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Sporting. THE WESTLAND •' M ELBOU RN X CUP" MINI -<i • O.MPANY. NOTICE TO SHARE tIOLDEES A CALL of TEN SHILLINGS (10--<) PER SHARE has been made in tbe above Company, payable in cash, or by PO. Order, and the follow'ng dividends will be declared on the sth November. Ist Dividend ... £400 2nd Dividend 200 3rd Dividend 100 Paid up Shares 100 Contributing Shares ... ... 200 Total ...£IOOO The Washiog Up will be under the Superintendence of a Committee Elected by the Shareholders. Should tbe Washing Up not realise the lull amount, the Dividends will be distributed pro rata. Full particulars, with Prospectus, can be obtained on application to NUGGET, Manager. Care of Mr J, Peake, Ruyal Mail Hotel, Revell street Hokitika. MELBOURNE CUP 1883. ADAM BEDE will th s year hold a series of Consultations on tbe above event?, Two Thousand Subscribers at £1 each, to be divided as tollows :— Firat Horse £500 Second Horse 200 Third Horse 100 Other Starters (divided) ... 600 Non-starters ... 700 Total £2000 It is pariicularly requested that early application for shares will be made, as each list will be drawn soon as filed. Eesults will be forwarded to subscribers immediately after drawing, and the next list proceeded with. Any subscriber drawing a horse in any list will be allowed, if he so desires it, to invest <n the following list any sum not exceeding Four Pounds without remitting any further cash, this amount to be ultimately deducted from prize money. Application by letter only, enclosing two stamps, with exchange on cheques, or by money order, bank notes, or drafts. Registered letters or telegrams will not on any account be received. If bank notes are sent, please use two envelopes, one sealed and placed, inside the other. P. O. Orders pre erred when procurable. No. 2 Now Open Address :— « ADAM BEDE," care ot H. N. Abbott, Box No. 2, Post Office, Auckland Medical. O PECIALT V ! O PECIALISTS ! ! Draw on Nature — She Compels you to Honor the Acceptance. Thiity years since, when Dr Smith first commenced practice here, it was thonght by medical men, that to be a Specialist was derogatory to the professional man, but this, like most other innovations in scientific and lay matters, was found ratber to aid than to be "infra dig" to that profession, wherein the .specialty was practised. Lallemandand Ricord, in France, and Acton, in England, were for years cried down by their medical brethren , Now and for many past years they have been looked up to and quoted, by every man who pretends to have any knowledge of the particular branch of the profession which these gentleman specially devoted themselves to. It was the same with Erasmus Wilson, the "Skin Doctor," recently knighted by Her Majesty. Years since, it was the same with Dr L. L. Smith, of Melbourne, who practised (as did Lallemand and Ricord) as a specialist. In all cases of diseases and habits which produce symptoms of Nervous Affections, of Skin Eruptions, of Prostration, and va. ike human beiDgs inririle, or which unfit them to carry on the purposes of their being, or which de* monstrates itself, on the other hand, in Eruptive Diseases and Secondary Forms of Affections. In all of these cases how necessary it is to have the Specialist who has devoted his whole lifetime to the studying and practising in this one branch of his profession? Hence, now, after so many years, all minutiae are familiar to him, and symptoms which (it is not unreasonable to suppose) may not strike the General Practitioner at once, now from constant practice and observation make Dr L. L. Smith master of the subject. The medical profession — that is, the more liberal-minded of them — have likewise recognised this fact, and Specialists now in e\ery branch — oculists, aurists, syphilic, mental diseases, chest disea?es, and in fact every portion the of human frame, has bow some member of the profession who devotes his time to that, and to none other. For instance, the "chest doctor" would on do account attend an accouchement, and the oculist would not think of setting a broken leg but each would ail vise his patient to go to that doctor who is most famed for treating the disease requiring special skill. Dr L. L. SmithS mith asks those who require treatment for Weakness, Prostration, Barrenness, aDd Sterility, whose frames and whose constitutions aie shattered, to consult him as an expert— thirty (30) yeara practice in this coJooy, with a practice extending throughout not only the Colonies but in India, China, Fiji, and even in England, he claims ought to be sufficient to cause every man or woman requiring such skill as is alluded to above, to consult him either personally or by letter. As a Sypliilographer no other medical man has been able to have such large experience as he possesses, and for other allied affections — such as Nervous disease— no one in the profession has enjoyed so much public confidence. URL.L. SMITH. Consultation Fee by Letter, £1. Medicines appropriately packrd and f or wai ilcd all over the civilised globe. DR L. iTsMITH, IS2, COLLINS STREET EAST, MELBOURNE, 1/TESSRS CLARKE, SO~N& PI,ATT~ *"-*- 85, Gracechurch Street, LONDON, E. C, Receive Advertisements in England for insertion iv this Paper. mHE WEEKLY LEADER EVEEY THURSDAY, PRICE.-STXPENCE.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WCT18831013.2.16.6

Bibliographic details

West Coast Times, Issue 4438, 13 October 1883, Page 4

Word Count
880

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 West Coast Times, Issue 4438, 13 October 1883, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 West Coast Times, Issue 4438, 13 October 1883, Page 4

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