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INANG .IHUA COUNTY COUNCIL NOTICE, AT an ADJ^UIiXEI) MKKTIXR of the Cm neil, held at th P Conncil -liamb-rs, Beeftfcn. March 31st ISBO, ii was resolved ofc the moti, n o. Mr Beennan. seennhed by Mr M'Gafpik that a s«!>erate rtte of THHEEPK,NCE •n the POU^D|u P on the values of the rateable propertj in tl iak portion of the district over wiich the rate is to be levied, as appeJrinu in the Valuation Itoll tor the tim 4 being in force be now made, and the sabe is hereby made, that 'Iterate be for ohe year commencing on be 15 h day of April, 18&0, and ending on the 14th day of April, 1881, and that it be payable in me sum on the 15th dav of April, 1880. I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the abore rate! will be due as above stated, and th?t the same iViU^T be PAID to tbe 1 ATE COLLECTOR, or at the OlMoe of ,he Council, Eeefton, on tbe date named. .Dated 2nd day of April, 1880. JOHN HABOLD, Couuty Clerk. " CATTLE TRESPASS ACT, 1868" ! NOTICE IB HEREBY GIVEN j that onl after Saturday, lith May, 1880, thl Provisions of " The CatUe Tresspasßl Act, 1568," will be enforced on my lani, known as M'lnerney's agricultural lease, Grey Eoad, and bounded on the north by the main Grey Koad, and on me south by Soldier's Creek, and that! it is my intention to CLAIM DAMAGES for all Cattle, Horses, Sheep, I Pigs, or any other animals TRESPASSING on the said land, whether the same be fenced or uuinclosed. 1 kETHUR BREEN. Eeefton, Bth April, 1888. MUSICAL NOTICE. J. SCHMIDT, VIOLINIST, BEGS to infom tbe Inhabitants of Eeefton and District— that, haring resumed his emploi meat as a Chemist, he is still OPEN for my MUSICAL EN* GAGEMENTS. VIOLIN, BRASS ] NSTRTJMENTB, AND JPIANO- -TAUGHT. BANDS PROVI HED FOR BALLS, , QUADRILLE LSSKMBLIES, &c. ©RDEBS left it Mr. Angus Camp* bell's SOUTH KB&. CROSS HOTEL, will be PROMP'IJp ATTENDED TO, " Lives of great men all remind us, We can make oi r lives sublime ; And, departing, eaye behind us Footprints on tl s Bands of time." r"pHE above is rea 1 with great interest by JL thousands of jpung men. It inspires j them with Hope, foJin the bright lexicon of yotith there is no eueh word as fail. Alas ! saj; many, this is corlpct, — is true with "Ogard to the youth who pas never abused his strength— and to thef man who has not been ' passion's slave." I But to that youth*— to that man, who has wasted his vigor, whp has yielded himself up to the temporary sweet atlarements of vice, who has given unbrtdled license to his paa» sions, to him the above lines are but as a reproach. What Hope can he have ? Wha^ aspirations ? What] chance of leaving hit footprints on the sinds of time P For him, aids ! there ia nought but dark despair and self raproach for d lostjife. Eor.a man to leave his footprints on the sands of time, he mast be endowed with a strong brain and nervous power. He must possess a sound, vigorous, healthy mind, in a | healthy body — the powei* to coneeiVe-r | thie energy to ex cute! But look at our i Australian youth ! . See the emaciated forai,tbe vacant look, the listless hesitating manner, the nervous distri it, the senseless, almost idiotic- expression. Note his demeanour, and cdnvorsation, and tl en,say, Is that a man to leave his footprints m the sands of time. ; Do parents, mcd cal men and educators of youth pay sufficieat attention to this subject ? Bo they e^fer ascertain the cause of this, decay; and hairing done bo, do they (as a strict sense of Duty demands) eeek the skilled advice of tae medical man, who has made this branch if his profession his particular speciality, wlose life has beeq devoted to the treatment of these cases ? Reader, what is your answer!? Le: each oae answer for himself, Parentasee their progeny fading gradually before fchlr sight, see them become emaciated old youn* men, broken down in healtli, enfeebled; unfitted for the battle of ljfe; yet one wordl might save them, one sound and vigorous iealth-giviug letter from a medical man, habituated to the treatment and continuous supimsioii of such cases, in most iastinbes, succeed in warding off. the impending doom of a miserable and gloomy iu:ure, and h\ appropriate treatment Seßtore the enervatea system to its natural rigor, and ensure a jojous and happy life. Dr L. L. faMITH, < f Melbourne, has made the. diseases of youth nd those arising there* from his peculiar stu Ij. Bis whole pro es» aional life has been es secially devoted to the treatment of Nervoi » AS. ctious and the Diseßses incidental t Married Life. Eis skill is available to all -no matter how many burdred-i or thousand! of miles distant. His system of eorresponde cc by letter ia now so welt orgauised and 1 iown, that comment would be superfluous -(by this iieaus many thousands of patients 1 aye been cured, whom he has never seen and never known) ; and it ie carried on with sucl judicious eupeivisou that though he haa been practising this branch of his professii i tor twenty»six years in these colonies, no i ngle instance of accidental discovery baa ever yet happened. When Medicines arc required, these are forwarded in the sau.e i areiul manner without a possibility of the ipnte&ts cf the parcels being discovered, PlJin and clear directions accompany these latfel, and a cure is effected without eyen the ph*ician knowing who is his patient. 1 To Men and Women with Brokeo«down Constitutions, the Kwvoub, the Debilitated, and all suffering from! any Disease whatever, Dr L, L. SMITH'S plat ot treatment commends itself, avoiding Jas it does, (be inconvenience aud expense pf a personal visit, Asoeess — I DR. L. 1 SMITH, 182, COLLINS STREET EAST, I MELBOUHNE. (Late the Residence )i the GovernorO

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800519.2.9.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

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

Word count
Tapeke kupu
997

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

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

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