Dunedin *"TAWTHORN HILL NURSERY, '. DUNEDIN. The planting season being close at hand, Orders for Fruit Trees and Bushes FoRE.?r Trees, Hedge Plants, should be given without delay, so aa to ensure early delivery. FRUIT TREES AND BUSHES. The stock on hand comprises ' Apple Apricot All the best Cherry 1, 2, 3, and 4 -{ Nectarine }- kinds of Peach years old. I Pear I Plum ) Raspberry, red and yellow Gooseberry, white, green, and red Currant, black, white, and red Almond ; Black Bramble Spanish Chestnut ; Elder Eugenia Ugni; Fig Filberts and Nuts Mulberry ; Olive Pomegranate ; Quince ; Walnut. FOREST TREES. Ash, Birch, Blue and Red Gum, Stringy Bark, Elm, Oak, Limetree, Poplar, Hazel, Sycamore, Laburnum,' Horse Chestnut, Pines, &c. &c. GEORGE MATTHEWS, Nurseryman, Moray Place, Dunedin. Agent at Cromwell: J. A. MATTHEWS. Argus Office. Lawrence ICTORTA HOTEL, PEEL-STREET, LAWRENCE. Eichari) Williams Proprietor. Families and Travellers visiting Lawrence will find every accommodation, and receive the best attention, at this old-established Hotel. A new building has recently been erected, which considerably enlarges the accommodation and enhances the comfort of visitors. The additions comprise a suit of Private Apartments, commodious Bedrooms, and well' furnished and cosy Sittingrooms, and render the Victoria one of the largest and most comfortable country hotels in the province. A substantial Stable has also been erected, making now L 3 stalls ; together with four loose boxes and coach house. Paddock for the accommodation of horses. Patent Medicine Nervousness—Deeility—Loss or Power— Spermatorrhea—The Indiscretions of Early Youth—Syphilitic Diseases. In all the above cases, arising from errors and the yielding to the passions, no time should be lost to at once arrest the progress of disease. TY R L. I, SMITH U has devoted himself for twenty years in the colony to the practice of this branch of his profession, while previously in England he was the pupil of, and practised with, the celebrated Dr 11. T. Culverwell, the only medical practitioner who over exclusively adopted this as the sole branch of his profession. Dr L. L. Smith hereby informs the public that he is the. on'y hgnlly-qunlifed medical man in this speciality of his profession ; that others advertising are unqualified, and that, therefore, in pretending to be qualified, they are obtaining money under false pretences. Dr L. L. Smith also warns the public against the quackeries advertised. If the taker of any of those advertised nostrums escape with his life, or his system be not thoroughly and irreparably undermined by them, he may look apon himseif as the most fortunate mortal. Dr L. L. Smith has been applied toby so many unfortunate broken-down young-old-men, utterly crushed in spirit, ruined in body, and filched in pocket, that he deems it a duty to publish this to the world. _ Those men and women who have been the victims of unprincipled charlatans frequently seek that recovery which is often beyond Dr Smith's control. When will the public understand that it is to their interest to consult a duly qualified medical man, who has made this his sole study, rather than apply to a number of ignorant impostors, who merely harp and prey tlpon their pockets and health ? Dr L. Smith has always stated that to warn the public of these quicksands is his chief reason for advertising. In all cases of nervous debility, lowness of spirits, loss of power, pimples on the forehead, lassitude, inaptitude for business, impotency, drainage from the system, and the various effects of errors of youth, and blood poisoning from diseases previously contracted, Dr L. L. Smith invites sufferers to consult him, as lie has no hesitation in stating that no medical man, either here or in England, has had the opportunities of. practice and extraordinary experieuce which hs has
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Bibliographic details
Cromwell Argus, Volume IV, Issue 205, 14 October 1873, Page 8
Word Count
616Page 8 Advertisements Column 3 Cromwell Argus, Volume IV, Issue 205, 14 October 1873, Page 8
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