the time, few hardships, the i here and there brightening ap as it L | fell upon the joe floes. The ohject of i our viet was now several miles to the | south, but to my Imaginative peered lxrger than ever. ack xd of excite. times ton of death rose _ they bnt make a he single hour | Indetidly upon my 21 shored in iatitods of Nor, a parties. rg drifted so close to the | doctor and 1 took the over to it in the hope stranded bear or musk ox. | not speak of our tedious strag- anderings ovir its cold moun- e. Terrible as they were use of them that the day : in he search and with thought of getting back to ¥ mind, I was wearily ny wa along the small level ice to which our boat was when my oye caught on R Wiel A. ” 32 eae , with the same ides and with ts we bey: the work of ex- ls Inter the doctor. sprang heard his ~ To the doctor, however, oss Jepaisiee, and his rom shoulders to In 3 great coat of hood Which, dotdt- e spent and our exertion. the chances are it's | E Weil soon know, an y { ing only one thing to be regretted -- That I. } | should finish it was his last wish. i It was in the preparation of th" task | | been struck with the description; spring, and beheld a false which | had taken for the inner cass | gaping open before me. the Catskills, ocean. seeking, it | banks of the Seine. finders should bear in mind that the wealthiest people in all countries de- fen by the overgrowth in the doctor removed. bos an examination proved the locket to { be empty. Then, having done all that | lay in our power, we replaced the body in its ancient tomb, A By the time we had reached the Po- i laris the great bleared sun had dipped below the horizon. As we stepped on deck, I looked back. A soft diffused Hght was poured over the ocean, and “Who could have perished #lone and so far North?'I thought. As 1 won. . | dered the idea grew upon me that the i strangers was no ordinary person. Sure. a Iy. Bo one ever had a grander mony. ment than yon stately pyramid. No pot even these old Egyptian kings 1 ; took my last look af the flcating sepul- | .chre as I went below. Hy tha next morning it had passed forever from wir aight. 3 * -. *» » - All thie was a generation ago. The dear old doctor bas passed away, leav- unfinished volume of his great work, his friend and co-worker, A false lining. while looking over his notes, that | An across a ragged brown leaf, from some old forgotien volume. torn Cari pus to know the reason for preserving such a fragment, 1 glanced over ft MAL the festival given by the East India company, on bosrd the ship The! Trader's Increuse, December 30, 1809 His Majesty, King James 1. presented Bir Thomas Smythe, Governor of the Company, with a very fairs necklace | of gold beariar a locket wherein was his own portrait” A description followed, which, as | through my brain. | had hever seen > | the neckisce, and vet how vividly the 1 desoricion pictured itaelf in my mind. | Then suddenly. as the recognizing of & former friend. | thought of the lwket | which we Bad taken from that corpse in Boothia bay. For nontha, ever jinca the doctor's death, if had been stowed {away In my desk at home Probably then the doctor also had fix falling memory bad doubtless pre- vented him from associating it with the jocket In his possexston. Hei it i was only a similarity. found in the Arctic America bors no i sonnection with Sir Thomas Smyths of three centuries back, Bir hemas Smythe. Again IT am confronted by that same Is It not more than a coincidence? 1 read on It was that rare old volume, “The Dar- ing Navigators of the XVIL Century” “When Henry Hudson set forth on | thst last fatal quest of the Borthwest route to the Indies Sir Thomas Smythe, then Governor of the Company, did “i present to him for a talisman for a | safe voyage the golden necklace which i had been given first to Sir Thomas by i His Majesty King James” I closed the book. Five minutes later 1 was once again gazing into the oid rocket for a cloe which sowhere met iy eyes. In final disgust | dropped rhe trinket from by fingers nnd It strock the stone tablet of my desk. I heard a sound as of the action of yu stiffened ining. Below this disk was a miniature in oil. The por. célaln was cracked and the calor faded, but the face was the fics of James And so, while the genial ghost of old Henry Hudson bowls niseping with kis merry trolls {ar In the depths of mortal. body, en- tombed In {ts r ty mausoleum now and forever sails the great Northern perchance, that open bighway to the East a a Then Faris’ Wiichery Wontd Yanbh, Some of our French friends over the fea compiain that Paris Is now the most expensive city in the world to live in; that the cost of many things bas risen to exorbitant figures on the Bat these fault. light to visit the gayest and most ar- tistic of capitals in larger numiers every year, and spend their money in Paris with more freedom and prodigal- ity every season. That wonderful City of Pleasure cannot be parsimo- pious or even frugal. tinue to allure the peoples of the enrth by surpassing her rivals in luxury and in splendor. If Paris should ever he. ome & cheap community her Witchery would seon vanish. ~-New York Tein une. ind eye it. I pehoy ooiared ; in lone Hoos from throat to feet and | slightly | : lonor of thelr vay with thelr families | the Hofiind the iace | puffed af the wriw : : ts placed a lining of white 1alfela. The i bed beloved face in this deep tint 8) compnsed of a sort of draws thread | tures grand indifference. helghis of i eraft of most i that ehables procure a perfect fitting i Black valyel | inte smbroidery iu very tinre and wristhands. The | and sweetly, {ribbon mn but | The tricket purity of the blood, Is ont of doors and it Is the duty of every one who wishes to be in good | healt to spend a certain amount of time ‘in the open alr. Good food is oy i pecessarily sxpensive food. Exercise | and rest shonid alternate and balance It ts quite possible to take toa mock exercise. and this side of the be declining in favor | introduced Bie must con- | Triangles on the Meus. How many women voi west wear triangles on their heads? examples of the marquise chapeau, a type of headdress distinctly becom. ing to “la belle Americaine” soft draped brime are hoth seen. The desire to set off het customer's good the child from the parent. | tl» one shows himself just ax he i to | I the close confident of all his moods looks. Taste ri RAHI cy A Smart Wark Gown, erghimiere Vind, meualin cloth timated nee the spliotine drape with ince SORES down the back of sleeves pmbiroidery, There is a perfedt rage for this on the continent. where entire gowns are created of it mounted over white taffeta alips What supreme daiutiness cannot the needa attain nowadays’! Traly i is & an to individualise, spe cinlize and Soneraily excel Cammon Sense Blanses. A great many blouses are made in old-fashioned socalled “English” em | broidery, the very open patterns for choke, mounted over Axlleta paie embroidery; collar at {ached to the bodice. pretty for co embroidery ghiovid be abbott two neh es while or two rows may be joined together. These washing blouses ave charming in conjunction with a blue | "WF clo give . pleagurs, apropos of the medal of honor which serge costume worn with 2 white straw Bretos hat tured up all around | snd trimmed with soft blue and white wati white wings resting under | Mule aad : Res : L only they knew she would bave re Co fased it tadmivation for the artist, sl] my ro The increasing number of women Pt for the woman. I who take & college pi the fact that within a year the Na , read, sent a hundred echoing visions | the brim against | the hair, Mores Women Gotag to Teflege. CONrse tional Association of Unllege Alumpae i bas added 1890 members to its rl los the victim bringing its iotal membership up to $000. Twenty two colleges are repre. | sented in the association. There is fo similar national organi. tion of college men, have found theirs a most useful body Ome of the ways in which {1 bay been most Leeful iw in opening several for foreign fellhvwashins : One of the nsscoelation’s standing committens Keeps a close watch on od: ue Bbe wan dead which the president of Bryn Mawr ig the chairman, has just presented (oo the annual meeting at Buffalo the re sults of a study of sin cases of ool leglate and noncollegiate women, de signed to show the Beneficial effects of 100 ry, ale WAR ry E noble and elevated of spirits, one of the artists most unrivalled. and cer geational legislation Another, health, al The Regutremmenis of Wenith, The requirements of health can be Ccontted on one band. suitable clothing clean'iness and exercise and test. The They are; Good alr. good food, first two requirements aft the blood, and us the blood circuates all over the Lody, including the brain, every