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