gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore tbe enervated system to its natural vipor, and ensure a joyous aDd happy life. Dr. L. L. SMITH, of Melbourne, has made the diseases of youth and those arising there; f roru his peculiar study. Bis whole profee-; sional life has been especially devoted to the treatment of Nervous affections and tbe Diseases incidental to Married Life. His skill is available to all— no matter how many hundreds or thousands of miles distant. Bis system of correspondence by letter is now so well organised and known, tbat comment would be Buperfloue— (by this means many thousands of patients have been cured, whom he has never Been and never known)! & Q d it is carried on with such judicious supervision that though be has been practising tbia branch of bis profession for twenty-six years in these colonies, no single instance of accidental discovery hes ever yet happened. When medicines are required, these are forwarded in the came careful manner, without a possibility of tl c contents of tbe 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 Men and Women with Broken-clown Constitutions, the Nervous and Debilitated, all Buffering; 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, 182, COLLINS STREET EAST, MELBOURNE (Late the residence of the Governor.) Consultation Fee by Letier, £1. SPECIAL NOTICE. DR. GRANT, M.R. Col. Surgeons, England, and of the Medical Boarda of Victoria, New South Wales, and New Zealand, and PROFESSOR WALLENBURG, CCULISTS, AURTSTS, AND SPECIALISTS, (from Europe) may be consulted upon all diseases cf the Eye, Ear, and Throat. Deafness, Koises in the . Head, Defective Sight, Cataracts, Amaurosiß, Ophthalmia, Gutta Ferenß, Lots of fcyelaehes, inflammation, and all Disfa'en of the Jb.TR, I'Jab, and Throat treated upon new and scientific principle?. DR. GRANT has arrived in Kelson, and may be consulted for onb mobth only, freni loth April. 1880, at hia * Consulting tiooms, RfcQirES Nelson Jtlotil. \ Hodrs of Attendance : Morning 10 till 1 Aiterno.n ... 2 „ 5 Saturdays ... Mornings only. OPINIONS OF THE FRESS. BLISDSES S AND DE AFNE 88. W e can conscientiously reon mand these suffer irg from deafness or other talmtnts that Dr Grant haß made a spetiil study ot, to pay him. a visit, when, if curable patient, they may certainly txfecfc relief. Au. instance came under our ppscial notice on Thursday, in tbx case of a man nam d Chas. Swanson, who has been very d<af for tlree years, but after ten days' treatment, can cow he r peif.ctl, even the kwest whispr. 3he cure is rather a rcmaikabla cne, bs he Ins been under the care of many medical men, but he received no benefit whatever from th.ir treatment —" Few Zaalander," December 27,1879. By the kind invitation of Profesor Wallen- . burg and Dr. Gra t.the editor of this journal in company with the editor of the Saturday Advertiser, visited their consulting rooms, nt the Criterion Hotel, ynsterday tncrning. The first ca^a thovn was J-hist of a &!ias White, agod U years, the daughter of a settler at Oamaru who has been totally blind for y<ar3, This ycung lady basbe<n under the trtat-ni-nt of thoee clever ocu.ists for' three days, and, wo.deifnl to say. her oyt sight has been perfectly restored. The father of the girl * assured as that be had placed her under the care of several rceiical men, who bad failed to do her any gosd, deepits the money he lavished upon her. . The next was the case of a frisa Hughes, a Dunedin resident, who stated that ebe Lai been deaf for a period of over three years. Strange to cay, she had only been under treatment for eight da.i s, and her hearing has b«en fully restored. This fortunate girl is nearly in ecstae'e? over her good fortune. The editor of tbis journal, accampanied by Mr. J; J. Connor, visited the oculists' conßulting-rooms at the Criterion Hotel this morning. The first person the editor converged with' was Daniel Mahoney, a laborer* residing at Logan's Point, who stated that he bad been totally blind for sonic two weeks, through a severe cold he had contraced. Be had been under private treatment lor a week, but he bad got worse instead "ot tetter. Be was brought to Professor Walleuburg on tho llth inst., eni since then he has been under this clever oculist's treatment, with the result that he is now recovering the sight of both c) es. John Chultners, a brickmuker. residing at Peli':htt Bay, stated that he had been blind of the right eye for over nine weeks, and the let one wes commencing to ba affected by the tight one. Be waa under treatment at the hospital, but without any beneficial result. lie had been under Profesacr Wallenburg'o treatment three weeks, and ha now cm discern the smallest N object with both eyes. Patrick Connor, a miner, residing at Hindcn, wsb the next ratitnt consulted. He h»d been totally blind of the right eye for three months, and had been in the hospital under treatment, which, he states, tended to make the right eye worse, and to injure the left one. Be went under Professor Wallenburg's treatment on the 9th Oc-ober, and now ha is perfectly cured, and intends starting to follow his caf- . ling on Monday next. — Tuapeka Times, 15. h November, 1879. AN ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. To the Editor. Sir. — You will much oblige me, as well as benefit the public in general, by i: sertirg in your columns regarding the cure effected on my tight eye, which was totally blind when I pieced myself. under the treatment of Doctors Grant and Wallenburg. I also found myself using, the Bight of the IrfC eye. I have now recovered my sight, and am going to work to morrow. Out of gratitude to those gentlemen, allow me to thank them, and hope all thoee suffer irq in the eyes may avail themselves of their ■•fill — I am, &c ,. '■•■•/, Patrick ITbancis. Witntss— W. J. Bawden, Logan's Point, Dunedin, 7th('ctober, 1879 Dr Grant has recently effected a very re* markable cure in the case of Mrs D. Evans, of Eumara, who has been under bis treatment for deafness since the 24th February last. Mrs Evars has been deaf in toth ears for a very long period— no less than thirty years— her affliction having been caused by a fever from which she suffered severely. Sine? that time ehe Imb been almost totally deaf, for she could only hear the loudest sounds. Since she has been under Dr Grant's treatment, her hearing has gradually improved, so that now she can hear plainly conversations in an ordinary tone of voice. She will return in a few days to Kumara perfectly well, and in possession of the full faculty of which she has been so lone deprived.— Hohitika Leader, \ llth March, 1880. 1086— 12 a
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Bibliographic details
Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 93, 19 April 1880, Page 4
Word Count
1,176Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 93, 19 April 1880, Page 4
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