n THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURtt, VA. WHAT TO WEAR AND iWIOlAR II Spscial Correspondent of This Paper Write Entertainingly to Women LATEST FROM THE METF.CFCLI3 tf T.irati Jacket Premise ta Be Popu ip Graceful and Becoming Apron Plain Little Bishop Gown for a Nightdress. Separate jackets tnadd id empire trie promise to be popular for sprin and summer wear. They usually htm made to mitch '.he dress but ron trasts, not too violent, are newer and It care. .11) planned, very effective, if two sbadu. of the same color are used the effect Is best ot all. The illustra tion shows the Jacket worn over a dress ot pale mauve voile. The ma terial Is a cloth of darker shade or mauve trimmed with silk braid and buttons. A scarf, o soft black silk .s sewed inside the neck and hangs be low the opening; of the jacket, weight ed with jet tassels. The style ar.d fit of an apron la real ly worth considering and now-a-days many of these are really graceful and Incoming. Some are made ot Brightly figured silks and sllkolines, while the embroidered Houncings are always adaptable to the tmaller kinds. No Improvement can be made ou Ue pLaln little bishop gown tor a nightdress Qui red Is a sleeves The only trimming r lace 'uffie for neck and By JULES THBROWA Notes and Commejit I "A NATIONAL DELUSION." That American Woman Has No Super ior Is Absurd. Ihe Idea that the position of Ameri can women U superior to that of any other women in the world Is character Ized by Mary lleaton Vorsu, In "Ap plutun's," as u "national delusion." She admits that they are undoubtedly the "uiont Indulged and petd women In the world," but as for real respect she thinks that the downtrodden Uer man hautfrau (sets more. "The Ger man husband may seem to us unchlv alro-js in the minor details of Hie. He may talk with brutal disparagement about the female brain, but when be goes out to amuse himself It doesn't occur ..o htm to go alone. 11 takes with him his wife and his children That patnetic person whose hjsbuud neglects her foi the society of iu-n. for whom our tears How so often lu this country, is not found lu Ger many." The varon aligned Is that by her skilful household management the liausfrau has become a source ui wealth to the country. The part winch women play in the national Hie is waat makes them pre-eminent o. re latively unimportant, says the article "The amount of Binall courtasy huowu them really doesn't make much dif ference. Show uie a country where Us women add to the country's weuiin oy participating in the business ul ti.ai country or by tuelr thrift and 1 w.n show you a country where the econo mic position of women la a higher one." In France, where the woiuuu is her husband's conrade ana business partner, she das the most power. "As a c-mtrast tc this, the American man stands alone. The women loilt of his Minily do not help him. As lui as his business goes, It's quite iiuuia terial o him whether be las a wile or whether he has not. Our men may talk as much as they like about the uplifting influence o- a noble woman and of the tangible support that the thought of her nobility give them. It does not alter the fact tha the aver age American man transacts all the business of bis life wi'ho.U ever ureaming of turning to bis lire's part ner for any counsel In tht matter and generally without her even having any knowledge of the business In hand." There is comradeship between young girls and men, Mrs. Vorse finds, but it ceases Just at the time wh"n the latter begin the real business of life. For this state ot affairs she thinks the women are to blame. "When a manr.flrst marries It Is bis Instinct to take his wife into partner ship with him. It's natural for a man to want to talk about that which takes up most oi the hours he Is awake tj the perso i he cares for most In the world." But the wife checks these advances accoiding to her na ture and disposition. "ElMer she will slip her arm through John's and say coaxingly: 'Don't let's talk about hor rid busintss, Jear; let's talk about something nice. You ought to rest when you get hume.' Or leso agree- ablo and more honest, she may admit rankly that business bores her." So the man actually comes to think that he ought to leave bis business cares at the office. Me ilts "bored and silent in his own home," while bis wife complains that he is "so absorbed In business that he has no Interast left for anything else.' "I do ot for a moment mean," the article concludes, "to bring the influ ence cl woman iu uer household down to a matter of dollprs and cents, but l is not prcbable that the spiritual bond between