fkTti€k r B&ENNAH itr- - * ' ■& *|IN3KG AisS Gff^EKAL COM* MISSISV AGENT,* *- -,— tioensedl>re%di**tiad§r "The - faud^aasfer Act." > for (Jrisytie and Co's Stamper *- rating. *Try? .- TO 'iHE I?AIt.\IKKS, 5'sriLKKS. AND &R&Elf.tt, PUBLIC OF THEINAK'gAHITA VALLEr," 'TIME undprstgtied has determined to 1 -HOLD'^GtfLAH FOLITNIGPTI/X - AUCTION*" SALES of .CAT^LJE.a^REEJP-rON", the FIRST ,of whlli Will be. JlfcLD "ou MON* e.cb ALTKkXATK MONDAY. PAK'IIISS having Castle, «heep, Horses, and Pips, for Sale, will find- it to their ADVANTAGE to PATRONISE the AUCTIONEER, securing thereby -the -BKNKFITof PUBLIC 00 M PETI HO X, aml PE )M PT SKTTLKMENT of ACCOUNTS, PATRICK .BRENANN, AUCTIOSKKR. Ueeftoo, 23rd March, 1880. U..0 jj E 11 ; T O.XLE V •..'Wholesale and Retail Storekeeper, bkoadway, XO/IRaVKLLKK:?. /COURTNEY'S JUNCTION ACCOSIMODATIONsHOFSE. Inan^abua Junction. ACCOMMODATION" fob TRAVELLERS. Boat on (he river forcrossing to Lyell. "Lives of great men all remind us ; Wo can nnilie our lives sublime; And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of tima," TEE" above is read vitb great interest by tbousanJft of joung men. It inspires tUemWitU 'Uqpb, tbria the brigbt lexicou of i ttfiei% "iif" tM s«ib.r'BFoei«ft«;&»i}> say many, this is correct,— is truo witb '.'^gard to* the youth who has nove? abused his etceiigih — and to the man wlio has not been 1 passion's sl^ve.' lint t<> that youth — to that man, wljo has wasti.nl i.is vijror, who has yielded himself up to tli3 tt'iupor-iry f-weet alluremeuts oi vice, who hii3 given unoridlcd license feu his }jassiom, to him. tho.-' above' lines, are. but ps a repro:io!). VVfrai II6PK e^n he iiave ? Wha's aspirations? Wbat chance cf leaving. 7ik lootpt Jnts on the sands of time? For him, al;ts! there is nought but dark despair and iilf-i eiu'oach fora lost 'life. Fora mini to leave" liij footprints on the sands of time, he must be endowed with a strong brain ami nervous power. He' must possess a sound, vigorous,, healthy mind, iv a he.'aithy body — tiio pow^r to eonteiTe— rhc energy to execute! But look at our Australian- youth ! Kea the, emaciated form, i lie vacant look, the listless hesitating manndr, the nervous distrust, the senseless, almost idiotic expression. Note bis demeauonr and conversation, «nd then say, Is that a man to leave his Jootprints on the eauda of time. Do purentd, raodical men and educators of youth pay sufficient attention to this subject ? l)o they ever ascertain the causa of this decay ; and having done 00, do they (as a fctrict sense of duty demands) seek the skilled advice of the medical man, w ho has m:ide tnis branch of his profession his particular speciulity, whose liie has beeu devoted to the treatment- of these cases ? JEteader, what is your answer ? S-ie: each one answer lor himself, Parents see their progeuy lading I gradually before their sight', see them become emacjated old young men, broken down in health, ecfeebicd, unfitted for the battle of life ; "yefr* one Vr-oud might gave .them, one KOimcl >».nd vigorous health-giving letter from a medical man, habituated to the trea^meut and continuous supervision of such cases, would, in most instances, suiftceed in warding of the impending coom of a miserable and gloomy (utuie, and br appropriate- treuttnont restore the enervated system to its natural vigor, and ensure a jo< ons aud happy liftsDr L. L. iSiiITU, oi Melbourne, has made the diseases* of youth and those arisiug then"* from bia peculiar s!u/ly. His wheits pro ea» | sioual life has been especially devoted to the tivatnient of Nervous Affections and the Diseusea incidental to Married Life. Uis skill is available to all— no matter bow nit.'iy hundreds or thousanda of miles distant. His svsiein of oorrcspoudenco by letter is now so Well orgauised and known, that comment would be superfluous— (by this :.}e;uts many thousands ot patients have been cured, whom ho has never seen find never known) ; tuici it i? earned on with such jiulicious supu-rviiou tiiaD though he his bocn practising this bi'iineh of his profession loi* twenty-sis ye.-ira in tliese eoloiiies, no siuglu instaiieo vi y^ci-de-ital discovery lias ever yet liiijtpjucii. VVlseu ilcdiciiics are requiivii, tiiuse are forwarded in the siuiio careful mai'.not.' v«ithcut a 'possibility ol the' (oulcuts vi the parcels bein J discovered, Plain ami clear directions accompany the-so httttr, and a cure i» til-ctoa witlious eyen the pbys-iuiau knowing who is iiis pHtieut. To Men asd Women with Brcken«c!oTn Constitutions, tlio JServoiv.', tho Debilitated, and all faiulrirmg from a,ny D»iea?e wiiarevcr, De L, L. SjiiXit'rf plan of treatment commends ilscl', avoiding, as it does, the inconvenience and cxpeusu of a personal visit, i\DDIiES3 — DE. U SMITH, 182, COLLISfa SiHEiCT EAST, MiiLBOOKiNB. Qjate the Rcsi lenc: oi tbo (JoyeraorO
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Inangahua Times, 5 January 1881, Page 3
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769Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Inangahua Times, 5 January 1881, Page 3
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