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" Lives of great men all remind up, We can make our Urea sublime; And, departing, leave behind*us Footprints on the sands of time." r|IHE above is read with great interest J. by thousands of young men. It ii • spires them with Hops, for in the briglt lexicon of youth there is no such word as fail. Alas! say many, this, is correct, —is true with regard, to the youth who has never abused his strength—and to the man who has not been "passion's SlttTp." "!But to that youth—to that maa, who has waßted his vigor, who has yielded himself up' to the temporary sweet • allurements i the above lines are but as a reproach. What Hops can he have ? What, aspirations ? What chance of leaving bis footprints on the sands of Kmo 1 Vnr Mm a]n» 1 thorn in nnucht hilt dark despair and self-reproach fob a lost life. For a man to leave his footprints on the •anda of time, he must be endowed with a strong brain and nervous power. He must possess a sound, vigorous, healthy mind, in a healthy body—the power to conceive—the energy to execute! But look at our Australian youth! See the emaciated form, the vacant look, the Uttless' hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, the sens Je s, almost idiotic expression. Note his d<meauour and conversation, and then cay, Is'that a man to 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 done so, do they (as a strict sense of duty demands) seek the skilled advice of the medical man, w' o has made this branch of his profession his particular speciality, whose life has been devoted to the treatment of these cases ? Header, whatistqtjk answer? Leteachoneanswerfor v: ii T> 1 »!..:.- en „ fading come emaciated old young men, broken d.iwu in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of life; yet one word might save them, one sound and vigorous health-givii g lettnr from a medical man, habituateu to the treatment and continuous supervfot a miserable and gloomy future, aus and happy life. I\. T T O „/-»»■ „11*„.....,„ *,„,, m ,.rl<. ios of youth and those a his peculiar study. profesional life has been especially devoted ~ .i... '—-jtincut of Nervous Affections and j es incidental to Married Life. His skill is available to all—no matter how many hundreds or thousands of miles distant. Ilia system of correspondent' 1,.m.r ;■ „„ w s0 we ii organised and ku„ ent would be superfluous—(by is many thousands of patients have .'(1, whom ho has never seen and never known); and it is carried nn with nnoh judicious supervision that is been practising this bi ion for twenty-six yeau ... , no singlo instance of acoi--1 discovory has ever, yet happened, i Modicincs are required, these are forwarded in the same t fid manner without a possibility of the ■•intoiits of the parcels being discovered. P a!n and clear < i ections acrompaany these Lt er, a euro is eifoctod without even the physician knowing who is his patient. physician knowing who is his patient. To Mon and Women with Broken-down Constitutions, the Nervous, the Debilitated, an 1 all Buffering from any Disease whatever, Dr. L. L. Smith's plan of treatment commends itself, avoiding, as it docß, the incoiivenienco and oxpenso of a personal DR. L. L. SMITH, 183 COLLINS-STREET EAST, MELBOURNE. (Late the Residonce of the Governor). Consultation Feo by Letter, £l. NUIE HOMCEOPATHIC DOMESTIC j FUYSICIAN, By Drs. Pclte and Errs. Revisod, with important additions, and many now remedies, by Wasiiimotok Em, L.R.C.P., M.R.C.S. Assistant Physician to tho London Homesopathio Hespital. I<argo Bvo., p.p. 724j cloth, Bs., post free; or in half morocco, 10s. 6d. TABLI Or COHTMTS. Oeneral Disease*—Casual Diseasos— Cutaueoua DuaatM—Fevart—Affections of tho Mind—tin. Head—the Eye.—tho Ears —th.i Noae—the Face, Lips, and Jaws—the Teeth, Uums, and Mouth—tho Windpipe and Chest—tho Stomach and Bowols—thn *?_! .1 n •»-! rt . T\: .. ..# Woman—Treatment of Children—Anatomy and Physiology—Hygiene and Hydropathy —Materia Medica—Domestic ourjjivy— Modioat and Surgical Appllanoes—Dislocntious' and Luxations— V racturos— Olonsary —lndex. A Chest of Medicines (l»ok enclosed) £3 10s. or £5 9s. ; or with glass stoppers t<i nil thn Tinctures, £4 45., or £0 6s. !j A M. 1.6 F V V 8 A N D" C 0., llcmißiirVPll"' CUKMISTS, j 18, Tbrwjuesdjn Wre"t, and 170, Picadilly, London,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STSSG18791206.2.2.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Samoa Times and South Sea Gazette, Volume 3, Issue 114, 6 December 1879, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
728

Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 Samoa Times and South Sea Gazette, Volume 3, Issue 114, 6 December 1879, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 Samoa Times and South Sea Gazette, Volume 3, Issue 114, 6 December 1879, Page 1

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