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We BOUT, •" LICENSED LAND BROKEB, VALUATOR, LAND, HOTFSE & COMMISSION AG-ENT, EARDY STBBBT, NELSON. I rgiRAHSFBBB cjr CONVSTANCBS of 1 LAND imdfir the "Land Transfer Act " effected at charges Used by tbe Act ; also MORTGAGES and SB - 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 collected. ; Land and Houses hired let, bought or sold, on commission, , . Insurances effected at lowest rates. Rents collected, Taxes and Insurances p?'d ; and repairs, effected. Valuations made in Town or Country for purchases, sales, or for Stamp and Succession Duty. — - — FOR SALE, ON TEBY EA«r XBBMB TO BUTT PBBOHABBRB— 6. Fifty Acies, Moutere— a bargain. 11. Three hundred Acres, Upper Moutere. 12. Forty Acres & Cottage, Lower Moutere. 85. House, and 40ft froitage, Teaman-street, , JBSSO 43. House and Half-an-acre of Land,Brontietreefe. £400. 48. A 7 roomed House with 7 acres Land, ct Wskefleld for £320 or .with 21 acres £500. 52. 64 feet Land, corser of Nile-street and Trafalgsr-square, £200. 64. A Farm of 68 acres, in Gibbs Valley, WakeOeld, fenced and in paddocio price JE6OO. 63. Three flrst-clasß Building Sites in Tra-fal'gar-st. South, on very easy ttrms. 68. Several Allotments at Stepneyville, the Port, at low prices. 70. A First-class Building Site, containing , Two-thirds of an Acre, in Kawai-st. 75. Corner Allotment, Waimea-street, at £2 per foot. 77. Superior Cottage and Land, Washington Valley, for £200. 80. New Cottage and 69 feet ofhnd, Van guard-street. £225, easy terms. 81. 100 feet Land, Russell-street. 82. 72 feet Land, Waimea-road. 88, A Bujlding Site at the Port at £1 per foot. 85. First class Building Site on Port Hills, tastefully planted nnd fenced 86. A capital Dairy Farm in Dovedale, o f 359 acres, with Homeßtead and all working appliances 87. Two Allotments of Land nearly opposite Lokins' Wharf 88. Three Allotments in Waimea-et 89. Tbe interest in a Leasehold Cottage in Nelson, very cheap. 91. A most desirable Residence in Cambria street, with large Garden and Outbuildings 92, A comfortable Cottage in Alton street. 04 A Farm of 100 acres at Hope, half cropped, halt grass, with ccmfoitabls ; Homester d, 95. Two Cottages in Selwjn Place, very cheap, £180. 96. Capital Business Premises in Gloucester street, near the Station^ and two Cottages, £300. 97. Good Building SUes, Collingwood-street, at £3 per foot. 99. SO ffetof land in Brougham street, at j6l per foot. 100. A Conyentent Stop and Dwelling-bouss at Brightwater, near tbe Kailway StatioD, with One Acre and a-Half of GaTdan land for £ieo. 101. A Fir it rate Site in Shelbourne-ttreet, cheap. TO LET, 29. A Four-roomed Cottrge, Westbnak Terrace, at 7s. per week. 35. A Five-roomed House, Waimea street, at 9s per week MONE7 TO LEND on approved freehold ■eonrity. tSesks, work-boxes, dressing \J CASES. &C, At B LUCAS & SON'S 14 Lives of great men a-i remind us, We can make our lives sub'-ime ; And departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time." THE above is read with great interest by thousands of young men. It inspires tbejn with .Hope, for in the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as fail. Al»s I say many, this iS correct—ia true with regard to tbe youth who bafi never abused his strength—and to the roan who has not been •!• passion's slave." i But to that youth— to that man who has wasted his vigor, who has yielded himself up to tbe temporary sweet allurements of vice, who has given unbridled license to his pas4iona, to him the above lines are but 88 a reproach, What hope can be have ? Wbat aspirations ? What, chance ot leaving his Footprints on the sands of time 1 For him, alas, there is nought but dark deepair and self-reproach for a lost life. i For a man to leave his footprints on the •ands of time, he must be endowed with a strong brain end nervous power. He must ! possess a strong, vigorous, healtby mind in a healtby body— the power to conceive — tbo energy to execute I But look at our Austral- { jan youth I See the emaciated form, the j Vacant look, tbe listless, hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, the eenseless, almost idiotic expression. Note bis demeanor a?d ! conversation, and then say. Is that a oian to I leave his footprints on the sands of time. Do parents, medical men, and educators of youth pay sufficient attention to this subject? Do they ever ascertain the cause of this decay ? and having dono so, do they (as a strict sense of duty demands) seek tbe skilled advice of the medical man, wh j has made this branch of hi« ptote salon his particular speciality, whose life has been devoted to the treatment of these casts ? Beader, what is your answer ? Let each one answer for himself. Parents see their progeny fading gradually before their eight, see them become emaciated, old young men, brokm down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of jfe ; yet one word migh save them, one lound and vigorous health-giving letter from a medical man, habituated to the treatment and continuous supervision ot such cases, would in most instances succeed in warding off the impending doom of a miserable and gloomy future, and, by appropriate treatment (restore tbe enervated system to its natural Vigor, and ensure a joyous and happy life. i Dr. L. L. SMITH, ot Melbourne, has made the diseases of youth and those arising therebom his peculiar study. His whole profes blonal life has been especially devoted to the treatment of Nervous affections and tbe Diseases incidtntal to Married Life. His shill is available to all-no matter how many nandreds or thousands of miles distant. Bis system of correspondence by letter is now an Well organised and known, tbat comment Would be Buperflous— (by tMs means many jthouaaudß of patients have been cured, whom he has never Been and never known); and it is carried on with such judicious supervision that though be has been practising thiß branch of his profession for twenty-six years in these colonies, no single instance of accidental discovery has ever yet happered. iWhen medicines are required, these are forwarded in the raine careful manntr, without a possibility of the 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 his patient. s To Men and Women wilh Broken-down .^Constitutions, the Nervous and Debilitated, all suffering from any disease whatever, Dr.. ■L. L. Smith's plan of treatment comraencß jitself, avoiding as it does, the .inconvenience and : expense of a personal visit. ' . I Address— j DR. L.L. SMITH, I 182, COLLiNS STREET BAST, I ....,..:. MELBOURNE '(Late the 'residence of the GoVOTmfc), „

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18801122.2.19.3

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue XV, 22 November 1880, Page 4

Word Count
1,139

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue XV, 22 November 1880, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XV, Issue XV, 22 November 1880, Page 4

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