man ant. womaL was ever less because they were helpful part ner, to each other In ihe affairs at everyoay life." A Cheap Shoe Box. A pretty at.d serviceable shoe box may be made iv the following way: Procure a small wooden goods box, say two feet long, two feet deep and one and a half teet wide. FaBten the lid on with small hinges. Palni the inside ot the box and Ho a rich dark red or blue. Cov r the outside with cretonne l; burlap In rich color, tack ing the covering on with rrlghthead ed bra&s tacks. The lid may be slight ly padded so as to form a seat when closed. Four red woo. tassels may be tackud to the corners cf the box b,, way of decoration. A red tape loop to draw cvor a brass hook may be used as a fastening. Such a box is very bandy ta Lold the boy's or girls' shoes and Is ornamental In the room as welL A Glass Rolling Pin. The modern rolling pin is ot gluss or ot porcelain, with glass handles These material!, are considered much more hygienic than wooa. LIONS FATTING AIM OF JOSEVELJ Where President Will Hunt, These Beasts Have Not Been Molested for 10 Months ESTATE WITH YANKEE HOUSE Mr. McMillan, I t Whose Jungles Mr. Roosevelt Will Shoot Big Game, Hat Everything In Readiness for His Distinguished Guest. London. Wliliar Northrup McMil lan, nephew of the late Senator Mc Millan, of Michigan, and his wife have sailed from Marseilles for IndU to viBit the Maharajah of Cooch Be har at bis earnest Invitation. Messrs. Bullpet and Shaw and six other Amer icanos, all frietiu of the McMillans, are in the party. Their fellow-passengers were the Princess Koyal and the Duke of Fife and their two daugh ters; Sir Henry aim Lady Tichborne, and Lady Lansdowne and her brother, Lord Frederick Hamilton. The Tich bornes are great travellers and Inti mate friends of the McMillans. After the visit Mr. McMillan will hasten to South Africa. He has in vited President Roosevelt to bunt big game on his vast estate near Nairobi, and as host be wants to be certain that everything Is ready to receive Mr. Roosevelt end his son. Mr. Mc Millan, himself a mighty hunter, will nos shoot with his guests, will not join them or even receive them. Certainly the Roosevelts will suffer no handicap while they remain on the estate, whicl. is to be given over to them. It is called the Juja Farm because it lies between the Ju River and the Ja Rivjr. The chief bungalow is the most comfortable residence imaginable, with two stories and a veranda. It wp.s made in America at the order of Mr. McMillan, who for merly lived ki St. Louis, transported lu sections and Ret up under his eye. It is well furnished with American furniture. And Mr. McMillan has taken pains to provide hue sport for is guests. In effect the game has been pre served; the shooting has not been dis turbed for ten -nonths. There ere six Hons', dens on the Mc Millan tract The lions have not been fattened by feeding them, but they have been left to live tranquilly, so that they may be there In good condi tion for the Roosevelts to shoot. The McMillans are very wealthy. Their Devonshire seat, Tout Saint, at Buckland, Kingdbridge, is superb. The place was originally a convent, and is a walled estate, with quaint gar dens, orchards, meadows and pasture lands. The Interior of the house Is palatial. It was furnished by French artists, the walls and ceilings being panelled and moulded by the best workers Paris cculd supply. Their London residence, No. 17 Hill street, Is even finer. A museum occupies the centre ot the house and the trophies of the chase it contains would delight Mr. Roosevelt. A ballroom was demolished to make room for the museum. The first thing that confronts one In the entrance i hall la a RtnlTerl linn thu flmt nna ' - .w., . " J U.Ob U.I U killed In British East Africa after Mr. McMillan took over the estates there. This beast fell to the gun ol Mrs. Mc Millan. A vase array of heads and antlers cover the walls a collection much finer than that of the Duke of Orleans at Evesham although Mr. McMillan has no polar bears, while there are ten et Evesham. The Mc Millan mansion contains giraffes, rhi nos, hippos, buffaloes, oryx, bartbeest, wapiti, gazelles, warthogs and two wild elephants. Hundreds of tusks line the walls and cases. Oval mir rors, some nine feet high, are framed with tusks, representing a fortune In African Ivory. Mrs. McMillan was the first wom an to cross Abyssinia at the head of her own caravan. She was guest of the Negus. An autaoress and devoted to sport, she cares nothing for society. VE8T BUTTON IN HIS HEART. Strange Discover lec In Autopsy Upon Body of Aged Man. Denver, Col. An autopsy