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TO TR \VRL. THR GIIEY VALLEY, and INANGAHUA DIrfIIiIOTSTHIS SEAS to. YOUNGjTOTARA, Bat Horsb, wits black points, stand> 15 hiinds three inches high. Four years old, is very strongly built and possesses very beautiful legl got by Totara, dam Lucy by Potentate, grand dam Josepbine. Will travel this season in 'he Grey Valley, and Inangahua District*, and thfe Farm. PEpGEEE. Yoo jb tot an a Is by Totai a, dam Lucy by Potentate, grand daoi Josepbinp, the iait*>i MnporM Jrom New South Wales by Dr< RenwicU (see JNew South Wales" s»«. hoofe). To^arajis by Diomed^s, dnn Wa.njea. tbe fatter bred in 3859, bj Hesperus, daih Diomedia, si*ter Wether^age by WeatherSt out oi Tauruw by Tdurus, Esmeralda by Yin* gflree, PasiolW by Bubeou*, Par/sol by Potatoes, Printlla by Hijfiayer. Promise by fenap, Hejperus by B*y Middleton out o» Piuaryi ststrr to Plenepotentinry Emelios, out [of Harriot, by Perirlei. Selma, Pipyltia hy Sir Peter Raligh by Tnmptor, Zihjjaree by Tramp out of J?"y b y^H°ong Drone, Begina by Monarch, Raliejjh by Trumpetor. Fane by Florijtil. | Potentate was »»red by Mr Stafford Jin 1853, got by Sir Her euies, dani Princes, by Gratis, grand dam by Stnde, great grand dam t>y Hector j Sir Hercules by Cap a-pie, damjParagttHy. Teems— £B 10s ; payable on the U February, 1880. Good paddocking at reasonable rate*. j D. M'GINLEY. MUSICAL NOTICE. J. SCHMIDT, VIOLINIST, BEGS tq inform the Inhabitants of Eeeftin and District— that, having resumed his! employment as a Chemist, be is stiii OPBN. for any MUSICAL ENGAGEMENTS. VIOLI2T, BRASS INSTRUMENTS, AM) PIANO— TAUGHT. BANDS PROVIDED FOB BALLS, QTTADHILLE ASSEMBLIES, &c. ORDERS left at Mr. Angus Cam*)* bell's SOOTH i£BN CROSS HOTEL, will be PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. M Lives if great men all remind us, We can Wake oar lives sublime $ And, departing, leave behind us Footprint on the sands of time." rjIHE above Is read with great interest by X thousand! of young men. It inspires them with Hots, for in the bright lexicon o( youth there is no such word as fail. Alas ! ssj maoy, thia ia correct, — is true with 'regard to the youth who has never abused his strength — and to\ the man who has not been 4 passion's Blave.'\ But to that yoath— to that man, wbo has waited his vigor, who has yielded himself up to the temporary pweet allurements of vice, who has given unbridled license to his passions, to him thai above lines are but us a reproach. What Hope cun he have ? Whas aspirations ? What chance of leaving hit footptints on the lands of time ? For him, alas ! there in nought but dark despair and self-reproach for a lost life. For a man to le ye his footprints on the aaods of time, he mist be endowed with a strong brain and i ervoue power. He must possess a sound, v gorous, healthy mind, in a healthy body — he power to conceive— the energy to « scute I But lock at our Australian youth ! See tha emaciated form, the vacant look, th< listless hesitating manner, tbe n^rvoui distrt st, the scnseleeo, almost idiotic expression. Note bis demeanour and conversation, and t cii say, Is that & man to leave his footprints m the sands of time. Do parents, raed cal men and educators of youth pay sufficie t attention to this subject ? Do they e\ er ascertain the eaus» of this decay ; and ha ring done bo, do they (as a strict sense of duty demands) seek* the skilled advice of t le medical man, who has made this branch of his profession big particular speciality, i hose life has been derated to »he treatment jf theeo cases ? Header, what is your answer ? Let each one answer for himself, Parenfc see their progeny fading gradually before tljeir sight, see them become emaciated old you ig men, broken down in health, enfeebled, rafitted for the battle of life; yet one woi 1 might save them, one wund and vigoroui health«gmng letter from a medical man, ha ituated to the treatment and continuous $\ nervision of such cases, would, in most iast mees, succeed in warding off the impending doom of a miserable and gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system to its natural vigor, and ensure ajovous and happy life. Dr L. L. SMITH, of Melbourne, has made the diseases of youfh and* those arising there* from his peculiar study. Bis whole pro e»* sioual life has beea especially devoted to the treatment of Nerftrous Affections and the Discuses incidental to Married Life. Bis skill is available tolaU— no matter how man? bucdreds or thouainda of miles distant H» system of correspondence by letter i« now so well orgauised aid known, that comment would be superflubus— (by this lieaus many thousands of patiebts have been cured, whom he has never seen! md never known) ; and it i? carried on with] such judicious supervuon that though he I has been practising this branch of bii profession for twentyssis years in these coloniesj no single instance of accidental discovery] has ever yet happened. When Mediemel are required, these are forwarded iv tbe jame careful manner without a possibility of the < oateuts of the parcels being discovered,] Plain and clear directions accompany thesejlatfer, and a cure is effected without eyen tbi physician knowing wbo is his patient. I To Men and Women wi'b Broken-down Constitutions, the Nervous, the Debilitated, and all suffering jrom any Disea»a whatever, Dr L, L. SMITHS pl&c of treatment com* mends itself, avoiling, as it does, the inconvenience and expanse of a personal visit. Addbbss — ! DR. Li L. SMITH, 188, COLLIWS BTREIT EAST, V MELBOURNE. [L«te the Residence ?f tat Governor-)

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800416.2.13.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 16 April 1880, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
945

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 16 April 1880, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 16 April 1880, Page 3

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