UN EOF COACHES TO DUNEDIN VIA NASEBY AND PALMERSTON. QOBB AND CO’S TELEGRAPH LINE of Royal Mail -loaches leave Mrs Geovg-’e Dunstan Hotel jvery Tuesday ami Friday Morning for Dunedin, via Black’s, Naseby and Palnerston, and leave Dunedin every Tuesday md Friday via Palmerston, Naseby, and Slacks for tbo Dunstan. We bog to thank the public generally for last favors, and hope for the continuance if same. Our Line of Coaches have lately men completely renovated, and every posable arrangement has been made fortha mmfort and safety of passengers. Our’s being the only Line of Coaches carrying Her Majesty’s mail, passengers nay rely on arriving at their destination it the appointed time. Fares :—Dunstan to Dunadin, £3. COBB di CO’S Telegraph Line of Royal Mail Coaches will leave CLYDE FOR LAWRENCE Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, at vt2p.ra .reaching Teviot the same day, and Lawrence the following afternoon in '.iaic for the 4.30 p.m. train to Dunedin. Leave Clyde for Cromwell and Queenstown Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, 11 a. in. Parcel Booking Office—Railway Department, Dunedin. Head Office, PEEL STREET, LAWRENCE. HINTED Forms of A pplicatiou tor all Licenses under tho Vincent County Bye Laws, regulating Hawking, Slaughtering and Depasturing to be hud at the Office of this Paper. Price, la. each. H. CRAIG & CO. Proprietors. H. CRAIG & CO., Proprietors
“ Lives of great men all remind ua. We can make our lives sublime ; And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time.” (HE above is read with great interest by thousands of young men. It inspires them with Hons, for in the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as fail. Alas ! say’many, this is correct,—is true with regard to the youth who has never abused his strength—and to the man who has not been “ passion’a’slave." But to that youth—to that'man, who has wasted his vigor, who has yielded himself up to the temporary sweet allurements of vice, who has given unbridledjliocnse to his passions, to him the above lines are hut as a reproach. What Hope can he have ? What aspirations ? What chance of leaving his footprints on the sands of time? For him, alas ! there is nought hut dark despair and self reproach for a lost life. Fora man do, leave his footprints on the sands of time, he must bo endowed with a strong brain and nervous power, lie must possess a sound, vigorous healthy mind, in a healthy body—the power to conceive—the energy to execute 1 But look at our Australian youth ! See the emaciated form, the vacant look, the listless hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, the senseless, almost idiotic expression. Hoto his demeanour and conversation, and then say, Is that a man to leave his footprints on the sands of time.
Do parents, medical men and educators of youth pay sufficient attention to this subject? Do they ever ascertain the cause of this decay ; and having done so, do they (as a strict sense of duty demands) seek the skilled advice of the medical man, who has made this branch of his profession his particular specialty, whose life has been devoted to the treatment of these cases? Reader, what is your answer ? Let each one answer for 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 of life ; yet one word might save them, one sound and vigorous health-giving letter from a medical man, habituated to the treatment and continuous supervision of such cases, would, in most instances, succeed in warding off the impending doom of a miserable and gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system to its natural vigor, and ensure a joyous and happy life. Dr. L. L. SMITH, of Melbourne, has made the diseases ofyouth and those arising therefrom his peculiar study. His whole professional life has been especially devoted to the treatment of Nervous Affections and the Diseases incidental to Married Life. His shill is available to all—no matter how many hundreds or thousands of miles distant. His system of correspondence by letter is now so well organised and known, that comment would be superfluous--(by this means many thousands of patients have been cured, whom bo has never seen and never known) ; and it is carried on with such judicious supervision that though he has been practising this branch of his profession for twenty-six years in these colonies, no single instance of accidental dia oovery has ever yet happened. 'When medicines are required, these are forwarded in the same careful manner without a possibility of the contents of the parcels being discovered. Plain and clear directions accompany these latter, and a cure is effected without even the physician knowing who is his patient. To Mon and Women with Broken-down Constitutions, the Nervous, the Debilitated aud from any Disease whatever, Dr. L. L. SMITH’S plan of treatment commends itself, avoiding, as it does, the inconvenience and expense of a personal visit. Address— DR. L L. SMITH, IS2 Collins Street, MELBOURNE. (Late the residence of the Governor). CONSULTATION FEE BY LETTER,
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Bibliographic details
Dunstan Times, Issue 964, 8 October 1880, Page 4
Word Count
851Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Dunstan Times, Issue 964, 8 October 1880, Page 4
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