FIRE INSURANCE. PROMPTITUDE and LIBERALITY In the Settlement of Claims; the LOWEST RATES OP PREMIUM conBistent with safety; UNDOUBTED SECURITY! and LIBERAL EEGELATIONS. MESSES GILLIES AND STREET, Land and Estate Agents, Princes street Dunedin, Having hppn .appointed Agents voit Otago of the well-known and long established Office, THE NORWICH UNION EIRE INSURANCE SOCIETY (Established 1797; Reorganised 1821}, Are now prepared to undertake the INSURANCE PROM FIRE of every description of Property, and to guarantee that ALL LOSSES WILLED PROMPTLY AS D LIBERALLY settled by themselves, thus avoiding the delay, and anxiety, and inconvenience occasioned by Agents having to consult Boards of Directory'and others at a distance. Every information asto theSociety’s Rates and Principles, cas to Special Rates, may be obtained free on application personally' or by letter to the, HEAD OFFICE FOR OTAGO, Messrs GILLIES and STREET, Agents; Or of District Agents, as under;— Clyde:— Mr. G. FACHE Cromwell:— Mr. JAS. MARSHALL A prow :—M'DOUGAL & SMITH THIRD EDITION, ILLUSTRATED JUST PUBLISHED In 1 Vol., Thick Svo, 412 Pages, Handsomely Bound, Price 10s 6d. Postage, Victoria, Is (id, Intercolonial, 2s (id. THE Generative System: AND ITS] FUNCTIONS IN HEALTH AAD DISEASE, BY JAMES GEORGE HEANEY, F.R.C.SE. Formerly on the Medical Staff of Her Majesty’s Military Forces, the Turkish Contingent, and Royal Victorian Artillery Regiment. Senior Surgeon to the Melbourne Hospital. FIRST DIVISION The Generative Organs, and their functions in their Normal Condition. SECOND DIVISION: The Generative, Organs, and their functions in their Abnormal Condition. Publisher, F. F. Bailliere, 104 Collins Street East, Melbourne. “ Will be universality studied and appreciated by' all true lovers of our fallen humanity, by the philanthropist, and by the legislator.”— Sydney Morning Herald . “‘The Generative System’ takes a sweeping view of the danger into which bad example and uneducated instincts lead the youth of the Colony.”— Melbourne Age. “ The manner in which it is got up is a credit both to the colony and to all concerned in it.”— Melbourne Argus. “A work for men alone, relating as it does to matters of whicli they ought not to he in ignorance.”— Melbourne Daily Telegraph. “Deals with an important subject, of which non-professional men might with advantage know more.”— Melbourne Herald. “ Contains all and every information it is desirable a child of either sex should know : judiciously used, it should become a safeguard against the many rocks found in the sea of life, upon which so many young people founder.”— St. Arnaud Mercimj. “ It is an undoubted fact that more disease and misery is engendered in families in consequence of the ignorance that prevails about this subject, than from almost any other cause, even including excessive drinking. We advocate the perusal of this work by all reasoning men and women.”— Wangaralta Dispatch. “Calculated to improve the knowledge and elevate the ideas of the masses.—Bendigo Advertiser, “ This work has been written with a desire to alleviate much of the misery caused by imperfect knowledge of the functions of the organs of reproduction. To those not famililr with this important subject, it is clear that definite information of a physioi logical character will be found of iiiesiiI mable advantage, by supplying; intelligent guidance in the conduct of sexual life, and to those we advise the perusal of so valuable a book.”— Marlborough Express. I “ The last new work goes elaborately into the evils, mental, moral, and social, connected with the violation of natural laws ; and it refers at length, to the carelessness of parents, and to the same fault in schoolmasters -in fact, the arguments apply to all who have the care of youth of both sexes. It deals copiously with the laws of prevention of these evils, the causes of which do not often trouble tbo medical practitioner, whose chief duty, generally, consists in curing diseases. Dr Bcaney takes a philosophical view of the causes that lead to certain dangers when the laws of health arc violated. This makes his works, which are generally written plainly, but forcibly, and are supported by lengthy extracts from high authorities, so acceptable to the general reader, who, at the risk of being charged with prurient curiosity, feels desirous of looking into these important matters. AVe can recommend tho work in particular to all classes, for none need be shocked by examining for themselves.”— Pastoral Times. “ Mr Beancy handles his subjects delicately and firmly, without being offensive ; he lays the bare facts and tho consequences of early dissipation and folly, clearly before his reader ; ho gives the results of his long, varied, and extensive practices to the public, accompanied with good sound advice. Foremost amongst which is, ‘Do not. in your suffering, and from a feeling of false delicacy, put your life, or, what is of more importance, your health in tho hands of quacks ; but unbosom yourself to a respectable professional man.’ Tho works in question will repay any one for their perusal. and, no doubt, wore the facts which he explains better nude:stood by the multitudes, the annual bills of lingering death, blighted hopes, and mortality, would be very considerably lessened.”— Murntrtmdi Times. “The Generative System, and its Functions in Health and Disease.— This work is a valuable addition to that ebssof medicalliteraturc whichhas, through false delicacy, been neglected by medical men fif standing and position, and therefore used and abused by charlatans. The volume contains 32fi pages. Parents will find most valuable information in it, which may aid them in rearing up a family in a healthy state, when, without such knowledge, they' might see their children perish without ever suspecting the cause."—Cornwall Chronicle, Launceston,
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DUNST18780104.2.16.4
Bibliographic details
Dunstan Times, Issue 820, 4 January 1878, Page 4
Word Count
925Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 Dunstan Times, Issue 820, 4 January 1878, Page 4
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