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HOGG AND HUTTON'S ADVERTISEMENT. T}ORT WINE, 1834 Vintage, 42 years old; per dozen, 110s. PORT WINE, 1844 Vintage, 32 years old. A bargain. Per dozen, 755. , BROWN SHERRY, 10 years. Just received. Rare value Per dozen, 755. ' /COLONIAL WINES, 30s. to 355. per dozen. T ORNE WHISKEY (Genuine), 48s. per dozen. HOGG AND HUTTON, Octagon. TTT ANTED, for ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC SCHOOL ** QUEEINSTOWN, a Certificated Male Teacher. For further particulars, apply to J. F. TULLY, Secbetaby, St. Joseph's School Committee, QUEENSTOWN. TO SOLICITORS. WANTED by a respectably connected and highly educated young gentleman a situation as ARTICLED CLERK or LAW CLERK in a Solicitox % 's Office, in town or country. A fair premium given if he be taken as an Articled Clerk, which would be preferred. Address A. 8., New Zealand Tablet Office, Dunedin. TEN POUND TEN FOR A DOUBLE-FURROW PLOUGH!. rpHE Estate of the We G. F. REID having to be wound up, we have secure 1 from the EXECUTORS a few of PIRIE'S Celebrated DOUBLE FURROW PLOUGHS, which we are prepared to sell at the above price. NimiO axd BLAIR, Dusedin. NOTICE. AS we are about to prepare for striking our Yearly Balance Sheet, subscribers to the New Zealand Tablet are requested to pay up all arrears without delay. Agents will also kindly attend to this notice. JOHN F. PERRIN, Manager.

AN APPEAL. FOR the last six years the " Daughters of St. Doininick " have been struggling to promote, in Dunedin, that good which it is the end of their Order to effect throughout the world, — namely, — the Education of Female Youth, in the path of science and virtue. The question of the advancement of true civilization, of genuine progress in the only real sense of the word — of the happiness of society, as of individuals, of the temporal and eternal interests of the rising generation, is eminently involved in the development and training of the young mind. While the subverters of order and authority in Italy, Germany, and other countries, spare neither wealth nor energy in their efforts to mislead the young and innocent, shall we be dismayed by our poverty ? Shall we mike no sacrifices to save them ? Shall we not rather call unto us the little ones of Christ, — shelter them from the baneful influence of corrupt principles and bad example — teach teach them that life has not been bestowed on them to be squandered in self-indulgence, vanity, or the gratification of their passions ? — but that, on the contrary, it is to be devoted to the selfdenying task of acquiring that solid, useful, and religious knowledge, without which they can never be good members of society here, or attain their noble destiny hereafter. To impart that all-important knowledge, the Dominican Nuns have devoted their existence' Hitherto their efforts in New Zealand have been much impeded by the numerous difficulties in which they have been placed. The want of suitable conventual and scholastic buildings has been a sore trial, and numberless have been the inconveniences arising therefrom. Plans for a Convent, suited to the requirements of the Dominican Rule, and affording facilities to the Sisters for conducting their Schools, according to the style of their European Houses, have been drawn out ; — the means alone are wanting for the accomplishment of the design. The Nuns, therefore, earnestly solicit donations towards a work which will involve an outlay of at least fourteen or fifteen thousand pounds. The smallest contribution will entitle the donor to a place on the list of Benefactors, for whom prayers are daily offered. DOMINICAN CONVENT, DUNEDIN Feast op the Pbesentation of Oub Lady. DOMINICAN CONVENT BUILDING FUND 1 «fc* £ a. d. Friends in Queenstown, per Miss Malaghan ...^ ... 2 6 6

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.I whakaputaina aunoatia ēnei kuputuhi tuhinga, e kitea ai pea ētahi hapa i roto. Tirohia te whārangi katoa kia kitea te āhuatanga taketake o te tuhinga.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18770323.2.23.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Tablet, Volume IV, Issue 207, 23 March 1877, Page 10

Word count
Tapeke kupu
615

Page 10 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Tablet, Volume IV, Issue 207, 23 March 1877, Page 10

Page 10 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Tablet, Volume IV, Issue 207, 23 March 1877, Page 10

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