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TO TR WEL. THE GREY VALLEY, and IIS A NGA HUA DIS lIiIOTS - THI6 SEAS K. YOUNG 'lOTARA, A Bat Uobse, with black points, sfand> 15 bands three mc >es high. Four years old, is very siron^y built and pos>esse> very beautiful legd. got by Totara, dam Lucy by Potentate, grand dam Josephine, i ! Will travel this season in 'he Grey Valley, Bnd Inanaahua District", and the Farm. PEDIGREE. YO UN G j TOT AR A Is by Totaral daui Lucy by Po'entate. grand dam Uosephin« > . the lattet imported trom Soutli Wiles by L>i" Renwiek (see iNear South Wsi'es slu. b''o'<), Toiara is by Diomed^-s, d«n Wa-raea, the latlej- bred in 1859, b) Hesperus, dam l)iomtdia. sister Wetherijaae by JWeatlierfit oot oi Taui-ina by Taurus! Fsmeralda by Yin« saree, Pasiclie by Uiul^eoiK. Pnr'tsol by Potatoes, Prinella ijy Higl flyer, Promise by Snap, HesperuT by B ! iy Middleton out of Ptuary, sisf|r 'o Plenepolenliary Emelius, out of Harriet, by 3'erirles. Selina, Pipylina by {Sir Peter Raliah by Tumptor, Zmjjnreej by Tramp out cf Folly !y Young JDrono, Jie^ina bys Monarch, I'ali«gb By Trumpetor. FincJ by F^orijfl. Potentate was t-red bfl Mr Stafford in 1833, got by Sir Hr|| cules, dam Princes! by Gratis, granrf dam by Stride, gieat £»*and dim by Hector ; Sir Hercules by Cap a-pie, dam^Paraguay. J Teem*— £3 10-t ; payable on the 1« February, 1880. Good paddocking 4t rea«nnaMe rates. ID. M'GIiNLEY. MUSICAL NOTICE. J. SCBMIDT, VIOLINIST, BEGS to inform be Inhabitants of Eeefton and District— that, having resumed his employment as a Chemist, he is still OPEN for ant MUSICAL ENGAGEMENTS, j VIOLIN, BRASS INSTRUMENTS, AND PIANO— TAUGHT. .. BANDS PBOVIDED FOR |BA|^ QUADRILLE AS SEMBLl|fl|^fe ORDERS left at Mr. A^K*CamD». bell's SOUTHERN OROS§|p*)TEL, will be PROMPTLY ATTEIpED TO. 1 77" **."■■ " Lives of gresi.m< n all remind us, . We can rouke ogr 1 yes sublime ; And, departing, "lea re behind us Footpriuts on the sands of time." THE above is read with great interest by thousands of youtS? men. It inspires them with Hope, for in (the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as fail, lias ! saj many, this is correct, +-is true with ">gsyd to the youth who has 1 never abused his strength — and to the man who, lias uofc been ' passion's slave." J . But to that youth — to jhat manj who has wasted his vigor, who has yielded himself up to th 9 temporary swept a lurements of vice, who has given unbridled icense to. his passions, to him the above ines are but as a reproach. What Hope ci ■ have ? Whas aspirations ? What chan |£04, leaving footprints on the sands o Jp-srJf§ ; |Sfc^S alas ! there i« nought biij i«^-'|pyl||||g| self-reproach for a '^3i4ii^/*'^'*J§§P|p For a man to leave hisl^^prfcfs'TJJPtli^ sands of time, he must bO*(>wed a. strong brain and nervoufjTp^jser. nepotist possess ajpound'i vigorous, Ifiegfftliy" mind, in a health^ body —the pow|f >^> .conceive— the en^Sp'to execute!.', IBjutiJlook at our Austra|jpi youth 1 Serf tKe emaciated form, the vacajft look, the listless! esitating manner, the n»?i^9 distrust, /^B; senseless, almost idioti^rorQision. * Ne||^ f- deme^oar and conye^K^i, and thedj^/ '& tha^pman to leave I|r|ibtprint3 on^p^'s wds^^pme. Do w^ai's, medical- men of youth pfey sufficienfe; Atten; MHp this subject? Do they Jeret^o^^e cause of this decay ; and havbig > iroitFsb, do they (as a strict senae of ,da't;£* "demands) seek the skilled advice of tha-.4fiedieal man, who has made this branchj^f^is oro'ession his particular speciality, ifffioße life! has been devoted to the treatment |o{| thesa cases ? Reader, what is your answ,eiyf Le,: leach oae answer for himself, Parefftj^see tHelr progeny fading gradually before.jfcliej%Bight| see them become emaciated old y6ung§|jien,| broken down in health, enfeebled, unfnted jfoi 1 the battle of life | yet one word mi^hn save tliem, one sound and vigorous health-riving letter from a medical man, habituated to the treatment and continuous supervisior of such ca«e«, would, in most instances, su ceed in warding off the impending doom of a miserable and gloomy future, and by appi )priate treatment -r&staie the enervated sjste n to its natural vioor, and ensure a jorous ai d happy life. <D&li. L. SMITH, of Me' wurne, has made itfce diseases of youth and th >se ai-fsing therefrom bis peculiar study. 1 iis whole pro es* sional life has been especial f devoted to ihe treatment of Nervous Afl ctions and the Diseases incidental to Majried Life. Jis skill ia available to all-no liattor how many hundred? or thousand* of miles distant. Mis system of correspondence bd letter is now so well orgauised and knowrl that comment 1 would be superfluous— (by pis ;ieaus many thousands of patients have Been cured, whom be has never seen and uevar known) ; and it is carried on with such juclicious supervisou that though he has beep practising this brunch of his profession far twenty»six years in these colonies, no ainglp instance of accidental discovery has evJr yet happened. When Medicines are required, these are forwarded in the saiue careful manner without a possibility of the tontents cf the parcels being discovered, Plain Ind clear directions accompany these latfer, a id a cure is effected without eyen the physic an knowing who is •his patient?. Jr. To Men and Womfen with Broken-down ;'&gstituMons, the Selvi us, the Debilitated, suffering from ai y Disease whatever, tOrili, L. SMITH'S plir of treatment coin"mjSrds itself, avoiding, as the inconvenience and expense of t personal visit, ■ ■ Addeess — [ 'M DR. L. L,|feMITH, 182, COLLISd STREET EAST, a BtELBOOItNE/y (Late the Besidenos of the Oovernof.)

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800407.2.12.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 7 April 1880, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
915

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 7 April 1880, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 7 April 1880, Page 3

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