Sporting , v- ; ■■'SPORTING.- NEWS.'-/-Gash •Pafiaes- <*& EIGHTH GRAND-. HAMBURG. DI|AWING r;iS.NOW vQP£N.- > . To a purchaser of 25 Programmes one will i be given Gratis. "OBOM the undoubted popularity and great JL Bucoess thesa drawings) have obi&ined.-■ throughout Mew Zealand the' promoters arc enabled to briris; them'before .the public every two month 1. There is also ".the fact that all those drawings have filled some time before tho advertised date of closing, which bus enabled the Company to pay tho prizes in full. The Eighth Grand Drawing for £4000 will close the end of APRIL, *tmd tho Ninth Hamburg Drawing will Open oa tba Ist MAY' ;.' ' .■■■:■■■ / ; This 'Eighth Grand Drawing will concist of 320 Mohby Prizes/ amounting to £4000, subscribed by 8000 members at 10s each. .''■.'. The various Moitbx Pbizes will bo distributed »b follows :— l<£3oo PRIZE ' 15 £23 PRIZES 1 1 £200 PRIZES 15 £20 PRIZES I 1 £100 PRISE- 15 £15 PRIZES . 2 £50 PBIZES 160 £10 PBIZB3 : 10 dS3O PBIZE3 100 £5' PRIZES Totai Amount, £4000. 320 Mohby Pbizes.. To a Purchaser of 25 Programmes one will be given Gratis. The Grand, principle of these Hdmburg Drawings is that a purchaser ofl 25 Programmes is guaranteed a Pbize, and • the chances are in favor of the investor drawing a iAEaE Pbizb, as thexe are 220 liABG-b Pbizbs to 100 small ones. To an investor'of £2 tho chances aro only 8 to 1 againiifc him drawing a prize, and the Head Peize . or any other may be drawn by an investor of 10s. Read This.—ln Boat's Grand Hamburg Drawings the greatest odda are only 25 to 1 against an investor of 103 .drawing a prize. But carefully note tho enormous odds against investors drawing a Horse or Cash Prize in any of the Horse Consultations. The marbles are replaced for each Drawing .of the Cash Pbizes, which give the enormous odds against investors. This. Company would 'simply ask investors to calculate the odds before placing their investments in any horse consultations; and this Company would liot; presume to tell ihe public that they have a number of chances and may win a nusaber of prizes for a Bingle investment of, 10e. .'..';'• ," . ' 3JOTE.—Prize Winners, whether winning large or small prizes are informed that their names will not bo made public without their written consent. . This Eighth Grand Drawing for £4000 will take place under the supervision of a committee of eight subscribers, and the prizes will be paid over as early as possible after the drawing. NOTlCE.— Country Cheques. marked correct by Banh, on\y payable to a number, and Is added for exchange, P.O. 'Orders^preferred, made payable only to BOAZ. Bank Motes accepted. Two 2d stamps for reply and result. Registered letters and telegrams not received. Kaine and address of applicant should be plainly written. All letters must be .addressed —BOAZ, care •Mr MOBEIIT, Wholesale - and Retail Tob'ac* oonist, Box 64, Post Office, Dunodin. Diseased Nature "oftentimes breaks forth in •trango eruptions."—Act iii, Scene 1. '■ '> ■ •y TO THE PUBLIC. SOME patients suffering from nervous affections sro afraid from sheer bashful- ; nGBB and modesty to pbhsokaliy consult a medical man—-other patients have not the self-posseßsion and qoolneß.s when in the consulting room, to accurately describe their symptoms —their habits of life, and the nature of the disease they suffer from.Let suoh persons (he or she) Bit quietly down in tee privacy of their own apartments, and with calm minds describe clearly each symptom of their case, a clear statement thus written, and laid before me isj far preferable in nbbtotjs diseases to a personal consultation. Where, however, ». disease is of a peculiar and exceptional character, a, personal consultation may become necsssary 5 but my succeos ia correspondence ia bo great, that of the thouaaads. upon thousands whom I have treated by latter during the last 82 years, not a single mistake basrever occurred, not a case hao ever been made public—in fact the very simplicity of my system of. correspondence prevents publicity.; > At the same time medicines are sent to my patients in such a form as to defy detection. ■ How many thousands have I not brought joy to?. How many have been enabled to enter into the ma/riage Btata through consulting mo ? How many after marriage have privately consulted mo and been blessed and their married lives mads fruitful and happy. How , many wiisted ruined youths of both sexea have ( also been restored to health, and thanksd their manhood, for having consulted me by letter. . How many questions arise 'whwe the family pbysiciaa ia unable to unravel the caee and where often the patient lingers on, not daring to tell his family medical adviser the nature of his complaint, until consumption wasting, or mental diseases, set in and the sufferer gets beyond the oiiriable Btage, and is left a hopeless wreck. A letter written in the privacy of the room and. dropped ,in the post box reaches me quietly 5 the answer is returned as quietly and unOßtentatioualy, and the patient, without stopping from his chamber, except ,to pqst his letter, is by return of post put in full posses* sion of the nature of his case. His hopes are rrised his doubts removed, and he is comparatively a new man; in fact^ in.many cases, a new being altogether. ' The only addition to the ordinary written letter is the ago occupation, habits and symptoms, nothing more. The usual consultation fee of £1 (one pound) must be enclosed, otherwise no answer/will be returned. There are thousands of cases in daily life where a consultation with, one at a distance will remove by a single letter a great fear, a great.care, and it often solves what appears as an impenetrable mystery. Many a sad heart h^s been made joyful on receipt of an explanatory letter from me. To thoae who are about to marry, T would cay consult me before doing so, . and thus I prevent many after troubles, and remove, many unnecessary fears and prejudices $ \to those, more especially, who "fcavo suffered in early years from disease, or who havo yielded to their passions. To these I gay, at once, coneult with me, do not tarry, delays are dangerous, and as an expert, my time may not be always nt your service, you can, by ismply enclosing one pound, have the benefit of my experience in the same manner as if I lived in your town, arid' with the additional advantage of thorough privacy.—-Tours, truly, LOUIS L. SMITH. Address'— ' DU L. L. SMITH. - 182 COLLIKS STREET EAST Melbourne. : CONSULTATION FEE BY LETTIDR, £1. Foe for pprsonal Conßultationj £1 1. Tho latter is inclusive of Medicine. Medicines forwarded, [well-packed, to all the Colonies, India and Europe, lift?, COIMM* BTS3JST gAST, MjHSOtBKJI,
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18850402.2.30.4
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Thames Star, Volume XVI, Issue 5061, 2 April 1885, Page 4
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1,118Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 Thames Star, Volume XVI, Issue 5061, 2 April 1885, Page 4
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