" Lives of great mon all remind uf,. We can make our iiw'a sublimn; ' And, departing, lo*va» behind us lesicon ttypSfi ttiert Jjs no'-Bucn ; wowl aa fail. Alas! say many, this 'it eorrect,— with regartf to the iyavAh who has never abuse* hit strength—and. to the-maa who has not been " passion's slave." '-('■'•'«3-'. •>"/ .-.-. s |«) t .j ijjA ' But td test-youth—to thatmtn, wasted hi» vigor, who has yielded .'hrmself up to the temporary sweat allurements o: vice, who has (. ivon unbridled license' to his passions, to him the above lines are but as a reproach. What 3 Hopb'can., ha have?. What aspirations? Whatnehanoe of leaving ins footprints on the sands of time ? -For him, alas! there is nought but dark despair and self-reproach foe a lost liPE.-' ! ' ! j -%■• ■ •-■ :•;...•• ' ,«V;.;.' r 'i.'.> For a man to leave his footprints oh the sands of time, he must bo endowed with a strong brain and nervous power. Ho mußt possess-a sound, vigorous, healthy mind/ -in a healthy body—the ppwor to conceive—ih'e energy to execute! Butlooi at' our Australian youth! See the emaciated form, the vacant look, : the listless, hesitating mr.naer, the nervous distrust; tho sensde s, almost idiotic expression. Note his"d- - meanour and conversation, and then, tay, Is that a man to leave his footprints ou the sands of time. . ... Do/parents, medical men. and" educators of youth pay sufficient attention to this subject?* Do'they ever. ascortain the' cause of thia,decay; and having done so, do they (as a strict sense of ' duty 'demands) seek the skilled advice of the medical man, w..0 has made this branch of his profession his ■■**yjww»ft7" otedtothetreati rtiat is your answer? Let each one am -imself. Parents see their progeny fadii'g gradually before their sight, see them bedown in health, enfeebled, unfitted for tho battle of life; yet one word n"'"** """"" them, one sound and vigorous hei letter from a medical r to the treatment and cont sion of such cases, would, in most instances of a miserable and gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore the eneivated Systeiu to its natural vigor, and onsure a joy•ous arid happy life. Dk. L. L. Smith, of if olbourno, * ~ " 1 ~ tlie eiseases of youth and thos therefrom his peculiar study. H..-> "« profi-siumd life has lieou especially devoted to the treatment of Nervous At" the Diseases incidental to 11a His skill is available to all—no matter bowmany hundreds or tliuusa"' l * n * milna distant. His system of c letter is now so well organised and" known, that comment would be superfluous—(by this means many thousands of patients have beou cured, whom he has never-seen and never known); and it is e on with such judicious supervision though ho has been practising this branch of. his profession for twonty-six yours in thpuii rnlnnißH, no single instance of aeciovor yet happened. When? Medicines are required, these are forwarded in tho same careful manner without a "possibility of the contents of tho parcels boiuj Plnin and nlnar directions accoi„r—is 'effected without even the physician kuowiug who is his patient. To Mon and Women with Broken-do Constitutions, the Nervous, the Debilitated, and all suffering from any Disoaso whatever, Db. L. L. Smite's.plan of treatment lends itself, avoiding, as it does, tho vonienco and expense of a personal visit. DE.'L; L. SMITH, 182 COLLINS-STREET EAST, MELBOURNE. (Late the Residence of the Govoraor). Consultation Foo by Letter, £1 THE HOMOEOPATHIC DOMESTIC PHYSICIAN, By Drs. Pulte and Epps. Revised, with important additions, and many now remedies, by . Wasblnotos Errs, L.R.C.P., M.R.C.S. Assistant Physician to tho London Homoeopathic Hospital. Largo 8vo'„ p.p. 724, cloth, Bs., post froe; or in half morocco, 10s. Od. ■ " TABLIS OFV CONTENTS, ._ General Cutaneous .Disoasosr-T-Fovers —Affections of tho Mind—tho Head-rrthe; —the'Noso—the FdcO, Lipsi and J»Ws—tho Tooth, Gums, and Mouth—the Windpipo and Chest—the Stomach and Bowels—tho. Urinary and. Genital Organs—Diseases of W6man«--Troatmoiit of Children—Anatomy, and Physiology—Hygieno and Hydropathy —Materia, Modiou—Domestic Surgery— Medical and Surgical Appliances—Dislocations and Loxauonsi—FractuHu—Olouary —lndex.' ' •,/''•• A Client of Medicines (book enclosed) £3 10s. or £5 ss. j Or with gloss stoppers to all tho Tinctures,, £1 45., or £6 6a. JAMfcS F P P~B AN*'D CO., IIOMUMrATUIC qIIKMISI'S, ' iB, Threnduondlo and 170,1'ieadillv, London,
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STSSG18791115.2.2.4
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Samoa Times and South Sea Gazette, Volume 3, Issue 111, 15 November 1879, Page 1
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688Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 Samoa Times and South Sea Gazette, Volume 3, Issue 111, 15 November 1879, Page 1
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