Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image

Public Notices. WOR X S PUBLISH E^; AT THE AUCKLAND STAR, OFFICE. BRETT'S HANDY GUIDE TO NEW ZEALAND. Jubilee Edition. Crown Bvo 342 pages. With numerous illustrations, maps, diagrams, etc Cloth-lettered, 3s 6d. THE NEW ZEALAND JUBILEE AND EXHIBITION-CHRONICLE. Crown; 60 pages and ooTer. Illustrated with 100 beautiful engravings. One Shilling:. THE EARLY HISTORY OF NEW ZEALAND. Demy 4to; over 750 pages, handsomely bound and prof ueelyillustrated, Published in four parts. SCHOOL HISTORY of NEW ZEALAND. By Frederick J. Moss, M.H.R., Crown Boy 276 pages. Handsomely bound in cloth, 3s; boards, 3s 6d. THE DEFENDERS of NEW ZEALAND. Crown 4to; 700 pages. Numerous illustrations, diagrams, maps, etc. Half morocco gilt;£22s. , BRETT'S COLONISTS' GUIDE AND CYCLOPEDIA, OP USEFUL KNOWLEDGE. Royal 8vo; 832 pages. Handsomely bound. Numerous illustrations. BRETT'S AUCKLAIfD ALMANAC AND , STRANGERS' VADE MECUM. Demy '■ 8vo; 288 pages. One: Shilling. BRETT'S NEW ZEALAND AND SOUTH PACIFIC PILOT AND NAUTICAL, ALMANAC. Demy Bvd; 370 pages. Cloth. J?ilt,7e6d. ■ BRETT'S GUIDE TO FIJI. A Useful Handbook for Residents, Tourists, etc.. with Directory to the Islands of the Group. Demy Bvo. Illustrated with Maps. By H. C. . Thurston. 2s6d. '■, ' HISTORY AND TRADITION OF THE MAORIS. From the year 1820 to the Signing of the Treaty of "Waitengiinlß4O. By Thos. WaythGudgeon.authorof the Reminiscences of the War in New Zealand. Demyßvo 226 pages. 756 d.. EARLY HISTORY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN OCEANA. By the Right Rev. Jean Baptiste p Pompallier (with portrait): also an introduction by Bishop ' Luck. Crown 4to. Sβ 6d. A WEIRD REGION. The Story of the "_ Tarawera Eruption, with a description of ; the Lake District. Crown 4to ustrated. * ... 2s6d. r ,', MEDICAL GUIDE TO THE MINERAL WATERS OF ROTORUA. Sy Dc T, : Hope Lewis. CAESAR, tHE WONDERFUL DOG. By A. Reisohek, F.L.S., Naturalist. Crown Bvo. Paper covers, Is; cloth, Is 6d. H. BEETT, PRINTEE ; AND PUBLISHER ' THE STAR OFFICE, ; SHORTLAND & FORT STREETS, : Auckland., - - - c£*o"'o~ii~ a" d y i c c' SINCE brevity is the soul of wit, and tediousness the limbs and outward flour : "/■;.. • ishesi:l'Will be brief.—fcjhakespeaxe./ . ' USE the means and M3k)d -will give the blessing. Itsgude tojdread'the warst, the : , bestwiube the w^lcomer.—Proverbs.; , ; ; the plough sangv sweet hi? wordnotes wild, and richest Shakespeare was a poor mans child.—Elliott. •.<•.■• OIN hath broke the world's sweet peace— ►3 the harmonious chord to wniclr .■■ ' the angels sung.—Dana. - ■■■. .; "■■'■■&■'-■- ---CHILDREN wealth or want, to each is given one spot of green and all the blue of heaven.—O. W. Holme's* „ •..- lS TT>ELIGiONiB slave to no sect—takes no ' Jl\) private road, but looks through nature up i to nature's God.—Pope.- •; „ fV IT is the care of a very great part of mam ■• kind to : conceal their indigence from the sf .... rest.—Johnson. .j ; .':■■■;..■.. i --•-." ■•>■' ..-.* BEAUTY is but a yam and doubtful I good, a flower that dies when first it gives •■'<•> , .to bud.—Shakespeare. . EyERY However h amble hia station, or public his powers, exercisea come influence ori those who are about him i ■ , for good or for evil.—Swift. ; ■ - : TCIINE thoughts are wealth, for the right -' X;. use of which men are, or ought to be, ac \'x% , r &Wgi O WRETCHED ia the, dame to whom . the sound, " Your lord .will soon return," ■ -..:.:?■ no pleasure brings.—Maturing. "OEFLECT upon a clear, unblotted, acJL\j quitted conscience, and feed upon the v '■■ ineffable comforts of the' memorial of a {i conquered temptation.—South. I THE idle, who are neibher wise for this ; world or the next, are emphatically fools at 1 large.—Tilloteon. -•■;■§ HE who receives a good turn should neyer. forget it; he who does" one should Charron. l TmVERYWHERE throughout all genera- , "-i tions and ages of the Christian world, no : cnurch ever perceived the Word of God . \\ ~¥7\ ALSE men are not to be taken into conJL 1 fldence, nor fearful men into a poet that ■ requires resolution.—L'Estrange. A MAN that sfcudieth revenge keopetli hie own; wounds green, .which otherwise would heal and do well.—Bacon. MEN are often capable of greater things than they perform. They are sent intothe world with bills of credit and seldom,,draw to their full extent.—Walpole. TF there be a crime of deeper dye than all . JL the guilty train of human vices, 'tis insratitude.—Brooke. LIFE'S evening, we may rest assured, will take its character from the day which has preoeded it—Shuttleworth. YET nothing bath wrought more pro-' judice to religion than boisterous and ■;■ reasonable zeal.—Barrow. ■■:..■-■..-■•.'■■ -. .• ,*j FILL your mind; gold was originally . mingled with dirt until avarice and ambition parted them.—Seneca. T> ESIGNATION casts a grave but fcran* JLXj quil light over the jprospects of even c tiresome and troubled/life.—Humboldt. IT it a fault with a multitude of preachers that they utterly "neglect method in theit harangues.—Watts. . *J TGIMPLOYMENT is so eeeentlal to human \ XU happiness that indolence id justly con. I ■loered the mother of misery.—Burton. "\TOTHING the united voice of all hiatorj : Xl proolaims so loud as the certain unfailing '\ ourse that has pursued and. overtaken >- saoruege.—South. ;] DECEPTION is nothing else but a lie I reduced to practice and falsehood passinSf m JUST PUBLISHED. - ©OLD BVBRYWHa»»yj

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18900503.2.45.22.3

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume XXI, Issue 104, 3 May 1890, Page 4 (Supplement)

Word Count
829

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Auckland Star, Volume XXI, Issue 104, 3 May 1890, Page 4 (Supplement)

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Auckland Star, Volume XXI, Issue 104, 3 May 1890, Page 4 (Supplement)

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert