> ESTABLISHED 1861 "% Published "every Evening at 5 o'clock. AT THE OFFICE, POET AHUEIRI. IHIS PAPER, haying an extensive circulation • throughout tne Province and Colony, offers great advantages to aDVERTIZERS.
THE HAWKE'S BAY TIMES CONTAINS tlae Latest SHIPPING, COMMERCIAL, GENERAL, and TELEGRAPHIC NEWS, and full and accurate REPORTS of all local occurrences.
OP CHARGES FOB ADVERTIZING :- •3 First Insertion, One Shilling per half incli of space; Subsequent Insertions, half-price. ExtraDisplayed or Standing Advertisements, by contract. Business Cards, one half-inch or under, 10/6 per quarter; one inch. 15/-. eg- All orders for Advertisements should distinctly specify the number of insertions, otherwise they will be inserted until countermanded and charged accordingly. Ad-veitis-ments received daily up to 3 p.m, npERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:—Six Shillings and •*• Sixpence per quarter, payable in advance. Single copies, Twopence. * LL orders for Advertisements, Subscriptions, &c., should be addressed to the oilice, Tort Ahunri, where they will meet with prompt atten tiou. """ IST OF AGENTS FOR THE lIAWKE'S BAY ■» TIMES:— London— G. Street, 30 Cornhill; A. Andrews, Poultry; Bales, Ilendy, & Co., 4 Old Jewry; Gordon & Gotch, lal Holborn Hill; F. Algar, Clement's Lane, Lombard-street. Sydney— A. Oubitt, 11 Bridge-street; Gordon & Gotch, 281 George-street. Melbourn" -Gordon & Gotch,Bs Collins-street. Portland, Victoria— J. Uok&u. Auckland —It. JJaird, Victoria-street. Dunedin—li. T. Wheeler, ttailbrd-street. Clive—i. Bray. Walpukurau —F. H. Drower. Wairoa —S. F. Prentice & Co.
T HE HAWKE'S BAY TSffIES mny be obtained A at tne eststblisiiment 01 Air T. is. lIAItDI.VG, Hastings-street, Nhi-iur, second d,.or from the Union .Bank or Australia, whore advertisements, &c, are also received.
COMMERCIAL HOTEL POUT AHDJiIIiL The Best Accommodation for Travellers and Boarders, July 6, 1871.
•VAR AD 0 X.— T 0 SUFEEEEHS Nervousness: its Mature and Cure. WHAT IS NERVOUSNESS? Various answers might be given to this question, according to the constitution and knowledge ot' the individual. Strong healthy persons, whether medically educated or not, generally regard nervousness as more or less an " imaginary complaint;" it 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 the 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 tiiem has no charms, for they feel that they cannot enjoy it. Without intending it, they annoy other people about the merest trilies; 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 U'i.-mulousness. The intellect also is sometimes clouded, the memory i'ails, the judgment becomes indistinct, the will c iprieious 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 becomes 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 suite 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. Why 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 CUIIE NERVOUSNESS 33y means of ordinary touics have so frequently proved fruitless, that the leading physicians now tor tiie most part recommend hygenie means, such as exercise in the open air, regular habits, sea bathing, the cold batli 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 be found by carefully perusing the following work. Ninth Edition, Lost Free, Is 4-d. NERVOUS DEBILITY: ITS CAU&E AND CUXIE. With plain directions for perfect restoration to health. Application for a copy of the above work must be accompanied by the amount iu New Zealand or other stamps, also h properly directed envelope. Address — CHARLES SENNET, Agent, Brooklyn House, Flagstaff Gardens, Melbourne.
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Hawke's Bay Times, Volume 19, Issue 1493, 29 November 1872, Page 4
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757Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Hawke's Bay Times, Volume 19, Issue 1493, 29 November 1872, Page 4
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