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k Publia Notices ' " Lives of great men all remind us, j We ran n>nVe our live* •üblime; I Anil, H«>p(»rrine. leave ho'iind us Footprintn < n the sands of time.' 1 fpHE h hove is read with great interest by J thousun^s o< young men. Tt inspire* tlnm with HoPX, for in the bright lexic-m ol cuth there is no such word as fail. vU« ! sh> many, tins is correct,— is tru« with " ignrd to the youth who has never abused hit strength— und to the roan who has not beon 1 ptmion's slave." But to iliHt youth— to that man, who hif wasted his vigor, who bus yielded hims»lf ti|i t the tetnpor iry sweet allurements of vi.-c, wUo ha< ifivoit uuoridled license tv his p >»• (■Kin?, to him the above li'iea are but ai a reproach. What. Hopb c.m he have ? Wlmt •i«|jti-iitions ? What climce of lei«vin^ Am lootpivn* on the sand* ot time? For him, alnf! therein nouelit hut dark despair and self-reproach for a lost life. For a m.tn to leave his ootprints on the sands of tt*e, he mu*t be endowed with ,\ ■ strong bruin an I nervoun power. He must • possess a sound, vigorous, healthy mi d, iv | a healthy body —the powr to conceive— i the ftier .7 to execute! Hut look at our [ Au-triilinn youth ! tie* the emaciated form, • the vacant iook, the listless hesitating manner, the n.ivous dislnfut. the senseless, almost idiotic expression. Note his demeanour and eonvemnion, anl then say, Is that a man to leave hit !ont|<riut« on the sands of time. Do parent*, medical men and educators of youth phv sufficient attention to this subjectP Do they ever ascertain the cause ol I this decay ; and li:t v j n_j done ho, do they (as v strict sense of duty demands) reek the skilled ndvice of the medical man, who has in ule tbi« branch of his proiesaioij his par tioulur specialiiy, whose lie has been devote** to he treatment of these fuses P header wlmt is yo«.' answer ? Le: each one answer 'or himself. Parents see 'heir progeny fading griduully hel'oi-e their sight, oee them become emaciated old young men, broken down 'v health, enfeebled, uufltted for the battle of lift); yet one word might save them, one •ound Hud vigorous health«gmng letter from a medical nan, habituated to the treat mont and continuous supervision of such cases wou' J, in inoi*t inntuuces, succeed in warning oil tiie impending doom of a miserable and gloomy future, aud by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system lo its nuturai vigor, and enoure ajotous aud happy life Dr L. Ij. sMI TU, of Melbourne, has innde the diseases of youth and those arising therd flow hit* peculiar study. His whole pro essional lile has been especially devoted to the treatment of N«-rvous AJfi-ctious and the Di^'KHPs incidental to Married Life. Hie skill is available to all— no matter how m*. 'iy hundred* or thousatida ot tulles dtstac t. iiis system of correspondence by letter is now so ' well orgauidbd and knotru, th • t couuuent would be superfluous— (by this leans many tkui4»»|id# tM;ptt(iß<iU baj* oeau oarbdy w4wm I lie has never seen and never known) ; and it j it cm r led on with such judicious «upervi>ou that though he hue been |'<ructising this brunch of his profession lor twenty«six years in these colonies, no single instance of aooi* dei.tai discovery ha* ever yet happened. When Medicines are required, these are torw:irded in the san.e careiul uiuuuer without a possibility ot tbe ■ omeiita ol tbe parcels being discovered, Plaiu and clear directions accompany thcae lutfer. aud a cure is enVoied without eyeu tbe phyiciau knowing wbeis iiis patient. To Men «nd Women with Broken-c!o— n ConstitutiouH, the Nervous, the Debilitated, and all suffering from any Disease whatever, Dr L. L. SMiTU'd plac ot treatment oom« mends itself, avoiding, as it does, the inconvenience and expeuse f a persouul visit, ADDBBBB— DR. L. L SMtTR, 18., COLLINo bIUhKT £±&t. MKLBOOi-NK. (f-ate tbe Real lence ■>(' the Governor.) I'Ula AUV\Hin6b.MHST &HUULU UK CtitK^CFLLV: R&AD AiND Ktf MBMBHIKKO Hl* KVEttVo^ii iA« TtfJCKsSTIi-D JS FENCING. THEPATENTOVAL SAMSON FENCE WIRE Huh (io>« bcru tief«r< (he public for fou years, and ifurinu that time iMXJO TO>.S HAVE BEEN SOL '.living very great satisfaction, in proof of winch we h > if uuuhmous tesiimoniulH from vveli-kiiown Colcaist^; aud the demaud daily ineteasiaK lo such an extent, tiia nuuerous Spurious Imitations huve lately l>u«u nv/jduccd in tlie various markets of Australia aud New Zealand, for the sole purpose of damaging tlie reputation ot >be Patent Oyal feaiusou Wire THE SAMSON WIRE Was ' aietited and introduced four yearn ago its Victor ia, New South \\ ale* Queensland and New Zealand ; and the principal claim set forth was its being made Oval to preven fraud. Yet, \u the face of these patents (inns— many of re< specrable siauding have, tor the sake ot pillry coiuiuiKsion, lent themselves totlu mtroductioa of various *pnrious iinitaj nous, wbicb render tbeujt table lo aotiof at law, and iuuoyance and uisappoint to (be uHers. The public when purehaning, are there fore cautioued to see thai each coil Lean* a tiu tally thus :— _»AiJiiNT OVAL SAMSON WIRK ih oval ; And, tlie Pateutees' f allj orlrade Mark At it K I* •. OLOOK. Manufactured by tbe Wbitecrosa Wire Company, Warrtngton, Koglaad. Prices Greatly Reduced ADDiLH.66: M'LEAN BROo. & EIGG, LMPOKTEIiS 99 j.i_iZA_KiU ttlliEtiT, AiKL. bOUK.Nii aKftlOiW' WAStIINQ POWDJitt O not injure toe must douoftte wh c ues iv ttitio.es wasuuJ, i> oompjsdi o it wool UetiodU) mgrcdid its an ( go<M mo luiuer (nan >uu«t Wasoi ig po*i^rj it aillj' rv<:<JM ueaioi *» ■» ** »t vi ««v> aw &

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18861112.2.2.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Inangahua Times, Volume XI, Issue 1781, 12 November 1886, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
941

Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume XI, Issue 1781, 12 November 1886, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume XI, Issue 1781, 12 November 1886, Page 1

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