BP I ! independent journal devoted to the : nt'tr wts nf Reynoldsville. Published weekly. One Dollar per year strictly in advance. Me VOI m. REYNOLDSVILLE, PENN'A., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, IW. NUMBEB 11. I, Wi'Vil t?,-v - .7 hut All Impoi You have often heard" people remark, f I were ever to lmilil I would plan my kithroom irst and would not put all my That's good ronimon sense JSAi it same time do it better than you anticipated it could be done for even more money. We have a booklet "Modern Nome Plumbing" which will show you how to arrange your bathroom, kitchen and laundry plumbing with "?hltdatsr Baths and one piece Lavatories, the best plumbing equipment in the world. Call, write or phone for a copy. It is free. Ilw I Tl lM I I 1 I 1 1 I I 1 1 i in- i.; iiiwii t f-A .V-cnis rr tin- ivJ (.rMMKIiVU.I.B IMMNK. KrtT L. M. SNYDER Practical Horscshocr and Gen eral Blacksmith. Ki'im rlnu' of nil kind promptly nnd ciirnfiil Ij done. Wood simp lit connection. Wlicn you need your tire pel. cull itiitj have II (tunc with the Solum Tiro Setter, "ilie machine tlmt iloos It right. Komemher the nliiru JACKSON ST.. NEAK K I FT 11. AT t I i Leech. Bros, Planing Mill. wkst Ueyn oldsville, you will find Window Sash. Hoods, Fkamhs. Kloohixh, STAIR WORK Rough and Dkksskd Lumhkr, Etc., Ktc. Givo us your order. Our prion hi'o reasonable. LEECH UUOS., r ROPRIETORS. tMs , JEFFEHSOX MACARONI F.tVTOIlY KRYNOLItVILLI PUNN'A. One of the larcost miuvironl factories In the stuto. Orders mint. O. O. P. or on flood reference anywhere In the Jutted Slates. Also whnlesalo agents for the well known brand of Premium Flour. C. A.I. M AKIN AUO, proprietors E XECUTKIX' NOTICE. Estata ot Albert Reynolds, late of thp Borough of Reynoldsville, Deceased. Notice Is hereby given that, letters testa mentary upon the estate of the said decedent have been granted to the undersigned. All persons Indebted to said estate are requested io make payment, and those havln.r claims or demands against the same will make them known without delay to Jt'l.lA A. lUYKOl.ns, Executrix, r,. Reynoldsville, Pa. Cl.MK.HT W. Flyhm, Attorney. portant Bathroom. money into the parlor with s 11 sentiment, for the bathroom is the most important of nil the household. It's the Mecca of cleanli ness, health and refine ment, and nowadays many homes are judged by their bathrooms. We would like to help you plan your bathroom and believe that we could surprise you by putting in n bathroom for you at a much less cost than you might expect and at the m tiiitMiiL; W. t- w i ii'-" W-iier System. UKY.SOMlSVII.I.E. I'A . Tired-Out Women. Fngged-out women, sutlerlng from back ache, uimble to stand lotiif or walk far, or Willi symptoms incident to the weaknesses fieeulliir to the sex HueU women need a friend o tell them tlmt many sueti symptoms are the result of ph.vHleul conditions thut can lie remedied only by building up the strength. This building up ran be done most ell'eet unlly with Celery King. It cleanses the stom ach and howeln, giving restful sloop and tut appetite of girlhood. For stila by Hoylo-Woodwiird Drug Co. JOHN C. HIUST, CIVIL AND MINING I3NGINEE, Surveyor and nmughtsnmn. Office iu yn dicale building, Main street. L. .JOHNSTON, JUSTICE OP1 THE PEACE. Office four lours from Uoss House, West Keyuoldsvllle, I'a. pitl ESTER HKOsil UN DEUTAKEKS. Black and whUu funeral ears. Mlun street. Keynoldivllle, I'a. ti. UUGUES, UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING. The U. H. Burial Longuo has been tested and found all right. Cheapest form of In surance. Secure a contract. Near I'ulillc li'imutaln, Ituynoldsvllle I'a. Y)t H. YOUNG, AUCHITECT. Corner Grant and Fifth sta., Keynolds vlllu, I'll. WINDSOLl HOTEL, Philadelphia, Pa. rtetweon 12th and i:)th 8ts on Filbert St. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter minal. Five minutes walk from the l'enn'a It. R. Depot,. European plan JUKI per day and upward. American nbin ;.no per day, Prank M. .vheililev. Miiuuger. ENTRAL STATE NORMAL SCHOOL. , LOCK HAVEN, PA. J. K. Fllcklnger. Principal. Pall term of IS weeks begins September II. doing first -class work, professional and acad- i-iiiic, were never neiier Mian now. lis grad uates are required to do a full year's teach Inu In the training school. Its faculty liar, the best American ami European training, llnlldings nm tern. Colli ire lileniiriLt.irv pi'tnient. I.ix'aliun unexcelleil. Fine Win- I -luni. F.xpiMises raoilorate. I'ree tuiiinii to ir..peclive teachers. Address for II his trated catalogue, the Principal. WANTED- BY CHICAGO MAM'KACTI R Ing lloue, person of trustworthiness and somewhat familiar with local territory as as sistant in branch office. Salary SIS paid weekly. Permanent posh Inn. No Investment required. Business established. Previous experience not essential to engaging. Ad dress, Manager Brunches, 333 li.