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The Cattle Tress-oass Act 1863. NOTICE is hereby given that, on and after Ihe 25th flay of November,.lßßo, the" provisions of "The Cattle Trespass Act ! 1868," will be ENFORCED pa . my Land, being Section G on tb.B Plan, Washington Valley, Nelson District, and that it is my intention to CLAIM DAMAGES for all Cattle Trespassiog, on the said land, whether the same shall be fenced or unenclosed. JAME9 MOORE Washington Valley, Oct. 25, 1880. ~4ap PHOTOGRAPHY. pARTE DE VISITE (size), 15/---\J perdczen After copies 1/6 each, or 12/- per doz. Copies from Old Negatives 1/6 each, . . or 12/- per dozen. CABINET SIZE PORTE AITS, Bix copies, £1 Is. After copies 2/6 each, or 12/- the half-dozen. TV". E. Brown, HARDY-STREET. 2794 3m ** Lives of great men an reminct us, We c»n make our Hvob eub!ime ; And departing, leave behind ub Footprints on the sands of time. 1 ' THE above is read with great interest by thousands of young men. It inspires them with Hopk, for in the bright lexicon of youththereis.no such word as fail Alns! say many, this is correct—is true with regard to the youth who haft never abußed his strength— and to the roan who has not been " passion's slave." But to that youth— to that man who has wasted hiß vigor, who has yielded himself up to the temporary sweet allurements of vice, who hqs given unbridled license to bin passions, to him the above lines are but as ft rfproach, What hope can he have ? What aspirations ? What chance ot leavirg hia footprints on the sands of time ? For him, alus, there is nought but dark despair and self-reproach for a lost life For a man to leave his footprints en tne sands of time, he must be endowed with a strong brain ; and nervous powfr. He must possess a strong, vigorous, healthy mind in a healthy body— trie power to eoriceive — «h«3 energy to execute ! But look at oiir Australan youth 1 See the emaciated form, the vacant look, the listless, hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, the senseless, almost idiotic expression. Note his demeanor and conversation, and then jiay, Is that a man to leave his footprints on the sands of time. Do parents, medical mcD, and educators of youth pay sufficient attention to, this subject ? Do they ever . ascertain the cause of this decay ? and having done so, do" they (as a strict pens© of duty demands) seek the skilled advice of the medical man, wh • has made this branch of Mb profession his particular speciality, whose life has been devoted to the treatment of theße casts ? Reader, what is your answer ? Let each one answer for himself. Parents see their progeny fading gradually before their sight, see them become emaciated, old yoiwg men, brokti down in health, enfeebled, utfltted for the battle of ife ; yet one word migh Bave them, one lound and vigorous health-Pivinjr letter from a medical man, habituated to the treatment and continuous supervision ot such cases, wuld in most instances succeed in warding off the impending doom of a miserable and gloomy iuture, and by appropriate treatment restore 1 the enervated sjstem to its natural vigor, and ensure a joyous and happy life. Dr. L. L. SMITH, ot Melbourne, has made the diseases of youth and those arising therefrom bis peculiar Study. Bis vhole profes sional life has been especially- devoted to the treatment of Nervous affections attd the Diseases incidental to Married Life. His sb ill in available to all- no matter how many hundreds or thousands of miles distant. His system of correspondence by letter is now an well organised and known, that comment would be superflouß— (by this means many thousands of patients have been cured, whom he has never seen and never known); and it is carried on with such judicious supervision that though he has been practising this branch of bis profession for twenty-six years in these colonies, no single instance of accidental discovery has ever yet happened. When medicines are required, these are forwarded in the tame careful manner, without a possibility of tre contents of the parcels being discovered. Plain and clear directions accompany these latter, and a cure is effected without even the physician knowing who is hie patient. To Men and Women wiih Broken-down Constitutions, the Nervous and Debilitated, all suffering 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 BAST, MELBOURNE (Late the residence of the Governor.) Consultation Fee by Letter, £1.

