I Public Notice;. '' Lives of greiit men all remind us, can n>nke our lives sublime; Ami, departing, leave behind us Footprinto on the sunds of lime." \ fT^UE above i is read with great interest hi ' I. tbousanJs o<' young men. It inspire--1 them with Hope, for in the bright lexicon o! "cuth there is no such word us fail. ibis! sa> many, this is correct, — is true with >• jjrord to the youth who has never abused his strength — and to the man who has not becu ' passion's slsive." But to that youth — to that man, who has waited his vigor, who h:iß yielded himself up tc the tempor ry sweet allurements of vice, who.hus given unoridled license to his pas- • sions, to him the aboro lines are but as a reproncm. W^lial Mopglmh he-lmro? What footpiints on the sands ol time? For him, ahis! there ts nought but dark despair and self-reproach for a lost life. For a man to leave his ootprints on the sands of tune, he must- be endowed with a I strong brain and nervous power. He must , • possess v sound, vigorous, .healthy mi. id, in | a h<-alihy body —the pow^r ro conceive — j the enerry to execute! L*ut look at our | Australian youth I Seethe emaciated form, I '. tlie vniMiit ; look, the listless hesitating tnumi«r, the n rvous distrust, the senseless, nlmost I j idiotic expression. Note his demeanour and j uuuvttiWtiou, aijil then say. Is that n man to I leave Aw iootprints urn the sands of time. I' Do parents, medical men and educators of youth p»y sufficient attention to this sub- ■ jeel ? J)o they ever ascertain the ca»s9 of I I this decay ; and having done m>, do they (as • <* strict sense of duly demands) ?eek the .• skilled advice of the medical man, who has i uiiule this branch ol his pro-ession his par I ticttlar. speciality, wliose life has been devoted to he tieatnieiit of these cases ? Reader what in your answer ? Le:.each one answer 'or himself, Parents see their progeny fading gr (dually before their, sight, *cc them become 5 emaciuted old young men, broken down in I health, enfeebled, unfitted for tlie battle of > life; yet one word - might save them, one 1 oound 'ind vigorous" heaith-giring letter from 1 a medical nan, habituated to tuo tivaunouc f and continuous fupervisiou of sueti eases • wou ! :*.lt in most inst-inces, succeed in warning o'l ti»e impending c'ooi'n of a miserable aud j gloomy l uture, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system to its naiurai .vigor, 'ami 't'iisure a jo.ous and. happy lifeB i)r L. L. tfMI I'H, ol Me bourne, lias made the disease* of youth und those arising therd \ from his peculiar study. Ilis wLole pro'ossionul lile has been especinlly devoted to ihe v tivalment. of Nervous Alleuiious and the ' Discuses ineidentnl to Married Lite- His skill is available to all — no nuater how int ">y ! Inn cired- or thdu.-iiiida of inil^s distant, liis sysiein of correspondence by letter is now so " Well orgauised- and known, th. t comment would be superfluous — (by this cans many thou-ands ol patients have been cuivd, whom he has never seen md never known) ; ano it is carried on with such judicious supervi«ou that though he has been practising this 3 branch of , his profession ior twenty^six ye.-irs P in these colonies, no single instance of accidental diseotery has dYer yet happened. • VV.hen Medicines are required,' these are ' forwarded iv the satr.e careiul inuuuer without a possibility of ch'e < outeuts of the p:in;els j being discovered, Plain ami ctaar directions j accompany these latlei'i and a cure is euvcied | 1 Vvilhout eyen the piiy^iciau knowing who is J his patient. • Td ilen and Women wi'h Broken-Co'vn ' Constitutions, the JServou*, the Debilitated, anil all suffering from any Disease whatever, ' Dr L, L. plac ol treatment coin- > mends itsel!. avoiding, as it. does, the inconvenience ami expense I a personal visit, { ADDKESit — DR. L. L SMITE, 18^, UOLLINo STUKET EAST. MhLUOUtiNli!. , (Late the Residence ->i the tioveruor.) THIS ADVKKTIsKMEM 1 aHUULD Xli CAiIKFULLY RlfiAJ) AND KE MEMBIfiUEI) BY KVliltVONii LN" TEKKSTJf-DIN FENCING/ THE PATENT OVAL S AMSO^^FENCE WIRE , Has now been oef >r-: the public for fou years, and during that time 5000 TON B HAVE BKEN 6OL (living very great satisfaction, in proof of which we h<> d numerous testimonials front well-known Coluuists ; and the demand 1 daily increasing td such an extent, tha numerous Spurious Imitations have lately btton MV/jduced in the various mmkeis of Australia and New Zeuhiini, for the 3 sole purpose of damaging the rvpulutiob of the Patent Oyai Samson Wiro. TBE SAMSON WIRE Was . ai eiiled mid introduced tour ' years ago in Vict'-ria, New t^outh A' ales Queensland and New Zealand ; and the principal claim set loiih was its being uinde Oval to preven f -aud. Yet, n. the lace or tnes« patents firms — ruany of re> n spec>ahle .standing hnye, for the sake ol m | paltry coimui.-sion. lent thutn&eives totlu 7 i lutruductiua of various .spurious umt;tf ,1 | lions, which render theii) liable lo HCtiof c I ut law, ami i;iuO3'ancu and disappoint 1 lo I lie us< rs Th* public whun puruhaving, are there ■» (ore oiiitiioued tt> sue liuu each coil beaff j a tin laiiv liius : — i PAIIiNT OVA L S A .VI SON W I U K ! IN OVAL ; " I And.thePuteiitees' Tally or i rade Mark > Al D i ll \ ITS VDLOCK. | Manufactured by the Wuiteeross Wire _ / Company, Warringtou, England j Prices Greatly Reduced ADDlilioS: M'LEAH BitOi. & RIGQ, IMPOKTEKS 3, g9 ELIZABETH 61'IiEiiT, MELBOUKNE N n KMOKB' WASSIINCr POWDER j^ duet- not injure the most delicate whit c li< ii. s iv artiiM's waslu-d, ii composed ofth most di-lic»te mgredie ts ami yoes muo ut j 'uuier iliau irost washi. g powders It h I '''{j'y rt'i'ommenJed as a sale an o tcoiiomi iv nd labor s
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Inangahua Times, Volume VIII, Issue 1310, 15 October 1883, Page 1
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984Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume VIII, Issue 1310, 15 October 1883, Page 1
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