The Wingham Times, 1916-06-15, Page 6rage 6
LEC: 'ISI
andNER,
1
cassello
FO
THE WINGHAM. TIMES
�l ,5
l t T ;
tY
r..'M t ~ lite• s , 1 l•'1
t
1 'tut it
asa1I�cuz �: �v aa: 1: •
•� e. �- fr1
,.
`44 tJ��Q �a��9Aset; ds ti11 Ki 1 .1 r a.1Y:,5h •
saa
Nerve Force is so much like Elec-
tricity, and the latter is so much bet-
ter understood, that we have used
this vivid. telephone picture to illus-
trate what takes place in. the human
system when the connecting nerve
fibres are deranged or something goes
wrong at Central.
In the nervous system the train
is the Central where the Nerve Force
is created, and whence are issued the
orders which control the whole human
body. • Mere is consumed one-fifth of
the blood in the 'human body, and
when the blood supply is deficient in
quality or quantity, the brain and
the nervous system are first to feel
the effects.
Neuralgic pains and headaches,
inability to rest or -sleep or concen-
trate the°inind, dizziness and noises in
the ears, are some of the symptoms
of a starved nervous system.
Just as machinery lags when the
current of electricity fails, so the
bodily organs weaken when the sup-:.
ply 'of nerve force runs low. Diges-
tion is unpaired and you lose appe-
tite, the liver, kidneys and bowels are
slow in performing their functions,
the heart's action weakens, circula-
tion is slow, elands and feet are cold,
you are easily tired, lose ambition and
grow downhearted and discouraged.
This describes the condition. under
which pr. Chase's Nerve Food can prove of
greatest assistance to you. Forming new,
rich blood it feeds the starved, exhausted
nerve and brain cells back to health and
vigor. The new vital, nerve force flows out
through the intricate system of nerve fibres
to every member and every 'organ of the
body, carrying new vigor, energy and
strength and driving out pain, ..weakness
and disease.
50 cents a box, 0 for $2.50, all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates
& Co., Limited, Toronto. Do not bo talked into accepting a
substitute. Imitations disappoint.
Dr. Chase's Recipe Book, 1,000 selected recipes, sent free if Ton mention this paper.'
A Ford car bought part by part
costs only $40 more than the
list price of the complete car as
against $940 more for the parts
of the average car priced az ound
$1000 and less.
$940—ice
Cost,
over car itself,
above
spare
parts to build the average touring
car priced around $1000 and less.
$ 40—Cost, over and above the list
price of the car itself, for enongh
spare parts to build a Ford tour-
ing car complete.
$900—Difference in part by part cost of
cars.
And remember, both by laboratory tests
and actual service tests, the parts of a
Ford car haveprovedto those of themselves any super-
ior,oother
rpart by part,
car.
Don't these figures drive home what is
meant by the low upkeep cost of the
Ford'
A. M. CRAWFORD
Dealer Winghani, Ontario
]Ford Runabout$480
580
Ford Touring -
Ford Coupelet - 730
Ford Sedan - - 890
Ford Town Car 780
f. o. b, Ford Ontario
Aft care completely
equipped, including
electric headlights.
Equipment does not
include speedometer
dont Some of them expected to ►n KEEP THE BOWELS REGULMI
money oil their tables. The wasteful-
urs was impaling yet the supplying of
,AND AVOID•
good food and accomodation is one of
TIO
a
the Most proiltable business in the �0��
world to -day. in Canticle it has been
more or less of a disgrace to be asso-
ciated with, or even seen in, a hotel.
In Europe and the United States some
of the richest and most prominent,. fami-
lies socially are investing and naming
hotels after themselves and the hotel is
becoming a social centre.
The most successful hotel -keepers are
men who began in the kitchen and din-
ing -room; who learnt the business from
that end. The Ritz Hotel in 1 ..ris is
probably the finest in the world to -day.
Mr. Ritz, when the writer first knew
him. had just been promoted to assist
in the management of the Savoy Hotel,
London. The present general manager
of the Ritz, Mr. Ellis, was his head wait-
er. Like so many successful caterers
they are both of Swiss birth. George C.
Boldt, of the Waldorf-Astoria, and other
itis hotels in the States, is the largest
hotel owner in the world, with a net in-
come of well over a million; perhaps a
couple of millions, a year. He worked
his way up from the kitchen. Fred
Sterry, manager of The Plazas and other
big American hotels, also worked his
way up through all departments. The
departments, of which these men know
least, in their business, is the bar.
It is not only the big hotels that have
been marvelously successful when man-
aged by men of capacity, who learnt the
business from the ground up, and who
have developed executive ability, but
some of the small hotels have been re-
markably profitable. We know of one
hotel, in a town of 17,000, managed
by a man who began, when a boy. cut-
ting meat in the kitchen of a big city
hotel. As a result of good food and
clean, perfectly apnointed rooms and
efficient management, the profits of this
house have steadily crept up, until, in
1915, they reached $50,000. To -day the
building is being nearly doubled in size
to meet the demand for good service.
So little does this manager think of his
bar that in his new building, he is putt-
ing it in the basement, as he is satisfied
that, in a very short time, liquor selling
will be eliminated.
Investors in hotel properties should
deal with them as a manufacturing and
retailing proposition. Manage, or have
them managed, by experienced business
men. Give a quality service, advertise
it, and build a reputation just as a
manufacturer does for his name or trade
mark. The traveling and local public
will flock to'them.
Wheu the howela are * ot,kept regulat
they become clogged up with waste and
poisonous matter, causing constipation,
biliousness, sick headaches, piles, and:
all kinds of liver troubles.
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills will regu-
late the bowels so that you may have a
free and easy motion every day. one
pili every night for thirty days will
cure the worst cases of constipation.
Mr. John J. Smith, Elginburg, Ont.,
writes: "I had been troubled fora great
while with constipation, and tried many
different remedies which did me no good.
I happened to try Milbtirn's Lasa -Liver
Pills, and I have found them most bene-
ficial."
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25
cents per vial, or five vials for $1.0n; for
sale at all dealers, or mailed direct on
receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
No Eye For Color.
Apropos of the amusing comments on
academic costume that so often reveal
popular ignorance of the symbolism of
hoods and gowns is the following story,
told by a contributor to the Liverpool
Post:
A friend of mine, says be, is a cu-
rate in a local suburban parish. Some
little time back be went up to Oxford
to take his master of arts degree and
the following Sunday appeared in the
pulpit resplendent in his new master
of arts hood. A few nights later he
was dining in the house of a prominent
parishioner and was amazed to hear
his hostess pleasantly remark:
"Mr. X., that new hood of •yours•
doesn't suit you at all. I can't imag-
ine
mabine why you, with your complexion,
chose red of all colors in the world.
A myrtle green or an old gold would
have suited you much better and would
have been far more effective. You men
never know how to dress yourselves!"
BIG PROFITS IN HOTEL INVEST-
MENTS
Hotel investments in most parts of
Canada, and particularly in On-
tario, have depreciated very much in
value owing to the spread of prohibition,
and many owners are in despair.
But there is no need for this On the
other hand a new and much better era
should now open. Hotel -keeping has
proved to be, and may, in Canada, be
made, one of the most profitable and re-
putable of business. It is the most
promising field for business develop- i
ment, we know of to -day for ambitious
•capable young men.
The trouble is that our hotels have t
been conducted on the wrong lines. The
bar has been regarded as the chief ob-
ject. Most hotel -keepers have not been
business men but liquor handlers. Lodg-
ings and food have been merely an inci-
n
1•t: -•d iy, June I5th, 4916
When the Plague Raged.
Sir Walter Besant in one of his
books says of the author of "Robinson
Crusoe" and "Journal of the Plague:"
"De Foe was bora in the year 1061.
His father lived in Cripplegate, where,
as we know, he had a shop. The
child, therefore, was four years of age
in the plague year. A. child of four
observes a great deal and may remem-
ber a great deal. De Foe says: 'When
any one bought a joint of meat he
would not take it out of the butcher's
hand, but took it off the hooks him-
self. On the other hand, the butcher
would not touch the money, but put it
into a pot full of vinegar which he
kept for the purpose.' This must sure-
ly have been seen by the child and
remembered. It happened in his fa-
ther's shop before bis eyes."
She ,Gained 36 Lbs.
Mrs. George Bradshaw, Herlowe,
Ont., writes: "I was troubled for
many years with weak, watery blood
and dropsy. I had nervous headaches,
dizziness and sinking spells, and was, in
fact, a semi -invalid. Doctors told me
my heart and kidneys were diseased and
gave me up. By using ten boxes of Dr.
Chase's Nerve Food I have been cured
of many of my old complaints and gained
36 pounds in weight."
DR. A. W. CHASE'S
CATARRH POWDER®
is sent direct arts by the
Improved Blower. o the sIieed alsthoulcers,
clears the air passages, stops drop-
pings in the throat and permanent-
ly cbres Catarrh and Hay Fever.
25c. a box • blower free. Accept no
Rarest& Co., Limited. es. All ToEdmanson,
ro to.
SUNSHINE AN ASSET.
Are you a faultfinder? Then, in the
slang of the day, cut it out. Be honest
with yourself. Did you ever accom-
plish anything by finding fault? Be
glad instead of critical. No one likes
the man who is always finding fault,
and when he is compelled to acknowledge
that something has been done couples it
with a doubt. If you know a man in
your community who is always sunshiny,
who always has a pleasant word for
those he meets, is always glad because
his neighbors succeed, then you know
a popular man. When a popular man
goes out among his neighbors to ask for
something, he generally gets it, because
he has paid for it long ago with his
sunny good nature. After all, the
world is about what you make it so far
l as you are concerned. Just a common
} place this, but a very practical common
I place for the man who makes his living
1 by personally interesting men in what
he has to sell.—The Volunteer.
Homyseekers
xcurs ions
Ever? Tuesday, March
to October
"All Rail"
Every Wednesday During Season Navigation
"Great Lakes Route"
Somewhere out au the prairies where Iasi year Canada's Greatest
Wheat Crop was produced these is 4 house waiting for you. The
CANADIAN • PACIFIC
will take yen thee: give ratan the informatica about the but
places, and help you to sslc+easa, to is
Particulars from any Canadian Pacific Ticket
Agent, or write W. It. Howard, District Passenger ti
Agent, Toronto.
Henry VIII. and Puddings.
Bluff King Hal, otherwise Henry
VIII. of England, was exceedingly fond
of puddings. At one time he gave a
certain Mrs. Cornwallis a house in Ald-
gate for herself and her heirs forever
"in reward of fine puddings." In .Piing
Henry VIII.'s private accounts occur
again and again entries of his rewards
to different housewives for bringing
him puddings. A typical instance runs
thus: "Item. The same day paid to
the wife that made the king podings at
Hampton corte, vis. viijd." This would
be about $1.75, but its value, was much
greater when the entry was made.
.,...,,•.•`••• • •••••.••••••••• •rI•r.,.r.••••.r r. -.-.-./-r•--
111
11'
10
10
1�l
10
Cts
110
tt
Diamonds,
1!
C
locks Etc.t
Wingham 411
:iatas ,.•,... ,�
A Thornless Rose.
The followers of Zoroaster have a
theory that prior to the existence of
siu in the world the rose was a thorn•
less flower. In the east it is a tradi-
tion to this day that the burning bush
in which the angel of the Lord ap-
peared to Moses was a rosebush.
Living In Luxury.
"Now that she is rich, I suppose she
has everything."
"Everything; even has a trained
nurse to help her nurse a grouch."
Phone 6S
A. N. KNOX
f _✓� L t BETWE i
.�. ill UFFALO:A.
<LEVELAND
.!,lin, 1•�h��nhJi1 ,:',��l�l, � •: cw;�.. '.
The Great Ship "SEEANDBEIE""
0Tho tnrgeet and most costly steamer on any inland water of the world. Sleeping aeeommodiz.
tion for 1500 passengers. 411
�1 "CITY OF ERIE" --- 3 Magnificent Steamers - "CITY OF EUFFALO".1
11 TVJEE21
BUFFALO -Daily, May lattx� Nov.15th-CLEVELAND t
i Leave Buffalo - - - 0:00 P. M. Leave Cleveland - - - �- 9:00 F.M. '
1* Arrive Cleveland • - 7:10 A. M. Arrive Buffalo - 7:30 A.M.
(Eactern Standard Time)
ILAConnections at Cleveland for Cedar Point, Put -in -Bay, Toledo, Detroit and all points West nod 161,
Southwest. Railroad tickets reading between Buffalo and Cleveland arc good for transportation
on our steamers. Ask your ticket agent for tickets via C. & B. Line. ( F'
Beautifully colored sectional puzzle chart showing both exterior and interior of The Great 1
Ship "SEEANDBEE" sent on receipt of chart,
cents to cover postage and mailing. Alto ask I
for our 21 -page pictorial and descriptive booklet free.
7• THE CLEVELAND BUFFALO TRANSIT C0., Cleeland. Ohio.
Modest.
"Do you think the hand that rocks
the cradle rules the world?'
-Sometimes," replied 112r. Meekton;
"but not when Henrietta goes down-
town and leaves me to look after the
house."
Reason For It.
"Here's a writer says that it's the
rich and the aristocratic who are the
worst gossips."
"On the principle, perhaps, that 'mon.
ey talks' and 'blood will tell."
Natural Result,
"What do you suppose will happen
when women are elected to our con-
gress?"
"Then every woman member of the
house will want to be speaker."
MISFORTUNES.
gear, /our own misfortunes
with half the resignation that
you bear other people's and
you will be happy. It is so easy
to tstI other people how to be
hereto and so difficult to be
cSurageauI ourselves.
44.1.4.144•14+1+I4l4-1»lei14÷1r'"1-t'
-HERE FOR YOUR
hovels, Writing
Paler, Envelopes,
Ink,Playing Cards 1
Tally Cards, Etc.
Magazines, Newspapers, Novels
All the leading Magazines and Newspapers
on sale. A large stock:of famous:S, & S.
Novels at the popular prices ioctand is;
Times Stationery Store
OPPOSITE QUEEN'SLHOTEI, WINGHAM, ONT;