THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBUR&. lJA. 10 HI i won i Our Special Correspond ent Writes Entertain ingly to Women. FROM THE METROPOLIS What to Wear When Yachting N a Serious y next Ion to Women c,f l'unh Inn Simple and Jnunty I'nr Mid-Season Wear A Flowered liilk With Kinbroldrrcd Pilot. 11Y Jtl.KS THKKOW. The striped linens are carrying; all I ( fore them Just as the striped clot'.;a did. In fact one cannot get away from striped effects no matter what material may be selected for a gown, for they are the design Ideal for all smart fabrics. There are divers ways of employ ing stripes In self-decorative schemes, but none more attractive than the idea exploited In the accompanying illustration. The skirt and Jacket are of different design. Broad bla folds of brown and white linen trim the skirt, forming a large diamond in the front. The waist line is ele vated and the skirt hung from a belt SIMPLE AND JAUNTY. plain brown linen trimmed with tall brass buttons. The Jacket, too, has the short v Jatline and is trimmed with tuck- ! bands of plain brown linen stitch- ' f.nder triple rows of linen sou ' '.che braid in the same tone. The front is vestless, nor has It revers, an artistic finish being effected by a flat stitching of fancy braid. The neck Is collarless and embellished In the same way. Long, rather loose Bleeves make the coat serlceable for late season wear and the hat Is a smooth brown straw trimmed with satin and brown wings. A costume which might be dupli cated in any of the soft fabrics of the season is depicted above, and through originally fashioned of figured Jap anese silk, silk finished nun's-veiling or challis would be quite as effective In addition to the economic advan tage gained. The material has a delicate cream background with a pattern of palo lavender and pink flowers. The ski it is guaged around the waistline be low an elevated girdle of broad flint A FLOWERED SIK DRESS, lace embroidered with narrow silk soutache braid. A band of this same trimming finishes the bottom, being stitched over the hem. . An odd feature of the girdle Is the way It Is laced at both the right and the left side, though one side only Is used in the adjustment, of course. The dress Is made In one-piece, but the blouse has a simulated ooenlnu formed by a box plate In the front with niching of soft cream Val lac on either side of the plait. Broad reven of the soutache era broldered Diet lace trim the uppe part of the blouse, suggesting t!i linen of a sailor collar, while f' . full sleeves end at the elbows wl bands of satin ribbon tied In fief bows. ' , , What to wear when yachting lv become a serious question in t!. mind of the woman of fashion, f. ) 5 the sport has grown so popular dur nng the past few years that It con stitutes one of society's principal pasttltnes In summer. The blouse shirt and plain skirt of former ytrs has given way to a dressier costume which follows the linos prevailing in street and house gowns. The love ly white and black suit pictures Is carried out in two materials the skirt being of soft French flannel DRESSY YACHTING COSTUMES, with a silk finish and the coat of heavy black taffetas, stitched with bands of white silk braldel with r-r-row black silk soutache. T!ie skirt is very close-fitting, extending above the waistline and finished at the top with bands of its own mnterln.l stitched in girdle effect. A soft white linen blouse is worn under the coat, which has a collar of plain white taffetas. The second costume In palest bis cuit color mohair Is trimmed with sea-green pongee with lare polka dots of white silk. The skirt has a narrow tuck about the knees, piped with green silk, which gives It the effect of being made in two parta. The blouse. Joined to it, with a bolt of the same material. Is laid in small plaits and cut in one with the sleeves. A deep turn-over collar Is facud with green pongee and the sleeves are ifnlshed with cuffs of the same ma terial. Fragments of Useful Information. Do you know That you can make a faded di-pRs perfectly white by washing it in boil- g water? That salt dissolved in alcohol will often remove grease spots from lothing? That two potatoes crated in a hnln of warm water give better results than soap In washing delicate flannel ip woolen goods, ribbons, etc? That linen blinds tan be cleaned by being laid fat and rubbed with powdered bathbrick? That piano keys can be cleaned ns can any old ivory, by being rubbed 1th muslin dipped in alcohol? That a little thin, cold starch rubbed over windows and mlrrora nd then wiped off with a soft cloth Is an easy way of producing most shining results? That a spoonful of mustard In n gallon of water will kill insects in the earth? This is gcod for potted plants? ' That a few drops of essenre of sassafras will keep flies away? That cloves or salt sprinkled on a pantry shelf will rid it of ants? That you can remove the oJor of fresh paint from a room by leading there a pail of water into v. hlch sev eral onions have been sliced? Scraps. Egg Stains To remove egg stains from Bllver, rub the stained part briskly with table salt, then wash in warm soapsuds. ' To whiten clothes, put one tea- spoonful of borax in the last rinse water. Powder the borax, so that it will dissolve easily. For settling coffee When eSF3 are h)!;h, one rray be econo.