. ■'. Public Notices. "Lives of great men all remind us, We can make our lives sublime ; And, departing, leave behind us >\ Footprints on the sands of time." : JmHEabdve ia read with great intereat by ,J A. thousands of young men. It inspires 1 1 them with Hons, for in the bright lexicon of youth theri is no such word as fall. Alas! iajvm'any, thia ia correct,-™ true with regard to the youth who baa nevep abused his : strepgth— and to the man who has not been V i Sat to ihai youth— td that man, whp has fasted h« vigor, who has yielded himaelf up fo tl# temporary' sweet allurements of vioe, whdbja^gjven unbridled license to his passions, to him the above} lines are but as a rebroafa. What Boss can he beyjeP What teotpt&t* dft #e^aVnfrof timeTl^fiiH alas! therein nought but dark despair and, aet to epwaeh fo? a ldst ltf«. Fora man to leave his footprinta on tbe aonda of time, he muat be endowed with a aWoilg brain Ahd nervotui power. He must possess a aound, yigoroue, healthy mind, ia a healthy body— the powejr to oonceite— the energy to execute! But look at our Australian youth 1 Seethe emaciated form, the vacant look, the listless hesitating manner, the nervous distrust/ the senseless, almost idiotic wpressibn. ;|ftte his demeanour and conversation, and. then eav, Is that a man to leave Am footprinM 60 the sands of time. Do' parents,i|MttMl men and' eduoatora of 1 youth pay sutoßß| attention to this sub* JeotP Djo the/ etui |srcertaln the cause oi thia decay j and having done so, do they (as a strict aenae of. duty demands) seek the - skilled acl vice of 'the medical man. whd has made this branch of his profession bit par tieular apeoiality, whole life has been djioted i to the treatment of theio oases P Spader, wbfttUy^'raiuwerP Let each o«e answer : for himself, PawnU see their progeny fading gradually before their eight, Me them become 1 emaciated' old! yOofig men, broken down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of life} yet one word might aave them, one Wand and-dgdrouahealth^if ing letter from aniedical mail, habituated to the treatment and eofltfouoitt rapenisipn of inch oaaea wqoTfl, fa mo»tittrtinc«s, fucoeed in warning off ioe impencßflff doom of a- miaw»bloand gloomy future, and by aopropriat* tmWm tettote the «nervated.afat«m to ita natural vigor, »nd.«inu©»Jotou»imd happy 1% , nr ITI. smith, of K«Ujon»orWiaa» ihfi diae«lle>'OT yootft and ibdto kriaina) therd f/oitthis pecflliarrtody. Bis whole jMtefea- , sional lite B«l boea eapeoiftUy devoted to the treatment of Servoua Atfeotions and the Diiwsel' faciaental to Married Life. His jkilTj* JdV&Uablo to all—no matter how muy hundreds or thouaanda of miles distant. His system of correspondence by letter is now so well -orgauiaed and known, thut comment would be superfluous— (by this means many thousands of patients have been cored, whom he .has never aeen. arid never known) } and it •is bamed on with, such judioioua superviaon a dHhe dontenta of *tiii, parcels being discovered, Plain and clear direotiona accompany then* latfer, and a cure is effected without eyen the physician knowing who is his patient. To Men and Women with Broken-down Constitutions, the Kervous, the Debilitated, and all suffering from any Disease whatever, Dr L, L. SMITH'S plan of treatment commends itself, avoiding, as it does, the moonr venience and expense f a personal visit, Addbbss— DR. L. L SMITH, 182, COLLINS STREET EAST, MELBOURNE. (Late the Residence if the Governor.) • THIS ADVERTISEMENT bHOULD ] HE OABEPULLY BEAD AND BE i MEMBEEED BY EVEBYONE IN* ; TERESTED IN FENCING. i THE PATENT OVAL SAMSON FENCE WIRE Has now been before the public for fous years, and during that time 6000 TONS HAVE BEEN SOLD Giving very great satisfaction, ia proof of which we hold numerous testimonials frosa well'known Colonists ; and the demand daily increasing to such an extent, tha numerous Spurious Imitations have lately bo«n *u/jduced in tbe various markets , of Australia and New Zealand, for the sole purpose of damaging the reputation of the Patent Oyai Samson Wire. THE SAMSON WIRE Was patented and introduced four t years ago in Victoria, New South Wales Queensland and New Zealand ; and the principal claim Bet forth was its being made Oval to proven fraud. Yet, is the face of these patents firms— many of re« spectable standing have, for the sake of paltry commission, lent themselves to the introduction of various spurious imitat 1 tions, which render them liable to action ! at law, and annoyance and disappoint to the users. * The public when purchasing, are there fore cautioned to see that each coil bears a tin tally thus :— , PATENT OVAL SAMSON WIRE IN OVAL ; Andjthe Paten tees' Tall} orTrade Mark m; b 19 .\J>LOQK> Manufactured by the Wbitetofjgs Wire , Company, Warrington, England, Prices Greatly Reduced ADDBES3; i M'LEAN BROS. & RIGG, IMPOETERS 9? ELIZABiSIH STBELT, MEL. ; BOURNE SENIORS' WASHING POWDER does not injure the most delicate white* ues in articles washed, ia composed of the most delicate ingredients and goes much futuef than most washiog powdera It is higly recommended as a sab and economical ime, soap, and labor g
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Inangahua Times, Volume VII, Issue 1079, 26 April 1882, Page 1
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855Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 Inangahua Times, Volume VII, Issue 1079, 26 April 1882, Page 1
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