THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. A i'KEXCII WEDDINCi li IS ALWAYS AN IMPOH'tAM ! i aii; in i i: m i:. F!'t ( l.i'i'.y a I ii lty Rlu'H I" the Coiui'ry Dl-trUtt. liiclmilnu a Walk Alonjj (lie P.isty Highroad Li'tig Pr(irniii:ne CiiitIccI Oat. Sometimes a country wedding pas-bed, aud that was always u pretty t . f i 1 1 . A marriage is always an liu Vi'i'i'i't aftalr In France In every ..... of liro. There are long uiti . ..Ions with all tho members ol i. j two families. Tho cure, tha i sry, the patron (If the youuy luau i .1 workman), are all consulted. - ,.u there are us many ue0olial.oiu , , i agreements In tho most humble i,. ...Mies as lu the grand uiondo ol i.ic Faubourg St. Gei umin. Aimosl 4.1I French parents tjlve a dot of tome kind to tht.i children, and whateer the sum la, either live bun tired nancs or two thousand, It li always scrupulously paid over to tin Lolaiy. The weddiurf-day Is a lonj t'i.e. After the religious cereiiiciij iii the church, all tho veudii.g pari) members of the two families atjc a certain number of frienUs ad journ to the hotel of the little to v. 1 l ..' u breakfast, w h:ch U long au Uioat abundant. 'i ilea copies t.it crowning glory of the day a coun try walk along the dusty highroad U fcjiue wood or meadow where t'.iej can spend tho whole- afternoon. II i.s pretty to see the little procession tiuut:: g along the bride in all lu 1 Weiia.iij i,.ii'iiieiUs, white dress, whit shoes, reath, and veil; the grootf in a did coat, to; -i.at, while craval Slid w:.. u.oat, with a whlte-riuojg lo. 0:1 l,is sleeve. Almost all la girls aud young women are dressed in w hite or light colors; the niotlien snu grandmoters (the whole family tun: . hi bl.ui:, with (lowers la their bonnets. There Is usually fiddler walking ahead making most remarkable sounds on his old crack ed instrument, and the youngel members of the party take an occas ional gallop along the road. Tl ey are generally very gay; there Is much laughing, and, from time to time, a burst of song. It is always a mys tery to me how the bride keeps bet dress and petticoat so clean, but shs dops, with that extraordinary knack fill Frenchwomen seem to have ol holding up their bkirts. They pass ed often under the wall of the chat eau, for a favorite resting-place was In our woods at the entrance of ths cllee verte, where it widens out rule; the moss makes a beautiful It carpet, and the big trees give .'feet shade. We heard sounds ol .. irrlment one day when we wer , 1: ting and we stopped to look on, -am behind the bushes, where w . juldn't be seen. From "Chateau and Country Life In France." Coat of Taffetas and Lnce. It Is the most emphatic expression of the latest modes to develop fancy coats In heavy lace, combined v itll strappings of taffetas or satin, nnd whether the coat takes the form ol ft redlngote or a paletot, is a mattei ,'.-5 or personal taste. A delicious Httla French model Is the one shown here contrived of baby crochet lace, mounted over very soft silk veiled with chiffon. The coat la short walsted with a suggestion of a girdle done In taffetas, decorated with tin buttons. Strappings of the taffeta appear bout the sleeves and shoulders and the silk also forms little postillions at the back that are finished In long points from which depend heavy whit silk tassels. The coat Is worn over a graceful klrt of silk crepe de Chine, tucked and Insert with bands of baby cro chet. While the skirt and coat are made en suite, each can be worn in dependently and any lace less ex pensive that baby crochet can be used to duplicate this very amart model. The hat is ornamented with a sin gle plume and a band of silk at the base of the crown, secured with a fancy hatpin. Canning Orab-Applea. In canning erab-epples, leave oa the stems and cook wn carefully la the Byrup to prevenf&reelng. xhU U a beautiful-looking trait worn pr served whole la a clear red Jell. r HOW RACE FEELING VARIES. Chinaman Hated In California, But Not In Mississippi. If you go to California today, you find an immense and Irrepressible feeling of race antagonism against tho Chinaman, and virtually none at all against the negro. Tnere Is race knowledge concerning Chlnnmon, and enough Chinamen there to constitute a nice menace, hut not enough ne groes, says John Sharp Williams, in tho "Metropolitan Mrunglne " If you go to Vermont, you will And none against either. If you go to Mississippi, you will find tho s-itne Irrepressible outbreak Ins of antagonism between the white and the negro races, and very little against the Chinese. A Chinaman, well dressed and be having himself, taking dinner at a Mississippi hotel, might excite some little remark, but nothing more. A nesro if he were a graduate of Har vard college, spotlessly clothed and Just washed, would, If ne were aa mitted to the dinner taule nt a hotel In my t-tnte, excite a riot. If, on the contrary, ho wont to a hci'l In Vermont, the other guests would doubtless seek an introduction to him, it helns an opportunity to see and study something of a now and e! rr.'