AUCTIONS. T? JOHXSTOX AND CO., AUCTION--Lu EERS. TOMORROW (WEDNESDAY), NOVEMBER 13, 1935, Commencing at 10.30 a.m. sharp. CLEARIXG SALE Of MOTOR-CARS, MOTOR-LORRIES, FURNITURE, TIMBER, TYPEWRITERS, WCYCLES. ELECTRIC MOTORS, TOOLS, CASH REGISTERS, etc., etc. At the POST AXD TELEGRAPH STORES, FRYATT QUAY, PII'ITEA WHARF. 5 Included in the list will he found 1 j Bnick sedan car, 1 Austin 7 saloon car, 1 Morris van, 1 Dennis 3-ton - lorry, 2 LeyJand 2-ton lorries, quan- ; tity of kauri and red beam timbers, typewriters, bicycles, electric motors, s 13 loft ladders, furniture, tools, teler phone and telegraph material, bicycle and motor parts, glass jars, Morris blocks, addressogyaph machine, cash - registers:, guillotines, Gestetner eleca trie duplicator, friction winch, new motor tires, and numerous other lots. In lots to suit buyers. On view morning of sale. SALE TOMORROW MORXIXG, At 10.30 o'clock Sharp. Motor-cars and Lorries will be sold it - 1 p.m. On view morning of sale. !; :ei. johxstox axd co., s Auctioneers. 1 "P JOHXSTOX AXD CO., AUCTION- , &' EERS. '. THURSDAY MORXIXG, at 10.30 sharp. 2 At the Residence, Upland Road, Kelburn t (down right-of-way between Xos. 11 I and 13 Upland Road). s IMPORTANT, AXD INTERESTING AUCTION SALE of s A VALUABLE COLLECTION OF AN--1 TIQUE FURNISHINGS, OLD MA- , HOGAjYY AXD WALNUT FURNI- ' • TURE. ' Old maho^my round dining table, old 1 mahogany chairs, valuable mahogany l buffet, )ld mahogany chiffonier; old 1 English oak hall chair, old mahogany 1 double-c oor wardrobe, dressing table £ and pillar bedstead to match, gilt s chairs, aid mahogany settee, old mahogany armchairs, old mahogany chc--1 val mirror, beautiful walnut occ. chairs, nahogany double-ended settee, 2 walnut dropside traymobile, antique > writing bureau, ultra-modern walnut bedroom suite, mahogany chests drawers, roand mahogany table, 3-piece cane loinge suite, specially well-made t 3-piece :hesterfield suite, china, glass- " ware, ornaments, new ice chest, tools, saddle, and appointments. \ 250 LOTS 250 \ On a/c. cf Mrs. H. E. Chapman, who ; has left for England. ; The Entire Contents, of the Residence. • including a wonderful collection of 3 beautiful old mahogany and walnut, all 3 in splendid order. £ Full Details Later. 1 E. JOHXSTON AND CO., ;. ' . Auctioneers, c : - - AUCTION SALE. T HIGH-CLASS FURNISHINGS 1 , At \ jJjjJcKENNA'S 1 (The New Zealand Christies), £ 18-24 Molesworth Street (opp. House of 2 Parliament). TOMORROW, at 2 p.m. SHARP. . Including 3-pieee chesterfield suite covered in old velvet with seven loose " clown cushions; this suite was made by i a master upholsterer and cost £165; 1 also 12 x 12 Super Axminster cart pet (black ground with rose, violet, t and green floral design, as new, cost i £75), Jacobean oak sideboard, oak f china cabinet, gateleg table, chest of drawers, Morris- couch with squab, wicker tables, new Hoover cleaner, wal--1 nut dining chairs, Clark electric clean--1 ers, dressing tables, lawn mowers, 1 kitchen dresser, lino., lot of very fine 3 glasses, plates, china ornaments, pic--5 tures, jam jars, and numerous other t items. . ■ J. F. McKENNA, Auctioneer. ■ Telephone 44-381. 2 AUCTION SALE FURNITURE, . T TOMORROW, 1.30 SHARP. 1 "RAMSEY WILSON, LTD., sell at their a •*-• Auction Rooms, ' 98 MANNERS STREET (opp. Regent), ' LARGE CONSIGNMENTS of new and . equal-to-new Household Furniture, Pianos, Chesterfield Couches, Easy 2 Chairs, Sewing Machines, Handsome Chesterfield Suite, and Attractive Lot 1 General Goods. : Also, Saucepans, Kitchen Utensils, Dustr bins, Lawn Mowers, Garden Tools, t etc. s RAMSEY WILSON, - Telephone 42-755. Auctioneer. I intervene, as other States occasionally j are, in the disputes between nations. It was for that reason that I empha- £ sised his materially weak and defence- ! less position. t "Again, even as Head of the Catholic > Church, he holds the office of teacher, . not of judge, except, of course, in r ecclesiastical cases. His business is I to interpret the moral law, primarily , for the guidance of those who recog- > nise his authority. In the present i case he has done so repeatedly and i emphatically, declaring inter alia that 5 a war of aggression is always wrong, i that even the right of defence is s strictly limited, and that the need for i 'expansion' does not confer a "right to • seek it by war. "Furthermore, the tribunal which had cognisance of the case, the League of Nations, did not decide that Italy s was the aggressor until several days • after the actual aggression. How the ! world would have blamed the Pope if ' he, assuming the role of judge, had ' broken in upon this legal process and : anticipated its verdict weeks' 'before; ; hand! 1 "Now that the League has decided, 1 is the Pope to denounce, and launch ' spiritual penalties against the aggres- : sor? Those who are convinced of ' Italy's guilt would say yes, but the 3 Pope has to consider whether such 5 action would do anything to help the r Ethiopians or to stop the war. He 1 has made his own moral attitude I : abundantly clear, and if he thought 1 that excommunication would further 1 the cause of justice, no doubt he would speak out. But if he is practically J certain that the only result would be •to produce worse evils—to expose the [ faithful in Italy to persecution if Fas- ' cism remained in power, or to plunge • Italy into chaos and anarchy if it fell ° —why should he to no purpose risk r precipitating either disaster? 7 "During the late war critics of the " Papacy wrote largely on 'The Silence 1 of Pope Benedict,' yet Pope Benedict • was one of the few public men who ' spoke words of wisdom and charity. ' Let us not in our zeal for our own 3 cause forget that the Pope is the best " judge of his own duty." i ——^———— 1 THE DUSTLESS FLOOR ♦ One invention which the world is t really looking for, suggests a correr spondent in the Manchester "Guard- ' ian," is the perfectly dustless floor. J We have almost reached the stage of \ the almost dustless road for motor - traffic, while in the mines, where dust t is ever the great danger, water can i be used to meet the problem. But we could hardly have constantly wet floors 1 at exhibitions, where dust is a serii ous matter. The visitor to many an exhibition often finds that a fine dust 1 has settled on his shoes by the time he leaves, and on the next day his' throat may even be a little relaxed, i This simply means that the fine dust i in the atmosphere has got into his : mouth or nose and has laid the foundations of trouble. Salesmen and dei monstrators know all about "exhibition i throat," and they take good wire to ) gargle frequently.
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Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 116, 12 November 1935, Page 20
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1,097Page 20 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 116, 12 November 1935, Page 20
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