Bookselleps. WILDMAN& LYELL EXTRAORDINARY VALUE THIS YEAR in CHRISTMAS NUM3£KS To Arrive during NOVEMBER, DECEMBER and JANUARY. j NOW BOOKING ORDERS. / Price. PSg* s. d. d. Auckland Weekly News :. 0 6 1 Australasian ° 6 1 BLACK AND WHITE 16 i Boys' Own Paper 0 9 3 Century Magazine 1 3 4 Chatterbox * 6 3 Christchurch Weekly Press 10 * English Illustrated Magazine... 13 4 Father Christmas 1 6 3 Figaro Illustre (English Edition) 3 6 6 Gentlewoman 1 G 4 GRAPHIC (London) 16 4 Graphic (New Zealand) *• 10 3 Girls' Own Paper * ■ 0 9 3 'Harper's Monthly 1 3 4 ILLUSTRATED LONDON. NEWS 16 5 Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News 16 4 Ladies* Pictorial 1 6 6 Low's Christmas Annual 16 4 Myra's Ladies' Journal.... 16 6 Observer (Auckland) 0 6 _ Pall Mall Magazine 1 3 6 PEARS' ANNUAL I' 6 6 Pearson's Monthly 13 4 Penny Illustrated Paper 0 9 4 Punch Almanack 0 9 1 Queen 1' •» Review of Reviews Annual 1 3 3 SKETCH 16 5 Strand Magazine.......... 1 3 4 Strand Musical Magazine 13 4 Sydney Mail 0 6 _ Town and Country Journal (Sydney) 10 1 Truth 16 2 Weldon's Ladies' Journal 0 9 4 Weldon's Illustrated Dressmaker 0 4 2 Weldon's Children's Bazaar 0 4 2 WINDSOR MAGAZINE 13 7 World 16 3 Yachtsman 0 9 1 YACHTING WORLD 16 I Young Ladies' Journal (December and XmaS) 2 6 DIAMOND JUBILEE PROCESSION NUMBERS. Have just received a fresh supply of these interesting numbers. I London Graphic Procession Number, 1/G; postage free. i Illustrated London News Procession Number, 2/; postage free. : WILDMAN AND LYELL, VICTORIA ARCADE AND SHORTLAND-STREET. R. .SPRECKLtEY'S NEW FICTION LIST. The Christian—Hall Came, 6/. (No cheaper edition will be published for twelve months.) PAPER. 2/G. CLOTH, 3/6. The" Martian—Geo. dv Maurier, author ot ■ Trilby. Uncle Berhac—A. Conan Doyle. The Fascination of the King-Guy Boothby For the White Rose of Arno—O. Rhoscomyl. False Dawn—Francis Prevost. Spindles and Oars—Annie Holdsworth. My Lord Dulce-E. W. H6rhung. lllgotten Gold—W. G. Tarbett. Captain's Kidd's Millions—Alan Oscar. Master Beggars—L. COpe. Cdrriford. Lid He Deserve It—Mrs Riddell. The Way of a Woman—Mrs L. T. Meade. A Rich Man's Daughter—Mrs Riddell. Only a Flirt—Mrs Joceiyh, , Elementary Jarte— Richard Pfyce. The Last Entry—W. Clark Russell. The Ways of Life—Mrs Oliphant. Temptation—Graham Irving. The Indiscretion of the DUchess—Anthony Hope". The Chevalier d' Auriac—S.. Levett Yeats. Rose of Butchers Coolly—Hamlin Garland Naricv Noon—Benjamin; Swift. The Third Violet—Stephen Crane. A Galahad of the Greeks—S. Levett Yeats. My Run Home—R. Boldrewood. The Island Of Dr. Moreau—H. G. Wells. The Philanderers—A. E. W. Mason. Tho Queen of the Moot—Frederic Adye. The Crime ahd the Criminal—Richard Marsh. Pacific Tales—Louis Becke. A Rose of Yesterday—F. Marion Crawford A Tale of Two Tunnels—W. Clark Russell. Sketches in Lavender,- Blue and GreenJerome K. Jerome. Ker Own Folk—Hector Malet. Stories for Ninon—Zola. ', Belinda's Beaux and Other Stories------i Arabella Kenealy. A Storyteller's Pack—Frank Stockton. Into an Unknown World--John S. Winter. In the Tideway—Flora A. Steel. Our Ladd-.e—Oliphant Stfie'atOh. The Girls at the Grange-Florence Warden. MeLeod of the CamerohS—M* Hamilton. The Mutable Many—Robert Ban*. Seeing Him Through-^Nat Gould (Board's) March Hares—Harold Frederic. Flames—Robert Hichens. Add postage 2d in the V. NEK r THE POST OFFICE, SHORTLAND STREET, AUCKLAND. • -■■"■•■.• 3 ~ ; ; ; _________ ■-'' *--■■~*..-.-/ ■ r=s Public Notices. • RENOUNCING THE" TREATIES." To some people this phraso. recently seen in the cables from England. Gonveys the idea that there is a malediction about Mr Chamberlin's intentions regarding foreign natioris. it is hot quite so severe as? that. IE means that he will give lidtice that the "most favoured nation" clause they nov/ enjoy in their Commercial Treaty with England will be terminated, and that the colonies will be permitted, if they choose, to charge higher duties on foreign than on British goods. For instance, tho majority of the pianOsr imported come from the Continent. Beet sugar is another article, and upon which the German Government pay. high bounties, so as to compete With sugars from Mauritius and Queensland. Mr Chamberlin's commercial mihd has. grasped the fact that in the British Possessions necessaries of life can be grown on Eritlsh soil without depending on the Continent for sugar Or China for tea. China has recently shown ingratitude to England by arranging With foreign Powers for railways, and Mr Chamberfln intends to give tit for tat. What ho practically says Is—'You foreigners do not know when you are well off. I'll give the colonies leave to seiid their produce Home on Free Trade lines, and enable them to charge extra duties on goods produced outsida our Empire. Thh; will give them an opportunity to reciprocate with Ceylon, a British colony, where that delightful Suratura Tea is grown. It is ■without exception the most invigorating for a tlred-out brain the world can produce, and it should be admitted duty free, and a prohibitive tariff put oh the production of t-he Chinaman, and so bind tho Anglo-Saxon together throughout the British Empire with something better than mere sentiment.' Recollect Suratura Tea is not blended with Indian or China, and that in using that wonderfully economic household requisite you are encouraging the PRO? DUOTION OF BRITISHERS FROM BRITISH SOIL (i _and not the CHINAMAN FROM CHINESE SOIL,
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18971213.2.54.6
Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume XXVIII, Issue 289, 13 December 1897, Page 6
Word Count
860Page 6 Advertisements Column 6 Auckland Star, Volume XXVIII, Issue 289, 13 December 1897, Page 6
Using This Item
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.
Acknowledgements
This newspaper was digitised in partnership with Auckland Libraries.