' LIFE—AS A BOOK. Man is, as it were, a book; his birth is the title page; his baptism the epistle dedicatory; his groans and crying, the epistle to the reader; his infancy and childhood, the argument or contents of the whole ensuing, treatises; his sins and errors, the faults escaped; his repentance, the correction. As for the volumes, some are in folio, some in quarto, some in octavo; some ar© fairer bound, some plainer; some have goodness for their subject; others, and they are too many, are mere romances, pamphlets of wantonness and folly; but in tlie last stago of every one there is the last word in every book. Be as it may, the last word in beverages is KOLA NIP, and throughout the whole volume of man's existence, Kola Nip plays a very important part in eVery chapter. There is. never a period in his history when Kola rNip cannot bo taken to advantage, improving both health and spirits, and adding materially to his length of days. Kola Nip at hotels, refreshment rooms, chemists, and stores. —Advt.
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Standard, Volume XLI, Issue 9168, 17 March 1910, Page 7
Word Count
179Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Manawatu Standard, Volume XLI, Issue 9168, 17 March 1910, Page 7
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