PATRICK BBENNAN SHAREBROKER ■/)[L\']iSGAND GESEJiXL COMMISSION AGE XT, BROAD WA V, PJOTTON. Licensedbroker under " Tiie Land Transfer Act." Agent for Goyne and Go's Stamper rating?. TO IHE FAMIEKS, SKITLUISS, AND GENERAL -PUBLIC OF THE I.XAXGAUUA VALLEY, ' 'jH [IE undersigned has determined to 1 HOLD REGULAR FORTNIGHT LV AUCTION KALES of CATTLE at RKEFTOX, the FIRST of which will be HELD on MONDAY,' I2th APRIL, proximo, afterwards fhe SALES will bo HELD on e..eb ALTEKXATK MOXD.-YY. ■ PARTIES having .Cattle* Sheep, Horses^.flnd Pigs, for Sale, will find h to their ADVANTAGE to PATRONISE the AUCTIONKEK, securing thereby the BfiNHFIT of PUBLIC COMPETITION, and PROMPT SETTLEMENT of ACCOUNTS. PATRICK BRENANN, j ' AUCTIONEER. Reef ton, 23 rd March, 1880. itO J3 li 11 T O.XLE 1" Wholesale and -Retai* Storekeeper, v i? o ad w a y , R-KKFTOJf. TO TRAVELLERS. /COURTNEY'S JUNCTION AC* ' COHMODATIONsHOUSE. lnangahua Junction. ACCOMMODATION rou TRAVELLERS. Boat on the river forcrossing to Lyell. 11 Lives of great men oil remind us, We can n>siko oar lives sjiblime ; And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time." THE above is read with great interest by .thousands of young men. It inspires tbi-m with If ore, foriii the bright lexicon of youlli there is no eueh word as fail, .lias! I sa\ many, this is correct, — is true, with '.','gard ! to tho youth who has never abused his strength-— aud to the man who ha 3 not been ' pass-ion's slave." "* But to llint youth — to that man, who has wasted liis vipor, who has yielded himsulf up to the tempo r. try sweet a!lure;nents of vice, who has given unbridled license to his passions, to him the above lines are but us a reproach. What UoPEcnn he have? Wlr.ist aspirations ? What chance of leeving hit footpi'nts on the sands of time? For him, al»s! thi'ro i* .nought but dark despair and si'lf-Tenvoacii fora lost life. For a mtvn to leave his footprints on the sands of U'ue, he must be endowed with a strong brain ami nervous power, lie must possess a sound, vigorous, healthy mind, in a healthy body — the powt j r to conceive — tho ener/y to execute! Uut look at our Australian youth ! &cc the emaciated form, the vacant look, the listless hesitating manner, the n.rvoud distrust, the senseless, almost idiotic expression. Note his dcjn?an3ur and conversation, and then say, Is that a man to leave his iootprinta on the eands of time. Do parents, medical men and educators of youth p»y sufficient attention to this subject ? 3)o they ever ascertain the cause of this decay ; and having done ho, do they (as a strict sense of duty demands) seek the Bkilled ad vice, of the medical man, who has made tuis branch of his profession his particular speciality, whose liie has been devoted to the treatment of theso cases ? .Reader, what is your answer ? La: each one answer for himself. Parents see their progeny fading gradually before their sight, see them become emaciated old young men, broken down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of life; yet one word might save them, one sound and vigorous healths-giving letter from a medical man, habituated to the treatment and continuous supervision of such cases, would, in most instances, succeed in warding oil' the impending doom of a miserable and gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system to its natural vigor, and ensure ajovous and happy Jife. i)r L. L. SMITJLI, of Melbourne, has made the diseases of yuuth and those arising them* from his peculiar study. His wh-jle urn o#« Hional life has been especially devoted to the treatment, of Nervous Affections and tho Diseases incidental to Married Life. Uis skill i 9 available to all — no matter how mt >y hundreds or thou*anda of miles distant, ilis system of correspondence by letter is now so WpII orgauisfd and known, that comment would be euporQuous— (by this aeans many thousands ot patients have been cuivd, whom he has never seen and never known) ; and it i* carried on with such judicious eupervUou that though he h»s been practising this branch ot his profession lor twenty^stx years in these colonies, no single instance of accidental discovery has ever yet happened. When Medicuies are required, the-jo are iorwarded in the sau.e careful uvju:r:er without a possibility ot uitJ <outer»t3 of the parcels being discovered, Plain and clear direc: ions aco'juivjauy tlieso latfur, aud a cure U dleotcd without eyen the piiyi-iciau Luowtug who is his patient. To j\leu and Women with Broken-uo'vn Constitutions, tho JServoua, the ]Jebiinated, and all Buffering from any Disease whatever, l)r L, L. SAllTtt'S plan ot treatnu-nt commends itself, avoiding, as it does, the inconvenience and expense of a personal visit, ADDiiESS— DR. L. SMITH, 182, COLLIE > SlliEJir EAST, MKLIiOOUiNE. (Late the Kesi-leccc af the Goveruor.)
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Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 7 January 1881, Page 3
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803Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 7 January 1881, Page 3
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