part ig affected. Fresh alr affects the each ther. gue on must he guarded against gs well ns the other Women ag a rule do pot rew: Her regular work. 14 is lmpossl bie far ber to attend to the health and | weila‘e of her family if her own health suflery from overwork snd lack rest. American Sue HR. Orang» Wiossoma in Disfavnr, Orange biosscrng would brides. Formerly the Bower deemed an essential part of tollet, and none hut widows went the altar without wearing them. when a bride was married in her trav. Sung costume she Pitre 8 sprig grange blossom in the bodice of gown. Judging by the fashionable wed dings of the past few months Seow £Ver, k new order of things has he One distingaished by went to the allgr with a wreath myrtle, another with white clamaiia and yet another with Hiy of the valley, The reason given sor putting aside orange blossoms is that as ow io Hiv perfume caused faintness to the ls dies. As the artificial flowers so ner ly resemble the genuine article. this | van scarcely be said to account for the { "siump” in the puptial blossem. Love of change and a commendable wisa | crowng | with i : ai Es ah ta aheatred our children either in the gener ise of the ir angie sn liners | CXBibiting thelr perfections or thelr and the reat conform to the milliners : wenknensos. A certain Jovaity iy due | eetits a pound for Mocha and Java Not A notion that beirs the {mpress of | elegant motif iw a doft black gown of | or : ; oarried canning capabilities, one | colersd | OF : 3 & rainy spell snd after having rashiy ‘The sleeves are usually of | | : ’ : taken an open carriage from her house | | plain lawn, very finely tucked and of {the bishop tendency gathered into a { band of the embroidery. A sensible { plan, and the one much adopted : Iadien who play golf or tennis is to have a detachable coliar band of the have ie J @enis ml tis 50 vary Stak 11 for the peasaniey, and for thi sel ane | and that she should mever have left Pceld” save a, Claretie, by in meen | the paper was hrought to her But the women [he Cpapwe of | page, sat down by her pillow and read | (the asirle in a loud voles, eign universities to American women VORRR shook ber head, and her lips by first creating and then maintaining + eretted in boner of | thess | venirs of the altection with which she Cw Hom The freshest alr | preially popular, af: {wen appear to with Engl sh Bela was i the behdal Essen | Coie of Lisep LAR oi ats Th flowers were paaily worn, the hegvy | | ready made, row black velvet { with either narrow flower ribbon, gold Lor silver ribbon. wedding atire, which Is apt to become | A is probably ut the root | stereotyped, of the new fashion. : Mothers Whe Shaw on Children. fome vesty wellmenning mothers | are so ohliviens of the sentttivensss of & child that they speak of nls fanite | in his presence, and ask aivice about | | the best way to control Mm. in the | sama cool manner that they allude | These are |, wis stiacks of croup and disenss | remedies. But any one who has the | {insight to read what is paasing in the | mind of a little one thus obliged to The marquise has various modifica | hlige tions, triangalar brim and round fist | erown, and triangaiar git #till under torment would be both {pitiful and indignant at the situation. | OF ail things ot us avold exploiting | £8 lot 4 exp ¥1 tt 1 smn ahable to attend to 1 way of If the Ht it i a betrayal of hia trust for the mother to repeat his conlessions or describe to others what | ghe learned about Bim. Ah, that all moth a world caltivate in (heneeiveq the cady #elf polse and frm will whith wold enable them (0 puree the aven headioss of what other people say or want! A mathey needa some of na dors it matter to nature that prople slander and defame her, wurmor abont ber changeableness and {ways | that which is right is don, decry her They may find fanlt or praise, and the day comes when the crithe's cry is Bushed - Florence Hull Winterimrn, in the Woman's - Home Companion. How Nosw Nanhosr Med, In Harpers Inlea Claretie and critic he had been for many years: “It was while visiting Paris during to the station, thal the artist caught “and on ar riving at By, went to bed, never to rise ap again Ono might well sald that Rose Bonheur was made for the country. them for even a dav. At all events, she came back to fle amongst them, work, my beloved friend her I bad written in the Journal the Salon jury