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."Kf xy m^ b £ s ■ OFFICE OF THE. [Evening Mail, &c. y SRIDGES STREET, NELSON. By Miss M. E. Riddell— Joy after SorrowHome sweet Home My First and Last Love The Eich Husband Far Above Eiibies Above Suspicion Austin Friar's The Euling Passion A Life's Assize City and Suburb Maxwell Drewitt The World and the Church By Miss M. E. Braddon— Lady Audley's Secret Fenton's Quest Eobert Ainsleigh The Trail of the Serpent Milly Darrell Sir Jasper's Tenant Only a Clod The Lovels of Arden Elanor's Victory The Doctor's Wife John Mar chmont'e Logacy ' . Lucius Davoren Henry Dunbar Dead Sea Fruit Eupert G-owdin To the Bitter End Eun to 1 arth , Captain of the Vulture Lost for Love Strangers and Pilgrims Hostages to Fortune ; Aurora Eloyd : ■ A Strange World Lady Lisle Ealph the Bailiff Taken at the Flood By Charles Lever — . j The,ODonoghue • , Harry Lorrequer . ; \ A Day's Eide \" ! Sir Jasper, Carew J : Cornelius O'Dowd . ! Con Cregan .... i That Boy of Norcott's I A^ent in the Cloud , ! Barringtori Maurice Tierhay | . Lutter 11 of Arran ' The Fortunes of (Hencore : One of Them Arthur O'Leary Tony Butler • - By Anthony Trollope— The Bertrams Doctor Shorne . ' V , Castle Eichmond i . Lady Anna ! iiendettbes of Ballycoran ; Vermcad ! ;;Eachel>Eay ... ■: ■'' ' Tales of All Countries.. | The KellysandtheO'Kellys i - i "Lives pf great men all remind üb, 1 We can make bur lives sublime ; j And departing, leave behind us I Footprints on the sands of time.? . > . ri>HE above is read with great interest by JL i thousands of young men. ,It inspires, ttiem with Hopb, for in the bright lekicbri of youth there is no such word as fail. Alas ! say many, t this is correct-r-is true with regard to! the youth who: has never ; abused his ! : Bt|rength— and' to the roan who has not been " passion's Blave." . jßut to that youth— to that man who has wasted his vigor, who has yielded; himself up tej the temporary ; sweet allurements of yicej ;wbo h'aa "given unbridled license to b ( is passions, to him ;; tne above lirieß are but as a reproach, What hope^can'hc have ? ,What aspirations'? What chance' ot leaving 'his fdotprints on the sands of time ? For himalps, there is nought but dark despair an^ self-reproach fora lost life. '." '■''..■ jFor a man to leave his footprints, on the sands of time, he must be endowed with a ' strong . brain and nervous, power. He must' possess a strong, vigorous, healtby mindin a healthy body— the power to conceive"— the' edergy "to "execute"! But look at bur Australan yonth! See the emaciated, f or m, t the vacant 1 look, the listless, heaitating 1 manner, the nervous dißtru&t, the senseless, almost idiotic expression. Note bis. demeanor and conversation, and then Bay, Is that a man to leave his footprints on the sands of time. JDp parents, medical men, and educators of | youth pay sufficient attention to this" subject? Do they ever ascertain the cause of| tbia decay ? and having done sb, do they (as a strict senee of duty demands) seek the skilled advice of the medical man.wh) has mAde ibis branch pf his prof eislon his particular speciality, whoseiife i has. been devoted to thu treatment pf theselcastH ?,'' r; Reader; what is your answer? Let 1 each one r answer for himself . Parents, see their progeny ; fading , gradually before their/Bight, see tliem become emaciated, old young men; broken dbwn^in health, enfeebled, anfltted for the battle of ifeU yet one word migh Bave them, one jlound and vigoroushealth-Siving letter from a medical man, habituated to the 1 treatment anji continuous supervision ot such cases, wojuld' in- most instances sucaeed itfwardihg ,off the i'mpendihg doom of a 'miserable 'and gk omy future, and by appropriate treatment' 3 restore v tbe enervated sj stem ' to' its natural vij or. and ensurea joyous and happy life.; Dr. L. LyBMITB/ot Melbourne has made the diseases of youth arid those arising there-, tfrdm his peculiar st^dyr His .whole profes' Bional life has been especially devoted to the treatment of Nervous affections and tbe Dieenacs incidental to Married Life. His HBhill is available to all— no matter how many hundreds or thousands of miles distant. ;' Bis syatem of correspondence by letter is now/so well organißed ; and kridwh, ' ihat ; cbmnqent would be 1 BU'perflbusr^Cby this means manythousands of patients have been cured, whom he ! has never seen and never known); and it is carfled"on r with Bticb judicious supervision that though be has been practißiog this branch of his profession for twenty-eix years in Ithese colonieß, no single. instance of accidental discovery f haa .ever yet happened, When "medicines are required, these are forwarded- in the same careful manner, without -a possibility of tbe contents of the parcels being discovered.; ; Plainjand cl^ar directions accompany, these latter, and a care is effected; without even the physician knowing who is his (patient. • „ -«■ •;,-■- .- % j- •■■.-, .-^. r -j-.v <.? j To "Men and .Wprrfen Brpken-3ow"ri; Constitutions; the 1 ' Nervous ; ahdr Debilitated, all i suffering from any' r diaease.irhaiAY^t«^P'* A L. L.' Smith's plan of ;tre^tmeh6 ! cpmroendß' itself) avoiding as it does 'the inconvenience and 1 expense of a ! personal Visit; ; ' f ' Address-r „ . ■. " .Y'-»;rVY" .".;..., ~ f Y',./'Y (Late the reddence of the Governoh) i .' „ ! Condition Fw by leiteTt £if

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18800907.2.15.4

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 213, 7 September 1880, Page 4

Word Count
864

Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 213, 7 September 1880, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 213, 7 September 1880, Page 4

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