.iiv type. The total absence of this feeling amor); people who heve never felt the presence of tho negro as a uienaa tv the inoriii:t;.s of social llfp, to tne white msn's civilization or his coda of eth'es, wlli be realized, when you re member that C'lninio, WRnnmnker, Itlslien Potter, of N-w York. Tie? lilei.t Roosevelt, have all citen with tho ne gro, as host and gutvt. ut the same ta ble. You would realize It all ths more If you knew. Manufacture of Cut Strings. Catgut strips, It is well known, fire n.i'.de of the iiitertines of sheep. The intestines of the full grown ani mal are from forty to fifty feet long. The raw material from the stock yards Is first thoroughly cleansed of fat and fleshy fiber, by dull knives ar ranged on a drum turned by a crank. The white tough mcmbranrt that Is left Is then handed over to tho split ter, who dexterlously splits the ma terial into even strands by bringing It against the blade of a eafety razor Bet upright In the table before hirn. The stands are then apnn together and placed on the drying frames. An American E violin string re quires six strands; the European four. The strands, at one end fastened to an upright post, are twisted togetu er, while still damp and pliable, by means of a spinning wheel. Taken from the drying frames, the atrlngi are cut In lengths, colled, and boxed in oiled paper for shipment. To pol ish the strings, very fine emery pap er, laid on a grooved aluminum block, Is used. While the strings, are still on the drying frame, the covered block is passed over the strings, polishing as many at one time as there are grooves In the block. It can be seen that from tne manner In which the strands are twisted the effect of polishing Is to weaken the string. In the essential features, the pro cess of making tho fine gut strings for surgical uses, or the heavy strings three-eighths of an Inch tnlck some times employed for machinery belting, does not differ from the method em ployed In tho case of the musical strings, except that the latter are handled with more care. What London's Lord Mayor Costs. The maintenance of the pride, pomp and circumstance of civic state costs the corporation of London a yearly sum of close upon .CIS.noo. The I.ird Mayor receives 10,0(10 and the in come tax on that sum Is paid for hira while he Is allowed .Cioo for the sup ply of new furniture, nnd his rries cost close upon 200. Then the rrtee tnxes and titnes pnyablo on the A m stnn House total upward of 3,000, the lighting involves an outlay of up ward of 570, the water supply costs 1?0, dnd fire and bollor Insurance absorbs 135. Next, Btructuml nnd other repaid represent an expendi ture closely approaching 2.000, and periodically there Is a heavy "call'' for snoeifll redocoratlon the cniount prppnt Inst year, for instanto, on the Egyptian hall being .ESC. London Tit-Hits. A Lucky 13th. There is one West Philadelphia man who doesn't care a hang it every day is Friday the 13th, yet he used to be one of the most superstitious of men. In September, 1907, when tho 13th fell on Friday, he was cured. A huge sare was bolng raised up to the sixth floor Of a Walnut street building as be was walking along the sidewalk. Just ae he got under It some one called, "Ijook out-" He grasped the situation In an instant, and there passed through his mind the thought that since It was Friday the 13th, he wai sure to be caught under the neavy safe. Nevertheless, he jumped for his life and landed half In the gutter and half on the sidewalk. Then he looked around to see the havoc, and discov ered that the ropes had merely slip ped a little and that the safe was be ing hoisted up as though nothing had happened. As he lay stretched In the mud his band felt something round and flat. When he rose and brushed off his clothing be etlll clutched the find, and upon examining It he found it to be a $20 gold piece that no on ever claimed. Philadelphia Record. The Ideal state of the U. i. Is mat rlmony, and plenty oJJ. WRINKLES TO OKDER MONEY, WORRY, DISCONTENT, AUTOS, ALL RHINO Til KM. The Skin of the Face Like a Sheet of Tlssuo TaiK't- All Kinds ol Trouble Make Each It Special .Vat'k 011 It. The beauty doctor took a piece of tissue paper in her hand, crlnklod it up fine and threw It on the table, li lay, a crinkled mass. "That," said she, "Is the way the fchln looks. Wrinkles may come siowly, or they may come suddenly. There Is no rulo which covers the v, rluklo. It may take a year to de velop In u woman's face or it may coino in a night. "Wrinkles are chiefly of three kin. Is. Tho most common are tho money wrinkles. They are little fin fliitirllke truces around tho eye$ aud at the corners of tho mouth. Tho housewife who puzzlos over her w.kly accounts gets thorn Just as certainly as tho woman of affairs "Women who worry have a queer ' n.'t or wrinkles, which are not to bi compared to wrinkles caused by any thi.it; else In ull the wide world. Tiiey may run all over the face and t !'