-urlHirn St.. Chicago. .ucrlbe for The -X-Star j If you want th News 1 I in V. ' ; ANTIQUITY OF UI1EAD THE STAFF OF LIFE A3 PREPARED BY THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS. Primitive Methods of Urlntllnat Wbent and Unking tli l.nnf The Ilreml nf the Assyrians First Water I'onpr Mills In Niirwsr. Itrond Avns luude of fnlrly respect able qtitillty Ioiib belore tlie advent of the duyg of Hiblieal elironoloi;y. Byn clti'otiotis with the development and progress of gt'liidltig stones wns the Inilifo vciiiput lu the uiuiiiier of milking hrend. .MeiHSkomer, to whose delvltiKS into Rtihjects ou rare proKt'ess much present knowledge Is due, discovered, says the Flour Trade News, nu eight pound lout of evenly crushed Rrnlu aud well baked tmilor conditions that mark Its iimniil'iicture as long before the ad vent of innn as he Is today. This loaf litis the appearance of having been been baked before an open lire, the muss of dough thrown on n flat stone before the open blaze and turned until each side had been subjected to the heat. It Is hardly up to the standard of our present bread, but the men of those days were not linlcnl. The ancient Kuyptians were the pi oncers In extensive gralii growing, and bread making. Their grains were wheat, bailey aud douru, uud were much like the grains of toduy. The KgyptiaiiH were really the best "farm ers" of which we have any coherent record. They harvested their wheut Dve months after It wns put lu the ground and bound It Into sheaves much like the hand bound sheaves of today. Their thrashing was done by driving cattle over the grauary floors. The old style of grinding obtained with the Kgyptlaus, the women usu ally being required to perform the work, but they had discovered the power of fermented yeast cells, as lu peveral Instances leavened bread has been found tinting to tills era. It Is also with the FJgyptians that the pro fessional baker first springs Into no tice In the world. There Is picture writing ou severnl tombs that shows bake shops long before the time of the dynasty. The story of Joseph con serving the abundance of the fat years for use during the seveu lean years shows how important grain mid bread stuffs were to hitter day Egyptians. Thanks to the art of the Assyrians and the enduring qualities of bronze, wo have records to show how this an cient people prepared their bread. Ap parently the Assyrians were a most abstemious people and little given to riotous feasting, even in the celebra tion of victories for their armies. On the bronze gates of Balawat are found engravings depleting the warlike doings of Khalmaneser II., who ruled and wnrred lu the years from 860 B. C. to S25 B. C. One engraving shows the women of a tribe baking bread! great piles of bread, for the benefit of return ing rii'torluv.3 soldiers. The Assyrians also knew how to raise grains, their hydraulic machines and aqueducts showing how they appreciated the vultio of Irrigation. Bread figured prominently In the his tory and religion of the ancient Jews. Their first cereals were only rye, wheat uud barley, and they begau their use by eating (hem raw after the fash Ion of primitive man. This is the normal course of progress with ell peoples that early become extensive grain eaters. The grain grew wild at first and was enten by the naked sav age only as one of the leguminous plants that gave him a precarious sus tenance. Gradually, seeing the strength obtained by those who fed exclusively upon a grain diet, man, with his Intel ligence Increasing, began to care for the patches where the desirable plants grew, aud from this It was not a far step to the careful cultivation of grain. Each family of the Jews had a mill for Itself, differing In this from Its con temporaneous races, where the grain was ground In a community mill. Bo Important was the millstone In the economy of the Jewish home that Moses laid down the law, "No man shall take the nether or the upper mill stone to pledge, for he tuketh a man's life to pledge." This, the phrase "to pledge," would Indicate that the pawn shop was not unknown at even this early stage of the world's career. To come down to more recent days, the old time residents of the Scandina vian countries in their time stood forth most prominently as grain users and bakers. Women were principally in charge of the preparation of the grain and of the bakeries. The grinding was done in mills run bv hnrsennwer. -wind ! or even by largo dogs. Soiuo of the first water power mills known of were in Norway. The bnk lug here was usually done In ovens constructed nnd maintained by the towns und villages. People with grain to be baked into bread came to the bakeries, where wouieu received the same, baked it and; returned the bread to the owner with tithe taken out for the baking. The Oflio seeks the Mas. Hoax Do you believe