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INANGAIIUA COUNIT COUNCIf N OTICE, AT nn ADJOUIJNRi) MEETING ot tl c C.unril. held y» t!ie 0..nn.-i Clia m h?rs, Keeftonj M;.rch 31-t, 1 >80. i was rcso'ved on the m^ti-n m V Bkksnav. seconded by Mr M'Gaffcv t hat a sppernte rate of TU U RKPiO Cl in the POUND upon the rallies of >h< rateable property i that portion of tin district over nhi--l. the r;ite i* to bi levied, ns npiieiirinr in the Yaluatio: Kollforlhe time b>ing »n f' r(:e l)e nfl(1 made, and the same is hereby marie, tha the r-ito lie for nne 'car coinmencmj: "or he 15 h d:iy of Ay' il, I=^o, nnd endin. on the 14 Is day ot .Ipril, 1881. nnd thai it be payable in one sum on the 15'h d;iv of April. 18S0. NOTICE IS HE JEBY GIVEN that the al-ore rate wil be' due' a"« shryp statfd, and that tie «Hroe MTJ-T li* PAID to the RATS (-OLLEC I'OK. or Ht the Olli.-e of the Council, Heeftou, on the date named. Dated 2;id clay of April, 1830. JO. -IN HAKOLD, County Clerk. '\CATTLK TRESPASS ACT, 1308" NQTICR IS HEJtEBT GIVEN that on after Salur.lay, ll'h May, 1 S 8 ), the Provisions of "The Cattle Tresspass Act, 1363," will be enforced on mV land, known as JM'lnrmey's agricultural ftase, Grey .Road, and bounded on the\iorih by the niiin Grpy i{oad, and on t\e south by Soldier's Creek, and that \ is my intention to CLUAI DAMAGES for all Cable, Horse*, Sheep, PieV or any oil)- 5 ? 1 animals THESPASSIfe on the sai^ land, whether the samK be fenced or v .inclosed. \ AKTHUB^EEEN. Keefton, Bth April, 18SS. \ \ MUSICAL NOTICE.^ \ SCHkIDT, Violinist, BKGS fto in!orm the Inhabitants of 1 EeeftoW and District — that, having resumed his employment as a Chemist, he is stil! OPEN \ any MUSICAL EN* UAGEMENTS.X VIOLIN, BRASS INSTRUMENTS, AND PIANO— 'KaUGHT. i BANDS PROVIDEd\jOR BALLS, \ QUADRILLE ASSESS£LIE3, &c. \ORDEES let at Mr. aVqs Campbell's SOUTH KEN CROSSXHOTEL. will be PKOMPILY ATTKNIJeD TO. " Lives of great men nil remind us, We can msike oat lives sublime ; And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on tha sands of time." THE above is read! with great interest by thousands of young men. It inspires them with Hope, for in the bright lexicon ol youth there is no sucl word us tail. Alas ! Baj many, this is cnrrelt, — is true with "jgard to the youth who hks never abased his strength — and to the man who has not been 'passion's slave." I But to lhat youth — tb that man, who has wasted liis vi^or, who h.is yielded himself up to the temporary sweet lallureuients of vice, who has given unbridlea license to his passions, to him the abovi lines are bHt as a reproach. What Hope cln he have ? Wlim aspirations ? What chaikce of leering hit footpiints on the sands *f time? For him, alas! there is nought bill dark despair and self-reproucb for a lost lin. Fora man to leave hisi footprints on the sands of time, he must ba endowed wiih a strong brain and nervous Ipower. He must possess a sound, vigorous,! healthy mind, in a healthy body — the powjr to conceive — the euerjy to execute! put look at our Australian youth ! See thel emaciated form, the vacant look, the listless Hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, tho Isenseless, almost idiotic expression. Note hil demeanour nnd conversation, and then say, 4 that a man to leave his footprints on the sands of timeDo parents, medical men and educators of youth pay sufficient attenti m to this sublet ? Do they ever ascerti in the cause of this decay ; and having don so, do they (as j a strict sense of duty dei lands) ceek the skilled advice of the mediui 1 man, who has rnnde this branch ol his pr )!ession his particular speciality, whose life las been devoted to .he treatment of these suses ? header, what is your answer ? Le: cich cie answer for himself. Parents see theii progeny Tiding gradually before their sight, :ee them become emaciated old young men, )roken down in health, enfeebled, unfitted or tho battle of life; yet one word might save them, one sound nnd vigorous hca!th-g ving letter from a medical num, habituated to the tivaMiien* and continuous supervision of such case*, would, in moi-t i.istoices, sue ;eed in warding oti' t c impending Ooom of i misumb.e and gloomy iuture, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated systeih to its natural vigor, and ensure a.jo>oiis aijd happy life. i)r L. L. tjMIL'H, of Melbourne, has made the diseases of y.>uth and thbse arising therefrom his peculiar stuiy. Jjlis whole pro es« sional life has been especially devoted to the treatment of Nervous Auctions and the Diseases incidental to Ma Tied Lite. His skill is available to all — uo i latter how nu '>y hundreds or thousands ol m les distant, llis svsiein of correspoiulence bj letter is now so well orgauised and known that comment would be superfluous — (by his Jeans many thousands ot patients have teen cured, whom he has never seen md nevet kuown) ; and it is cuined on with such judicious eupervison that though he has beea practising this branch of his profession io tweuty»si.>: years in these colonies, no single instance of accidental discovery has eve- yet happened. WueD Medicines are ret uircd, these are forwarded in the same cartel I manner without a possibility of the ( ontei ts cf the parcels being discovered, Plain ai d clear uireci ions accompany these latftr, au< a cure is en>cied without eyen the phy?L-ia i knowing who is his patient. To Men and Women Mvh Broken-do™ Constitutions, the JNervoui,lhe Debilitated, and all suffering from any [Disease whatever, Di- L. L. iJIHTH'si plan di treatment commends iucli. avoiding, as ill does, the incouvenience and expense of a Wsoual visit, Address — I DR. L. SMITE, 182, collino Street east, t ' MELBOURNE. (Late the ResUencc of (the Governor.)

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800908.2.12.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume II, 8 September 1880, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
993

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, 8 September 1880, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, 8 September 1880, Page 3

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