perform. ed on the body of Fred. Pomplltz. who was sixty se -i years old, re vealed a black vest button embedded In the heart over the right auricle. Dr. W. Q. Mudo and Dr. J. P. HSmlll made the autopsy. This was nbt all, for they founr In the spleen of this same person a piece ef rock, two Inches long, one-e'.ghth of an Inch thick and an eighth of an Inch wide. The doctors' tj.eory is that be swal. lowed the button by accident, that It stuck In the bronchial tubes and by a process of ulceration was carried In- to the vena cava. The "rock" In the spiee- wa. caused by salt con cretion from the blood. , $5,000 tor a Church 8inger. Chippewa. Falls, Wis. A visitor here for a few days from Waupon was Mrs. Catherine Marbone, who la, per haps, the champion mother In Wiscon sin. Mrs. Marbone Is only thirty-nine years old, has been married nineteen years and baa bad eighteen children, one born each year. She has been married twice, the first time when she was seventeen years old. Twelve children blessed her first marriage anfl Six her sennnd FACTS C0NCERNIK8 BLOOD. It la the Most Genetic Thing A boat Animals. ' A drop of the blood of a walrus shows no relation with a drop of whale's blood, or of the blood of any ' other cetacean, such as seals or por- poises, which, like the walrus, are mammals that have taken to the sea. Instead of that, the blood or the walrus Immediately reacts with the blood of horses, asses and zebras, thus proving that he Is an equine that no longer crops grass but goes where he can live on an exclusively fish diet. Likewise the hippopota mus Is shown to be a modified pig. Where a blood relationship exists, but Is distant, these reactions are proportionately faint, but where no reactions occur there Is no relation ship at all. Thus, geology Indicates that birds are descended from rep tiles, and, oddly enough, the blood of a bird shows a distinct, though very faint reaction with the blood of a snake but none whatever with that of the winged bat or the flying squir rel, for these are mammals. On the other hand, the marsupials, once such a great family, but now re duced to the kangaroo, the opossum and a small creature In South Ameri ca, have now not a single blood re lation left. As to man, he has no relationship to monkeys, but the blood of anthropoid apes shows a very faint reaction with his. Mean time, all the races of man are unmis takably of one blood, whatever their color or nbodo. Hence the blood Is by far the most hereditary thing about us. Neither the shape of the skeleton, nor the contour of the body, nor brain, heart, lungs, stomach, Intestines, liver or skin, nor even ancestral habits about the grcnt Food Question Darwin's only Creator how to eat or keep from being eaten are comparable to a single drop of blood for telling the correct story.of descent. All this gives a new meaning to the words, "For the blood thereof Is the life thereof." Likewise, the old saying that Insanity runs In the blood now wears a scientific look, since blood and family are so Inseparably asso ciated. Average Ages of Itlrds- The doctrines of vegetarianism ap pear to be slightly shaken by the re sult of an Investigation that an Eng- ,lsh newspaper has made Into the subject of the longevity of birds. With one notable exception the meat feeding birds are the longer lived. The exception is the swan. The average ages of some of the best known birds are given in the following table: Tears. Blackbird lives 12 Blackcap 15 Canary ' 24 Crane 24 Crow 100 Eagle 100 Fowl, common , .. 10 Ooldflnch 15 Goose 50 Heron 69 Lark 13 Linnet 23 Nightingale 18 Parot lives 60 Partridge 15 Peacock 24 Pelican 60 Pheasant 16 Pigeon ' 20 Raven 100 Robin 12 Skylark ; . . 30 Sparrow Hawk 40 Swan 100 Thrush 10 Wren 3 The average age of the boarding house variety of chicken Is still un determined. Tulip Soap. . "What makes this vegetable soup taste so different?" asked the young husband. "Only the leeks you sent home," replied the bride. "You remember you said you were going to order leeks." "1 didn't order any leeks," growled the husband, but he finished his bowl of soup rather than disappoint her. That afternoon he stopped at the grocery store. "How did you come to send leeks up to my house this morning?" he demanded. "I didn't order them." "Great Scott! Did you eat ttiem." "O, for land's sake. They were Mrs. Jackson's tulip bulbs. She left them on the counter and they got Into your basket by mistake." De troit Free Press. Cry Baby Cure. Alaska babies do not cry. They try It and then give up the bad habit from choice. To this desirable end they are gently persuaded by their mothers. When a baby begins to cry iiib moiner taxes B POt Of water. fills her mouth with the llauld and B1ulrt It Into the face of the weep, lng ,n,ant- If the cry Increases In rorce, so does the stream of water. No word Is spoken, no blow Is struck, but the victory Is sure. Very soon the Infant begins to connect weeping with the squirting of water In lu face. Becoming firmly convinced that the two things are Inseparable, It decides to cry no more. Chinese Coolies Smuggled. Smuggling Chinese coolies from Mexico Into the United States is busy Industry on the border and ft profitable one, but occasionally there is a setback, The other day one at tht) UmilfrirlAFa warn n.,.l., entering San Diego harbor at night I ...iv -i-i... .. . I 71 coones in a steam launoh. Tho Kind Ton Have Always In use for over 30 years, and lsyg- sonal supervision since Its Infancy. f-GUcAi&S, AHnw no one to deceive you In this. All Counterfeits, Imitations andJust-as-grood'nre but Experiments that trifle trith and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, rcgiJates the Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS i JO Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. VMS etHmUR MHMtt. V MURRAY T-KT, NCW VONft OITV. BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal ot the Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Farmer is the only Literary Farm Journal pub lished. It fills a position of its own and has taken the leading place in the homes of rural people in every section of the United States. It eives tl:e farmer and his familv snmMhino- fn thlnV about aside from the humdrum Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON G00DE WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF Two for the Price of The Oldest County Paper and TIJE AMERICAN FARMER BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO TV, Jo -.,11,. 1 3 -cr 11 uujaucicu uu is maae to an new subscribers, and all old ones who pay all arrears and renew within thirty days, bample comes free. Address ? 11 THE COLUMBIAN, Only a little cold in the head may be the heglnnit g of an obstinate case of Nasal Catarrh. Drive out the Invader with Ely's Cream Halm an plied straight to the inflamed stuffed up air-passages. Price 60o. If you pre fer to use an atomiser. ak for iVuld Cream Balm. It has all the good uual Itlesofthe solid form of this remedy and will rid you of cutarrh or hay fever. No cocaine to breed a dreadful haul'. No merourv to ilrv miiti,a cretlon. Pi ice 75c, with spraying tube. All druggists, or mailed by Kly Bros.. 60 Varreu Street, New. York. i Envelopes TSooo Envelopes carried in stock at the Columbian Office. The line includes drug envelopes pay, coin, baionial, commercial sizes, number 6, 6, 6, 9, io and 1 1 , catalog, &c. Prices range from $1.50 per 1000 printed, ftp to 55.ee. Largest stock iu the coun ty to selcet from. CASTORIA Tor Infants and Children. the Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Bought and which has been. has borne the signature of has been made under his per Signature of of routine duties. One: THE COLUMBIAN i . Bloomsburff. Pa. Who) Bay-to is Best? With nearly all medicines put up for salo through druggists, one lius to take the maker's say-so alone as to their curative value. Of course, such testi mony is not thiit of a disinterested party and accordingly Is not 10 be given the same credit as if written rroni disinterested motives. Dr. Pierce's medicines, however, form a striking exception to this rule. Their claims to the confidence of Invalids does not rest solely upon their milkers' say-so or praise. 1 heir ingredients are matters or public knowledge, being printed oa each separate bottle wrapper. Thus Invalid sufferers are taken Into Dr. 1 ierce's full oonfldonce. Scores of lead ing medical men have written enough to Jill volumes In prabe or ihe curative value of the several Ingredients enter ing Into these wcllknowu medicines. Amongst these writers we lind such medloal lights a Prof. Finley Klling wood M. D., of Bennet Medical Col lege. Chicago; Prof. Hale, of the same city; Prof John M. Heudder. M. D In e of Cincinnati, Ohio; Prof. John King M. D., late of Cincinnati, Ohio; Dr. (J rover Coe, of New York; Dr. Hartholow, of Jetteron Medical Col Jfge, ol Pa., aud scores of others equal ly eminent. ' Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrli tion cures the worst cases of female weak ness, prolapsus, anteverslon and retro version and correct irregularities, .f!lPlnful J10'!. 'Irles up dlsagree-t!?-d wea,kun'K dralus, sometimes tSSl ? J ?Vlvi0 .cuUrrh anl a 'mttlU women diseases peculiar to