the office should seek the man? Joax The tax office generally does. Philadelphia Itecord. To willful men the injuries that they themselves procure must be their tchooluinsters. Shakespeare. REMARKABLE DUELS. Fantastic Contests That Tried Mea'i Nvrv anil lotirsge. Two heavy weights suspended from H beam by slender cords were Ute weapons chosen by two rmislnns nam' ed Purler and Volslu to terminate their rivalry for the hand of a pretty uclress. Ileiumlh a weight each took his stand, there to remain until the breaking of one or the other of the cords should decide Ills fate. Eor more than four hours they remained motion loss, when the cord attached to Du rier's weight snapped, and the ponder ous mass of metal, falling upon the man beneath, struck him to the ground. Kortiltialely, however. It just missed his head, and he escaped with no worse damage than a severe shock and a bro ken collar bone. Somewhat .prolonged was the duel wnged a few years back at a well known Yorkshire seaside resort, to de cute which of two young men should surrender his claim to the hand of a local publican's daughter. The rivals both prided themselves upon (heir na tatory prowess, so It was agreed that he who should first miss his morning's swim lu the open should wlthdruw bis pretension to the lady's hand. For nine months and more each took bis matu tlnal swim, but at length there came day of such furious storm (hat one turned faint hearted and refused to dare the tempestuous billows. The oth er, however, at considerable risk, dash ed Into the foaming sea, and, although he was badly cut aud bruised, emerged a triumphant wooer. Another aqueous duel occurred some years since, the location being the lake of Cetieva and the contestants n Hwlss mi moil Zellner aud one Lenoir, a Frenchman, who agreed that be who could remain the longest beneath (be surface of the water should without In terplion or hindrance from the other be permitted to pay his addresses to the daughter of a wealthy tradesman. The rivals dived simultaneously, uud more than two minute elapsed ere Zellner's bead nppeared above the sur face. There was no slgu, however, of his rival, nfler whom when yet an other two minutes had sped a couple of onlookers dived and succeeded In recovering his senseless body. Hestora tlves were successfully applied, and on Lenoir's recovering consciousness he wits acclaimed the victor. At the time of Hussl's forty day fast at (lie Westminster aquarium, some years ago, a couple of young Mancunl aus ngreed by emulating his example to decide which of them should first propose for the hand of a girl who bad hitherto regarded them with n seem ingly Impartial affection. Four days was sufllclent ordeal for one, who, re fusing any longer to abstain from food, left the field clear to his rival, whoso proposal, .however, met with scant consideration from the lady, who declared that she would not Intrust her future to the keeping of such a fool as he had proved himself. Needless to say his rival's reception was equally glacial. During a very severe winter In the last century a couple of Germans, na tives of Dresden, resolved for love of a woman to fight a duel to the death. Very fantastic was the method em ployed. Without provision of any kind and clad only In the lightest of clothes, they went out Into the country, there to remain without shclteruntil one or other of them should succumb to the cold. Three days after their departure a wretched object crawled back Into the town. Ten miles distant his rival, frozen to death, lay beneath the falling snow. London Tit-Bits. Ther nought Darning- Houses. One of the strangest businesses In ancient ltome is mentioned by Juvenal in his "Satires," and we henr of it also from historians. It consisted of buy ing houses on fire. The speculator hurried to the scene, attended by slaves carrying bags of money and others carrying tools, Judged the chances of salvage and made a bid to the distracted house owners, who were glad to accept anything as a rule. The bargain struck In all baste, this earli est of fire assurers set Iris slaves to work and secured what be could. Sometimes even he put out the flames and so made a coup. " It was a busi ness for capitalists, but the poorest who speculated in a small way could hardly lose If he had presence of mind enough to grasp the chances. Thus Cato the elder, and, above all. Crassus laid the foundations of their wealth. The lnttcr bad a passion for such gambling. He gradually collected a force of carpenters, masons aud such artificers slaves, of course which reached 500 men. Not only did he buy houses on Ore, but also, enlarging upon the common practice, he made a bid for those adjoining which stood In danger. His proposals were commonly wel come, so helpless were the people and so great the peril. By this means Cras sus became the greatest owner of house