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j Public Rotieos, " I<ives of great men all remind us, We can nuke our lives sublime ; 1 Ami, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the emids ol rim.'." fTMIE above is read with s" "'t interest b* X thnusamis o' young men. It inspires them with Hopb, for in the bright lexicon of lut h tli ere i* no such word us Tail. I Ins! s;i\ many, this is correct. — is truo with -',»gard to the youth who has n^ver nbu*ed his dti-fntith — und to the man who has not been ' pus-ion'i* slnve." ISut to thi«t youth— to thiit mnn, who has waited I. is vij?or, who hns yielded h;msMlt up t tlie timpor ry sweet iillurenieiith ol vice, who hii-i i;iven unoridled license to his passions, to him the above lines are hut as a { reproiich. Wlun Hope en he have? What u-fjinuions ? Wlntt chiince of lei'vintf hi* footptints on the sam Wot time? Fur him, aliio! tin re im nought but dark despair and sell* reproach for a lost life. For a man to leave hi* ootprints on the smids of time, he nni-t he endowed with » : strong biaiu an I nervou* power, lie must I pushes' a sound, vigorous, liealthy mi d, in I h lit althy body —the power to conceive— . the energy to execute! l^ut look at our I Au-ttuliiin youth! Seethe emsiciaied form, - 1 lie vitCiint look, the listless hesttm ing tuunner, 'the luivoui distrust, the senseless, almost ! idiotic expression. Note his demeanour and 1 convefMiiion, »nd then say, Is that a man tv I leuve his ootprints c*i the sands of time. I iio parents, medical men ami edue.n*oi"9 o f i youth p»y sufficient utteutiou to this subI ject ? J)o they ever ascertain the cause oi I 1 1110 decay ; and having done no, do the./ (its j j a strict sen>e of duty deinaudo) i>eek th# I skilled advice of the medial man, who has j j in >de this branch ot his pro esrion his par ticuliir speciality, whose lile has been devotee* Ito he treatment of these cuses P header I wlmi i« your im*wer? Le: euch one answer I 'or lmn«tli. Parents see their progeuy fuding gruluaily before their sight, k^p them become emaciiitcd oid vutig men, broken down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of ' ti IV ; yet one word might save them, one •ound and vigorous health-giving letter from j a meilical nan, hubituated lo the treatment and continuous tupervUion of such cases wou' j, in most instances, succeed in warning oil t.ie impending doom ol a miserable and gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system lo its natural vigor, and ensure a.jotous and happy lite i>r L. L. SMITH, ol Melbourne, has made the diseased of youth and those arising therd fmm his peculiar study, ilia whole pro. »»- sioual lile has been especially devoted to the treatment of Nervous Affections aud the Diseases incidental to Married Life. Uia skill is available to «t!l — no matter how tot "ty hui dred- or thousanda 01 miles distant, iiis s.Mstfitt of correspondence by letter is now so ' WpII orgnutfltid and known, tint comment wuiild be superfluous — (by this >eaus many thnusiinda ol patients have been cured, whom he has never seen md never known) ; ami it is earned on with such judicious supervison tlmr though be Ins been practising tint bnnu-ii of lus prufesMon for tweuty»six years I in these colonies, 110 single instance ot accidental discovery has ever yet happened. When Medicines are required, these are TdrtH/rrtetl in the same careful manner without v possibility ol the • oniotits of the pun-els being discovered, Plain and clear direct ion» accompany these latter, and a cure is ett.-cted without eye.ll the phy-ic;au knowing who is his pntient. To Men and Women with Broken«Cown Constitutions, the Nervous, the. J)ebilitated, and all sullen ng from any Disease whatever, Dr L. L. 8111 1'li'd pluc ol treatment comuiends itself, uvoiding, as it doer, the inconvenience and expense f a personal visit, AvvHßsa— DR. L. L SMITE, 1»2, UOLLLNa STREET EAST. Mi:LIiUUi:NE. (f<ate the ReHi-lencn -m' tlie (J-nvernor.) riili ADVEUIISh.VIKAT tHUULIi MOASCfiFULLV llBAJ) AND XX MK.UBKI«Et) BY hVKUYONii INTEIiKSTUDIN FENCLNG. THE PATENT OVAL SAMSON FENCE WIRg Uas;io« h< en net r the public for fou year», and durinu that time .5000 TONS HAVE BKKN SOL '•fiviittf very grpat suttsfacuon. in proof o> wlncii we h<> 0 numerous lesuuioiiinl.s frum well-known Coloiu»i>; and the demand daily increasing to .such an exteut, tiiu nuiiierons Spurious Imitations huve lately Kn 'i</jduced iv the various ruaikets of Australia and JNew Zoiland, for the sole purpo.MO of daiuagitig the rep'jtiftioL ot the Patent Oyai Smiusoii Wire. TBE SAMSON WIRE iVm , aseiiied and introtiucerl tour years ago 111 Victoria, i^'ew JSouth Wales QucenslHiid and New Zealand ; and the principal chum set louli was its being mode Urul to proven f^aud. Yet, Iv the ' face ol these patents firms — many of re* gpecfable standing have, for the »ake ot paltry commission, lent themselves to tin 1 introduction of various spurious 1111110 I itons. which tender them liable to action at law, and imioyance aud utMappoiot to the users I Jhe public when purt-lissin<>;. are there ' tote cautioned to see that each coil bear' I a tin tativ thus:— J^U'EiVr OVAL SAMSON WIUK IK OVAL ; I A nd,the Patentees' Tall) or'irade Mark B IX VDtOCK. Manufactured by the WhitecroM Wire Oompuuy, Warrmgton, Euglaud Prices Greatly Reduced ADDitliS6: M'LEAN BROd. & RIGQ, LMPUKTEIIS 99 i.LiZABKI'II SIUKIvT, MKLUULTiiNIi QKNIOKS* WABUIN<J POWDEB O doeJ not injure the must delicate wh c lies iv articie* wasutti, i< c>n t >o«d 1 o tb most delioitw in^rdiiie its a>i I u.o tuiuer iiiitu 1110*1 w I*lll it{ pu>vi«rs It uigly roooui.mj.ii.'i hj .» *„->.*>iu: ujja^ji <id i»'ooi b

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18851012.2.2.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume X, Issue 1612, 12 October 1885, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
964

Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume X, Issue 1612, 12 October 1885, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume X, Issue 1612, 12 October 1885, Page 1

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