Dunedin Advertisements. HE UNBEKSIGNED Begs to inform the INHABITANTS PROVINCE OF OTAGO That the business hitherto carried on by him under the name and style of HAY BIIOS., Tailors & Outfitters, Princesstreet, Dunedin, will on and after this date be carried on by him under the name and style of DAVID R. HAY, TAILOR AND OUTFITTER, PRINCES-STREET, DAVID R. HAY. Princes-street, Dunedin, 26th March, 1870. N.B.- -With reference to the above, I beg most respeotfully to inform all those who are indebted to the late firm that 1 shall feel extremely obliged to them if they will be kind enough to settle their accounts A T ONCL. PAVID R HAY.
" Up ! Up ! my friend, anil clear your looks ! Why all this toil ami trouble ? ALL those who are suffering from despondency, melancholi i, loss of spirits and pluck, who feel that thov are wasting and pining, and who are gradually getting weaker and weaker, from causes thev have not courage or desire to acquaint their family attendant with : in all such cases, Mr L. L. Smith feels it incumbent on himself to inform such unfortunate patients, that he has devoted his lifetime to the study of these complaints, having been a pupil and assistant of the late Dr Cnlverwell, of London, who made these diseases his special In all those diseases relating and pertaining to : Married Life, and which make marriage a curse lather than a blessing, Mr L. L, Smith can lie consulted with the greatest certainty of success, and with the additional feeling that no chance can possibly occur of their secret ever being divulged. In cases of extreme Nervous Debility, where cally prostrated, and incapable of exertion without great fatigue, then and there the person so situated should at once consult Mr L. L. Smith, before disease of a more serious character sets in ; the above arises frequently from the enervating influence of hot climates, but frequently from other causes of a more serious nature. Palpitations of the heart, a tendency also to he easily startled and alarmed, is another phase of disease which requires particular attention, as arising from a most important cause ; those who suffer from the above have not—- " Mix'd reason with pleasure And wisdom with mirth ;" But have, on the contrary, been gniltv of a secret vice, which has. as it were, eaton into their very vitals. Many "old young men" consult me, who, though young in years, have, through the vice above alluded to, and by their having been quacked by the unqualified and unskilful medical man, at last given up all hope and succumbed, and are aged in their very youth, unfitted to fulfil the duties which they w r ere sent to this world to perform. " Re wise to-day, 'tis madness to defer, Procrastination is the thief of time.''
Mr L. L. Smith wishes to impress upon those who are labouring under diseases which cannot he treated by the general medical attendant, from insufficient knowledge and practice, that as an expert in these diseases, he has the right to warn the public at large against the number of blatant charlatans and quacks, who not only extort the money out of the pockets of the patients, but are continually ruining the health of tlio unfortunate sufferers. Many hundreds yearly present themselves to him from all the different colonies, who are thoroughly bankrupt in health and pocket, and they then lament, when too late, the horrible deception which has been practised on them. Not only do men deceive those unfortunate victims by pretending to be legally-qualified men. but they advertise for sale, and swindle the public, by selling bottles of muck, under the name of "Dr Kieord's Essence of Life,' " Balm of Syriacum " and a mass of other quackeries, whose sole province is to extract money out of the pockets of their deluded victims. Will the public never understand that the only guarantee they call have that they will bo honestly and skilfully treated, is the fact that the person to whom they apply for advice is a legally-qualified medical man, who has devoted his time to the branch of practice for which the patient is seeking aid ? Secondly, that his long residence in the place, and his position, is at least a guarantee of the estimation in which he is held by his fellow-citizens. Dr L. L. Smith can be consulted by letter : fee, £l. By the above means, any male or female patient can, by describing -their symptoms, avoid the unpleasantness, in many cases, of a personal interview, and the patient can retain lvjs incognito. Medicines appropriately packed to avoid observation arc sent to all parts of the colonies, with plain letters as to diet, &c. Mr L. L. Smith consults personally daily—mornings before 11, and evenings before? and 0, K Bourke-stiect east, Melbourne.'
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Bibliographic details
Cromwell Argus, Volume 2, Issue 92, 15 August 1871, Page 8
Word Count
803Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Cromwell Argus, Volume 2, Issue 92, 15 August 1871, Page 8
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