property in Rome. nis Mistake. Mr. Sllmsky I don't believe the elty water Is safe. I notice it has a clouded appearance this morning and tastes sort of milky and Mrs. gtarvem That glass contains milk, Mr. 81lmsky. Hie water Is at your left. And, by the way, your board bill was due yester day. Cleveland Leader. "HERE IS THE TRAIL." tana I1 sell by ludlnn Tribes and White Hunters. First among the trail signs that aro used by Indians and white hunters and most likely to bo of use to the traveler, says a writer In Country Life In America, are ax blazes on tree trunks. These may vary greatly wllb locality, but there Is one everywhere lu use with scarcely tiny vnriollon. This Is simply (he white spot nicked oft by knife or ax uud meaning, "Here Is the trail." The OJIhwuy-s and oilier woodland tribes use twigs for a great many signs. The hanging broken twig, like (he simple blaze, menus, "This Is the trail." The twig "clean broken oft and laid ou the ground across the line of inarch means, "Break from your straight course and go In the line of the butt end," and when an especial warn ing Is meant the butt Is pointed toward the one following the trail and raised Rimiewlmt lu tt forked twig, if the butt nf Hie twig were raised and pointing to the left It would mean, "Look out, camp," or "Ourselves or (he enemy or the Ritmo we have killed Is out tlint way." The old buffalo hunters had an estab lished signal (lint is yet used by moun tain guides. It Is as follows: Two shots In rapid succession, an In terval of live seconds by the watch, (hen one shot, means, "Where are yotiV" The answer, given at once nnd exactly (he same, means: "Hero I ntn. What do yon want?" The reply to this may be one shut, which means, "All right; I only wanted to know where you were." But If the reply repeals the first It means: "I am in serious trouble. Como its fast as you can." PROUD OF HIS WORK. John Met nllniiiili Made ( hairs lie fore He lleemne an Actor. Of the thousands who admired the nctlng of John .McCtilloiigli few were aware that at sixteen he could read, but could not write, and that ut eight een he knew absolutely nothing of lit em lure, perhaps not even the name of the great poet of Avon, whose In terpreter be afterward became. Iu after life McCullotigh used to speak gratefully of an old clialrtnaker, under whom he worked, for teaching blm two tilings "chalniiiikliig ami Shakespeare." In bis periods of con viviality the old chalrtiiaker was ac customed to spout Shakespeare to young McCullotigh, giving n somewhat Imperfect Imitation of Forrest's acting. It was this that turned McCiilloiigh'a thought from clinlrmakliig to the stage. 'et In all his after years McCullotigh was proudest or his early craft. On one occasion, nt the height of his popu larity, he was the guest of n wealthy riiiladelphian, In the midst of the talk after dinner the tragedian glanced at u chair In the room, went over to It and, turning It bottom up, said to bis amazed host: "I thought so! That's ouo of my chairs!" And he seemed prouder of the fact that the chair bad lasted so long, be cause it was so well made, than ho was of bis histrionic success. Saturday Evening Tost. Customs Iteil Tape. Several tins of paint wore found among the luggage of un Englishman who was traveling to Monaco. He was iu charge of a racing craft nnd Intended to use the pigment to touch tp the vessel after Its long railway Journey. The French customs officials, however, took exception to the paint on the ground that It contained dutiable spirit, whereupon the traveler argued that he Intended bringing it back on leaving the country. Asked how he was going to bring it bock, he replied, "On the sides of the boat." Even this plea did not sutllce, the authorities ar guing tlint the spirit would have evap orated. The Great Assam Earthquake. After the great Assam earthquake which occurred on June 12, 1807, the earth tremor went on continuously for several days. It was estimated that there were 200 shocks a day for a few days after June 12, and, though these had diminished to twenty or thirty a day by the middle of July, the people were accustomed for nt least two years after the earthquake to a daily shock. These after shocks were the residual effects of the first big disturbance and had nothing dangerous. In their charac- The Wonl "Tram." Residents of Orent Britain call street cars trams. The term is old. Three hundred and fifty years ago an Eng lishman left the following Item In his will: "To the amendlnge of the high waye or tram from the weste ende of Bridgegnlt, In Barnard cnstle, 20 shil lings." This "tram" was a plank road. Whether It was the ancestor of the tram of today or merely an etymolog ical relation Is not quite clear. The forefather of all the trams was a Scandinavian word meaning a log. In time tram In Scotland came to mean a beam, a cart shaft or the c.