wished to give her. Into this article I put al} my I was ignorant of the fact that had relarned What say 1? £6 BiH, ring, "Bhe could no longer speak when But faithinl wservant, Mademoiselle Ross on The 4ving parted In & mat wan smile seamed fo exnress her thanks Wig in the morning. vision prew clouded. Gradually her That evening “And now | dedicate, crown or chanliet. for the monuinen: Rosa Bonheur few pages of sonvenirs-<son honored me. and of conversations far fain to remain llustrioss in the future, it has beds my privileges to know, to admire, and to love” The newest volis | are of mcumeling de soi» hemstitched, with large dots in white, ; A handsome clasp for 4 fur or other variety of mantle fa of pink enamel in the new fabricn for eve ning wear a white satin of salt lustre, brocuded with viglets in paturasl shades, 8 es pretty, Persian hand trimming is gti very Btitehed banda of sill hellishment of winter costiines, The modish weaves for ars delicately fugey, making 2 bold showing of smanthtiess, w the surface they look stiousy. hose wear boots prBedens rar talon thin Senin worn for Bw, suede ot frien evening and match the tet is to be soon mere and more in k ; R atpi ne, : vomby for the adr : aants and ib dog collars with pr gpecial desizn sel into the front strings of jel carried arcuud the rest of the collar 3 Pen the ars © be seen with Oeepalopsily for women SIH mimoet ention 3 Rr Ore _anpastive without them a a break ia the lines of " that is not desirable the hair, which are sold are to he found of nar ribbon oats Kpowr Too The result is a simple Mtt.e knot, but very pretty. hus | Psa Nothing reluten | | & pathetic incident attendant on the | death of Rosa Bonheur whose fiend | without complaint re | signed and resolute, just as she had iived through yo many years of hard | it was my mournful consolation | Jame having bean inipra dent anough to brave the cold at Paris, - Rosa Bopbens By . Bick! AR! she was of pulsunary congress | perceiving the | the 83 a new combinad RE RE i tH adulterate tl ormamentsd with a spread eagle in | 0 Miulterate the gold, suMicientiy. Every woman ; Bl try during the day to get a few minutes’ rest. even if [it interferes with © cuion and save the most money, tthe rale among certain Aros ro under In England if has been the r than 8 efaonti : ; i Sib pe i rn Jong tin oe preted from Mocha by the Jesults over #3 WE IOF a century and a half ago. and the quale ih ot Java, Eo : tant of Juve, | Hy of (he bedn produced (a very supe umes never know the difference The in wiendily failing | the government is grade : potinh weight in gold Take chileory: feel on the ooweir if taken in too large | and proprietors have serfongness that should the chicory be | { ieft out for a few days und only the | SOME STEADY DRINKERS BECOME FOND OF THE ACULTERANTS. : A Secret Absat O14 Government Siva - Very Small (Jusntity of Ir Hronght tn This Country o An I ndev.rausted Col. foo in Pronsmnesd Waurwly Unfivee Drink, An old friend asked the other day what kind of coffva | ped, anid oF bee ing informed that it was the awn) mixture of Avablgn Mocha and Masi heling Java Half and ball ar 40 centa a pound, offered (his amaring informa. tian: "I am obliged to have a swans mip of coffer in the morning. Without try to buy ths beat tn the market and for years have paid from 40 io 45 ong peo 1 learned a wecrel. A great den Gf the alleged Java we buy i big prises is Maracsibe, which A member of the Coffee exchanges | to hear “1am net surprised that Maracaile 1s often sald for Java apd probably the enn produdtion of Java off Indesd nally giving up the cultivation of cof. fee, finding the profits small in com parison witn former years, und in the near future the crop will be entirely in the hanas of private planters. Of late the business has been so unre mundrative that many coffee estates : bave heen turned into tes farme fmport abont BU.000.060 pounds of col We fee, and of this Wage guantity only about a million and a quarter pounds are Java. In 108% our supply of Juva war near £500 000 pounds.” This broker continues: “The dn mand for Java hes been sustained by its nmme. During the civil war a hag of Od Government’ was worth jis stay-at-homes were sipping small enps | of this treasure. which was measiored | out us carefully as {f it were the rar esi wine. The name has jived in the meraries of the old folk, and its po- teney has