. are apt to bo particularly dujp .'will disfiguring. 'Tho woman who lives n discon tinued 11 fo will huvo furrows going 1. l.i.fiiit from the corners of tho eyes down to her '.'hin; sho will have lieeji lines reaching from the cor-ro.-u of her mouth to her neck, and l!:;ro will be ugly crease.'" urouud her ears. "There arc muscles In the facj v.hich aro influenced by a bad torn per. The woman w ho seta her teeth in a determined way will make het j;is ugly. Tho habit will broaden her face, make her lips narrow and make a great many curves around the corners of Iwr mouth and about tho tip of her chin. "The eyes of the discontented wo man have a dull, tired look, and tills means wrinkles around th eyes and bags under them . "Automoblling la responsible fot a great many lines that are not to be classified In any other way except us auto lines. One of my custom ers has tho automobile countenance. "Between her eyes there re three up and down wrinkles that look al most like harlequin lines. They are Just such creases as the clown paint on his forehead when he wants to make his eyes look queer. " 'It was eye strain,' she explain ed as she lifted her veil and showed me the wrinkles. 'I looked right Etralght ahead at the glaring white road until these came Into my face.' "The first step in removing auto mobile wrinkles Is steaming the countenance. I take a little electric stove and I put a basin of warm water upon It, and as the water heats I let the woman hold her face over its steam. The Vapor pene trates the cuticle and softens It, and then I spray her face with hot water to take out the dirt. "Most wrinkles aro caused by dirt, but if you tell a woman this bhe will get angry. But If you were to soften her face with a little warm water or steam and spread a lather of soap or soap jelly over It and then wipe tho whole thing off with some hot water both you and she would notice a great difference in bcr complexion. "Most women . are afraid t soap. They think It poisons the skin and they don't stop to reason that soap may be very good If it Is good soap. "Most women go out too soon after washing tho face, and this la tho cause of a great many wrinkles. A woman after washing her face should stay Indoors until her face has had time to cool, so that It it not subjected to a sudden change of temperature. "If It is absolutely necessary to ga out she may rub a little cologne over her faro to tighten the pores, or she tit 11 touch it with benzoin and water. Or, if she be a wise woman, sho will kvp a raw cucumber in the housd Vti.h which to strengthen the skin against the quick changes of tem perature. "Therd Is a professional beauty In New York whose dressing table resembles a vegetable stand. There 1 a cut lemon with which sho takes o.T stains. "Tho lemon Is mixed, half and l:r.if, with water, followed by a touch of told cream. In this, way she wards off ugly little lines on the forehead and beneath the eyes. "She rubs her face during ths strawberry season with the pure Juice of tho strawberry, which makes her look pink and pleasant. She has a vegetable for almost every condition of the skin. "If her forehead Is furrowed with n.ito lines or creases she takes a cucumber and cutting it In running slices, she binds the pieces on her face, letting the Juice dry In. The bkln for a while has a queer, stiff feeling, but a little massage will limber It up. "Few women realise that the skin Is like a piece of tissue paper. It creases readily and the fine lines re main until they are rubbed out They can be Ironed out with a warm Iron which should, however, be used over a damp cloth so as not to In jure the tissue, or they can be rub bed out with the tips of the fingers. "It Is a good thing to experiment With tissue paper if yoo want to know how your skin wtll act under tertaln conditions. AMERICAN Ht SHANI) A SLAVE. A Mere Money Maker and Washer ol Ills Wife's Clothes. A French woman has contribute! her Impressions of America to the l'nrls Matin. Among other things ho snys: "1 used to believe that slavery wai abolished, but I have learned In Now York that that Is not the cnao. He lots still exist lu tho persons of Ara ptican husbands. "From their earliest years they art Bpirentieed to their hard lot by be Ine; Made the butts nnd drudges of tl.eir flsfers. Amorlcnn boys have tc give way to every caprlco of the American girl. For woman la Am erica Is a d'siot to bo feared; tia has taken tho place of the idol of a; oiio or wood to which tho redskins oifereii human victims. "A husband in tho eyes of nn A:::orenn wife Is a machine for mak ing moiwy. Ho has no other rea M.n for existence, whilo her partcoti s;ln in spcii ,ing what ho makes. "Ask any young girl ennnged to ,ie Cue young fellow of m . derate i; ''aim how sho has passed some hull '...y with her lover, and sho will toil ;-oi; triumphantly: 'I've made him rjetid so many dollars.' "A pleasure that U not eypcnslve I never a pleasure to an American woman. That tho poor tin. ti in a s:n::!e day has soon a month's ?ani tn;;a disappear Is a maitciiof 110 1m. 1 oitiu.ee. "When married this unrortunnte mini sola forth to business early In tho morning. All tho day he will hardly take the time to swallow a glass of milk without even sitting dovn at the nearest bar; his time belongs to the Idol; ho has no right to waste the least bit of it on his personal needs. "In tho evening he returns, worn cut and worried, almost always to a boarding house, for ho has not even a hearth, no American wife bolng willing to endure the work of keep ing house. And then his wife will give him for a little relaxation her till; or wool combinations to wash in tho wash basin, these being all tho underwear she uses, while her dress will cost about $200; she, n.eanwhilo, at case In a rocking chair, remains deep in the delights of a novel. "Tho worst result Is that havlrg reduced their husbands to slavery American women despise them, be cause they are slaves which Is nat ural. They reproach their husbands with being fit for nothing but ma terial work, while it Is they who de mand this material work. "Heiresses dream only ojt marry ing men like those in French novels, from whom they will have to learn In turn what It Is to be ill treated. Aud as the result of their toil and mad devotion American men see their money and their women fly to foreigners." A Fashlonublo Coiffure. Halrdressing Is truly an art in these days of exquisite coiffures and It requires taste as well as skill to uccomplish Borne of the coiffures de signed for women of fashion. Waved tflocts continue extremely fashion able and sometimes the coiffure is entirely lost amidst the mass of waves into which the hair Is undu lated. There are puffs and curls of all kinds, however, to add an appro, prlate touch to the waves, and when t'.ieBe are not used, the long, Eng lish braids are brought Into service. The coiffure sketched is 0110 that Is generally becoming and among the least difficult of arrangement of tho ultra-smart modes of hairdress iiig. Marcel waving la tho chief feature of the coiffure and after this lii accomplished, the ends of the hair are wound into a little coil, then hidden under a bunch of artificial curls. It Is almost impossible to get along without the use of artificial devices In hair-dressing nowadays and cheveures have reduced hair making to such a science that it is not at all difficult to have the hair matched perfectly in coloring, and if one wants to pay a little more, it Is even possible to match the quality. Warm Chilled Feet. To rub the feet with alcohol re freshes them wonderfully, and noth. lug is as good for them as a vigor ous alcohol rub after they have been wot or chilled. A rub with cocoa butter Is a fine thing for the feet at all times. Get a cake of this and give them a flve mlnute rub at least once a week after the daily bath and you will sare yourself many a groan. Steam Away Ring. In cleaning clothes in gasoline, whn It leaves a ring around the part cleaned, the ring can be re moved by steaming It over the tea kettle. Tlio Kind You Have Always In use for over 30 years, and r?i'' sonal supervision slnre Its infancy. f-CUCAMS, Allow no one todoeclvo you in HiIm. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-pood" aro lmfe Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Expcrlcnco against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless suhstltuto for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. If contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic, substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms nnd allays Fcverishncss. It cures Dlarrhua and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation And Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Ilowcls, giving healthy and natural bleep. The Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS ' Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. Tun etwrauM nMm, Tf wun stu'ct, mtw von em. ATTACHMENT FOR PITCirERS. !:rl;i Cup to Catch Drippings Fwiri I ho SM)ut of Vessels. A peculiar nnd unique Invention li' t patented Is shown in tht llliix ir:i.!on below. The drip cup was J, i Ijnod to provldo a simple means of preventing the contents of pitchers CATCHES THE DRIPS, and blinilar vessels havln; a Cm charge spout trickling cn the tHhl. or on whatever object they hbpppi to be placed. The drip cup la sf cured to the re eptacle beneath thi Fpout. Its use will be ajiinrun tha drippings from the spam of t!i recrptEclo dropping into thr lin eup. It Is Impossible for tho c.i. tents of the drip cup to dn; n,. when the pitcher h tilled. Foi purpose a guard la plucej .:.. . across the top. Hints AlXdil I'.kk. Eggs when boiling, frequently burst. This Is caused by their be ing too full of air and may be pre vented by pricking one end with-a needle before putting them Into the water, which makes an outlet for tho air. Eggs become unwholesome If kept In refrlgorators; a fungus forms In them which Is fii.-illy found by the inlseroscope, although it is uot no ticeable to the taste. Stale igs are glassy and smooth ct idiell. The shell of a fresh egg has a llmellke surface. A boiled OL'? which Is dull and dries quickly on the shell when taken from the kettle Is fresh. tolled eggs which adhere to the i hell are fesh. SUIT8BT MA0AIIHI beautifully illuOiited, good Monet - nd article, about Ctuioraia and -Ou alt tha Fai WL T" CABTXBA CEATT davoud each Booth to tha ai- tutic reproduction ol tha bast $1,00 work ol mttraf aod proiauional a photograph an. B0AD OF A TH0USAHD W0HDEBS s book ol 75 pa get, containing 1 120 colored ptotogiapK ol $07S pletureeqiM apeta la California ' I & sod Uragoa, Tetsl . . . $3.35 All for . . . . $I.0 Addnaa sB order te 8UFSBT KAGAZm flood B.iiUirig Bl MAGAZINE READERS Bought, and which has bom has borne tho signaturo of has been mado under Ms per- Signature of To Cleun Linen. A little pipeclay dissolved In watea Uued in washing linen saves a gresl deal of labor and soap, and cleanses the dirtiest linen thoroughly. Thtt simple method Is especially usefsf In towns or places where outdoor bleaching Is generally an lmposst billty. SteniMd Kmlrnlliry Put terns. If the stamped pattern for em broidery will not wash out of th completed piece, rub dry soap weC over it. let it remain for five hours wash out in tepid wnter. anil the pattern disappears Instantly. Dampening With Cold Sinnh. When Ironing a starched garnienl and a part of It becomes dry. do nm dampen with water, but with a clotJ wet with a little cold starch. Thli lll keep all parts of the uariueal of equal stiffness. Stnrt'hlnK Linen Ciifiilns. Starch from top to bo! torn, the! front, as this Is the heavy Khld anf prevents the back from tearing. Combs should not bo '.vai.l.e.1 witi water. This Is apt to split the toeto, A still nailbrush Is a goo 1 thing !9 keep for cleaning them. After a 1ir; the brush, take a damp clots ond wipe between each tooth wIlS this. ' Whisky Medicines. The temperance precs Is emphasizing tliedanti;er to the home intlieneof ''medicines" which are loaded with whisky or alcohol, in this iv-jieet, s well a in the remarkable clmriieterof their euros, l)r. l'lerce's medicines dif fer from other preparations. Ir. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for l he cum of weak stomach, dyspepsia, indiges tion, billioiiHi.eHS and bowel tlcrumrc meuts. and ' Favorite Prescript i"n" for woman's (HraiigcmeiiU and weak lieges, contain no alcohol. Their lull ingredients are printed on the Im'.tle wrappers, therefore they are not secret or patent medicine. Write tolir.lt V. Pierce, Bullalo, N. Y., for free hook let giving list of medicinal roots from which these remedies are extracted by the use of trlple-rellned glycerine; Mu the eminent medical wriiers who re commend their ingredients for the cure of the dineases for wliscli these iinnli fines are advised. The average woman doesn't have to get on the scales to have her own -v- . TilK BOOTIUNO Hl'KAY of Kly's Li quid Croain lliilm. u-ed in an utmii?r, is an niiHpeakahle relief to Hiilierera from Catarrh. Home ol them describe it as a Godsend, aod no wonder. 'I'1 thick, foul discharge is dislodged and the patient breathes freely, perluijw ff the first time In weeks. Liquid ('re Halm contains all the healing. puriT ing elements of the solid form, ad " ..ii ... .i . . ..ill Ill krllff Liev er inns io BHiisiy. om uy mi "o ts, for 75o.. including sprayliiir I""" gists or mailed ly I'Jly uros., on eet, New York. Htreet, Any man who fan write a successful love letter could turn liis hand to no tion. A Reliable Remedy CATARRH wettjjrri Ely's Cream Balm la quickly absorbed. Givet Rnliel at Onco. It clenusiia, soothes, huaU and piotuuts the disuusi.d inum. brane resulting from Catarrh and drives . iii i . i WZJAiiiM m Head quickly. He. II A V rCXfR stores the Keuses of HH I Taste and Smell. Full size 50 cts., stPW gists or by mail. Iuliuuid form, 75 'J" Ely Brothers. 66 Warren Street. Now Yfc B J t 'M i