■OMPIRE HOTEL, Half -Ounce. JOHN GRAHAM having purchased the above well-known hotel. Upc-ountry travellers and the public will find it entirely renovated, every department in thorough working order, and presenting very superior (and the onlyj accommodation in the District. •" A large and comfortable Billiard Room furnished with one of Alcock's Full-sized Billiard Tables,— Stabling. , JOHN GRAHAM, . Proprietor. /COMMERCIAL HO T E L Twelve-Mile Landing, (On thfc direct road to the Grey Valley and : Inangahua ; Gold Fields. ) Good Accommodation for travellers — Meals at all hours— Stabling and Horse Feed — Dairy Produce on Sale— English Grass Paddocks. * ■'■■*'■'' G ; EORGE BIDGOOr, Proprietor. HALF-WAY HOUSE HQT3L Middle Terrace, ' Nelson Creek. . LIVERY AND BAIT STABLES. Saddle Horses for Hire. ; AFerry available at all times on the creek. R. POTTS; Proprietor. ■piUROPEAN HOTEL I ' Brunner Parade, No Town. ; The undersigned in announcing the openng of the above Hotel, begs to state that he has : entirely altered and enlarged the premises ; and those favouring him with their patronage will meet with superior accommodation and attention to their wants LOUIS EGDEN, Proprietor. KE LLY ' S HOT EL, Twelve-Mile Lauding, (Junction of No Town and up-country roads.) Possesses first-rate accommodation for travellers;, and being entirely rebuilt, all the internal arrangements are very superior. First-class stabling, and securely fenced paddocks. Booking Office for M essrs ABhton and Cassey's Line of Coaches, No Town, Ahaura, and Reefton. • . ■ Farm and Dairy Produce always on Sale. . KELLY AND MUILINS, , Proprietors. T>ATRICK DEARE, Butcheb, Cattle and Sheep Dealer, Camp street, near Gilmer's Hotel, and opposite the Post Office, Ahaura. Families and Hotels waited upon for orders, and good delivered throughout the District;. NERVOUSNESS, Debility, Loss of Power, Spermatorrhoea, . Indiscretions of Early Youth, Syphilitic Diseases. In all the above cases, arising from errors AND THE YIELDING TO THE PASSION, no time should be lost to at once arrest the progress of the disease. ....... . , DR. L. L. SMITH. 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 Culverwell, the only medical practitioner who ever exclusively adopted this as the sole branch of his profession. Dr L. L. Smith hereby informs the public that HE IS T.iE ONLY LEGALLY- QUALIFIED MEDICAL'MAN IN THIS SPECIALITY.OF HIS PROFESSION ; that others advertising are unqualified, and that, therefore, in pretending to be qualified are obtaining money under false pretences. Dr L. L. Smith also warns the public against the quackeries advertising. If the taker of any of these advertised nostrums escape with his life, or his system be not thoroughly and irreparably undermined by them, he may look upon himself as the most fortunate mortal. Dr L. L. Smith has been applied to by sp 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 upon their pockets and health?Dr L. 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 bloodpoisoning fromdiseasespreviouslycbiitracted, Dr L. L. ■ Smith invites sufferers to consult him, as he has no hesitation in stating that no medical man, either here or in England, has had the opportunities bf practice and extraordinary experience which he has had. Therefore those who really desire to be treated by one who is at the head of his profession in this branch of medical practice should lose no time in seeking his advice. Nor should anyone marry without first consulting him. - The Consulting Rooms are at 182 COLLINS STREET EAST, MELBOURNE, opposit9 the Melbourne Club, (Late the residence of the Governor.) Private entrance is in Stephen street south. CONSULTING FEE (BY LETTER), £1, Medicines forwarded to all the Colonies, : so packed as to avoid observation. Books published by the Dr. can be had on : application to him.
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Bibliographic details
Grey River Argus, Volume XIII, Issue 1587, 5 September 1873, Page 4
Word Count
741Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Grey River Argus, Volume XIII, Issue 1587, 5 September 1873, Page 4
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