PnbHc Moticeg. OEKS PUB L I 'feH E B AT THE STAR 0 F F I 0 E. BRETT'S HANDY GUIDE TO NEW ' ZEALAND. Jnbileo Edition. Crown Bvo 3<!2 pages. With mimerotis illustrations, Maps, diagrams, etc. Cloth-lettered, 3a6d. I THE NEW" ZEALAND JUBILEE AND EXHIBITION CHRONICLE. Crown; 60 paggs and cover. Illustrated with 100 beautifufyengravings. One Shilling. : THE EIARI/Y HISTORY OF NEW ZEALAND. Demy 4to; over 750 pages, handsomely bound and profusely illustrated. Published in four parts. SCHOOL HISTORY of NEW ZEALAND. • By Frederick. J. Moss, M.H.R.. Crown Bvo 276pag,iE. Handsomely bound in cloth, 3s; board.. 3s 6d. THE DEFENDERS op NEW ZEALAND. Crown 4to; 700 i pages. Numerous illustrations, diagrams,. maps, etc. Half morocco »' gilt. £2 2s. BRETT'S COLONISTS' GUIDE AND , CYCLOPAEDIA OF USEFUL K.NOWLEDGIS. Royal 8vo; 832 pages. Handsomely 1 bound. "Numerousillustrations. BRETT'S AVUOKLAND ALMANAC AND STRANGERS' VADE MECUM. Demy 1 8vo; 288 pages. One Shilling. . I BRETT'S NEtW ZEALAND AND SOUTH PACIFIC PILOT AND NAUTICAL ALMANAC. Demy 8vo; 370 pages. Cloth Kilt, 7s 6d. BRETT'S GUIDE TO FIJI. A Useful Handbook for Residents, Tourists, etc., with Directory to the lelandaof the Group. Demy Bvo. Illustrated with Maps. By H. C. Thurslon. 2s 6d. HISTORY AND TRADITION OF THE MAORIS. From the year 1820 to the Signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840. By Thos. W,aythGuugeon,authprof.the Reminiscences of the War in New Zealand. Deniy Bvo 226 pages. 7s 6d. EARLY HISTORY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN OCEANA. By the Right Rev. Jean Baptiste Pompallier (with portrait); also an introduction by Bishop "Luck. Crown 4to. 3s 6cl. A WEIRD REGION. The Story of the Tarawera Eruption, with a description of the ? Lake District, Crown 4to ;i 11 ustrated. 2s 6d. MEDICAL GUIDE TO THE MINERAL WATERS OF ROTORUA. By Dr. T. Hope Lewis. THE WONDERFUL DOG. By A. Reischek, F.L.S., Naturalist Crown Bvo. Paper covers. Is; cloth, Is 6d. H. BRETT, PBINTEE AND PUBLISHER THE STAR OFFICE, SHORTLAND & FORT STREET?, '• .- • Auckland. - D 'a' D V I O E SINCE brevity is the soul of witj and tediousness the limbs and outward flourishes, 1 will bo brief,—Shakespeare. . ~ USE the means and God will give the blessing. It's gude to dread the warst, the best YRsilbe the welcomer.—Proverbs. BURNS o'er the plough sung sweet liis wordnotes wild, and richest Shakespeare was a poor man's child.—Elliott. C*IN hath broke the world's sweet peace— \ >J3 unstrung the harmonious chord to which the angels sung.—Dana. • /CHILDREN of wealth or want, to each is given one spot of green and all the blue of heaven.—O. W. Holmes. RELIGION is slave to no sect—takes no private road, but looks through nature up to nature's God.—Pope. TTT i 8 the care of a very great part of manB kind to conceal their indigence from the rest.—Johnson.' BEAUTY is but a; vain and doubtful good, a flower that dies when first it gives to bud.—Shakespeare. . EVERY man, however humble his station, or public his powers, exercises some influence on those who are about him for good or for eviJ.—Swift. "|T(INE thoughts are wealth, for the righb JU use of which men are, or ought to be, accountable.—Bailey. „„, ... „ I O WRETCHED is the dame to whom j the sound, " Your lord will soon return," no pleasure brings.—Maturins. REFLECT upon, a clear, unblotted, acquitted conscience, and feod upon the ■ ineffable comforts of the memorial .'of-:a conquered temptation.—South. THE idle, -who are neither wise for this world or the next, are emphatically fools at large.—Tillotson. HE who receives a good turn should never forget it; he who *loe3 one should never remember it—Charron. ;" ' ~W7\ VERYWHERE throughout all generajtli tions and ages of the Cliristian world, no church ever perceived the Word of God to be against it.—Hooker. FALSE men are not to be taken into confidence, nor fearful men into a post that . requires resolution.—L'Estrange. A MAN that : studiebh revenge keepeth ; his own wounda green, which, otherwise I would heal and do well—Bacon. MEN are often capable of greater things than they perform. They are sent into the world with bills of credit and seldom draw to their full extent.—Walpole. IF there bo a crime of deeper dye than all the guilty train-of ■"human, vices, 'tis ingra-titude.-Brooke. ... LITE'S evenings we may resft assured; will take its character from the day which , baspreceded.it—Shuttle worth. YET nothing hath wrought more prejudicoto religion than boisterous and unreasonable zeal.—Barrow.' ~ FILL your mind; #old wk briginally mingled with dirt until avarice and ambition parted them.—Seneca.. .'. RESIGNATION cists a grave but tran- , quil flight over the prospects of, even a .tiresome and troubled life.—Humboldr. IT is a fault with a multitude of preachers thatthey utterly neglect method in "theijr ; harangues.—Watts. ; ; ; ' " . TTIMPLOYMENT is so essential to human JLJJ happiness that..indolence is justly considered the mother of misery.—Burton. qvrOTHING the united voice of alLhietory U3I proclaims so loud as the certain unfailing , curse that has pursued, and ; overtaken sa,crilege.—South, .• .::»::, DECEPTION is nothinet else bub a lie reduoed ; to practice andtalsehdod passing. from words to things.—South, ; ! rjus Tγ xtb;l i shed.j SOLD I
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Auckland Star, Volume XXI, Issue 90, 17 April 1890, Page 2
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834Page 2 Advertisements Column 3 Auckland Star, Volume XXI, Issue 90, 17 April 1890, Page 2
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