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Public Notice;. ! 'f Lives of great men all remind us, We ran ti'f.be "ur livrg sublime; AIK ! . -lepirtiiiß, i«avi- hnliitvl 1(4 Foot))rintj> Dii the sand* of tim ( '." is rrad with gretit interest b} thi>usiin<Ts o' .vouiig -men. ft inspire, them with Hopr, lorw the bright lexicon o i cuth tli ere it< no such word us tail. Llii.s ! sa> many, tins is enrrect,— is truo with -jijard to the youth who ' has never abused his strength — :iud to the man .vho has not beon 4 pttKKtoii's " Hut t" lint youih — 'd that man, who hue wasted bis vijjoi, who hns yielded himself up (• thstnnpor ry sweet allur.euujnts of vice,, who has tiven unoridled license to Tiis |»iB- -]> BWH9,-to^inrHiw*%WHwH^twH(^^ i repronrti What lloPKcn he have? What ■i«|,irutii)iiß ? Wlnit chunoe of lei*vin» Am j ontp'iinK on tlie "and- o: time ?' For him, ai>i>! th. re i« nought but dark despair and aell-reiiroucii fof a lost life. " For a man to leave hi* ootprints on the sands of time, he must be endowed with a ■ strong 'brain ana nervoun power. He must ! posses* a sound, vigorous, healthy tni-'d, in j, j a healthy body — the power to conceive — I . rhe ener -y to execute! But look at our ( I Au-ii tlian youth! Seethe emiiciaied form, I . i lie vaciiiit look, the listless hesitating maiiDdr, t I the n i tous distrust, the senseless, almost g j idiotic expression. Note his demeanour and I' coiiVor.Mnion, nii'l then cay, Is that a man to leave his ootprints cm the sands of time. Do parents, medical men and educators of I youth p:iy sufficient attention to this subject ? Do they ever ascertain the cause of \ I this decay; and hivving done ho, do they (as r o. strict sense of duty demands) >eek the skilled ml vice ol the medical man, who has , m.vie this branch ol his pro ession his par \ i.icnliir .iuerialii v, Those lire has been devoted to he teatnieut of these cases? Reader what is your answer V Le . each one answer ' or himself. Parents see their progeny fading gndually before their sight, »cc them become s emaciated old young men, broken down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of > life; yet one word might save them, one I «ottud ami vigorous hea-th-giving letter from a medical nmi, habituated io tne treatment r and continuous rupervi-ion of such cases 1 wou' 1, in inoet instances, succeed in warning oil tne impending doom ol a miserable aud I gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system io its natural vigor, and ensure ajo ous aud happy life J)r L. L. SMIL'H, ot Melbourne, has made ' the diseusep ol ynuth and those arising therd ' from his peculiar study. £1 is whole pro.nssional life bus been 'eapecixlly devoted to the tii atnn-ni ol Nervous Atfeciiuns and the I'lfU'Kses incidental to Married Lile- bLis skill is available to aam»l — n» inattor liow int "iy hui.dred- or thousaiida of mil. s distant. His sysiem of corre.ipon iciico by letter i» now so well orgauisud and known, tli it comment would be superfluous — (by this •eaus many thousands ul patients have been cured, whom he has never seen md never known) ; and it ie> carried on with such judicious supervison that though he has been practising this bra noil ol his profession lor twenty«six years in thetse colonies, no single inatuuce of accidental discovery has ever yet happened. When Mediciues are required, these are iorw.ii'ded in the samocarelul manner without a possibility oi the > ontetits of the parcels being discovered. Plain and clear directions accompany these ltitl'er. and v cure is enacted without eyen the phyician knowing who is his pHtieut. !<• Aien and Women wiih Broken-Cowii Constitutions, the i\emmu, ihe. Debilitated, amt all sullei-iiig IVoiu any I)i9eace whatever, Dr L. L. SillThl'jJ plac ol treatment commende itbeli, avoiding, as it does, ihe inconvenience and expense f a personal visit. Address — DR. L. L SMITa, 18a. UOLLKno Sl'RfciiT EAST, Mi'.LBOU..MK. (Late the lien le-nce >t the tirovernor«) Ihib ADVEiU'IS>h..VHfi.NT oHOULD BKCvHEFULLY UICAJ) AND XX MEMBEKEU BY KVEJIYO^^ IJS« TE J ( KSTJ} D IN FE NUIiN G. THE PATKNT OVAL SAMSON FENO£ WIRE Has now been bef>r> the public for fou years, and during that time /5000 lOiNB HAVE BKEN 80L Viivin:; very great satisfaction, io proof of which we h<> <l numerous testimonials from well-known Colonists; and the demand daily increasing to such an exteut, ttia numerous Spurious Imitations have lately b««n nv/jduced in the various markets of Australia aud New Zealand, for the sole purpose of damaging the reputatioL of the Pateut Oval Samson Wire. TBE SAMSON WIRE Was , ate&ted und introduced lour years ago in New {South *Vales Queensland and New Zealaud ; and the principal claim set toiih was its being uidde Oval to preven f -aud. Yet, ib the face ul tuese patents iirtus — rauny of re< Bpecfable standing haye, for tbe sake ot j paltry commission, lent themseives to tin t introduction of various spurious imi tat i tiotis, which render them liable to action at law, and inuoyance aud uisappoint to the usi-rs The publio wben purchs;>iog, are there 1 fore cautioned to see thai each coil bear* ] a tin tally thus : — PAiEN T O V A.L S A MSON W I HE IN OVAL ; Andjthe Patentees' Tall} orlradeMark M B B IV ».,DLOOK. I Manufactured by the Whitecross Wire Company, Warnngtou, England Prices Greatly Reduced ADDiiEod : M'LEAN BROo. & RIGG, IMPOKTEJRS 99 ELIZABETH aXitJBhT, MELBOUKNE SENIORS' WASHING POWDER does not injure the most delioata wh c in artio-dd waaaed, ij cjuapoiel o (h j st Jdlw.tCd mgfjiieiDi aal gjes tr.o Iv uer cuuu moit w^auiug pawiors It 'gly ro;o.n.ao idoi u» a dila >»n d ojau.as nd labo? s

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18840331.2.2.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume IX, Issue 1381, 31 March 1884, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
958

Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume IX, Issue 1381, 31 March 1884, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume IX, Issue 1381, 31 March 1884, Page 1

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