The cStle Tr^swass Act, 1868. ! NOTICE is hereby Riven that, on and after the 25tb day of November, 1880J the provisions of "The Cattle Trespass Act; 1868," will be ENFORCED on my Land; being Section G on the Plan, Washington Valley, Nelson District, and that it Is my intention to CLAIM DAMAGES for all Cattle Trespassing on tbe said land, whether the same shall be fenced or unenclosed. JAMES MOORE. Washington Valley, Oct. 25, 1880. — 4ap photookaphyT CAUTE DE VISITE (size), 15/---per dczon After copies 1/6 each, or 12/- per doz. Copies from Old Negatives 1/6 each, or 12/- per dozen. CABINET SIZE PORTBAITS^ six copies, £1 ls. ' After copies 2/6 eaeh, or 12/- the half-dozen. W. E. Brown, HARDY-STREET. 2794 Sm " T.ives of grpat men aM reminflt us, We can make our lives sublime ; /nd departing, leave behind us Footprints on the eandß of time.'' THE above ifl read with great Interest hy thousands of young ffiefi. It inspires tbem with Hopk, for in tbe bright lexicon of youth there is no euch word as fail. Alos ! eay many, this ib correct—is true with regard to tbe youth who hog nefer abused his Btrencth— and to the roan who has not been " passion's slave." But to that youth— to Ihat man who has wasted his tigor, who has jielded himself up i to the temporary sWeei Allurements of vice, who has piven unbridled license to hia passions, to him the above lines are but na a rfproach. What hope cbu he have ? What aspirations? What cbance ot leaving his footprints on tbe sands of time ? For him, ales, ther6 is nought but dark despair and self-reproach /oi- d hit lifb For a man to leave hlfl footprints on the i lands of time, he must be endowed with a etrong brain Md nervous powfr., He miiflt. Pobspss a strong, vigorous, healthy mind in a healthy body — the power to conceive— -the energy to execute 1 But look at our Austral--an youth 1 See the emaciated form, the vacant look, the listless, hesitating manner; the nervdus distrust, the .senseless, almost idiotic expression. N6te his d-emeanor and conversation, and then say. Is that a mto to leave his footprints on the sands of time. Do parents, medical men, and educators ofi yOuth pay sufficient attention to this subject 1 Do they ever ascertain the cause of thisiidecay f and having dono so, do -thev (as a strict »ense of duty demands; seek the skilled advice of the medical man. win has madethis branch of his profession his particular speciality, whoße life haß been devoted to tbe treatment of these casts? Reader, what is your answfr? Let eaeh one answer for himself. Parents see Melr pfogefly fadirg gradually before their eight, see tbetii ofceome emaciated, old young men, brokrn down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of ife j yet one Word migb save them, one lound flnd vigorous heaith-^ivintr letter from a medical mah; habituated to the treatment and continuous supervjsio'n of such cases ; wuld in most instances. succeed in ■warding off the impending doom of a miserable and gloomy luture, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated Bjstem to its natural vipor, and ensure a joyous and happy life. ( Dr. Li L. SMITH, ot Melbourne, bas made tbe disease of youih and those ariß.ing,therefrom his peculiar study. Bis whole profes; .sional life has been especially devoted to th^ treatment, of Nervous affl'ctioas and tbe Diseases incidental to Married Life. His rtill Ib available to all— no matter bow manv hundreds or thousands of; mileß distant. Biß eystem of correspondence by letter is now so well organised . and' known, tbat comment would be superflous— (by this means many thousands of patientß have been ctifed,wbom he bas never, seen and never known); and ij; is earned on with Bueh judicious supervision tbat though he has , been practising, this branch of his profession for twenty-six years In these colonies* no single instance qf accif .dental- discovery has ever yet \ happened When medicines are, required, these are fort warded in :the tame careful manner, without: a possibility of tt 6 contents of the parcels being discovered. Plain afld clear directions accompany these latter, and a cure ia effer ted without even the phjsician knowing who is his patient. i To Men and Women wi'.h Broken-down Constitutions, the Nervous and. Debilitated; all, suffering from any disease whatever, Dri L. L. Smith's plan of treatment commends itself, avoiding as it does, the inconvenience and expense of a personal vieit. Address — DR. L. L. SMITH, j 182, COLLINS STREET BAST, I MELBOURNE (Late the residence of the Governor.) ] Consultation Fee by Letter, XI.