been the encouragement and excise for much fragd Even the | cheapest store hus pretended fo kien | on hand a supply of "Old Government’ for customers who would not think of | drinking anything else, and | doubt it There | themaelven from ‘Old Govern | ment.” “Because Maracaibo is cheap in prive | you must pot believe it & cheap’ ont fee, in the sense of inferiority. Wa import about 43.0008 pounds anpu- ally, 8 fraction over ® eents a pound. IMG the price was about 1 cent high- er. Rio will niways be onr cheap oof fee, 1 suppose, heeauss thers is more of 11, more of it 1108, 000 800 poiads Whe, it Think te 400 Hy (0 of houses mixed with chicory, which greatly improves the tastes, “Eteady coffee drinkers who are not able to obtain a satisfactory tirand of the bean becoms so food of certain adulterants that they demand them. it his an jnjusiovs of guantities, bot all that make a» upeciaity of caffes ee it, told me in all pure coffee fNikion be used thelr cus tomers will complain and threaten to BD elsewhere The adulteration of gress investigation Whew! 1? you you buy it! The French use canimel or burnt Sugar, a cast-off product of | the refineries And esvervbody brags | about ‘French coftes’ adulterations are roasted wheat and # rye and potato flour. acarms ground date stones, etc, Coffees sub. stitutes are flooding the market-—vere- | ale, sssences, eto, “It 13 a hard matter to aduiterate | cerffee, a sanll quantity ac a time, have the best ints. | 8 Croast the bean in order to sscape the | brown evening | iithough Fo heoown, about 25 have bITa leather | Satin shoes and wiiDpery : [ made poet delicious . lees in weighty, which ix considerible or Cvieth are also mech used in the em: | Ag ander roasted drink. Beans eooked coder lowe 15 chestnut brown they percent. and when the sirrect unfit to toa reshidish percent. whe tose about 20 hey become dare calor, they los pareent, by weight. In cere i gonth American countries, Colom for inatuice it becomes ® opal from It fs overy hulk aad stone and olesr, but has a bitter taste that wonkl not salt ga AN coffee snlmti- ciffon ie 3» hia, until maser coffee ioflee, “Oulles 8 podaon question abong it pitrivgent others Hisativse ¥osame people, Na fosdk And it Hamme invented with pots, $5 apiece. negra vook The patent oflce wm packed ste gone of which Yut at a camp coffes in Beane evperis sav boil say font bail it the efter: some for Be it as clear a8 crystal and as strong as alechol. While | was in Su. | wate; yeveral years ago, { drank got. FEE | fre fi opiomd , were tea. Brit it was as fine coffee as | has ever tasted, and certainly contained | Trg proportion of = caffeine. Tnis cught to open pew field My always parched her pwn coffee. She was one of the ‘Old Government Javed friends, and regarded every: grain a8 precious. The parching wae done is an ordinary sheet-iron baking pan, and when the dark-brown oolor was tained she glaged the beans with the whita of an egg That sas to keep fo the wtrength fTaen she crumbled the “hell to make the coffer settle i “} should Hike io own a large coffee plastation. it i alos business- goie tiemian's business. Several years ARO several friends of mine in Hamburg vrganized 8 company with § capital of $d 000 and purchased a plantstion at Juezaltenango, Guatemala. There Pwore afl wld 18.500 acres, from 2300 under ifaw | Peal shims costs only 15 conte a pond” Le 2000 feet above sea level. Some 008 D Thasse re rather fog While the army was making coffee out of burnt potatoes the | werd wore planted in coffes shrubs over 1.500.009 being set oul. Over S000 Indiuns were emploved as laborers men met with great success The plants were some of the stock m= rior, The finest 7 gies ure sont fo Londen and Hambarg, where they big prices. The sweepiogs and the unwashed ara shipped fo Sam Francisca An annssl profit was made Con the investment. 1 lock to ses great quantities of fine coffes grown in Niles aragis, Costs Rios, Hondorse, Salvae dor and Guatemala when the canal ig built. "~~ Victor Smith, in the New York Press, WHISKERS OF WICE, Eyebrows of Bears and Mumasn Eyelashes Used in One Trade. 