Jli Bpok-lbinders,v'^ 7 And MiGHiNB.RIJLEpS. All binds of Account Books, &c, made to order at Melbourne Prices. ' Library Booka Repaired 6r Bebbund^at 1206 moderate prides. - . ■ -* ' •■'■ ■ ■ ■ 14 Lives of great men all remfna us, We can make bur lives BubHirie ; And departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time." THE above is read with igreat interest by thousands of young men. It iriapireß them with Bo£b, for in the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as fail. Alss ! say many, this is correct— is true with regard ;to tbe youth who has never abused his '•■ Btrength— and to the roan who haa not been ! " pf!Bßion*s slate.'* But to that youth—to that man who has wasted his vigor, who has yielded himself up to the temporary sweet aUurementß of vice, who has given unbridled license to his paesions, to him the above 'lines are but as a reproach, What hope can he have ? What aspirations? What chance ot leaving his footprints on the sanda of time ? For him, ales, there is nought but dark despair and self-reproßch for a lost life For a man to leave his footprints on tbe sands of time, he must be endowed with a strong brain end nervous pofffr. He must possess a strong, vigorous, healtby mind in a healthy body — the power- to conceive — the 1 energy to execute 1 But look at our Austral!an youth I See the emaciated form, the - vacant look, the listless, hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, the senseless, plmost j idiotic expression. Note his demeanor and conversation, and then say, Is that a Tnari to : leave his footprints on tbe sands of time. Do parents, medical . men, and educators of youth pay Bufficienfc attention to. this 'subject ? Do they e.ve'r ascertain the cau.se of this decay ? and having done bo, do they (as a strict Dense of duty demands) seek tbe skilled advice of the medical msn, wh >; has; made this branch of his profession his particular speciality, whose life has been devoted to ; the treatment o* these cases ? - Reader, what is pour answer ? Let each, one answer for himself. Parents Bee their progeny- fading gradually before their Bight, Bee them become emaciated, old young men, broken f down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of ife ; yet one word inigh save them, one lound and vigorous health-giving letter from a medical man, habituated to -the treatment aud continuous supervision ot such, cases, w< uld in most inßtaric.es succeed in warding : off the imjsending,doom of a miserable and ■gloomy future, a"nd by appropriate treaf inept restore the enervated system to its natural vigor, and ensure a joyous and happy life. Dr. L. L. SMITH, of Melbourne, has made : the diseases of ; youth and thos& arising therefrom Kis peculiar study. • His whole profes sional life has been especially devoted to ihe ' treatment ' of Nervous "'affections and U?e Diseases incidental to ' Married ' Lif- 1 His shill is available to allr-no.matter how many hundreds or thousands of miles distant. His; system of correspondence by. letter! is now sq well organised aud known*. <tbat'.°. comment would be super Sous— (by this means; many, tbousands.of patients have been cured, whom he has never Been and never "known); and.it is carried on with such judicious supervision that though he has been practising .this branch of his profession for twenty-six years in these colonies, .no single .instance of accidental discovery' has' ever 'yet "happened ; When medicines, are, required,. these are fori warded in the same careful manner, without .a possibility of. t| c contents of the parcels : being discovered. Plain and clear directions aecbinpany these latter, arid' a cure is efferted without even the physician knowing who is his patient.- , - . i To- Men and Women, with Broken-down ! Constitutions, the Nervous and Debilitated, all suffering from any diseaaelwhatevHr, Dr. L. L. Smith's plan of treatment commends itself, avoiding as it does tho inconvenience and expense of a personal visit. Address-— DR. L. L. SMITH, : 182, 'COLLINS STREET 'EAST, . , ■'•_'.' '•■•;' .MELBOURNE ((Late the residence of the Goverrior.) ; '. Con?u'tation Fee by Letier, £l. DYSENTERY, CHOLERA FEVER, AGUE, COUGHS, COLDS, &c. , DR. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S (Ex Army Medical Staff) C H L 0 E O.DY N E ; Is the Original and only Genuine. ■■ CAUTION.— Vice-Chancellor Sir W. P. Wood stated that Dr J Collis Browne was undoubtedly the Inventor of CHLORODrEjTE j ! that the story- of the defendant, Frpeman, 'being the inventor, was deliberately untrue, which he regretted had been sworn to. Eminent Hospital Physicians of London Stated ,that Dr. J. Collis Browne was the discoverer of Chlorodyne ; that they prescribed it largely, and mean no other thari Dr. Browne's. —See Tain of July 12, 1864. ! : The Public, therefore, are cautioned against \ using any other than ':'-■'; < ;Db. J. Collis Browne's GHLORODXNE | . ESMBaDIAL TJBB3 AND AOTIOW. ; i • This INVALUABLE REMEDY produces quiet, refreshing sleep, relieves pain, csrims the system, restores the deranged functions, ) and stimulates healthy action of the -Becrejtions of the body, without; ■ creating .any of ; those unpleasant results attending the usje of i opium. Old and young may take it, at all •hours and times when requisite. .'Thousands !of persons testify to its marvellous good ■effects and wonderful Cures, while Medical ;men extol its virtues most extensively. ; lOHLORODYNB is admitted by the profea--1 sioo to be the moist wonderful arid valua- ; -ble remedy ever discovered j iCHLORODYNE 1b the best remedy known j for coughs, consumption, bronchitis, i asthma , j iCHLORODYNE effectually checks and ! arrests those too. often fatal diseases— 1 diphtheria, fever, croup, ague iCHLORODYNE acts like a chnrm in | diarrhcoa, and is the only specific; in I cholera and dysentery CHLORODYNE effectually cuts short all attacks of epilepsy, hysteria, palpitations, i and spasms . " " ■ ! CHLORODYNE is the only p^U^ative, 5u neuralgia, 'rheumatism, !, gout, ■ can'ce" tootbacbe, meningitis, etc. ['. i . [Extracts from Medical Opinions.! j The Right Hon. Earl Rußsell communicated to the College of Physicians, and J. T. Dav|enport, that he had received inibrma'tion to the effect that the only remedy of any service in Cholera was Chlorodyne.— See lancet, Dec. 31, 18R4. . . ; From A. Montgomery, Eeqj, late Inspector of Hospitals, Bombey :— v Ghlorodyne is a most valuable remedy in Neuralgia, Asthma, and Dysentery, To it I fairly owe ray restoration to health, after eighteen months? of severe suffering, and when all other remedies bad failed." ' ; , Dr. Lowe, Medical Missionary in India, ire*' ports. (December, 1865) .— "|That in rieaWy every case of Cholera in which Dr. J. Collis Browne's Chlorodyne was administered, the patient recovered." - I j i Extract from the Medical Time$ tl January 12th, 1866 :— "jDhlorodyrie i^ prescribed jby scores of orthodox Medical Practitioners, jOl course it would riot thus be singularly popular, did it not 'supply a w&nt' arid fill a place.'" I. [ CAUTlON.— None: Genuine without the wordi, " Db. J. Collis Biownk" on the Goyernment .stamp. ; Overwhelming Medical teßtimony accbriipanies each Bottle. | Manufacturer '-^J/T. DAVENPOfIT i S3, Great RusseH-Btreet, Bloomsbury, ; r i"• ' -" ■ -j'-ionionr':"';" •■- v-v, : -f,:~ : y .-',,-■ \ k Sold In Bottlej^l/iii^and -4/6.;; ;^h I Agenti.te/W«JlJngton::'>: ! ' /^-;. l ip«
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18800915.2.15.3
Bibliographic details
Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 219, 15 September 1880, Page 4
Word Count
1,164Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 219, 15 September 1880, Page 4
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