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The Wingham Times, 1899-02-03, Page 30 t UE WING :E. M '1111E►a, . TA11u tJ Af Y 3, U-,`,;). I TUE ,TIC'ir Bell: FIS a TIte',.++ B. J i it iL Ifk fitrO11I.D`f3t'.lil:i HIT+ APPRENTICE -i Still' do AS rel. tri; t'itCoiltilL WHL r., 1 ii Those G..i-o.leri;lrxoxr, • jeSeventeen is the preferable ego for going io a trade, bet In many .11t�� `, noses sixteen is net tou young, nor ttjl i eighteen tuts cold," writes: Berton • Cheyncy in the February Ladies,' Home Journal. "last,, tilI Wild itipns .being favorable, it is well fur a boy .o +tri' nge his :tppre3ntiee.,hip so that be can finish his trade by the time Ile is twenty -ons, Ono of the advent - ages of' going to a trade early is that it allows. the ltlfl tithe to make A. change slltiuid lie dieeuver that he has Made a mistake in ,;iicotdc g• his vocation, and there is net tuftallible method or rule that cats be followed in corder that soca mist:Ikea c.sn be avoided -But the best cotu•bc to pure sue is for the lad totally aceuait(t him• self with the details of the trades to which ho may inelite before he snakes a selection This can be easily done at the expense only of a little observation and inquiry. Then the matter of natural aptitude can he eoneidored—and it is a west lin pertaut factor—so tha'l the lad.can avoid going into anything for which he has no special fitness. It is as- serted that every one is adapted fur some one thing better than anything else, .and the boy should strive to discover what that one thing is. It would be a great tntstake fur a lad without a natural bent f::r mechanics to 'attempt to learn the machist's trade, and the chances tim told be :against such A boy'e proper advance inent, for one's best work anti devel- opment are the oute nue of being .t ongenially employed." Nie It at the Bud. The time to put out, a .fire is when it starts O nisn:nption is like fire. to the beginuine it is easy to cure. The longer 1t tines Oil the more it de3tr'ye. At the first, sign—when the cough begins and when flesh is lost—cure it with Shiloh's Cough and Consumption Cure. 25 ots., • 50•rts. and fat,UO a bottle Your money refunded it it. fails to cure. Row to eget and Van- itadnoy Troubles. Paint3'a Celery Oompeuncl the Suf- ferer's Only Salvation. Too many men al 1 wn•nen forget the taut that tail ketiesys aro twee import- ant orgn11H the leafy. 'they art wnutler- tuily euustruuted wachinee that titter all poisons Hutt impurities from the blood. 'When, through d:eeaee, they are unable to de their tenni, pntsen and death are carried to all parts of the system. When the kiduoys s re disordered, the enfant. zoite victim isquicttly and surely brought to a knowledge of the dangers that de. velop Urigh3's disease cud Diabetes, The back aches ; there is indigestion, dropsy, inflammation of the bladder and a constant Hell to urinate, There is . generally abundant sediment • in the water ; sometimes it is psle in color, fre-• quently it is eli coy rind streaked with blood. • Any of the eymtntns noted above should create alarm, and warn the vie • tim that he or she should at once make rine of Pulse's Celery Com p3und, the . only medicine that can put to night all symptom.; of a dreaded and deadly, ilia tease. The action of Peine's Celery Ctam- pound is prompt and telling in the most aggravate fortes ot chemise ; it seare lies out every weak sleet, ,.,,tl its healing vir- tues bring strength and regular action to +every organ. What .Paine'e Celery Com- pound has done for tellers in the past it will do for you now. Da not hesitate or procrastinate poor sufferer ; lay huld of Paine's Celery Compound at once. ant health ..wilt bp your reward. It cure.9 surely and perivaueutly. Some i.4. If in t. ri tee is e sa3B333 divorcee is Riever its ellede331r. If a thing doesn't seer, possible it 5,13 sure to °sear. If you, would flatter a in to tell him le i- not easily faltered. • If two, pe iple cin live on leas than one'it'e ht!eease they have to. If the wit i w,•lvei reelly say things they probebty teil tihh stories. If attain .i3 a little vain he 'ought to show which way the wind blow;. If some types ot beauty were mere than skin deep they might prove fatal. If you went to see the right side sof some legislative bilis look on the other •side. If the offl,e were to •start out in Search of the men it would s'x n get ]list in the crowd. • Quick. Cure of Sciatica. Dlr. 4. 