-.iW al In this way: Break an egg In a Jelly glass, fill It. with granulated 3ugar. mix, then cover tioaely. Use o'ie half tensponnful to a pot of coffee. This keey any length of time. AiH'l i Jolly When lutkiag apple Jelly, try putting a drop of oil of cinnamon l:i It. It. Improves the flavor. Cnrncd Tomuto Recipes, Stock tomato soup. Take any sort of meat soup and add half a can of stewed and well-seasoned tomatoes; strain, and servs wlui croutons. Tomato toast. Stew down a can o. tomatoes till thick, with a table spoonful of chopped onion, a table spoonful of chopped parBley, salt, ana pepper; wnen the Juice Is some what absorbed pour over slices of buttered toast and serve at once. Do not strain. Tomatoes au gratln. Take a cu'i of tomatoes, add salt and pepper and a teaspoonful of minced onion; put them into a deep baklng-dlsh In lay ers with soft bread crumbs and nut bits of butter on these; repeat till me aisn is run, with crumbs on top and bake till brown. Promoting Flower Cultur Flower cultuiQ has reached the point among the women In the fash lonable Lenox colony where plan have been made for a show upon i Urge aoaU. HERE IS A THRILLER I How to Give an Eleotrto Shook While I ihaklng Hands. I To receive au eloctrto shock while i shaking hands Is quite a mrstury to j your friends. This may be acoom I pllshed with the aid of a small indue j tlon coll that can be constructed nt , home. The core, A, Fig. 1, is con- ctructed In the usual manner with small soft Iron wire to make a bun dle about three-sixteenths of an inch in diameter and about two luches long. The coll ends are made from card board about one Inch in diameter with three-slxteenths lnch hole In the cen ter. When cutting the bole, cut it as shown In Fig. 2, so as to leave four small pieces that can be bent out, leaving the projections as shown. After wrapping throe or four turns of paper around the bundle of wires the cardboard ends are put on with the projections inside, so the colls of wire, will hold them In place. About 70 turns of No. 24 double-covered mag net wire is first placed on the core for the primary and then 1,500 turns of No. 32 or 34 double-covered wire is wrapped on top of the primary for the secondary. Sufficient length of wire must be lort outslda from each end of the vibrator directly opposite tlons. The vibrator, B. Fig. 1, and the Btipport. C, are made from thin spring steel about one-eighth Inch wide, bent as shown and securely fast ened to the cardboard end of the coil. The armature is tnnde from a soft piece of Iron about three-sixteenths-inch In diameter and threo-slxteenths-inch thick, which is soldered to the end of the vibrator directly oposltn j the end of the core. A small screw j Is fitted in the end of the support. C, ' for adjustment, which should be tip- j ped with platinum placed where the : screw will touch the vibiator, B. One of the primary vlres is con- j nected to a flash lamp battery, D. The other primary wire is connected to a switch, S. which in turn ia con nected to the other terminal of tha battery. The switch, S. may be mads from a thrce-elKhths-lnch cork with the wires put through about three-sixteenths-inch apart and allow them to project about one-half inch. Tha plate E is cut about ' one-half Inch square from a piece of copper and la Tetatlt cf Induction Coil, fastened to the heel of one shoe and connected with a wire from the sec ondary coi. which must be concealed inside of the trouser leg. Tho other sec ondary wire is connected through the coat sleeve to a finger ring, F. The vibrator screw must be properly ad Justed. When the vibrator Is not working the armature should be about one-sixteenth-inch from the core and directly opposite. The coil when complete, says Popu lar Mecnanics, will be about 2Va Inches long and one inch In diameter. The coll can be placed in an old box that has been used for talcum powder or shaving stick. The SDace around the coil in the box can be filled with I paper, to keop It tight i The coll and battery are carried in 1 the pockets and the cork button put In ! the outside coat pocket, where It can u pressed wunoui attracting atten tlon. Marriage in 8outhern Nigeria. Among all tribes in Southern Ni geria polygamy la the rule, the reason given by the natives being that It ia impossible for one woman to do all ' the work of the house, look after the children, prepare and cook the food, fetch the dally supply of water (often an arduous job), cultivate the planta tion and go to market. And the rea son is that the African Is an exceed ingly Hungry person. It is their cus tom to eat several times a day when at home, and the men spend most of their day sitting In the palaver house. or market plac-3, while the women bring the food all day long. One wife could not possibly do this. Besides, the African lady encourages it, for she says: "The more wives the less work." Among the Ahlaras, Onlchas, Obuwus and the lower class of pagan tribes In the Interior there Is very little form of marriage. As soon as a man has the means he pays the parents what they want in the shape of goats, cows, beads, money, and takes the rlri. There is no ceremony at all. The more wives he has indi cates a richer man and jthat he will be better looked after. If of course they can manage to seize a woman from the neighboring tribe while she Is fetching water or working on her farm so much the cheaper. With this method in vogue for centuries no won der that It is as much as a native's life is worth to go out of his own vll la;e and that the country is so back ward. A Real Snsks Story. An old ben with a large family of small chickens was recently given an empty barrel turned down on Its aids for a coop on thi writer's premises. One day recently the hen gave the sig nal of distress used bv all ii gars, and the barrel was quickly sur-' rounded by the fighting members of the household. j A large snake was found In the bar. rel and quickly lynched. Several bunches were noticed on the reptile's body, and he was ripped up the baok with a pair of shears, and seven ohlok tna were found gasping fr broth. They UTtd, nr. zfxT 1 ! A CHEMICAL FACTORY The Chemical Products of the Human Body. In the presence of the great nerv ous system physicians are now Ilka prospuctors In the Kloudlke region. A faw fine nuggets have already been collected which prove that they come from rich velut In the mountains around, and no one knows how soon rome voin In them may be struck which, followed up, will yield much gold. A specimen of these golden ad ditions to our knowledge Is the fact thaL amona; many other things, the Sympathetic actually makes drugs, or true medicine, whose presence in tho blood is essential to life. One of these Is now sold over tho counter like any other drug. The ori gin of It is from a twig of the renal (kidney) sympathetic plexus becom ing at a certain early stage of devel opment rolled on itself like a ball of twine. In time it breaks off from Its parent stem, and, being enclosed In a capsule, adheres to the top of the kidney as a separate gland called the adrenal gland. These adrenals add nn Internal secretion to the blood whose active principle has been found ' ti bo a definite chemical substance, only 1-S00 of a grain of which will un comfortably raise the pressure of a man's blood In all the arteries of his body. This adrenalin, as it Is called. Is a new medicine with many valuable properties, but It is Itself of such purely chemical composition that sub Ftances like It can now be made arti ficially, like artificial indigo. About two tablespoonfuls of a bit ter salt like Epsom salts is dally manufactured by the liver, and then can bo extracted from the bile. The bases of this salt, called taurln, was fifty-two years ago supposed by the eminent English chemist, Bence Jones, to be like a veritable animal quinine, because he found that the taurln of the guinea pig gave both all the different chemical reactions of quinine and its spectroscopic lines as well. This substance, therefore, he regarded as our natural protective agent against invasions of the blood by micro-organisms. Since then this theory has been considerably modi fed by tho discovery of numerous other drugs manufactured In the body which, because they can combine with acids and form salts, are called alkaloids, some of them, however, be ing powerful poisons. It is now, gen erally agreed among physiological chemists that we dally manufacture enough poison in our alllmentary ca nal to kill us before the day is over were It not that these poisons are neutralized by the liver and other or gans before they can enter the blood and thus reach the brain and other vital parts of tho nervous system. Magic and Poison Rings. The ring began when man thrust his finger through a hole in a pretty shell, aud later learned to make rings of Jut. The ring Is very magical. Lord Ruthven, who helped to kill Rlc cio, gave Queen Mary a rlug which vaa sovran against poison, and she generously replied with the present of her father's wonderful jewelled dagger, of French work, uo longer In existence. Whether Ruthven tooled with this magnificent weapon in the affair of Rlccio or used a cheaper arti cle Is uncertain. At all events, Mary based on the ring that was an antidote lo poison a charge of sorcery Against I'.-thven. The Judges of Jeanne d' Aic regarded with much suspicion her liulu ring of base metal, a gift from l.cr parents, Inscribed with the sacred names Jesus Maria. U was usual to touch the relics of saints with lings; Jeanne d'Arc said that her ring had touched the body of tit. Catherine, whether she meant of the actual saint or a relic of the saint, brought from Sinai to Fierbois. The ring might contain a relic, or, later, a miniature. I fear that I do not be lieve in the virtues or vices of poison lings. Our ancestors practically knew uo poison but arsenic, and Carthagin ian science can scarcely have enabled Hannibal to poison himself with a Urug contained under the stone of a ring. White Lettuce and Green Cabbage. "There is a curious difference," cays a gentleman of St. Louis who speiiigV large part of the year In Eng lund.AQjetween the English and our selves in the way of growing cabbage and lettuce for the table. With us the cabbage is encouraged to form a head, and when the leaves show a disposi tion to spread the gardeners some times tie a string around the clump to make the leaves grow together. In Lngland, on the other hand, the ef forts of the growers are directed to ward keeping cabbage green, and thejr pull the leaves apart so as to expose all portions to the light and give them u dark, rich color. "We like our lettuce green, but the English want theirs headed up and blanched, so as to have It aa white as our cabbage, In other words, they sim ply reverse our practice, and Instead of white cabbage and green lettuce they like green cabbage and white lettuce. Of course It Is only a mat ter of taste, but still the difference la rather curious." How Mary Stuart Looked. How did that fascinating witch of all time, Mary Stuart, really look? Andrew Lang thinks he knows. In the London Academy he says: "Mary was a tall, lithe beauty, with a bright pallor of . complexion, very delicate, thin arched eyebrows, wide apart, a lofty brow, bright russet hair, red hasel eyes, long and narrow, with heavy white eyelids, a subtle mouth with delicate curves, a beautiful chin, sod s ratatr long, atraifht am" Tho Kind You llavo Always iu use for over 30 years and --t sonal All Counterfeits Imitations and "Just-as-pood" nro but Experiments that triflo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil Pare frorlc Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fcverlshncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep Tho Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYO Bears the The KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. VW OtNTMlft eOMMN. Tf MUMMV Ttf IT, NtW TO UK OITT. 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 tVif i- u j tl ..i . 7 , 7 ""V .-. jr imm juuiuai pub lished. It fills a DOSltlon of lti nwn ami Viqo rol.., U l place in the homes of rural people in everv section of the United States. It gives the farmer and his family something to think about aside from the humdrum of routine duties. 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 THE AMERICAN FARMER BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO This unparalleled offer is all old ones who pay all arrears THE COLUMBIAN, Then are Hnma wnmun u-lir, u..rv, t, lie Dcrmmliill v vmiM.dil im ........... daughters are couipitnlona as well as . unu ii-u. nun nil-color in me mother's cheeks, the lrli,'htiienH iu hi r eyes, the rnu milieus of her form, all sneak ol .,., umuiiik ueuiwi. wiiai h iter Hecreir She is ut the middle iije of life when so many women are worn, watted and mini, uimi yei timeuitMoniv ripened her charms. The secret of this matron ly health and beauty mav he told In the brief phraw. Dr. IMerce's Favorite Prescription. The ueneral health of woman is so Intiinatelv related to the local health if thu lu!i....tu organs, that where thene arediHeaxed, me w iioib mmy must minor " ruvorlte I'rexcrlnttoii" ilriuu tli l-i.ii;t. i.,.. drains, heals ulceration and inHum- (Un .. .I. it. ii, uum leiiiiwe weatneHM and imparts to the delicate female nnmn 11..111....I ..l - .i.,. ... "'' ikit unu viiHiuv. women who havloHt their health and their I initial l'lilllut llllfl - " tsiau V (fc 1 1 14 roxy cheeked" by the usu of thin mar- Viiliki .u tnl U.l .t n CASTORIA ?or Infants and Children. f ha Kind You Have Always Bought ' Bears & Signature of Bought and which lias hecn has borno tho signature of has been inado under his pcr- supervision slnco its infancy Signature of nnlv T.ifMn. j?-,-,, i v One: THE COLUMBIAN made to all upw criirc r,nA and renew within thirty days. Bloomsbunr. Pa. Fnvelopei 75,000 Envelopes carried in stock at the Columbian Office. The line includes drug envelopes, pay, coin, baiouial, commercial sizes, number 6 6, yit 9, 10 and 11, catnlos;, ,S;c. Trices range from $1. o per 1000 nrinti-d, up to Sj.oc. Largest stock iutheco.:n ty to selret from. ' ?o kai.se 1'rkve.nkk has marked the career of KI.v'h Cream Balm. Heing en tirely ImrmteHM, it is not reapoiiHlbla like the catarrh HnuffW and powders, for miud-t Hhattercd bv cocaine. The Kre.it virtue of Kly'a Cream Balm ia that it )eedily and completely over comes naal catarrh and hav fever. Hack of this statement in tne trbtluiony of thouxandri aud a reputation of many yearn' miccow. All druiririnu, 50o., or mailed hv F,lv llros.. 5(1 Warren Street, New York. I'lio Cynical Bachelor il-ie-t to re mark that a man never fully realises that life Ih full of contradictions until he jfetn mauled. Trutpaai NotiCOk. Card bius "No Trespassing" for pale nt tliis office. They nre print ed iu accordance with ibe late act of 1903- Price s cents each, tf