MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, ipHE largest selection of Pianos in New Zealand, world-famous makes, at Begg's, Manners Street. (JEE the English Kemble Piano, famous UJ Jubilee Model, at Begg’s, Manners Street Easiest of terms. RADIO APPARATUS. PHILIPS Radio, the world’s best, £1 deposit and 5/- weekly. L. V. Martin, 228 Lambton Quay. Phone 42-268. CAFES AND RESTAURANTS. FpRY Sanitarian Health Food Cafe, 83 Willis St., for better meals. Steamed Vegetables. Salads. CATERERS. / T ET the Sandwich Specialty cater for your next dance or social function. Call or tel, 52-098, 153 Willis St. MISCELLANEOUS. RENTAL GARS. DE LUXE V 8 RENTAL CARS. jgURKE BROS., LID, KILBIRNIE. Tel. 17-099. Cheapest Rates. Tel. 17-099 SPARE OR FULL TIME EMPLOYMENT. WRITING TICKETS AND SHOWCARDS. YVE claim our course to be the best and ’* most inexpensive in the world. Complete outfit supplied, with_ simple, clear instructions and postal tuition, with no time limit. We guarantee proficiency and satisfaction. Send for full particulars— DEPT. Z., WARREN LAMPTON INSTITUTE, Box 1743, Auckland. KEEP YOUTHFUL. TN these enlightened days, symptoms of -*- physical age are as out-of-date ae long skirts, and just as absurd. All fashion is sounding the youthful note, but greying hair mocks a young face. Keep vour twenties or thirties complete with the aid of HENDY'S HAIR REGENERATOR, the acknowledged specific for cheeking premature greyness. Guaranteed safe, and not a dye, but an excellent tonic. Thousands use it.- Obtainable everywhere in New Zealand from Chemists and Hairdressers, Price 3/6. Also from mckenzies department stores. All Branches throughout New Zealand. QOOD FARMING both allows its workers self-respect and gives them respect from others. Against that, what have the Maoris had from the tourist industry? (7). , "Corrupted . . . into cadging showmen.”—Vide Alpers’ “Cheerful Yesterdays.” “The degrading influence of regarding the Maoris as a tourist attraction.” — Vide “Evg. Post,” 16/1/37. “They dislike the tendency of the pakeha to treat them as museum specimens on view to the tourist.” —Vide “Evg. Post,” 2/3/37. “Our young men and women are migrating to the cities. Some are in cafes or inferior hash-houses, others in Chinese gardens. Our women have nothing to look forward to but Chinese gardens.”—Vide “Evg. Post,” 25/5/39. “A where the squalor ... is unedifying . . . and the children are as insistent as ever as beggars.”—Vide “Dominion,” 12/1/37. “Already in some places the two races are beginning to part company.”— “Dominion,” 11/6/37. “At the local Maoris may not play on the golf links.” —Vide “Evg. Post,” 25/7/36. “The white people do not seem inclined to place them in positions of responsibility and trust.”—Vide “Evg. Post," 26/7/39. To end the tourist industry in .favour of good farming would, give the Maoris jiew hope.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19390830.2.4.6
Bibliographic details
Dominion, Volume 32, Issue 285, 30 August 1939, Page 2
Word Count
437Page 2 Advertisements Column 6 Dominion, Volume 32, Issue 285, 30 August 1939, Page 2
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Dominion. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.