I ._ ■•"■■"■ SELECT REGISTRY, Upper Queenstreet, Auckland (late Y.M.O.A. t Buildings.—MlSS McKENZIE, Proprietress, respectfully informs employers tr.'l employe'- that she is prepared to book engagements, livery care taken to satisfy her clients. SHIPPING BAKERY. -Contractor for the British and Foreign Navy, s and for the Union Steamship Company. -E- McKEOWM, Wholesale Bread and , Biscuit Baker (next William's Saloon), Queen street Wharf, Auckland.—Cate and Restaurant. Meals at all horrs, and at 9d only. Balls. Wedding Orders, and i Picnic Parties catered for. SALE- Good Tall.' Plates. I Onion.", Mai/j, Oats (all kinds). oha.'i, Bian, ."-iharp.-. Kl'.nr. 'I.'ta. <■!'.: , '< etc. ; also. Donkey:-- aid Pure HrH Collia i.'UjW tioiii I'Oimi l-.-lui:d. '_' uumi \'.ict:N (il)and -i loiim;. nh'i -purs. I'i.ali van i-e sold on the station. SSpcoal airuiuicmtiits can be made for shipping large quantities of Farm Produce, etc., etc. Consignimmis of Produce, etc., promptly . attended to.-A. F. CHAMBERLAIN, next G. P. office. Fort-street, Auckland** r — ~~ —■ " — JOSEPH HPYNDALL, Surgeon Dentist, REMOVED TO BROOK HOUSE, HOBSON-STREET, AUCKLAND. T. HARTLY, TEACHER OF MUSIC & SINGING, Cambridge. Music supplied for Public and Private Danct-s in any part of Waikato. Terms on application. DATERSON & O . Grain & Produce Merchants, esskbs of Auckland Tramways lluv-es Bought, Sold, or Exchanged. On }»"ale • Oats (seed or feed), Clover and Grass Semi, Flour, Maize, Bonedust, etc. Office : Queen-street (opposite Railway Station), Auckland. [a card ] pEO RG E p DRST, (Aoent S.S. Waitoa), MARINE SURVEYOR. CUSTOMSHOUSE AGENT. LICENSED PORT GUAGER & SHIP PING AGENT. Office : 18, Queen-street Wharf. T. & H. COOKE Have just imported LACE CURTAINS in white and ecru from 3s 9d pair; also, ORIENTAL andTAPESTRY CURTAI N< and TAPESTRY TABLE COVERS.
T. & H. COOKE Have one of the Largest Stocks of DRAWING-ROOM, DINING-ROOM and BED ROOM FURNITURE in tbt colony. T. & H. COOXE Are SELLING SUITES of 5, 7, or 9 pieces, in Cretonne, Tapestry, and Velvet, at very low prices. T. & H. COOKE Make a SPECIALTY ol MOTTLED KAURI FURNITURE, and have in Stock Chests ok Diiawkbs, Ward robes, Ducifkss Pairs, and Fancy Tables in this Beautiful Wood. T. &H. COOKE Are IMPORTERS of LINOLRUMS and FLOORCLOTHS. Floobcloths, from Is per square yard ; Linoleum from Is 6d per square yard. Bedroom and Sitting-room Sqharks, in great variety, from 13s 6d. T. & H. COOEE, FURNITURE, CARPET, AND BEDDING WAREHOUSE, GREY-STREET, AUCKLAND. PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY. Published for the Special Bknefit of NonChurchgokrs.
Trus Christian Religion, intelligently under- ' stood, comes not to add to men's burdens but to remove them. " For God sent not his Son into , the world to condemn the world,, but that the world through Him might be saved." John iii, 1 17 [ Its leading .doctrines, adapted to the use of this New Age, are summarised as follows —■ There is one God, in whom is a Divine Trinity of Love, Wisdom and Operation, and He is the Lord Jesus Christ. Saving Faith is to believe in Him. Evils are to be shunned, because they are of the devi! and from the devil. Good Works ought to be done, because they are of God and from God, and they ought to be done by man as of himself, but with the belief that they are from the Lord, operating in him by him. There are two things which constitute the essence of God —love and wisdom. And there are thren which constitute the essence of His love —to love others out of Himself; to desire to be one with them ; and to roakethem happy from Himself, The same three constitute the essence ot His wisdom ; because love and wisdom in God make one, and love wills these things, and wisdom accomplishes them. True Christian Religion, No. 48. The word of God is Divine truth clothed in human language, and adapted to the varied states of the human heart, that thus a man may know God, and learn to know and do His will. "I' ye continue in My word, then are ye My disciples indeed." John viii. 31. "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do unto >ou: do ye even so unto them ; for Ibis is the law and the prophets. Matt. vii. 8. ( The Ten Commandments point out what evils are to be shunned in order that men may attain eternal life. "That it is not so difficult to ive the life o' heaven as if c'mmonly believed is evident fron. this—that when amthing presents itself that one knows to be insincere and unjust, to which his mind is disposed, he need not only chink that it ought not to be done because it is contrary to the Divine commands. If a man accustoms himself so to think, and from custom derives the habit, he is thin by degrees conjoined to heaven ; And in so far as he i? ( conjoined to heaven, the higher degrees of his mind are opened ; and in so far as these are opened he sees what is insincere and unjust; and in so far as he sees these evils jhey can be shaken off, fnr it impossidle that any evil can be shaken off until it be seen. This is a state into which a man may enter from freedom ; for who is not capable from freedom of thinking in this manner ? Hut when he has made a beginning all goods are wrought in him by the Lord, and He causes him not qnlv to se« evils, hut alsonot to will them, and finally to become averse to them. This is meant by the Lord's words, "Myyoke is easy and My 'mrden is light." Matt. xi. 30. Hut it should be known that the difficulty ot so thinking, and likewise of resisting evils, increases in proportion as a man Irom the wills commit evils, for in so far he becomes accustomed to them, until at length he does not see them, and afterwards loves them, and from the delight of love excuses them, and by all kinds of fallaciesconfirms them, and declares that they are allowable and good. Hut this occurs with those who in the age of adolescence plunge into evils as if without restraint, and at the same time reject Divine things from tne heart."—" Heaven and Hell," No. 533. This advertisement, though containing truth for all, is especially published for the benefit of those who from any cause do not profit by ordinary religious ministrations. Those who approve of the doctrines here enunciated, aud who desire to assist in the work of disseminating them, are invited to communicate with MrT. E. Hawley, St. Martin's, Christchurch, New Zealand, who will be glad to afford all necessary information, and supply a copy of " The Doctrine of Life," gratis and post free to any one desirous of perusing it. The works of Emanuel Swedenborg, and cognate literature, raav be obtained from Messrs Turner and Henderson, Hunter-street, Sydney. FOR SALE by the undersigned the ; following Sections — HAMILTON WEST—Ns. 348, 319, 8, ' 108, 109,134, and 13 HAMILTON EAST-No. 69, 304, and i 79. < J. S. EDGECUMBE, 1 Waikato Times Buildings, 1 1
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Waikato Times, Volume XXXIX, Issue 3175, 29 October 1892, Page 2 (Supplement)
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1,162Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 Waikato Times, Volume XXXIX, Issue 3175, 29 October 1892, Page 2 (Supplement)
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