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portance to you personally. vances in knowledge fhat have been made during the ing a quick response from the prompt, while looking to past thirty years. This is the information which we a sale in the near future at the full price, without most often need, this is the information which, as every serial payments, for a fair return upon the large outlay one knows who has attempted to find it, is most diffi- o f capital. cult to prooure. Tne p resen t ofier of the recently completed DncycloIncrease Your Efficiency paedia Britannica is, then, necessarily for only a very short time. The offer will soon have to be withdrawn. In these days when, on the one hand, every branch But tbe Wl thdrawal of the ofier will not mean at all of knowledge is highly specialised, and, on the oijher t hat " The Times " will cease to sell the 35 volumes, hafod, the advantage of education as a prime factor in O m the contrary " The Times," which has absolute consuccess is being recognised from one end of the world trol of the work> will continue to sell ifr-only at a to the other, it is hardly necessary to point out the hianer price> Nor will tnis higher price be a mat ter of increase of efficiency, the positive increase of business a few snillmgs more than the present price. The withafcd of earning capacity, which results from possessing drawal of the pre sent temporary ofier will mean that ready to hand such an unfailing resource as the recent- the present price Wl n be more than doubled. Only by ly completed Encyclopaedia Britannica. In this con- very soon selling copies at the [ull pxice can « The nexion it may be interesting to put sdde by side two Times .. aßord now to sell copies at less than half opinions of the recently completed work. The first is price, from a speech made by the Prime Minister of England, the second is a letter from Subscriber No. 26,326, a Why YOU should Inquire TO-DAY colliery engineman, who pays seven shillings a week for rent, and wants to give his four children a better start But although the special sale is necessarily limited in the world than he had :•— to a very short period, and the advaatages can only be Mr. Arthur Balfour:-"^ work which will lighten held to the P">mpt, "The Times" has made ample the labours of every student, and will enable all the English- P rovisi °n so 1 that every one who is interested should speaking peoples of the world to obtain, ut the least possible be able to form for himself, from the fullest material. cost of labour and exertion, the remits of the best intellect his OWTI private judgment of the recently completed and the best research of the age. 1 ' Encyclopaedia Britannica. Upon a request addressed to A Colliery Engineman :-" If all intelligent working ™: Box 285 ' Welh^ on ( the N ™ Zealand office of men would take advantage of your unique half-price offer and / 1 imes (London )^see Inquiry Form at the end obtain the valuable work, it would be to their lasting benefit, * l thls announcement), the inquirer will be sent, gratis and would go far to remove the reproach often flung in the P ost free > a 22 0-page illustrated quarto book made teeth of the British workman about the better education of U P of extracts from 298 among the 26,000 articles, and German and other foreign artisans." including 76 from among the 120,000 plates, illustrations, and maps in the 35 volumes. A photograph of An Investment for the Children the volumes and the bookcases accompanies this J To spend money on such a possession (and if you ," sample book '" so that the inquirer can at his f spend it now you can purchase the 35 volumes at less leisure ' in hIS own horne ' m^ a more thorough X „ , . . . .. , . . , . , examination of this purchase than of others X / •uhan half price and for small instalments) is true .^^v. hl> . -„„ ,_^, , , ... . , w f , , , JJ ., i. v which he only looks at hurriedly as he stands f X economy for a man himself and the best investment he m a shop Qnly v should % S X can make for his children. The Encyclopaedia Britan- make your inqujry &t Qnc sq X f nica at home will supplement what your children learn , / f X 7 at school, it supplies deficiencies in the regular school in \\f ei f. subscribe for the X X Id. curriculum, offers a wider outlook, a greater variety of t ra rt T'/h + exam.nation, / / subjects. It will engage the schoolboy's attention and I^°^ that J™ ™sh to have / /Stamp create interest where his school wonk finds him Idle. 1 >*™ cost more / / Let your children have the run of this great library, double their P™«*t / / lU take for to grow up in a house where there is a copy of ' f f this form in the Encyclopaedia Britannica constitutes a liberal Already more than three j X o education in itself. weeks of the short / / envelope A Novel System to Ensure Cheapness period have gone / ZpoStTT" But if the issue of this classical work, brought f fa 'p QiMpp fully up-to-date by so distinguished a body of authori- f f tO ties, is an event in itself, the other side of the enter- f / Box 285, Wellington prise undertaken hy the great newspaper (whose his- f f~K Z, Q ffi.ee o f " The Ti "t ' tory eq,ually dates back over a century and a quarter) f f m< °* London is not less calculated to claim the reader's attention. / / Pl^^end}mthe22ovaafilh,,f rr n f i In undertaking its enterprise in connexion with the / f book devrrihi** th a f emusfr afed Encyclopaedia Britannica it was the object of " The / / v Z?i -, n ™ mtly com P^d Times," not only to ensure a perfected book up-to-date, / / *™J cl °P<™m Britannica, and full parhut also to make the book cheap, to devise such a plan / / r'cuiars of the temporary offer at less than of sale as would put this perfected library of reading f f atj-price and upon the instalment system. and reference, invaluable to every man, whatever his f f calling may "be, within the reach of every man. The f f Name problem of making really cheap a book which cost over f f (Please write cieariy) £300,000 to produce called for radical measures and a f f novel system!. Boldly cutting down the price to f f Address less tblan half, and offering to accept the low f f price in small instalments, *' The Times " ap- f X peals direct to a large public, thus elimi- f f Tab. 1 nating the middlemen's profits and ensur- S f f f Rank or Occupation

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT19040526.2.14.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXII, Issue 21, 26 May 1904, Page 7

Word Count
1,138

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXII, Issue 21, 26 May 1904, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXII, Issue 21, 26 May 1904, Page 7

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