AGRIOtTLTUEAL "■ XM?LiSME^TS ON SAfcE IJir THEtJNDEBStGfNED. Lehded ex " Wave Queen— 45 pkaa. Samuelson'^ COMBINED BALANCR DRAUGHT REAPERS AND MOW£R9. To arrive ex " Hermione " — SO pkgs. Samuelbon^ " OMNIUM " BEL t - BAKIK G SIDE - DELIVERY REAPERS. 3 Hornsby's PATENT SPRING B&LAHGE SELF-RAKING HEAPIRS. BINDING WIRE FOR McCormack's MACHINES. Prices on Application. JOHN DUTHIE &■ CO., WELLINGTON. 3S96— Dec.'3lßt. W. ROUT, LICENSED LAND BROKER, VALUATOR, LAND, HOUSE & COMMISSION AGENT, • . .. HARDT STREET, NELSON. mBANBFERS o* CONVEYANCES of A LAND under the « Land Transfer Act " eflected at charges fixed by the Act ; also MORTGAGES and RE - LEASES, POWERS of ATTORNEY prepared, and LEASES drawn. Money invested on Mortgage Securities or in Bank and other Shares. Money lent on Freehold Securities at current rates of interest. Rents on Land, and Interest on Mortgages colleoted. Land and Houses hired let, bought or sold, an commission. Insurances effected at lowest rates. Rents collected, Taxes and Insurances : ppid ; and repairs, effected. Valuations made in Town or Country for : purchases, sales, or f or Stamp and Succession Duty. • FOR SALE, ON VERT HAST TEEMS TO SUM PURCHASERS— : 6. Fifty Acres, Moutere— a bargain. 1-1. Three hundred Acres, Upper Moutere. 12. Forty Acres & Cottage, Lower Moutere. : 32. House, and 40it frontage, Tasman-street, '■ J6BOO 1 43. House and Half-an-acre of Land, Bronti--1 street. £400. i 48. A 7 roomed House with 7 acres Land, at Wakefleld for £320 or with 21 acres £500. 52. f 4 feet Land, coraer of Nile-street and Trafalgar-square, £200. 54. A Farm of 68 acres, in Gibbs Valley. Wakefleld, fenced and in paddocks price £600. 68. Three first-class BuUdiDg Sitea in Tra-falgar-rst. South, on very easy terms. i? 8. Several Allotments at Siepneyville, ! the Port, at low prices. 70. A First-class Building Site, containing Two-thirds of an Acre, in Kawai-st.. 71. A very convenient Villa Residence, with' in fly« minutes' walk of the Poetofficft* ! for £150. ;75. Corner Allotment, Waimea-street, at £2 ; per foot., >77. Superior Cottage and Land, Washington j Valley, for £aoo ISO. New Cottage and 6ft feet of land, Van-guard-street. £225, easy terms. 181. 100 feet Land, Russell-street. iBS. 72 feet Land, Wnimea-road. •65, A Bailding Sn« at tbe Port at £l per foot. '84. A pieaaart Residence at Beacbviile ;85. First class Building Site on Port Bills, ~_ tastefully planted sud fenced 86. A capital Dairy Farm in Dovedale, o 1 SS9 acree, with Homeßtead and ,all wording nppliances 87. Two Allotments of Land nearly opposite Lakins 1 Wharf 88. three Allotments in Waimea-et '89. Tbe interest in a Leasehold Cottage in Neison, very cheap. tl. A most desirable Residence in Cambria street, with large Garden and. Outbuildinga 92 A comfortable Cott^e in Alton street. .94 "A Farm of 100 acres at Hope, half cropped, half grass, with comfortable Homestead, ;95. Two Cottages in Selwjn Place, very cheap, £180. ; 196. Capital BuVioess. Premises in G'pujester street, near the Station, and two Cottageß, £3-0. 37. Good Building B' tee, Collingvrood-street, at £3 per foot.. 93. CO feet ot good Lai d, with a Cottage, in Vanguard*street, ior j6 1 35. . 99. 80f«etof land in Brougham-Btreet, at £l.per foot, T O: LE T, 2». A Four-roomed: Cottage, WestbankJTerrace, at 7s. per week. 35. a Five-roomed House, Waime* etreet.'at 9sperwiek lUONB^ TO LEND oa approTdl freehold

B^fer ■ •ft'ttrftrfl H Miff^lmiA-fl ftjr^fiiml warranted not only free from every inHHtMP lUBSi ft ll k *iy y.M " A^./^l rjmions property and- Ingredient; butof in W f ][ lO 11,0 Milf fl^fwlW^^i^ 6 best possible quality. Its extraor|HpßJ|j|BßHPßWtPfflS^WWßT^ Gout, Chronic Rheumatisni, Incipient Hfe.l S ljftd?!^^^ ffiS^y tf t^yiWflTvlJL^H Dropsy, Flatulency, Colic 'pains of the ; JJMBlß|||Sißl|BH Stomach or Bowels, whether in Adults or i ™BBBmBpBB88BHBbI» Infanta; in atl ordinary cases of Ob- ! "MB 1 8l rf ° 'l t !Jß^ t^ ''^fll '*3 8 B^^l 'struGtioDß in the, Kidneys, Bladder, "and lifflfflSftflimWviliii^iliiiiWffirfM ' Urinary Organs ; in Dyspepeia, whether imSuMuBBSBmBKSBKSBBB^^^S^BSBi acute or chronic; in General Debility, :fIBBwBHHHBHBBH9ffiHHBBBH9£B Sluggish Circulation of the Blood ; Inadequate' Aaeinlilatlon ot FOOJ, anu JDxliausiejl Vital Bntrgy,— are acknowltdged. by the wholeiMedical Faculty and attested in their highest written authorities. i Pbbpbtpal iMJDKCttiOHS against the Bale « f Counterfeits ot y WOLFE'S T SCHNAPPS " have been granted by the Supreme Courts of ittew Sonth Wales and Victoria.-arid further action will Abe; instantly ; taken, .against^ anyoiie iinfringing upbav the TrftdeJ right#:of Tthe Proprietor. •- : .-- '•->'■•' •'•■...■.':-;>'.• I . v ; „.>.,; . --.v -„ ..-.; « -.j.^.^'-^i ••'••>* a-^^^-'-v • . Bole Agent for A B itr»lte an New Ziilablj«- I*,UOSB* 00, Sydney .wdlUHioiv^j

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18801108.2.16.3

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 220, 8 November 1880, Page 4

Word Count
1,493

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 220, 8 November 1880, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 220, 8 November 1880, Page 4

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