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Government Notices. | NEW ZEALAND GOVERNMENT LIFE INSURANCE AND ANNUITIES. Government having been empowered _L by special Acts of the Legislature to enter into contracts for Insurances on Lives, and for the grants of Annuities and Endowments, are now prepared to execute any of the usual contracts dependent upon the contingencies of human life. The following advantages are presented as deserving of Public attention, and especially of the Working Classes : 1. The tables of Premiums in all the branches are considerably less than in any other office in New Zealand. 2. All transactions, and Powers of Attorney and other documents, are free of Stamp Duty and all taxation, 3. No charge is made beyond the purchase money or premium, paid quarterly, half-yearly, or annually. 4. Ttwenty-one days of grace, are allowed beyond the due dates ; and should the assured die during these periods, the policy will still be valid. 5. Surrender values are granted on the whole or any part of a contract which has endured for three years. 6. Residence is permitted in any part of the Australasian Colonies or Europe, and premiums may always be paid on the due dates at the nearest Money Order Office. 7. Insurances effected for the benefit of and settled on Wife or Children are free, to the extent of L 2,000, from the claims of Creditors. 8. The Consolidated Revenue of the Colony is liable for all claims, in the event of the monies received (which are safely invested at compound in* terest) at any time being insufficient to meet demands, thus affording the best security to the Assured. The fullest information can be obtained on application to any Money Order Office or Government Schoolmaster, or to ARCHIBALD BARR, Chief Postmaster, Dunedin. W. GISBORNE, Commissioner. Medical. PARADOX TO SUFFERERS. NERVOUSNESS ITS NATURE AND CURE. WHAT IS NERVOUSNESS? Various answers might be given to this question, according to the constitution and knowledge of the individual. Strong healthy pei’sons, whether medically educated or not, generally regard nervousness as more or less an “imaginary complaintit is sometimes only believed to be real when the patient is found to be dying or dead. The best answer to the question, probably, is this—nervousness IS AN UNNATURAL CONDITION OF THE nervous system. Sometimes this unnatural state is accompanied with considerable bodily weakness, loss of flesh and loss of strength ; but in most cases there is in th? earlier stages of the disorder no outward sign of weakness. The sufferers are found in both sexes; they often have the bloom of health upon the cheek; they are surrounded by kind friends, yet existence to them has no charms, for they feel that they cannot enjoy it. Without intending it, they annoy other people about the merest trifles ; if they encounter some person unexpectedly they feel confused, afraid, and alarmed ; the heart beats violently, the hand shakes when writing, and the whole frame at times experiences a complete tremulousness. The intellect also is sometimes clouded, the memory fails, the judgment becomes indistinct, the will capricious and undecided, the taste vitiated, the imagination broods upon unpleasant topics, the spirits are either very low or very excited, the ordinary duties of life become burdensome, society is shunned and business neglected. A STRANGE SPECTACLE. It is certainly strange, but not the less true, that perfectly sane persons in the prime of life, with firm step and healthy countenance, may occasionally be met with, who, in spite of possessing all the advantages of education, religion, ample means and kind friends nevertheless are victims of the nervousness above described; unhappy themselves, they render other people unhappy. Wly, is this? What cause has operated to change the cheerful, active, obliging, unsuspecting, and uncomplaining youth into the unhappy, drowsy, listless suspicious and gloomy misanthrope ? Many causes, or one cause only, may operate to produce this sad state ! The cause may be either mental or physical, or both combined, Attempts to cure nervousness by means of ordinary tonicaehave so frequently proved fruitless, that the leading physicians now for the most part recommend hygenic means, such as exercise in the open air, regular habits, sea bathing, the cold hath friction ; change of air and scene, as in travelling. If all these fail, as they often do, what is to be done ? The answer will he found hy carefully perusing the following work. Ninth Edition, Pont Free , Is id. NERVOUS DEBILITY ITS cause and cure, With Plain directions for perfect Restoration to Health. Applications fo» > a copy of the above work must be accompanied by the amount in New Zealand or other stamps, also a properly directed envelope, CHARLES SENNET, Agent, Brooklyn House, Flagstaff Gardens, Melbourne. HOLLOWAY’S OINTMENT and PILLS. —Glandular swellings in the throat, neuralgia, tic doloreux, rheumatism, gout, lumbago, and other diseases affecting the glands, muscles, and nerves, are permanently eradicated by this healing anti-febrile and soothing unguent. It is also a perfect remedy for all skin diseases, and superficial or deep seated sores ; which soon lose their angry and painful character under its cooling beneficent action. '1 he Pills have never been administered either by hospital or private practitoner in dyspef>sia or liver complaint without producing the desired result. 36 CAUTION. STEEDMAN’S SOOTHING POWDERS, for Children Cutting their Teeth. Purchasers are requested to Sold by a Chemists and Druggists ,in the Colonies,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18720531.2.16.5

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 2896, 31 May 1872, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
884

Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Evening Star, Issue 2896, 31 May 1872, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Evening Star, Issue 2896, 31 May 1872, Page 4

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