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Worth Remembering.

Public esteem is the reward of honest men. —Sir R. Peel. A horse is neither better nor worse for his trapping. ' • Talking comes by nature, silence by underetanding. Great promisers are bad paymasters ; great boasters are little doers. Prosperity gains friends, and adversity tries them.—-Dr Franklyn. Age makes us not childish ; it findß us still true children, —Goethe. ’Tis liberty alone that, gives the flower of fleeting life its lustre and perfume. — Cowper. Those who trust to their neighbours help will wait awhile for their harvest. Laws are like grapes that, being too much pressed, yield a hard and unwhole.

some wine. He knows much who knows when to speak ; he knows more who knows when to hold his tongue. The end of man is an aotiorf and not a thought, though it were tho noblest.— Carlyle. ' . Deliberate with caution, but act with deci. »ion ; and yield with graciousnebs, or oppose with firmness. —Colton. Every uoan is conscious of a power to de.termine in things which he conceives to depend upon his determination. A man must either have noble purposes in life, or he must aim at the imitation of great men. Otherwise his powers will leave him as the magnet loses its force if for >. any lengfcn of time it is lsft lying pointing to the wrong telluric poles. —Jean Paul Richter.

That feeling of weariness so often experienced results from a sluggish condition of the blood. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla strengthens and invigorates the system. It is a highly concentrated extract and economical to use

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZMAIL18881026.2.23

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Mail, Issue 869, 26 October 1888, Page 7

Word Count
257

Worth Remembering. New Zealand Mail, Issue 869, 26 October 1888, Page 7

Worth Remembering. New Zealand Mail, Issue 869, 26 October 1888, Page 7

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