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isaxgaiiua! county council NOTICE. A T an ADJOU!i>*Kl> MEETING A of the Council, held at the -oiim-,1 Cambers, Keefion, March 31-',l^oo.i: «-as r.'solved on the nioii n n\ Mr Hmkknay. seconded hy Mr .^ T ( . ; , Af / (^; :h«t«. W ,IP ratoof THlil'.r.L'itM'^ ■n the POUiND upon the values o\ t it.■ale.il.le pnpertv in tint portion of the lisirict over whi.-h the rute '; to he levied, «s appearing in the Taaation Roll fur the time being in f'Tce >c now iiiadp, and the same is horebv mn.lo, tuai ilieNc l-eforom* V^ar commencing on he 15 1. day of April, 18SO, >...d endnie on the 14 h day of -\pril, ISBI. nnd that it be pavahl" in one sum on ihe lot" t..«J of April. 1830. -r-^rvr »i t JSOFICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tha» the aLove rate will be due as above slated, and that the same *'V*} " c PAID to the J.'AllE COLLKC I O.x. or ■it the OIK.-c of the jOouncit, HeeKou, on ihe date named. I Dated 2ud day of April, 18S0. JOHN HAROLD, ] County Clerk. " CATTLE TRESPASS ACT, 1868" NOTICE IS HJEIIEBY GIVEN that on afiet Saturday, 11 th .Vl ay, 1880, the Prk^isions of " The Cattle Tresspa>s Act,\lß6B, : ' will be enforced on my land, kndwn as M'lncrney's agricultural lease, Glrey Road, and bounded on the north jby the main Grey Hoad, and on the s< uth by Soldier's Creek, and that it is my inteution to CMII DAMAGES for all Cat'le, Horse*, Sheep, Pie:, or any other animals THESPASSI !^G on fhe said land, whether the saaae be fenced or U', inclosed. AETHUR BIIEEN. Reefton, Bth April, : 88S. MUSICAL s T OTICE. J SCHMIDT, VIOLINIST, BEGS to inorm tjie Inhabitants of Reefton and District — that, having resumed his employment as a Chemist, he isstil! OPEN for anJ MUSICAL EN* GAGEMENTS. VIOLIN, BRASS INSTRUMENTS, AND I PIANO— TIUG-HT. BANDS PROVIDE ) FOR BALLS, QUADRILLE ASSEMBLIES, &c. ORDERS left at Mr. Angus Caranbell's SOUTHERN CROSS HOTEL, will be PROMPILY ATTENDED TO. " Lives of great raei 1 all remind us, We can rmike our lires sublime ; And, departing, leaJe behind 113 Footprints on the sands of time." rriHE above is read ■with great interest by JL thousands of younc men. It inspire? them 'with Hope, for in Ihe bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as fail. .Alas ! sa} many, this is correct,-j-is true with '-ogard to the youth who has J never abused his strength — and to the man who has not been 'passion's slave." I But to that youth — fojthat man, who has wasted his vigor, who hasjyielded himself up to the temporary sweet illurements ol vice, who has given unbridled! license to his passions, to him the above! lines are but as a reproach. What Hope cln he bave P Whas aspirations ? What chance of leaving hit footpiints on the sands of time? For him, alas! there w nought bi t dark despair and self-reproach for a lost I fe. For a man to leave h s 'ootprints on the sands of time, he must be endowed with a strong brain and nervoi s power. He must possess a sound, vigoroi 9, healthy mind, in a healthy body — the p( wer to con cive — the enecy to execute But look at our Australian youth ! See he emaciated form, the vacant look, thelistle s hesitating manner, the norvous distrust, tl c senseless, almost idiotic expression. Note his demeanour and conversation, and then sa -, Is that a man to leave his footprints on th ; sauds of time. Do parents, medical re 3n and educators of youth pay sufficient att mtion to this subject ? Do they ever as err.am the causs of ', this decay ; and having lone so f do they (as a strict sense of duty demands) jeek the skilled advice of the mt dical man, who has made tliis branoh of his pro'ession ins particular speciality, whose ife has been devoted to ihe treatment of th :so cases? header, what is ywr answer ? Ie; each one answer 1 for himself. Parents see heir progeny fading gradually before their si ;hr, see them become emaciated old young mm, broken down in health, enfeebled, unfiti 3d for the battle of life; yet one word m ;ht save them, one sound mid vigorous hea fh-giviiig lettar from a medical man, habituu ed to the treatment and continuous euperv. »ion of such cases, would, in most instances succeed in warding oil" tlie impending doom of a miserable and gloomy iuture, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated ijstein 10 its natural vigor, and ensure ajo> (Jus and happy life. l)r L. L. SMIL'li, ofl Me bourne, Ims made tbe diseases of youth and those ari?ing there* from bia peculiar slu ly. His whole pro es« j sioual life has been especially devoted to the tr> iitiru'iit of Nervoul AffVctiuus and tho wise-used incidental tJ ilnrrit'tl Life. His skill is available to a!l-J-no maitei^hov.- mt iy liujLtlivd- or thousandJ of miles distant. His system of correspondence by letter is now go well orgauised aud Inown, that comment would be superfluous4-(by this >eai!3 many thousands ot patients Lave been cured, whom he has never seen anJ uever known) ; and it is carried on with suJb judicious supervLon that though he h^fe been practising this branch of his profession for tweutyv-ix years in these colonies, nojsingle instance of accidental discovery hah ever yet happened. When Medicines are required, ihuse are iunvarde;l in the samd carelul mai!i;ei- without a possibility of thu I. outents of th? parcels being discovered, liuin and clear Uir.uc.i-. mi? accompany these latLr, aud a cure is ell'cie.i without eyen the piy.-ieian knowing who is his patient. | To Men and TTc nen wi h Brokon-down Coiistitutions, the I ervous, the Dclnlitmed, and all suti'i-ring froi i any Disease whutever, l)r L, L. SMITH'S plan ol treatment commends itself, avoiuiii;;, as it does, ihe mcuurenienee and cxpeusi of a personal visit, ADDKES3 — DR. L. t SMITH, 182, collinj street easi 1 . I MELBOOKNE. (Late the Rcsi.lenos of the GoTernor-)

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18800913.2.10.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 13 September 1880, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,005

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 13 September 1880, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 13 September 1880, Page 3

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