ils ‘Paris Medicine Co. One Regular Fixture. . Testimony in a Brooklyn divorce suit brought out the story of a mid- night beefsteak dinner followed by a dance till dawn, the night's “lark” continuing with an automobile break- : fast party in the park. = To such lengths is the search for new sensa- tions to whet jaded appetites carried. But the more the amusements are di- versified- the more the divorce suit at the end remains the same regular fix-. ture.—New York World. Not an Inch of Healthy Skin Left. “My little son, a boy of five, broke out with an itching rash. Three doc- tors prescribed for him, but he kept getting worse until we could not dress him any more. They finally advised me to try a certain medical college, but its treatment did no good. At the time I was induced to try Cuti- cura he was so bad that I had to cut his hair off and put the Cuticura Oint- ment on him on bandages, as it was impossible to touch him with the bare | hand. There was not one square inch of skin on his whole body that was not affected. He was one mass of sores. The bandages used to stick to A hi ferred. his skin and in removing them it used to take the skin off with them, and the screams from the poor child were heartbreaking. I began to think that he would never get well, but after the second application of Cuticura Oint- ment I began to see signs of improve- ment, and with the third and fourth applications the sores commenced to dry up. His skin peeled off twenty times, but it finally yielded to the treatment. Now I can say that he is entirely cured, and a stronger and healthier boy you never saw than he is to-day, twelve years or more since the cure was effected. Robert Wattam, 1148 Forty-eighth St., Chi- cago, Ill., Oct. 9, 1909.” ‘Nearly ten thousand beds in London hospitals are daily occupied by the sick and maimed poor. GRANULATED EYELIDS Cured The worst cases, no matter of how long standing, are absolutely cured by Dr.Porter’s Antiseptic . . ° Healing Oil A soothing antiseptic discovered by an Old Railroad Surgeon. All Druggists re- fund money if it fails to cure. 25¢, 50c & $1. Hodges, Texas. Dear Sir: I must say that DR. PORTER'S ANTI- SEPTIC HEALING OIL is one of the greatest remedies known to me. 1 had granulated eyelids so badly it caused blindness for about six weeks, got a bottle of DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING Qll:and up to the time of this writing have used abGut half of it and my eyes are almost entirely well. I wish every body could know the value of DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEAL- ING OIL Yours truly , (Signed) CLEMENT BASHAMS Made by Maker of Laxative Bromo Quinine NEOPLATONISM. Send 25 cents for 10 issues of THE CLIFFSIDE VULCAN, the smallest magazine in the world, started upon a folder post card, as a memento of the Hudson- Fulton Celebration, but owing to an unlooked for circumstance not issued until that event was over, but inasmuch as the subject matter bears more par- ticularly upon the next great event that takes place in New York, a rot Universal Exhibition or World’s Fair in 1925, it will be all the more appre- eiated and timely now. And a three months’ trial subscription to QUO VADIS, the enlarged form,which the post card memento is to take up, besides taking on the additional subjects of ‘“Farmer’s Uplift,” “Conservation,” Economics, Housing of the Poor in Cities, Socialism and kindred topics, and more par- ticularly the relation which these topics have with regard to the NEOPLATONIC PHILOSOPHY, the Bible and other ancient literatures, and the light which these philosophies throw upon those knotty subjects. i 25 cents for 10 issues of THE VULCAN and a three months’ trial of QUO VADIS. THE CLIFFSIDE VULCAN Box 48, Cliffside, N. J. CN OR A (Th Om Tk) / Js re BN EY . ol 5 ; ET B 0 “I have been using Cascarets for In. somnia, with which I have been afflicted for twenty years, and I can say that Cas- carets have given me more relief than any other remedy I have ever tried. I shall certainly recommend them to my friends _as being all that they are represented.’’ Thos. Gillard, Elgin, Ill. Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken,!Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25¢, 50c. Never sold in bulk. The gen- uine tablet stamped CCC. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 924 Maryland Farm, $10 per Acre 1 to 300 acres, level land. Mild, healthful climate. Two crops per year: no failures.” R. C. DREW, Salisbury, Md. ~ WOULD YOU MARRY IF SUITED? Matrimonial paper containing hundreds of ‘advertisements marriageable peonle from.all sections, rich, poor, young, old, Protestants, Catholics, mailed, sealed, free. C. X. GUNNELS, TOLEDO, OHIO WANTE LAP; any kind, any quantity, anywhe:e. Write tor prices, RICHMOND BAG CO., INC. Richmond, Va. America’s Greatest Alfalfa Field. The rich black Prairie of Northeast Misalesimpt. Now being developed: Write today. Maer Realty Company, Columbus, Miss, \ 3: Watson E. Coleman, Wash. 3 oN ington, D.C. Books free. High ak Ww est references. . Best resulta. PN, U 13, Oi If aficted | and serve. SECOND-HAND BAGS AND BUR- svi Thompson'sEye Wer | THE ~~ ~¢ EPICURE’S Nut Wafers. Beat two eggs and cream, with them a half pound brown sugar. Add a rounded tablespoonful and a half flour sifted with a quarter teaspoon- ful baking powder and a saltspoonful salt. Add also a cupful walnut or pecan meats broken in small pieces «0nd a teaspoonful vanilla. Drop the mixture on to buttered tins, put a whole nut meat on the top of each cake and bake about five minutes in a. brisk oven.—Emma Paddock Tel- ford, in the New York Telegram, Nut Cookies. ‘Use for these little cakes a cupful hickory nuts or any other nut pre- Rub to a cream one pound light brown sugar and one cupful lard and butter mixed. Add two well- beaten eggs, one cupful sour milk into which a rounded teaspoonful soda has been beaten, the cupful nuts and flour, a little at a time until the dough is stiff enough to roll out. Roll thin, cut in circles or any fancy shape desired, place on a well-greased: pan and bake in a quick oven for four or five minutes.—Emma Pad- dock Telford, in the New York Tele- gram. — Stuffing For Turkey. Boil the kidney, heart and liver until very tender, letting the water boil away until there is about one- half cup left; chop very fine into two onions, add ten or twelve crackers, chopped with two ‘large boiled pota- toes; mix the water and a cup of milk and an egg together and stir in the chopped part, adding more milk if necessary, for you want it quite thin; then add pepper, salt and sage to taste and dots of butter. Of course you will have to keep adding boiling water to the giblets, as it boils away. —Mrs. Mary E. Robinson, in the Bos- ton Post. Hollandaise Sauce. This is particularly good to serve with boiled fish. Mix in a bowl two tablespoonfuls butter, a teaspoonful lemon juice, a bit of bay leaf, a half dozen whole black peppers and if the butter is fresh a saltspoonful salt. Add a cupful stock or water and the juice of a lemon. Place the bowl in ‘a pan of hot water and stir until the butter melts. Take from the fire and stir a little of the warm mixture into the well beaten yolk of three eggs. When mixed, gradually add the re-| mainder of the sauce, return to the fire and stir steadily until thickened. Add another tablespoonful of butter The sauce is the founda- tion for lobster sauce or oyster sauce. Add to a pint of Hollandaise the chopped meat of one lobster craw and half the meat of one lobster pounded to a paste with the last table- spoonful butter to be added. oyster sauce add a dozen and a half oysters that haye been scalded in their own liquor to a pint of the Hol- landaise. Do not add too much of the oyster liquor, as the sauce must not be too thin.—New York Telegram. Creamed cauliflower, served in green shells, makes a dish as tasty as it is satisfying to the eye. To prevent eyeglasses ‘steaming’ in cold weather, rub with vaseline and polish with a silk handkerchief. A baker says that a cupful of liquid. yeast is equivalent to half a com- pressed yeast cake, or whole dry yeast cake. If one needs a door stop and there is not! one at hand, a large spool, nailed in position, will answer every purpose. ; No Oyster cocktails are sometimes served in small grapefruit shells or in paper. shells. The effect is decidedly pleasing. : To remove odor of fish or onions from the frying pan, put in vinegar and heat until scalding, and then wash out. For creaming butter or butter and sugar, a perforated spoon will be found more convenient than a fork or the hand. A spoonful of whipped cream is a tasty addition to any cream soup. Add it to the top of the cup just be- fore serving. : Ink stains on handkerchiefs and other cloths may often be soaked out in milk, but the sooner they are deal! | with the better. i Use butter rather than milk: if po- ‘| diate use, it will freshen much more | tatoes, pare and slice them thick and For | | visit or someone from out of town [ mer ‘makes them soggy, and nothing is worse than milky mashed potatoes. ‘To remove iron rust from white material wet the goods with lemon juice, rub on salt, and put out in the it again. If salt fish is required for imme- quickly if soaked in milk instead of water. Sour milk will answer as well as sweet. * In baking biscuits have the oven quite hot at first, but lower the tem- perature just a little before the bis- cuits are ready to take out. This will add materially in making the biscuits light. : Cold boiled spinach moulded in individual forms may be served with a'rim of shredded lettuce as a salad. Dress lightly with oil and vinegar and put a little mayonnaise on the top of each form. To use up the cold boiled sweet po- fry them in butter. When they are brown sprinkle them with a little lemon juice and sugar and let the sugar melt over them.: Who Pays Advertising Cost? A merchant whom we will call Marks, because that is not his name, does no advertising. ‘He pays .a monthly rent of $50, and $125 per month in salaries to two salesmen, about $25 per month for lights, and about $100 for other expenses—a total of about $300 a month. On av- erage days he seels one hundred arti- cles at an average gross profit of fif- teen cents. In twenty-six days his gross profit is about $390, and after deducting his $300 expenses he has. $90 to cover his interest and his own time. In the same town on another street, but no better located, is another mer- chant whose name we will call Jones. He employs one more clerk and his expenses, otherwise approximately the same as Marks’, are $350 per month; but he spends $25 a month for advertising—or a total of $375 a month, At the end of the month Jones finds that he has sold 200 arti- cles a day at a profit of $30, or $780 for the month, Deduct his expenses and he has $530 for his own services and to cover the interest on his in- vestment, as against Marks’ $90. Did. Jones or his customers have ‘to pay that $25 for advertising? Certainly neither of them did. Then who? to The clerks stood part of it because they sold twice as many goods as Marks’ salesmen did. The landlord stood part of it because he received no more rent. The electric light man and the coal man stood a part, for they got no more out of it because more goods were sold. Advertising is not an expense. It is an economy, like insurance, or heat or rent. ri This is true of any line of mer- chandising, or any business with fixed expenses. The only man who gets the worst of the deal is Marks, who doesn’t believe in advertising, for he ‘has ‘to help pay Jones’ advertising bills in lost trade. All the Accessories. ‘William T. Stead, the editor of the English Review of Reviews, tells the ‘story of an Irishman who applied to one of his friends for a position as coachman. “You know, Pat, if I engage you I shall expect you to do things by com- bination. For instance, if I tell you to bring the carriage ‘round at a given time, I shall expect the horses with it and driving gloves, etc.” “Yes, sorr,” said Pat. He was duly engaged and gave satisfaction. One day his master came to him, telling him to look sharp | and go for a doctor, as his mistress was ill. Pat was gone for a long time, ahd on his master grumbling at him for his delay, he said, ‘Sure they're all here, sorr.” “All here!” said “What do you mean?” “Didn’t you tell me to do things by combination?” “What's that got to do with it?” said the master. © “Well,” said Pat, “I’ve got the doc- tor, the parson and the undertaker.” —Judge. the master. Wants Local News. Every newspaper wants to publish the news. The better the paper the more prosperous it will be. news items are especially hard to run down. How many times have you, | dear reader, been approached by the newspaper man for an item of news and told him that you knew nothing of interest. Probably at the same time your family were away on a was visiting at your home, Of course you don’t mean to deceive the scribe, yet when you receive your paper you wonder why your family or friends were not mentioned. A good way to ‘avoid all of this is to kindly inform us of the facts or drop a note in the postoffice. The one. item may not amount to much, but several columns. of such news. is the life of a local | tatoes need extra thinning. The for- Local sun. If the first application fails, try | 1 | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound? We can furnish positive proof that it’ has made many remarkable cures after all other mew.ns had failed. / Women who are suffering with some form of female illness should consider this. As such evidence read these two unsolicited testimonial letters. We guarantee they are genuine and honest state- ments of facts. Cresson, Pa.—* Five years ago I had a bad fall, and hurt myself inwardly. and when I stopped I grew worse again. I was under a doctor’s care for nine weeks, I sent for a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, took it as directed, and now I am a stout, hearty woman.” — Mrs. Ella E. Aikey, Cresson, Pa. Baird, Wash. —¢“ A year ago I was sick with kidney and ‘bladder troubles and female weakness. All they could do was to just let me go as easily as possible. up. The doctors gave me I was advised by friends to take Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier. I am completely cured of my ills, and I am nearly sixty years old.””— Mrs. Sarah Leighton, Baird, Wash. Evidence like the above is abundant showing that the derangements of the female organism which breed all kinds of miserable feelings and which ordinary practice does not cure, are the very disorders that give way to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Women who are afflicted with similar troubles, after reading two such letters as the above, should be encouraged to try this wonderfully helpful remedy. 3 For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for No sick woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. guided thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. female ills. She has Large Wooden Ship. There has recently been launched at Bath, Maine, the largest wooden vessel ever built in the United ‘States. The Wyoming, as she has been named, is a six-masted schooner of 3,730 gross tons, with a total length over all of 350 feet. Next to her in size among wooden vessels is the William L. Douglass, with a gross tonnage of 3,708. Only One “Bromo Quinine,” That is Laxative Bromo. Quinine, Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25¢ ] Wheat Production. For the years 1808 to 1907 Great Britain has produced 32.6 bushels of wheat an acre, as against 13.9 in this country and 9.3 in Russia, which ‘makes the poorest showing of the large wheat-growing countries. Many Children Are Sickly. Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Chil- dren, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children’s Home, New York, cure Fever- ishness, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. AtallDruggists’,25c. Samplemailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Poetic Interpretation. When the staff poet of the Washing- ton Star begins with “down in the earth, mid prehistoric gloom in cav- erns stranger, deeper than the tomb,” he must be describing the cave of the senate finance committee, where one- half of a dinky little state with about 1,000 square miles of territory makes the laws for the United States and its island possessions—Louisville Courier- Journal. \ : . (Elven the girl with a rosebud mouth can give a withering smile, Afraid of Ghosts Many people are afraid of ghosts. are afraid of germs. the germ is a fact, If the germ could 20 a size equal to its terrors it would appear more terrible than any fire-breathing dragon. car’t be avoided. They are in the air we breathe, ~ the water we drink. ‘The germ can only prosper when the condition of the system gives it free scope to self and develop. - sleep is broken, it is time to guard fortify the body against all germs by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Gold- It increases the vital power, cleanses the § system of clogging impurities, enriches the blood, puts the stom- ¥ ach and organs of digestion and nutrition in working condition, so that the germ finds no weak or tainted spot in which to breed. . ¢¢ Golden Medical Discovery’ contains no alcohol, whisky or habit-formicd drugs. All its ingredients printed on its outside It is not a secret nostrum but a medicine oF KNOWN composITION and with a record of - #0 years of cures. Accept no _ substitute—there is nothing ‘ just as good.”’ Ask your neighbors. en Medical Discovery. wrapper. e—— ‘paper.—From the Jefferson Xe. 3, Bogus Nickels Utilized. ; So many counterfeit nickels are dropped in the fareboxes of a New York street railway company that the lead realized when they are melted down makes an appreciable item im the revenue of the road. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Er er 13 French lights are the best along the shores, say the navigators. They are posted low, close to the water line, and so do not mislead like the Italiam . pharon perched high above the sea. They have the best lenses, and are al- ways visible. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar-coated, easy to take as candy, Tequlzie and invig- orate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not gripe. Big Agricultural Department. In half a century the United States department of agriculture has growm from a mere beginning to an instite- tion with over 11,000 employes. Con- gress supplies it with an annual in come for its expenditure in the neigh- borhood of $15,000,000, while half as much more is spent by the states im their agricultural experiments, colle- ges and experiment stations. Of its employes, nearly 3,000 are scientists, hundreds are administrative officers and thousands are clerks and helpers. There are a dozen bureaus, ranging in expenditures from $60,000 to $4,000, 000.—Kansas City Star. : Mr. Justice Darling, referring to ill nesses contracted by kissing microbe- laden Bibles, remarked: “It is my opinion that a large number of peo- ple who commite perjury are punished in no other way.” Yet the ghost is a fancy and When there is a deficiency of _ vital force, languor, restlessness, a sallow cheek, a hollow eye, when the appetite is poor and the Paris has 50,000 cafes. Few people be magnified Germs establish it- against the germ. You can