3 The business done in mouse whis- - Kers is considerate this year, for they are used in the making of the wonder ful new fly for flshermen—~the ‘new Fray goat.” And they are expensive niearly two cents per whisker. Trout rise very much better at mouse whis ker files than at the same “guar” drosged in jinglecock backies, which look much like them. gee of them éver had an ounes of | the genuine articls In stosk ars coffees anite as good as Teva and 11 am glad the peaple are beglunig to | i WeRn In 1864 it wae luvelved to os at | 1a and there will continue Ww be | The Rravilian vrop ix over | ¥ E pounds That i hook that the fiy will take half a oi than the United States consumes Most tof the Rio used in public which | This is ; thes Coff an extra special iy. Among Other |. gveh-sought-after materad, it of the i right shade—golden vellow- <for all the | lighter suimon files, and one our] will make a dozen first-class fitex. There Ba thought herself of a way of escape. : She cloimied ag the unknown was passing. ¢ “A Ds Lio ye the bean is couked | The beverage farme | neat; Cand Thousands | of apparatus for making it have teen | riley rape the wedding bells rout we have seen an old | fire make the | a tomato can. The trade of artificial fy making i» the lightest-fingered business in the i | world, and it {8 pot one MAD OF WOES out of 660 who can learn to tie Mes | re tyers are remarkable for the | Beaty and delleaey of their hands, and {only the clevorest of fingers can deal with the “niggliog” work of knotting. : hints that can hardly be seen. o In making a fiy the earth haw to be ransacked for precisely the correst feathers and hairs, and one Sale wrong will make all the difference, Lntes to turn ont a fy, which somidets of La tiny hook, with winge of Egyptian C dove feather, legs of fox hair and a body of mouse fur, wound round with a thread of yellow silk. A covelessly mace fly will have pelther leg por “feeders,” but the trie expert adds the - lege and puts on a pair of nog “ele ers” of cal balr, white at the tips AM {these tiny details will be exnctly Cthelr places and so finely tad strong Gah and be none the worms, Bear's eyebrows, Being stiff, and ex actly the right shade, are used In 8 Cnewly invented fly thay is Killing quan. titles of salmon this voar. and thess : eyebrows come from tie Himalayan ‘brown bear and ‘cost about $1.50 per ; | set, There are always agents afl over the world searching tropical forests Tor the right birds to supply fiy hackles vhekiy restagrants | and one of the most sought after skins [ig that of the rare “greén screamer™ | an African bird, about the size of » fowl, which has a tiny bunch of feath- ers on each shoulder that are worth $15 , per bunch to the fiyMaker One of There is no limit to the enthusiasm % of an artiste fly tier. whe weill use hair from his own eyelashes to finish Baty's hair is are wavy salmon and trout fishers whe pay E3000 a year for thelr files alone. 3 afin nat! Enquirer. I the green bean, and nearly as difeulr roasted bean; but | ground coffee is dangerous. The poo- | ple who roast thelr awn Cagis Never Safe te Propse Marriaen : A servant who, in & moment of . F wiegriness with domestic duties, sald; “Rather than £0 un lke this. month | after month forever. I'll ask the frst {man who passes if he wants a wife!™ Her fellow servant challenged her to pat tie question to a man just thew | passing hy. The yYoRng Woman [wis aut prepared to be taken st her saddeniy, but. in despiration. be was Welsh, and hurriedly ew cigtan gwralg arnoch ochwi?™ un owant a wife?) “Oea” (yes) very unexpectedly replied the youog man. who, also, mirabile dict, hailed from the Principality, and with Celtie sprightliness followed into the hall the } : : Chinshing girl, who had ls upon hess tutes nck caffeine. and caffeine is what ing the familiar word, The maid & “4 daughter. was buxom and the swain was an industrious spibtious young deaier, with mromising prospects, and soon “mer “London Fron Lan AC, $ Worried Him, “My wife.” said the thoughtful man, “always kisses me very affectionately [when | am going away for a trip.” Some foreigners pre. | o make it in a saucepan, and they | “Thi ought to please you" "Well, 1 don’t know about that. § i notice she never kisses me so affec : tionataly whem 1 come back."—Ché | cago Host. It takes an expert tier only 15 mine ; birds only supplies feathers enough for hall a dozen floes. Numbers iis wl nd i of men spend thelr lives—and lose ground coffee (x a fine subject for con- | them. toon collecting the right kind 3 . could only know what you get when | { of Nyus for Sv featur,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers