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Public Notice?, ! '•' Lives of great men all remind us, j We run m n be our lives sublime ; I A n<l, fli-pnrting, leave behind us I Footprint;, on the ennds of time." I^.IJF. nbove is read with great interest hi thousands o* young men. It. inspire . them with Hope, for in the bright lexicon o •cuth there is no such word as fail. Lhis pa\ many, tliis is correct, — is true with "jgarc to* the youth who l*as never al>u«ed hii strength — and to the man who has not beor 'passion's slave.' But t.'> that youth — to that man, who hrn wa*t»*d his vigor, who has yielded himself u\. t<- tha tt-mpor rj' sweet allurements of vice who lias given unoridled license to his. pas- ' 1111 s tlie ' rißove lines are but as c reproach. What Hope en he Imve ? What aspirations ? What chance of leaving hii footpi'nts on the sand* of time? For him, ahis! thrre ih nought but dark despair and self-reproach for a lost life. For a man to leave his ootprints on the sands ol time, he inu-t be endowed with n I strong brain and nervous power. He musl ! possess v sound, vinorous, healthy mind, in | a healthy body — the power to — the ener.-y to execute! But look at oui I Australian youth ! !see the enjneialed form, . the vaciint iook, the listless hesitating rnanudr, (the n.ivous distrust, the senseless, almost j idiotic expression. Note his demeanour and convcrMiiion, and then say, Is that a man to leave his footprints cm the sands of time. Do parents, medical men and educators ol youth pay sufficient attention to this subject ? l)o they ever ascertain the causa of J this decay ; and having done ho, do they (aa v strict sense of duty demands) *eek the skilled ndvice of the medical man, who has m;ide tliis branch of his protession his particular speciality, whose life has been devoted to .he treatment of these cases ? Keader. I what is your answer ? Le: each one answer (or himself, Parents see their progeny fading gradually before their sight, see them become emaciated old young men, broken down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle ol life; yet one word might save them, One sound and vigorous health-giving letter from a medical nan, habituated to the treatment and continuous supervision of such cases wou' J, in most instances, succeed in warning oil' tne impending doom of a miserable and gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system to its natural vigor, and ensure ajo»ous and happy life. j)r L. L. SMITH, ol Alelbourue, hUs made the disease? of youth and those arising thurd from his peculiar study. His whole provisional lile has been especially devoted to the treatment ol Nervous Affections and the Diseßses incidental to Married Life. btis skill is available to all — no matter how im »y hundred.-* or thousanda oi miles distant. His system of correspondence by letter is now so well orgauised and known, th.t comment would be superfluous — (by this jeaus many thousands ol patients have been cured, whom he has never seen nnd never known) ; ami it if curried on with such judicious supcrvi.-on that though he -has been practicing this branch ol his profession for t\venty»su years in these colonies, no single instance of accidental discovery has ever yet huppeuuu 1 . When Medicines are required, these uro forwarded in the s^inc careful uianuor without a possibility of ihe contents of the parcels being discovered, Plain and clear directions accompany these latf'er, and a cure is eifecled without eyen the physician knowing who is his p.-itient. To Meu a v id Women with Broken-Cown Constitutions, the Nervous, the Debilitated, and all sullen ng from any Disease whatever, Dr L. L. SMITH'S plan ol treatment commends itself, avoiding, as it does, the mcouvenience and expense i' a personal visit. Addkess — DR. L. L SMITa, 182. UOLLLN6 STRIiET KAST, MKLBOUKNE. (Late the Resilience •>!* the Grovcrnor.) THIS AUVIfiUTISKiMKAT &HOULD UK CAjJEFULLY JiKAI) AND KE MtiMBEKEIJ BY liVEliVO^'ji liS" TiS K ESTJf D IN FE N 013 G. THE PATENT OVAL SAMSON FENCE WIRE Has now been before the public for tou years, and during that time 5000 TONS HAVE BEEN 6OL 'living very great satisfaction, in proof of which ws huKl numerous tesiioionials from well-known Colonists; and the demand daily increasing to such an extent, tha numerous Spurious Imitations have lately btt«n nvjduced in the various markets of Australia and .New Zealand, for the sole purpose of damaging the reputation of the Patent Oyal Samson Wiro. TEE SAMSON WIRE Whs i atented and introduced four years ago in Victoria, iSew South Wales Queensland and New Zealand ; und the principal claim set torch was its being made Oval to preven fraud. Yet, ib the face of these patents firms — many of re* spectable standing haye, for the »ake ot paltry commission, lent themselves totlu introduction of various spurious iniitai tions, which render them liable to action at law, and i.'iuoyauce and uisuppoint to the users. The public when purchasing, are there fore cautioned to 'see that each coil Lean 4 a tin tally thus : — PATJii\T OVAL SAMSON WIKK IN OVAL ; AndjthePalentees'Tallj or'irade Mark M li R IK VDIOCK. Manufactured by the VVhitecross Wire Company, Warnngtou, England. j Prices Greatly Reduced ADDItESS : M'LEAN BltOi. & RIGG, IMPOIITEKS yU ELIZABETH STJIEhT, MELJiOUJINIL QENIOKH' WASHING- POWDER £_) <loi-'> not iiijiuv inn u\j=t iloiiiMro wh a lii-j m iA.'U'jiLv, >v.i_»u.:..l, l, cj'HijojuJ. o fh most d:;hjito i;i.,'.-o .h;; iti ;;u I g.»oj iii« iUill'Ji t'UU lllOrtl \V l»:li i,; })O .V.J..H 1 :: it lit/iy i':.' jo i\ v' ti - i »i ••* ai.'i 'i ci ciji>.io-n

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/IT18840728.2.2.3

Bibliographic details

Inangahua Times, Volume IX, Issue 1423, 28 July 1884, Page 1

Word Count
941

Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume IX, Issue 1423, 28 July 1884, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Inangahua Times, Volume IX, Issue 1423, 28 July 1884, Page 1

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