'Taylor, 'Lk Afton Ave., Toronto, 'writes': "J was greatly afflicted alto Boiatioa, but alter using one box of Mil ]aura's Rheumatic Pills I was able to go to 'Is or":. in three dal s and have uut been iroubled sinon," The Longest Beard in the World. • Probably the longest beard in the world is that of a metal worker in• Vaadenene, near Nie\''re, France.The, man is 71 years old . and is in . p'erfeet health. When 14 years old he had a heard G ine'les long. It grew from i ear to year, and now his 111rsate attachment when un- rolled haas, reached the respectable length of 10 feet 10 inches. When this man goes out walking he carries his beard rolled up in a big skein under his arm; as the old Roman Senators ca, ried their togas. In winter he winds his beard several Gimes around his neck, using it as a boa. Since the man is rather small in size, measuring bat 5 feet 3 inches, the heard is more' thin twiee the m'ill's height. • "She Barri '.,s Her Heart ±. on Her Sleeve" R• Tfhat a boon to manya man orwoman iftlils wore literally so—How many spirits aro broken ' !Watts° this particular organ is shackled by disease -and yot how many times has • Dr„ • Ageow's Cure for•the Heart brushed against the grim reaper and robbed him of his victim. :Diseases of the heart are by far the most treacherous'of ailments which afflict humanity — ruthless. -to old and young alike—not insidious but violent, for when the heart fails the whole system suffers` violence. Discussing causes here will note4 II, -Y y console the suffering one. The one great ycam bi the heart -sickened patient is how to get relief and at cure. Dr. Agnow'tt Care for the Heart stands pre- emincntly to -day as theater of hope to sufferers front heart trouble, and so far pastthe experimental period that thousandsto•.•ay proclaim,in no uncertain sound, the belief 'that were isnot for this great remedy they world have long ago passed into the great beyond. Most entitleht doctors, ivhom heart cases have baffled, have tested Dr. Agnew's claims, and to -day they prescribe it in their practice as the quickest and safest heart remedy known td medical science. What are the symptoms? Palpitation, flut- tering, shortness of breath, weak and irregular pulse, swelling of feet and ankles. pain in the left side, chilly sensations, fainting spells, uneasiness in sleeping, dropsical tendency and as many more indications that the heart is deranged. Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart is a heart specific ; and no case too acute to find relief front it inside of thirty iitintites—a powerful cure. Mas. Jin. Frremerrretq of Gananoque, Ont., after having been treated by eminent physicians for Heart disease of five years' standing, was d:s- charged front rho hospital as a hopeless incurable. Sho antlered from acute pain and palpitation, her feet and ankles swollen, and there wail every tendency to the dropsical form of heart disease, but the lady pro- cured t ho e. d ♦sal t as she declare p thoHeart , Ono Agnew's Cure for $ 0 ed Dr. 1 rat than thirty minutes, itt less �r veryacutespasm Y gi ved her of a sand three bottles cured her—nt n symptom of the trouble remaining Com:meTOR WILLUM G. LUCAS, of the N. u°t W.12:114 and living at }tagarstown,htd., suffered for years with aorto valvular form of heart• disease—cost hint many a" lay off" from his dailyduties on the road, and be spent a mean fortune in remedies andtreatingwith heart gspeek,ligts in prornite of a cure, and all ended in disappolnlancnt, mull a good friend who had been b� corded, recommended Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart. Ho tried it, and found it gavo'him relief and .comfort almost Immediately. Ho eonanued its useuntil afew bottles were taken, and to -clay lio'swell and atrchg, andrays, "Tell all heart suitcases that I can highly recommend this great remedy." 1DR. AcINHW'3 OINTMnNT Cures mediae, salt rheum, tetter, scald head and tillitching skin d:teases' cures piles in three to five nights. gs cents. AtGNEW'S CATAltattAlL POWroS t relloves cold In nut head or hay foyer in ten minutes—will ours most stubborn and long standing catarrh cases quickly and permanently' laver-�cicar the SOO. AtiNIIW'S t IVaR PILLS cure constipation, la:lieusnoss, tick headache, torpid r likes so doges. act cents. SOLD Mt A. L. TIAMILTOIv, WINI 41/1111. B BART 'RTS. Dr. Agnew's (Jure for the Ifearli One Dose helped in 30111iuttte— Two Bottles Oared, Mrs. M. K. Oalhynr, 99 Paoille Toronto, was troubled with beart ditieaee for years, could not Stand oil a chair without.growing dtzey ; going up stairs, or being suddenly startled brought on palpitation, suffocation and intense pains under the shoulder btndes. She tried many remedies -.-was treated by heart specialists without permanent re- lief. Silo procured awe used Dr. Ag- new's Cure for the Heart. She got re lief within 30 tninutes after the first tinge, and before she had token two bet ties every sylupton: elf honrt trouble had left her. Sold by A. I.4. Hamilton.. The End of tee Century, There are still doubts in some people's minds as to whether the year 1900 ends the nineteenth or begins the twentieth century. The .h'reneh Government is partly responsible for the persistence of the error as it sets the year -1900 for its twentieth cen tury exposition. It is merely an illusion,• however, says the Montreal Witness, caused by the sound, which is easily corrected in any but the most confused minds b rpointing out that the year 100 must have belonged to the first century. But as many prefer the voice of authority to the exercise of theie own wits, we ma; refer to Haydn's Dietionery of Dates. That authority explains that the calendar year has been made to cor respu.td in length with the solar year by 'skipping a leap year upon the year ending a century., The Julian year calculated by the astronomers under Julius Caesar was fixed at 365. days, 6 hours, every fourth year be- ing bissextile. Tbie calendar was defective, as the solar year was 365 days, 5 hours and 49 minutes. This diti'erence between the calendar and true solar year amounted to ten days by the sixteenth century. 'To oh• viate this error,' declares the author of Hlaydn's Dictionery of Dates, 'Pope Gregory XIIs. ordained in 1582 that that year should consist of 365 days only (making the fifth day of Oeso ber the fifteenth), and to prevent further irregularity it was deter mined that a year ending •a century should not be bissextile, with the ex ception of' that ending each fuurth century ; thus 1700 and 1800 have not been bissextile, nor will 1900 be so ; but the 'year 2000 will be zi kap year. In this manner three days are retrenched in four hundred years, because the lapse of eleven minutes makes three days in about that, period.' We are not in a position to say whether Pope Gregory in thus ordainin& used the samo ]antivaae which the writer quoted does, and spoke of the years ending the cen- turies. If he did, it is a little curl• ons that the Cardinals at Home should have beeu reepmmendin; the Church to mark the end of the cen- tury by a world's pilgrimage to Rome in the year 1899. A. Bayonet Thrust is as a pin scratch to the tortures of Indigestion and Dys- irepeia. The bravest soldier will w eaeren beige the onelaught of these redoubt- ahle enemies to hdaltb. Dr. Von Stsn's Pi neapple Tablets break down thestronsi- holds of disease, build up and fortify the wasted nerve force. .put new life. new hope, Dew energy, hoist the banner of victory in the stead of the #las; pf distress. 35 cants. Sold by A. L, Hamilton. Thirteen Mistakes. To yield to immaterial trifles. • To look for perfectibrt in our own Rotldns. • To endeaver to mold all disposi- tions ispositions alike. ' To expect uniformity of opinion in .this World. To look for judgment and exper- t fence in youth. . , . To measure the enjoyment of others by your own. . To believe only. whist our finite minds can grasp, ' TO expect to be able to en;der- st'tnd everything. Not to mac allootanees for the infirmities of ochees. To consider everything hnpossible that we cannot perforate To worry ourselves 'and others with that cnnrot be reniedied." Nettie allevinte all Viet needs Inllevitttioil, as far ;as lies in our powel'. '4 It is a groat mistake to set' nti Vent' own standard t1f'' right Anel wrong and ',ledge peuplrt according- ly. _wax!VIUsTw tart ll' i'istt• V sand in this stir,+ to inanafo oar b i4, a th se own ens twee selfless. It f., t,in•;Ay t 1A^6 so k condue'o•l at he ,:e. Salary etrar let tseer a rule and,nx,enacd--leflnite, bnnande, notnn,o.ho 1h,'t "d;a•y. Sronthly '7.a,; IIet.•renrra RI close C'^if-addroaeetl'+tnm'r-rt ,.wtt't , mowed le; ova. +}rest., Dept i1. Chicago '7, • i:' • has been for sixty years the popular medicine for colds; coughs, and all diseases of the throat and lungs. It cures Asthma and Bronchitis, and so soothes the irritated tissues that a refreshing sleep invariablylows its use. No mother ,fears an attack of Croup or Whooping Coh for her children, with Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the house. It is a specific for that modern malady, La ,Grippe. It prevents Pneumonia, and has fre- quently cured severe cases of lung trouble marked by all' the symptoms of Consumption. It is p Ih.c for Coids, Coughs, a d --Lung 4s.cascs0 "At the age of twenty, after a severe sickness, I was left with weak lungs, :z terrible tough, and nearly all the symptoms of consumption. My doctor had no hope of my recovery; but having read the advertisements of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, I determined to try that preparation. I did so, and since that time, I have used no other cough medicine. I am now seventy-two years old, and I know that at least fifty years have been added to my life by this imcomparable preparation." A. W. SPERRY, Plainfield, N. J. ' "I have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for nearly fifty years and found it to be an excellent remedy for all bronchial and throat di -teases." L. 1-i. MATHEWS, Editor Arws-Disbaltlr, Oneonta, Ala. "My first remembrance of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral dates :sick thirty-six years, when my mother used it for colds, coughs, croup, and sore throat. She used no other medicine in attacks of that sort among her thildren, and it never failed to bring prompt relief and. cure. I always keep this •medicine in the house, and a few doses elutckly check all colds, coughs,, or any Inflammation. of the throat and lungs. J. O'DONNELL, Seattle. Wash. et I have sold Ayer's Medicines for fortyfive years. I know of no preparation that equals Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for the cure of bronchitis. It never fails to give prompt relief." C. L. SHERWOOD, Druggist, Dowagiac, Mich. "I have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral both in my family and practice, and consider it one of the best of its class -for la grippe, colds, coughs, bronchitis; and consumption in its early stages." W. A. WRIGHT, P.T. IJ., Barnesville, Ga. "Some years ago Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cured me of the asthma after the best medical skill had failed to give me relief.' F. S. 1IASSLER, Editor A, us, Table Rock, Neb. Frcc Advicc0 i_ 5. We have organized a Medical Department; with a physician of the highest standing at its head, and invite. the sick and ailing to write, and receive the best medical advice, absolutely without charge or cost. Iii iron Y•.'}���S.•r �l.:h ,�, � r'A'irt,--,'�.�,-�fi.• ., Montague, of Dunnville, Cured of Ulcerated Itohtn;; Phles. Mr. Robert Montagne. of Dunnville, Ont.. writes :—"'Vaa.troubled with Itch ing Piles for live years and was so hadlt uleertited,' they were very leaned. tet miioh so, that 1 mild not, pleep. I trier] almost every medicine known when 1 was recommended to eta Dr f•.hase'" Ointment. 1 purchased a cmc and from • the first application trot relief. Have used two boxes and not note uoml'letely cured." WHEN ENGAGED TO WED THE YOUNG WOMtit SHOULD FIT HEItSEL1' row TUN IIM W. PROBLEMS of LIEN. "The engaged young man k Int k ink 'ahead in a husinesliktt way t' the time when his expense., will he doubled,,' writes lltelen W.t tt('''s"i1 Moody m the POD rill I V Lactic.' Rome Journal. "nu k, if he le to 1st+. and worthy, savtrt n eeeteirt definite' sum each month far the bank se r w t I n Dunt 1titoU velli 1 n Cott met C C rat,. I S is`a responsible party to 1' mart fact' engagement But nt .s 1 tier r'ftplr the young Wonan, with Nr lease. r 1 ltnowledge of the 1'nsilte.$c eido el ' life, and with prelates a subtle, feminine itpv roeitttinn Ow the all sufficiency ofiove,lots tilt: lents and months slip by tAithrent mow. toward fitting herself for her own special partrershijs in thee' firm r.fj two which is to untlerteke the moat serious problems which life ratfera. She forgers r.hst marriage is a civil eontt•.sct as well as a sacrament ; a vot•king partnership as well as the •xpriteeion of divine sentiment. The 'art lined by clothes in the entire (theme she understands so well that he utiurilly (Werra tes it, and her en Are let':+i'Itti.l fix• ntnrr•inge re solves itself into tileelehorati'lli of a reit,?ea a. Nor is this love ora r"ussonit of it,elf to be deplored. Whet womanly woman is there whose hem t does not dwell with love upon eltlifons and bilks as •in all t,thyr pre'tr.t' things, their beauty is ..heir own excuse for the lave they wirt. Bet the Ical sig'nificance' f 111}1 he! life is etmcerred with other 'hinge then einrlies." Cramps and Colic art' nIa'il a 3:re► nptt' relieved ht1 r. Poe li,r's. Ii I'•a"r of tt. ild Stray, het' he best, Dtnrr•hte' tali edy in esietet rr. Devious Deftltitiorts. - �n1wee% more in sorrow that, 1,r:'fer---AO Animal that feetl•i t„ r tor, kter';s thee. ratWide —that line that gel"11 illi' ..qui' men f'onl'liare. !teller' Intuit --ens kind of 1t t't•' velem the ymlitttie t'an telt. Ste lilt -- itltneet inv11rinblr tit, u};liest discovery of the season • • Love—the dream of childhood,.t e lite of youth and the bankruptcy or old age. • Heretic—A men who doesn't e- lieve as you du and is too truthful to, lie about it. Sport— a man who takes all the sport. out of sport by making it a brutal exhibition: • Ametear —• an . individual who' thinks he knows twice as' mueh as a professor really knows. Itealiseic—the drania embodying 10 farm animals, 20 stage effects and 30 unreal actors. Hagyard's 'Yellow Oil cures all Pain and takes out Swelling and Infla- mation quicker thee any other remedy. Price 25e, We sc ldom find people ungrate fal as long as we are in a t ondition to render them services, OD'S oILLS $Dose, the ter pid liver, sad Curt biliousness, sick headache, jaundice,. nausea., indigos tien. etc. They are ilia valuable to prevent a cold or break tip a fever. Mild, gentle, certain, they' are worthy rota' confldenre. Purely t•'eretable, they ran be taken by children or delicate women. Price, 2ec. at all m,dleine dealers of by nun Of 0.1. HOOD d Co„ u,ltrell, Masai: