THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURQ, VA. WHAT TO WEAR ID 10 WEAR II Special Correspondent of ThU Paper Writes Entertainingly to Women. LATEST FROM THE METROPOLIS 1"-e Jumper Waists Hare Come to Stay A Ttandanna Effect A Shirtwaist that is Xeat and Prtt tj A Pretty Idea in the Trimming or liittle Girls' Dresses. BY JULES THEROW. That the "Jumper" waists and dresses have come to stay is evident from a glance at this season's most fashionable garments. The ease with which the home dressmaker can make a really attractive costume by using this style of waist has nev er been equalled by any previous mode. The one Illustrated here is a "one piece" waist made of bordered voile, the edge coming on the edge of the sleeves. A box pleat Is made In the back to take up the unneces sary fullness and the garment Is slipped on over the head. A bow tie Is made of the same material as the waist and fastened to the front, at the top. The guimpe worn with this Jumper has the new high linen col lar with the wide frill of plain net around the top. For neatness and smartness of tllne the waist like the one pic- ed here can hardly be Improved ' on. The material Is white linen :h hand embroidered collar and Its. The wreath design being used i d worked out in delft blue. At each side of the box pleat In front where the garment closed, are two tucks turning toward the front and near the shoulders are two more turning In the opposite direction, giving the effect of wide box pleats. The back Is tucked In the same way, the tucks on the shoulders meeting those on the front and the other two turning toward each other and meeting at the center of the back. When the waist Is put on the fU iioes. at the back Is pushed under the shoulder tucks which leave the back perfectly smooth between the tucks. The cuffs are the new wide kind turned back over a broad sleeve band and having buttonholes through both band and cuff. Worn with this is a delft blue bow and a whit gir dle fastened by a gold enamelled square buckle. The use of several differently fig ured materials In the same garment extends to children's clothe as well as those of older people and opens the way to innumerable pretty ef- rects. Stripes and checks, polka dots anc plaids, and even flowered goods com ROW blned with stripes or checks are a! rpon and with rare In selection can be made Into very attractive frocks. A pretty idea Is shown In the trim ming of the little girls' dress Illus trated here. The dress Itself Is slnr ply made of printed challls. The I CRure being a blue ring on a white (riound. Two forward turning tvrks extend over the shoulders stitched v.Itn blue silk and ornamented with but 0n-moulda, covered with blue r.nd white checked silk. The silk Is i:sod also for bands around the neck, rleeve caps, and lower edge of the fklit. This would also be pretty inarlo of dark blue and white striped flannel and trimmed with a bright pin Id ribbon about an Inch and a quarter wide. Economy in Irets. There are three dangerous rocks In the beginning of a season which a woman who must practice econ omy is likely to founder; the first, cheap novelties; the second, adver tised bargains which are sold cheap berause discriminating buyers will not pay for wearing apparel a sea son old; and, third, hasty buying of the very new In fabrics, color or shape. New shades of standard colors are especially dangerous un less the person selecting them Is a prophet. Not very many aro, and even astute tailors go slowly in pur chasing until this or that dress or color has "made good." Never buy a tailor suit of last year's cut, because it is cheap, and because you think it can be recut ct home and brought up-to-date. In 19 cases out of 20 this cannot bo clone. If It were possible tailors with their workrooms full of people tt th"ir disposal would themselves r,.i'.'.;o changes and reap the benefit. When such garments are worked ovr at home they usually end In a home-made, nppearance, and, all counted, will cost more than a now season's gown. Some I'ses of Hot Water. Hot water is far more of a medici nal property than' many believe or know. The uses of hot water aro many. There is nothing that so promptly cuts short congestion of the lungs, sore throat or rheuma tism as hot water when applied promptly and thoroughly. Head ache almost always yields to the simultaneous application of hot wate to the feet and back of the neck. A strip of flannel or napkin folded lengthwise and dipped in hot water, wrung out and then applied-, round the neck of a child that has the croup, will bring relief sometimes In ten minutes. Hot water taken free ly half an hour before bedtime Is helpful in the case of constipation, while it has a most soothlne effect upon the stomach and bowels. A goblet of hot water taken Just after rising, before breakfast, had cured many of indigestion, and is widely recommended by physicians to dys peptics. The Much-Used Kitchen Table. My zinc covered kitchen table is such a convenience to me that T want to describe it for the benefit of other workers. It is bo simple that any one can duplicate It at small ex pense. Take any ordinary table and care fully cover the surface with sheet sine, being careful to smoothly ad just the edges. These should be turned under and securely tacked clown. It is best to have the hard ware man do the work, unless there Is a "handy man about the house" WhO knOWS hOW tO Use a hammer with Judgment and precision. Once accomplished VOU Will I'fin der how you ever cot on without your zinc table. It is so easily clean ed I wash mine daily with soap and occasionally with a cloth dipped in kerosene to keep it polished. Hot dishes can be placed upon it with never a thought of their burning through and SDoillntr the n mini Ml- ClOth. It is a sanitary table, ton for it is so scrupulously clean. Try These Useful Hints. Burn dried out the house frequently, It purifies the atmosphere, disnels anv mint. odors and leaves a dainty fragrance. tnat nothing can surpass. white clothes that have hnrnm yellow from age may be restored by soaking in butter-milk for Beveral days, changing the milk each day. Never pour sugar over the whites of eggs while beating them, but add from the side of the platter, a little at the time, in order not tn hrouir the air cells. An excellent remedy for sore throat 1b pineapple syrup, taken a teaspoonful at the time. If a panful of lime is kept In the closet with preserves and Jellies, it will prevent them from mouldng. Salt water will clean bamboo fur niture, Chinese and Indian matting and will prevent it from turning yel low. For Sweeping and Dusting. Remove chairs and all other mov able articles out of the room. Pour a little household ammonia Into a basin of water; take an old news paper and crumple tn water; scatter the wet paper over carpet, then be gin to sweep. The wet paper col lects the dust. If you have a carpet sweeper, use sweeper first, then use broom. Oar. aeU swept la this way have a nice Uaa look. Dust piano, table tops, etc, with old piece of velvet; the dust eUngs t the nap. For other ar tfcdes uo cheesecloth, as It la soft aa4 nlo. When dusted In this war that Is do lint LILITH WIFE OF ADAM Legend Says She Still Haunts Night p.s a Spectre. WHY SHE HAD LEFT FA3ACISE. According to the Taliiiiirilt I'.vo was the First Man's Second Helpmate Fable Invented to Reconcile Geneela I. with Ucne.U II. The Talmudlsts say that Adam had a wife before Eve, whose name was LHis or Lilith. Refusing to submit to Adam, she left Paradise for a re gion of the air. She still haunts the night as a spectre, and is esoucl ally hostile to newborn Infants. The table or Lilith was Invented to rccon cile Genesis I. with Genesis II. Gene sis I. represents the simultaneous creation of man and woman out of the earth, but Genesis II. represents that Adam was alone and Eve was made out of a rib and was given to Adam as a helpmeet for him. Of the three Assyrian demons, l.llu. LDlt and Ardat Lilit, the second Is referred to in Isaiah x.xxlv, 14. She Is said to have been worshipped by the Jewish exiles as a goddess of night. Lilith is more fully dearribed In posl-Biblical literature, where she appears as a demon of the nl&ht Three classes of spirits are mention ed spirits, devils and ' ltlln." The first have neither body nor form, the second appear In comnlete human shape, the third In human shape but with wings (Rashl to Sanh.. 19A Adam procreated all the spirits while he was under a spell. Similarly, Eve bore demons to male spirits for the space of 130 years. Lilith is a se ductive woman with long hair; she is the Queen of Zemargad; Abrlman Is her son. She goeB about at night, fastening herself upon any one sleep ins alone In a room. "The Lord will protect the" (Numbers vl, 24) means, acordlng to Talmudic com ment . . from "lllin." The me teor stones is her arrow, and is a remedy against disease. King Solo mon, who commanded all spirits, had tne "lilln' dance before him Some identify "Lilith" with the Parses Bushyantsa, while the Arabic translators render the word in Isaiah xxxix, 14, by "ghul." which Is identl cal with the "lamia" of the Vulgate. In the Talmud, however, thero u nothing to Indicate that "Lilith" Is a vampire. The Arabians, on the contrary, re said to regard her un der the form of "Lalla," as a "holy aame. " In the later Middle Ages the mys tics systematically amplified demono- t . . ... iogy on tne oasis or the traditions and the current Eupropean supersti tions, and they also assigned a more aennite form to "Lilith." The suner stitlons regarding her and her ne farious doings were, with other sun- erstltlons, disseminated more and more among the mass of the Jewish people. She becomes a nocturnal Bplrit, flying about in the form of a night owl and stealing children. She Is permitted to kill all children which have been sinfully begotten, even rrom a lawful wife. "Lilith" likewise appears to men in their dreams; she Is the bride of Samaei. It is said in a Judaeo-German book ("Hamhagat ha-Hasidim"), publish ed in tne Deglnning of the eighteenth century, that "Lilith" deceives men and has children by them, and lne.int mortality is regarded as a conse quence of this miscegenation. In a certain legend she aDDears as the Queen of Sheba, who in the euIho of a beautiful woman seduced a poor Jew of Worms. As she was eaer to seize new born infants, mothers and child were provided with amulet3 corns, with labels on which the names of Adam and Eve were In scribed, with the words, "Avaunt thee Lilith!" which since earlv times were regarded as an efficient protection against magic and demons. The name "Lilith" occurs also in non-Jewish superstitions The conception that she was Adam's wire appears to have spread through Buxtorf's "Lexicon Talmudicum," where the subject is dealt with. Lilith is a clear Instance of the persistence of popular superstitious neueia. Yeomen's Homes. The housing problem in eh. beth's day may have left the laborer in very primitive dwellings, but it gave noble mansions to the groat and to rarmers and country craftsmen pleasant homes of such durahmtv and such charm that many of the.Ti stand to-day to shame us Into r ib contemptible mode of building than mat wmcn the nineteenth century produced. Country Life. National Conversations. If you see three men standing to gether on the sidewalk in any given country, you can guess the subject of their conversation. In Oermanv it is the army: in Russia tha hn. reaucracyj in France, womn; la the umiea eiaies, ousiness; in -England, sport, ana in Turkey, nothing at all. ua uerniere Heure, Brussels. Stopped Fraudulent Coffee galea. There I not one-twentieth a much Mocha coffee sold la New York city, according to the label, a there was before we had a pur food law. Now coffee sellers must tell the truth, about their wares and only eoffee grows In Tern en. In the southern part of JjraMa, oao b eaUd "Moon," L! flQTEHSHIDE HONEY. Tit Where Sweets Are Stored !:i Lily Concealed Xertar. Crfore "the bee sucks," as Ariel DUt It. ho must And the womlei f , 1 places where the flowers hide nwr.y their honey, to bo found like tl.e priests' hiding holes In ancient nmn- ilons, by the right sort of visitor. and to keep awa'r all intruders. In the recesses of the crown Im perial lily at the centre can be seen six large honey pits, one on every floral leaf, and each la brlmmlmr over with a big drop of honey and glistening like a tear droD. Shake the flower and it "weeps" as the big drops fall from it. soon to be re placed by other tears In the rapl lly secreting flower. The simple folk call the flower "Job's tears." The snowdrop Is literally flowlnir with honey, for In swollen vein traversing its fragile whiteness aro rivers of nectar. The petals of the columbine are ingeniously and ela borately designed with a view to nro- vlding good places of hiding for t,:..) honey. Each Is circular, hollow. shaped like a horn. In each tl.o honey is secietod In a round k.io'j at what would bo the mouthniere ciu of the horn, and the Ave are arrant; ed in a ring side by side with jo honey knobs aloft. Though tiij honey store 13 obvious from without, yet the Insects who would slu it must creep Into the flower and pone trate with a long nose up the curv Ing horn to the knob. Sometimes the petals are all Jolnrd together Into a tube and the sweet iienar simpiy exudes rrom tho inner side of the wall and collects at the bottom. This is the case in the rl. i 1 netiie, me iudo or which forms toothsome a morsel that some chl! dren call it "suckles." Tho 1io:h- suckle Is similarly planned, and im sweetness Is bo striking as to havo furnished Its name. The monkshood has aualnt nee- tarles. If the hood be drawn back there suddenly spring Into sight two objects on long stalks which n-.o sometimes like a French horn, some times like a cowl, or, looked at tile ways, not unlike a pair of dove Their presence within the hood has provided the nicknames "Adam aiu! Eve" and "Noah's Ark." Thus the honey bags are carefully tuckori nuiv and protected. County Larger Than State. Although the New Enelanrt ntntrn are small, the average size of tho count les is greater than In most of the middle, western and southern states. Worcester countv. In Mans-. chusetts. Is an example of an eastern county that Is at the same time large in area and very c-oDulona it Is larger than the adjoining state of unoae island. Dishonest Heroine. The Bteady increase of rrimn among stage heroines is beelnnlne to r.rt serious. It used to be the men who dll all or most of the dreadful things In plays I 1116 An the nlrkiri'? Imd stealing the forging and embox- sii.ng and offenses of that kind. Now It is the women and it Is all the fault of the late Henrik Ihsen nMv. en rest his soul, notwithstanding. m. A. P. Kino Lamntuge. As a rule the educated natlvo ni West Africa like his Indian broth..,- loves highflown language. A clerk some time ago sent a reoort com. plaining that the carbines of the po nce at his station often misfired; wis is now he put it: "it u ririi, ,,. lous to report that the firearms nf the police, when pointed at the firm ament, refuse to give exnloslvo souna. Sticking to Facts. Little Miss Marearet is nothing it not literal. To her. a well-k no wn sound upon her ear, a simple sound is unto her. and it men nr,tt.i more. Consequently when h w" asked in a store whither she and an other small friend had been taken for a treat, "Will you have a eh late sundae?" Miss Margaret with decided emphasis: "No'm, I'll have It now!" Southern California Fish. The shellflah k nOWn SLR ft hn Inn ft abounds in southern California water in quantities sufficient to export nt the rate of hundreds of tons per an num. A market for any amount could easily be found in China, where the natives consider it a great delicacy. It used to be dried for the market, but Is now being canned. Scarcity of Humor. It is to be feared that if the ni. pers reserved .. special corner nm. each week for he witticism of tlio week it would be often left blank. There is no wit to sneak nf tn.Hn,. only a feeble imitation of It wiiinh people are fond of calling the saving sense of humor. Had Small Brain. A healthy, regularly-formed brain of 34 ounces, scarcely half of the normal average, seems to have been the smallest ever recorded for an adult. It was recently found In Dan iel Ryan, a New York coachman, who died suddenly at the age of 4 6. Tea a Germ Destroyer. Tea is now elevated to the dignity of a germ destroyer. Dr. McNaught. the medical investigator, has found that typhoid acllll placed in coll or lukewarm tea are greatly diminished at the end of four hours, and have completely disappeared at the end of 14 hours. AVcgclable PreparationTor As similating theFoodandReguIa ting the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digcation.Chmfu.-' . I Y" a 1 t.t ness ana itesi.ujni.ains nenner Onium.Morphine nor Mineral Tsot Narcotic. yavw roufrSiNunmaaii Arjerfecl Re.mpdv fnrrnncllna Hon , Sour Stotnach.Diarrhoca Worms .(onviiUinna Fouorieh. ncss and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. T BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal of the Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Fa ;u.j Ti zii : 7 y .isneu. it nils a nnsitmn nf itc , . , - "tu nuu litis iaKen me ieadino 6i2,,n u 6 m!f f Ural peP,le in every secti0 f the Unite! btates. It Fives t .fi farmer ho ... r about aside from the humdrum Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON G000E WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF Two for the Price of The Oldest County Paper and THE American Farmer . BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO This unDaralleled offpr icm,0 n all old ones who pay allarrears Sample copies free. Address : Nahat. Patau D IT am I n II . .1 Of the delicate mcmhu..n it.,i air-paHsaKes, la not cured by any mix tures taken into the stomach. JWt waate time on them. Take Klv's fw"J.BttJm th8h the not-trilH, so iLl1?6 fevered. swollen tisHues are reached at ouce. Never mind how long you have suffered nor how often ".L',ve bee" Reappointed, we know W8 Cream Balm 1m the remedy von Jhould use. All dmgtfHU, 60c. Mafled by Lly Bros., 66 Warren 'street, New -Hoax-"The tuKboat captain al ways ha his buslne, well tow'' Joax-"i$o has the chiropodist." Trespass Notices. Card signs '"No Trespassing" for sate at this office. They are print ed in accordance with the late net of 1903. Price s cents each, tf CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. the Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years uucirtiy tarni loumai Dtib. of routine ZnZs. One: THE COLUMBIAN and rene ZtZtXY hln ihnty days- For nervous, who suffer fron, Ud7?taS toroidKV'T'r'6' "-SSK? tas e 1, hCoate.d lo,,KUe w" bitter jaate in the morning and nooraimptit t becomes aeeewaTy to Wni S fw and It 1P ",""? '? n their yn Americ Rii .. ,' TaKen rro, our rnedh, J .Tr'8' ould produce a dent in?,, h'eh Wlw """-vehnHly ertl- atlmenu vm' chro,,l. lingering Medical n U"ty ,le,"Ud "Uolden RM"1"1 10 "tollmen and liver I u the di V ."r0"0111"", I hereby Uelp cure U th? bl,M'- Thereby it ranim?ni.moUHne, U,M kidrd .nfine few line of Weddinr in vitations just received at this office. 1 AW