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il\ ANGAfim COUNTY^COtTNCII "~ "" "^"""notice. PM|?G* the temppary absence c tb'f* Collector at Harapden, al parties "^are hereby rcoaested to PAI BATES into Jthe COUNCI] CHAMBER OFFICH, without delaj as all BATES OOTSTANDINC after tbe Ist day of jJnUABY NEX^ will be CEBTAINLYKUEJD FOB. Zl*' Silt D. J. M'KENNA, County Bate Collector. Beefton. otb Dec, 1879. :j .a a< i - •-' I TO TBJVVEL.THEKSERY VALLEY and IN AN G A HfA DIST BICTS -J YOUNG lOTABA, A Bat Hobss, wUhlblack poin<s, sfandi 15 hands three inches high. Four yean old, is rery BtronnH built and possesses «>ry beautiful leas.jgot by Totara, dam Lucy by Potentaw, grand dam Jose* 'phiire. -*t t«h •■»..'.! Will trarel this lesson in the Grey Valley, and Inangahua Districts, and tbe Farm. PEDJGBEE. Y-'O'-Uii'S G| T O T A R A Is by Totaral dam Lucy by Poien* tate. grand dam fosepbio*, the lattei imported Jrom Wewl South Wales by Dr. nenwick (see JPiew South Wales stu book), Totara is iby Diomedes, dan Waimea, the latt* bred in 1869, bj Hesperus, dam Diomtdia, sister Wethergage by jWeatherfit out 01 Taurina by Taurus, Fsmeralda by Yin* earee, Pastelle by|Bubeou«, Pawsol by Potatoes, Prinella by Highflyer, Promi!.e by Snap, Hesperqs by Bay Middleton out of Pluary, sister to Plenepotentinry Etnelius, out of Harriet, by Pericles. Selioa, Pipylina b* Sir Peter Baligh by Tnraptor, Ziogarae by Tramp out of Folly hy Young Drone, Keuina by Monarch, Raliegh by Trumpetor. F«nc by Fiorifel. Po 1 ektatb was bred by Mr Staffed in 1 !53, got by Sir Her cules, dam Princ ;s. by Gratis, grand dam by Stride, great grand dam by Hector ; Sir He 'cules by Cap a-pie, dam Paraguay. Tebus— £3 10: ; payable on the It February. 1880. Good paddoekin ; at reasonaMe rates. D. M'GINLRY. " Lives of great! men all remind us, We can tonka oar lives sublime ; And, departing, leave beliind us ] Footprints on the sands of time." : TjlH#aUvXit "a<! with great interest br \_ thousands o<" young men. It inspires them with HOPS, tor iv the bright lexicon oi youth there i* no such word as fail. AW ! sh) many, this is correct,— is true with regard to the youth who has never abused his strength— and to the man who has not been 1 pasnon's slave." , But to that youth— to that man, who has wasted his vigor, who has yielded himself up to the tempor -ry sweetl allurements oi vipe, stons, to mmifSeaboup lines are but as a reproach. What HoPSpm he have? Whim aspirations ? What chbnce of lefving hit, dlootpiints on tbe tandq of time? For htm, hU» ! there i* nought tut dark despair apd •elfaenroaoh for a lostaife. For a man to leave pis footprints on the sands of time, ha m««| be endowed with, aj strong brain and nerrpu* power. He must posses? a sound, vigorous, healthy mind,! in a healthy body —the mower to conceive— the energy to execute! But look at our Australian youth ! Sw the emaciated form,' the meant look, the listless hesitating manner, the n.rvnus distrustj the senseless, almost idiotic expression. Note his demeanour and convcreation, and then say. Is that a man) to leav^ Att'opt points onl the s»nde of time. > Do parents, median men and educators o'< youth p»y sufficient I attention to this subject ? Do" they even wcertain the cause! of this decays and having done mo, do they (as a strict sense of doty demands) teei the skilled advice of the! medical man, who Mi ra-.de this branch ol his proession bis particular speciality; wh >se life has been devdted to he treatment. 0 these cases? Kead^r, what is your answer Le; each one anfwei <or himself, Parents lee their progeny fading Xridu«lly|b|fo|r|he * sight, see them became [ema(Ci|ted^ jldirduni men, broken down in health, enfeebled, v ifitted for the battle 61 life; yet one word might aare them, one ■ound snd rigorous iealth«giving letter from a medical man, habi uated to the trea'nen' and continuous ?uprvi*ion of such c««e», would, in mo?t in«tv ces, succeed in wart ing oif tie impeading f oom of a miserub c irid gloomy future, and y appropriate treatment restore the enervatt I system to its natnra] rigor, and ensure aj >■ ous and happy life.* Dr L. L. SMITH, of Me'bourne, has tnad« the diseases of youtl and those arising there* fronv his peculiar et Hy. His whole pro e»i sional life fias been Ispecially devoted to this treatment of Kervqus Aff. ctions and th« Diseases incidental Jto Married Life. Bit skill is available to ul— no mutter how man-. hur.dre.ds or thousatiia ot miles distant. Hi; system of eorrenpomltnce by letter i 8 now k well organised and Iknown. tht com men' would be supetfluou(fr-(by this earn maiij thousands of patientslhave been cured, whom he has never seen mjH never known) 5 arid jh is earned on with such ju limous supervi«oii that though be h*> been pracli.-ing thii branch of his profession lor twenty^six years in these colonies, no 1 single instance ofacei* de' tal discovery liub ever yet happenwf When Medicines aje required, these art forwarded in the sumdcarvlul manner witlioul a possibility of the 10-itents cf the parcels being discovered, P|nn anJ clear direoion: nceotiip^ny these latflr. and n cure is efi. ctei without eyen the phpiuian knowing who ii his patient. I To Men and Wonlen wi b Brdsen-do>*t Constitutions, the Istlrvous, >h ■ Debilitated und all suti'ering lioinlany Disease whatever Dr L. L. SMITH'S plan o> treutmt-nt <okn mend* itaeli. avoiding, Us it does, 'lie in ■Ooveuience and expense ot' a personul vi»it, ■"■■■ Address— ' 1 v * DR. L. Li SMITE, - 182, COLLINS 81TK&KT EAsT. "* MKLBOOKNk (Late the Residence of the Governor.) G>«*«Ko&m Ft* by UtUr, £L

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800107.2.11.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, 7 January 1880, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
949

Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Inangahua Times, 7 January 1880, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Inangahua Times, 7 January 1880, Page 3

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