Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image

TO TRWEL, THE GREY VALLFY akd IN AN G AH UA DU i lUOTS ~ THL3 SEAS N. vlb YOUNG ICTAUA, A Bat Hokse, with bl ick poinls, Biand* 15 hands three inches »igb. Four years old, is very strounly b lilt and possesses rery beautiful le as . gofe by Totara, dam Lucy by Potentate, grand dam Josephine. I Will travel this seakon in *he Grey Valley, and lnangab.ua Distrirtoi aud the Farm. PEDIGREE. YO IT N G J T O T A R A Is by Totara, dam Lucy by Potentate. grand dam Jcpephinp, the lattei imported from jNew Soutb Wnles by Dr) Renwick (see JNewjSouth Wa ! es stu. book), Totara is try Diomedes, dan Waimea, the latter jbred in 1859, bj Hesperus, dam DJomedia, sister Wethergage by Weatherfifc out 01 Taurina by Taurus, jEsmeralda by Yin* garee, Pasfelle by Eubeous, Parasol by Potatoes, Prtnella by Highflyer, Promise by Snap, Hesperus by Bay Middleton 1 out of Piuary, sister *o Plenepotentiary Emelius, out of Harriet, by Pericles, Seiina, Pipylina bylSir Peter Baligh by Tnmptor, Zmgaree by Tramp, out of Folly by Youngj Drone, Begins by Monarch, Raliegh Iby Trumpetor. Fancby Florifel, Potentate was bred by Mr Stafford in 1*53, got by Sir Her enles, dam Prinees. by Gratis, grand dam by Stride, /great grand dam by Hector ; Sir Hercules by Cap a-pie, dam^Paraguay. j Tebms— £3 lol ; payable on the Is FebiWy, 1880. I . Good paddockiag at reasonable rates. ] D. M'GINLEY. MUSICAL NOTICE. J: SOHMIBT, VIOLINIST, BEGS to inferm the Inhabitants of Reefton an 1 District— that, having resumed bis emp' 3yment as a Chemist, he is still OPEN fo| any MUSICAL ENGAGEMENTS. TIOLIN, BRASS INSTRUMENTS, AND PIAN< )— TADaHT. BANDS PROVIDED FOR BALLS, QUADRILLE ASSEMBLIES, &c. ORDERS left! at Mr. Angus Camp* bell's SOUTHERN CROSS HOTEL, will be PROMPTLY ATTENDED-TO. 41 Lives of great men all remind us, We can moke *ur lives sublime 5 And, departingl leave bebind us Footprints on me sands of time." nnHE above is rssm with great interest by JL tbousanJa • of young men. It inspires them with Hope, for in the bright lexicon of ; youth there is, no such word as fail. • ..lk§! saj many, this is conjeet, — is true with regard to the youth who Ilius never abused ( his> strength — and to the! man who has not been ' ' passion's slave." But to that 'youth-*— to that man, who has wasted his vigor, wbd bas yielded himself up to tha temporai<y swaet allurements of vice, who has given unbridled license to his passions, ta Jiim .the above lines are but as a reproacfi. ""w^at Hope can he have ? Whps aspiratii»B#^What chance of leaving ikt footpimtsj^n'^be "Saunas of time ? For him, alasl^ybreM iioughtibut dark despair ami aelfoeproacb for a tost life. ITor st-Slia^to leave! Jbiis-footprints on the sands of linae, he mupt-be endowed with £ strong brain and nerraia power.tHe must possess a sonndv healthy mind, in i' healthy body ♦—jtb'eij power to conceive — the ener-ry to execqte! But loalf'ai; our Australian youth ! Sle the form, the vacant look, ther!iat)le£§ti imitating manner, the nervous distrustj, the, sebeeliss, almost idiotic expression. .jKpte his,- detneanotir and conversation, and, fheifteWy, Is "that a man to leave his footprints bdyjie «aflds of time. Do parents, medical men and educators of youth pay sufficient I attention to this subject ? "Do^they eve j ascertain, -the cause of this decay; and having d^nfe id, do they (as a s^HCfc sense «-oJ d »ty d^naiuts) geek the skilled advice of th( medicaj man, who bss «made this, branch 0 his profession his particular sjMciat»y, irl jefefife ha>beeu devoted Ho ,lhp, treatmenfc o theiso cases ? Reader, "what i#^6«r answer LeE- eacj ose answer for himself. Parents see their p^ageny fading gradually befor&^tbe r sight, see them become emaciated ofd young, men, broken-down in health,^enfeebled, ufrutted foft tb© battle of life; yet one word] might sare them, one sound and vfgorous Jbe^ltu^ivitig letter from a medical man, habituated to jhe treatment and continuous . sup^'vision of «ach ease*, would, in mosf iriS^[ceß, succeed in <I wai I dii)g off the impending^Rfom of a miserabte jyid gloomy future, Andlby appropriate treatment restore the eneVvated Byste«n\to its natural vigor, and ensure a |,o>ou6 ami b»ppy bfe. Dr L. L. SMITH,' of. Steib9arDe,*aß made the diseases of youTh and those arisisg then* from bis peculiar fctudv. His wifole pro'e«» sional lite baa bee* especially, devoted to the treatment of Nervous AJt'ections and tbe ; Diseoses incidentJl to Married Life- Hi*" skill i s available td ail— no matter how nianv hundreds or thoudanda of miles distant- His system o( corre*p#n ieuce by letter is now so well orgauised apd known, that comment would be superfluous — (by this Jeaus ulany thoiuands 0! patients have been cured, wiioui;, be has never see* aud never known) ; anolt is carried on witp such judioiaus superVison that though ha has been practising this branch of his pnofession for twenty»six years" in these colonies, no single instance of "accidental disco very bas ever yefc happened. When MediciJbd are required, these are forwarded in tha same careful manner without a possibility off the contents of the parcels being discovered, Fluiu aud cleur directions accompany thole latfor, and a cure is efi- eted without eyen tlie physician kuowing who is his putient. I To Meu ani Women wih Broken-down Constitutions, ,be Nervous, the Debilitated, aud all sufferit g from any Disease whatever, Dr L, L. SMI' H'S plan of treatment commends itself, ai oiding, as it does, ibe inconvenience and e pense of a personal tisit, Addhess— DR. I* L. SMITH, 182, COLLINS STREET EAST, MELBOOKNE. (Late tho Eesidenoc oi tho Gorttnot-)

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800419.2.10.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 19 April 1880, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
933

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 19 April 1880, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 19 April 1880, Page 3

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert