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RO V» B BT O.X LE Y and J^etai^ Storekeeper. b p /o a d w a y , TO TKAVKLLKIi" 5 . pOURTNEY'S JUNCTION ACCOiLMOD ATIONsHOFSEInangahua Junction, t ACCOMMODATr )N roa IRAYELLERS. Boat on dio rive forcrnssmz to Lvctl. "CATTLE TK'JSPASii Aol\ 1835." "VTOTICE is 1 ereby given Ihnt on and _i3l after Thursday, 2M( November, 1880. the Ptov sions of " The Tresspass Act, 1865," will, he enforced on ray land, known Is Lynch 's Farc-i, Grusli* inetor, and that\it is my- intention to cl\lm damages for an Csv\*. Horses, Sheeo. |?igs, or any other animals TRESPASSING on the said land, whether tbe fame be fenced cr uninclosed. /' THOMAS LYNCH. j Crushington. . Eesftbn. Octol*r 29, 1880. ltfr£Rfi4llK^>2p ALL. OENTiiFJrEir, — am yet nlive, thanks to Holloway'b Pills. Not wishing to Hecame one of the residents < f the Professor's intended Lunatic A sylum n iw being erected in England I lately bought s bos of Holloway's Piite, took them at int< rvals, and retrained from the " flowing Bom," und Bichard's himself again. Elolloway'l Pill's and Ointment are largely used in Berpiuda, and that account*, in mj opinion, lor tha longevity of its inhabitants, I feel quiet assured, however that Profeßsor Holloway is and haa bee%cne of the greatest benefactors to the human .face that has ever lived, nnd that his name vrid be handed down to polteiity when the nauie of onr bravest inanelaiprs are forgotton. Strange tosoythtifc we, injfditferent ways, strive to acquire the art of Killing, but our owu pre* servation we take little heed of. I have lived in Bermuda 26 y*ar«, and in that time have inquired of soldiers how they have preserved their health so w*ll ; the answer hss generally been," tiy not gcing to the Army Doctor, but by using the PiOl aud Ointment." i By using the above, I am now found at my Hermitage to beiiocking much younger and more healthy thajn you have seen me ior years. Yours, I J. W. ODDY, TtjckW Towk, Bbbmutja, [Formerly SeereAury to Duke of Brunswick.] The uda May, 1879. " Lives of gi sat men all remind us s We can roak i our lives sublime ; And, departing, leave behind us Footprints o i the sands of time." THE above is read with great interest by thousands )f young men. It inspires them with Hopj , for in the bright lexicon of youth there is nj such word as fail. Alas! aa} many, this isjeorrect, — is true with >vgard to tbe youth who has never abused his strength — and to; the man who has not been * passion's slave.'* But to lhat yoUth — to that man, who has wasted his vigor, Who ha3 yielded himself up to the temporary sweet allurements ef vice, whohtts given unbridled license to his passions, to him the above lines are but as a reproach. What Hope can he have ? Wha.v aspirations ? WI at chanee of lesving Ait footprints on tha sand* of time? For him, alaB ! there is nought but dark despair and self-reproach for a tost life. For a man to leave his footprints on tbe sands of time, V 3 must be endowed with a strong brain an I nervous power. He must possess a sound, vigorous, healthy mind, in a healthy body —the powpv ta conceive— the energy to execute ! 1-ut look at our Australian youtt ! Seethe emaciated form, the vacant look, he listless hesitating manner, the nerrous ' dit trust, the senseless, almost idiotic evpressioi . ifote his demeanour and conversation, and then say, Is thut a man to leave Ms lootprinls on the sands of time. Do parents, madical men and educators of youth pay sumciVut attention to this subject? Do they aver ascertain the couse of this d'ieay ; and hiving done so, do they (as a Btrict 'sense of I duly demaaJs) seek the skilled e.dvice of tlie medical man, vtbo has made tbis branch pf his protession his particular speciality, fl lose life has been devoted to who treatment f these cases ? keadtr, what is your answe ? Lee each o^e answer ior himself. Parent see their pfogeuy fading gradually before th :ir sight, see them become emaciated old voui g- men, broken down in health, enfeebled, nfltted for the battle of life j yet one wor . might save them, one sound and vigorous health-giving letter from a medical man, habituated to the tr-atmen*-and continuous tuner vision of eu«-'h cases, would, in most i.istulcus, succeed in warding off the impending dViom ot a miserable and gloomy future, and bw appropriate treatment restore the enervated syttcm u> its miturai vigor, aud ensure a jojous and h'.ppy life. Dr L. L. siMll'li, dt Melbourne, has made the diseases of youth and those arising; there* from his peculiar study. His whale 'pro es* sional life has been eaieually devoted to the treatment ot Nervoul Atl'ections and tho Diseases incidental toi Married Life. His skill is iivuilable to all-t-no mutter how mtiy hundreds or thoUsandHjpt miles distant. His system of correspondence by letter ie now so well orgauised and known, that comment would be superfluous — lby this 'Jeaus many thousands ol patients hare been cured, whom he has never seen and uever known) ; ami it is earned on v-ith such judicial:* supervison tbat though he has been practising this branch of his profession: lor twenty »sis years | in these colonies, no single iuetauw of accidental discovery has cyer j«d happened. When Medicine's i>re required, these are forwarded in the same cafelul manner without u po3i;bility ot the (outcnts ef the parcels being discovered, Plain i>nd clear direcfions accompany these latfer and a cure i-s eHmed without eyen the pby ician knowing who is his putieut. To Men and Yfovm n with Broken^do^n Constitutions, the £.ei vous, the Debilitated, and all Buttering from my Disease whatever, Dr L, L. SMITH'S pi n oi treatment, commends itsell, avoiding, .s it does, tbe mcouvenience and expense u t a personal visit, Addbess— | DR. L. SISITfI, 182, UOLLIN* SfKEET EAST, MKLIiOOKNE. « (Late the Eosi'cncc oi the- Governor-^

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18801203.2.11.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 3 December 1880, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
998

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

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

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