A GUI CULT URAL IMPLEMENTS ON SALE BY TBE UNDEKSIGNED. Landed ex " Wave Queen''---45 pkgß. Samuelson's COMBINED. BALANCF3 DRAUGHT BEAPEBS AND MOWER3. To arrive ex " Hermione "— 20 pkgs: Samuelson's "OMNIUM " 1 6ELF- BAKING SIDE - DELIVERY REAPERS. 3 Hobnsby's PATENT SPRING BALANCE SELF-RAKING REAPIRS. BINDING WIRE FOR McOormack's MACHINES, Prices on Application. JOHN DUTHIE & CO., WELLINGTON. 3398— Dec. 31st. W. ROUT, LICENSED LAND BROKER, VALUATOR, LAND, HOTTSE & COMMISSION : AGKENT, HARDY STREET, NELSON. TRANSFERS or CONVEYANCES 0/ LAND under the "Land Transfer! Act " effected at charges fixed by the Act ; alao MORTGAGES and RE * LEASES, POWERS of ATTORNEY prepared, audi LEASES drawn. Money invested on Mortgage Securities or in Bank and other Shared. ; Money lent on Freehold Securities at cur- '■ rent rate* oi interest. Rents on Land, and Interest on Mortgages ; collected. Land end Houses hired let, bought or sold, on commission, Insurances effected at lowest rates. Rents collected, Tares ahd Insurances, ?j»Jd ; and repairs, effected. Valuations made in Town or Country for : purchases, .sales, or lor Stamp and Succession Duty. FOS SALE, [ OK TKET BAST XBBMB TO (JUIT *UEOHASBBB— 6. Fifty Acres, Moutero— ft bargain., ' 11. Three hundred Acres, Upper Moutere. 12. Forty Acres & Cottage, Lower Monttre. 12. House, and 40ft frontage, Tasman-street, -£380 ! ; 43. House and Half-an-acre of Land, Bronti- ! . etreet. £40Q. , 48. A 7 roomed House with 7 acres Land, at , ! Wakefield for £320 or with 21 acres I £300. ' J ' 52. *4 "fee*;, Land, corner of Nile-stroet and i ,Trafaisar-s4tJftre/jfi2bo. j • J4. A Farm 'oif 68 acres, in Gibbs Valley.; 1 WakeSeld, fenced and in paddocks ' price £600. j 13., Three flrat-class Building Sites in Tra- • falgar-st. South, on very easy terms, i I *8. Several : Allotments at Stepneyville,. I the Port, at low prices. ; 70. A First-class Bailding Site, containing! . Two*thirds of. an, Acre, in Kawai- sf. j i 71. : A very convenient Villa Residence j.wlth-j In five minutea' walk of the Po&tofltcfc, for £150. 75. Corner Allotment, Waimea-street, at £5, per foot. '...'. i 77. Superior Cottage and Land, Washington j Valley, for £200 " ! . 80. New Cottage and 69 feet of land, Van-guard-street, £-225, easy terms. ; 81. 100 feet Lend, RaSseli~Btreet, 88. 72 feet land, Waimea-road. , 83, A Bailding Site at the Port at £1 pers foot. ; 84. A pieosant Residence at Basel ville 85. First class Building Site oa Port Hills, tastefully planted And fenced 86. A capital Dairy Farm in Dovedale, o<, 359 acres, with Homestead and all worb log appliances 87; Two Allotments of Land nearly opposite, Lukins' Wharf 88. Thiee Allotments in Waimea-et 89. The intereat in a Leasehold Ccttage iii * Nelson, very cheap, i 41.. A most desirible Residence in Cambria 1 street, with large Garden and Out-! buildings 92 A comfortable Cottage in Alton -street. ■ 94 A^ ; Farm of. 100 1 acres at Hope, half crbp-j pad,, half grass, yriih comfortablej Homestead, | 95. Two Cottages in Selwjn Place, very, cheap, £180. . 96. Capital Business Premises in Gloucester; street, ne&r the Station, aud two Cot-j tages, £3.0, j 97. Good Buiiding S'tes, Collingwood-street,; at £3 per foot. . §3. 50, feet of good Laid, >ith a Cottsge, in Vanguard-etreet, for JB 135. 99. 80' 'feet of Laiid in Brougham-street, at £1 per foot. T 0 LE T , 29. A Four-roomed Cottage, WestbankJTer-! race, at Ts. per tfeek* i 85. A Five-roomi3d House, Waime i.street^at 9s per Wiek j MONB7 TO LBN D <» appro*© 1 ftcohold! •«n«rHv' " ■n ' -IBWgg; ..' '..■,..' .-.HUSUIi IN llil'
H warranted not only free,, from every Jn|jurious proper^ .and icgredien't,. but of the best possiblo, quality. Its extraordinary medicinal properties In. Gravel, Gout, Chronic Rheumatism,;, Incipient Infants ; in all ordinary oes&a. of Obacute , or : chronic ; in General',. D-ebiilty , Sluggish Circulation of the Blood jVini ___ t , _____ ... , Ifcal , Emrgy,~w.e -"aMnowledgedby the whole Medical Faculty and attested in their (highest, written authorities..„ ?K . -._.,- .-...,. ..- j * Vmimvit* ItuuNO-riOiTB against the Sale of Counterfeits of £ $QL|R> t s^SCHNAPPS '[. have beetf granted by the Supreme Courts 01 Kew South Wales and Victoria^, and>further aetion will Abel.instaatty.itakeni.againßti anyone iinfrlngin^uppnj thp^^rade^rigWfii jjf M ; Proprietor. * I *■_ .•"'".'" . •.. :v*':'.' v ,**•*. -.1 Bole Agent for An»t?alli an New Zealand.;-* M, MOSS & CO., Bydney and Melbouro
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18801109.2.13.4
Bibliographic details
Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 221, 9 November 1880, Page 4
Word Count
1,458Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue 221, 9 November 1880, Page 4
Using This Item
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.