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NAN G UIUA ICOaNTY COUNCI L N OJjT ICE, AT an ADJWIiNEi* MRRTTNG of tlie Council, held at ihe Ocnncil Keefifin, March 3ist, 1880, ii was resolved oq the moli. n of &fi Bbennai?, seconfed by Mr M'Gaffin fiiat a seperate rite of TfiRREPKt.>OK in the POUND jitpon tbe values of the ! rafeaMe* ! property in that portion of the district over winch the rate is to be levied, aft appearing >n the Vaination Roll for tbe time being in force be now made, and the safae is hereby made, that • tie rate be tor oae year commencing on he 15 h day of »pril, 1860, and ending on tbe 14: h day bf April, 1881, and that it be payable in que sum ou the 15lh day i>( .April, 1880. " NOTIGK IS J [BBEBr GI^EN that tlie above rate will be due a* above stated,' and th* the same MU-*T be PAfD to the KLTJB COLLECTOR, or at the Olh'** of t le Ooaneil, Ifeefton, on the date named." .Dated 2nd lay of April, 1880: (JOHN riiROLI), County Clerk. " CATTLE TIfesPASS ACf, 1868-" NOTICE laUi RJSBY GIVBN tltat on lafter Saturday, 11th May, 1880, the! Provisions of " The Cattle Tjfes«4>asi kpt, 1868," will be en. forced on my landl known as M'lnerney's agricultural leasJ, Grey fioad, and bounded on the nirth by the main Grey fioad, and on tile south by Soldier's Creek, and that it is my intention to |CL*ISf DAMAGES for all Cattle, Horses, Sheep, iPies, or any other animals jrkESPAKSING on the said Jand, whether tha same be fenced or Ui. inclosed. I AETHUE BEEEN. lieefton, Bth ApJi!, 188 S. MUSICAL NOTICE. J. SCHMIDT, VIOLINIST, BEGS to inform! the Inhabitants of Eeefton and district— that, having resumed hia employment as a Chemist, he is Still OPEN for Ay MUSICAL KN» GA9EMENTS. "T VIOMN, BRASS iJsTRUMENIS, AND m*TO--feU€rHT. BAiroa p«otm|b tan balls, QUADRILLE ABBEMBLIES, io. "OEDEBS jeftatpr. Angas Campi w-tfl^PltOMPllit^TfiroiiO $<O, 11 Livea of great r^eil %U remind us^ We can spake ourlßfe sublime j. And, departing, leavl behind us Footprints on the saads of time." , mHE above is read win great interest bj JL thousands of young men. It inspire! them, with Hops, for iv t ie bright lexicon ol jouth there is no such m »rd as (ail. JJu! sa} many, this it correct,- is true with >»gard to the youth who has never abused bit strength— and to tbe man who has not been • passion's slave. 1 * But to that youth— to t lat man, who has wasted bis vigor, who has yielded himself up to the temporary sweet allurements office, who has given unbridled license to his pas- | sionf, to hiffl Hie above aines are but as a I reproach. What Ho?B ca ihe have ? Wha# ! aspirations f What ehan » of leaving hit i footprints on th« sands c f * time ? *I?or him, | alas ! there is nought ba dark despair and self reproach for a fott Hju For a man to leave hi: footprints on tbe [ -sands of time, he mu?t b } endowed with a | strong brain and nervout power. He must I ; possets m sound, vigorous healthy mind, in' ! a healthy body "Mibe poi «r to conceive — the energy to execute! But look at our Australian youth ! , See ti t eiriackted form, the vacant look, tb&lJßtlesi hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, the senseless, almost idiotic expression. Note ] U demeanour and conversation, and then say Is that a man to leave his footprints on the lands of time. .-: Do parentß,;medicai me t and educators of youth pay sunicient attei tion to this subject? Do they ever asct tain the cause of this decay; and having d ne so, do they (as a strict sense of duty etnamis) seek tbe skilled advice of the met cal man, who has made this; branch. of his trotession his particular speciality, whose li s hat been devoted to the treatment of the s cases ? Reader, what is y<tur answe* ? Let each one answer for himself. Parents see tHeir progeny Aiding gradually before their sigit, see them become emaciated old young mefl, broken down in -health, .enfeebled, unfittel for the battle of life-.} yet one word taiglt save them, one sound and vigorous healtlLgiving letter from a medical man, habituate* to the treatment and continuous supervbi n of such case-*, •would, iv most instances, i icceed in warding off the impending doom < f a miserable and gloomy future, and by ap iroprtate treatment restore the enervated sys em to its natural vigor, and ensure a joyous uid happy life. Dr L. L. SMITIi, of M >lbourn», has made the diseases of youth and jhose arising therefrom his peculiar study. Ifiis whole pro es» sional life ha* been espeopy devoted to the treatment of Nervous iffections and the Diiesses incidental to Married Lite, ais skill is available to all— nJ matter how ntanv hundred* or taousanda ottaiies distant. His system of correspondence/by letter v now so well oigauised and knofrn, that comment would be superfluous— (try this means many thousands oi patients haw been cured, whom he has never seen and ntver known) ; and it ie earned on with such judicious supervkon that though he his leen practising this branch of his profession! for twenty»six yean in these colonies, no Bugle instance of accidental discovery has pver yet happened. When Medicines are I required, these are forwarded in the same careful manner without a possibility of the tdWeata of the parcels being discovered, Plali and clear directions accompany these latfeix and a care is effected without even the pnsiciuu knowing who is his patient. A To Men and Womfn with Broken-down Constitutions, the Keivous, the Debilitated, and all suffering from jany Disease whatever, Dr L, h, SMITH'S p&c ot treatment com* meads itself, avoiding, as it -does, the inconvenience aad expense at a personal visit, ABDBB33— \ DR. L, L. SMITH, I 182, COLLINS STBKET EAST, MELHOOKNE. (Late the Besideacc ji the Ooveraor*)

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800521.2.11.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 21 May 1880, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
992

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 21 May 1880, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 21 May 1880, Page 3

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