-trt Itself, and perhaps It Is to this rather than to the tram that was a plank In a log road that the modern sense traces its rlgln. At any rate, etymologists af- f rm that the derivation from the name of Benjamin Outram, who Improved rail trucks about 1SO0, Is absurd. KILLING THE SEALS. AIitots Done In the Murnlna-, When the Temperature Is Lowest. John Scudder McLaln In his "Aluska" thus describes the business of securing seal skins: "The killing Is always early in tho morning when the totnper- uttire Is lowest. It was 5 o'clock in the morning when we left tho ship. The killing season was practically over, but tho agents had arranged a drive for our benefit. The seal lie along the rocky shores, the bulls or 'beachmiisters,' as they are called, and tho cows and (heir pups occupying the locks nearest the water, whllo the bachelors, the young unmaled males, are forced to go further up tho beach As only the bachelors are killed for llielr skins, tills natural division fa cilitates the work of tho drivers in making their selections. Two or three drivers slip In and cut out, as the cowboys would say, a bunch for the day's killing. They proceed to make a great noise by shouting, slapping pieces of boards together and beating on tin cans. The seals aro frightened, and tlie squirming, huddling mass Is gradually forced away from the rook cry. "Now, hero (bey come, bleating like n Hock of sheep, ambling in their awk ward fashion through the tali grass. The younger males aud the few fe males which tlie drivers will not try to separate from the herd until tho kill ing ground Is reached offer no resist ance, but the two or three old bulls show light nnd rush nt tlie drivers with surprising speed and agility when pressed too hard. As they are driven to the killing grounds their gnlt Is a sort of canter, us they raise themselves ou their llippers and pull their heavy bodies up. They repeat this movement rapidly for a hundred yards aud thou fall, panting nnd exhausted. The moth od of killing adopted inflicts less suf fering on the victims than any other that could be devised, but one who has witnessed Ilie operation will not wish to see It again. "Those who do the killing are na tives who are expert at the business, each armed with a stout club about five feet long and three inches thick at the heavy end. They cut out twenty or thirty of the struggling creatures and, striking each one on tho bead, crush tlie soft, thin skull. Death Is In stantaneous. As the club falls with a (hud upon each graceful head those that hnve escaped the first crushing blows seem to become conscious of their impending fate and their appeal ing eyes, soft as those of a deer, their plaintive cries and theh- Ineffectual ef forts to escape would certainly stay the arm of any not schooled by years and generations to do this work. The stranger to the scene Is forced to turn away, though he must admit that not a throb of conscious pntn follows the descent of the heavy club." ItRna-e of the Honeybee. "The rango of honeybees Is but little understood," said an authority. "Many suppose that bees go for miles In quest of nectar, while others think they go only for n short distance. It may be curious to many to understand how any one can tell bow far the bees may fly, but this Is simple when understood. "Years ago, when the Italian bees were first Introduced In the r'nltcd States, these bees, having marks dif ferent from the common bees already here, were easily distinguished, and after any beekeeper had obtained tho Itaiiitu bees they could be observed nnd their range easily noticed. If bloom is plentiful close to where bees are located they will not go very far, perhaps a mile In range, but if it is scarce they may go five miles. "Usually about three miles Is as far as they may go profitably. Bees have been known to go as far as eight miles In a straight line, crossing a body of water tlint distance to land." Milwau kee Free Tress. The Power of a Voice. Stories abound to Illustrate the power possessed by great speakers and act ors to stir the emotions by the tones of the voice. It is said of the elder Booth that ho brought tears to the eyes of a company upon one occasion by the way in which he uttered the opening words, "Our Father," of the Lord's Trayer. A story is told of the great Irish ora tor. O'C'onnell. An attack bad been made upon him in the house of com mons. When O'Connell arose to reply, his lofty brow was black with thunder and his arm uplifted as if to strike. Then, checking himself, he said, "But the gentlemnn says he loves Ireland." Lowering his tone to the rippling mur mur of a summer brook, he continued, "I have no words of bitterness or re proach for any man who loves Ire land." The pathos in the fragmentary utterance of the last word brought tears to tho eyes of many veterans of the bouse. One Bird Barred. "Can we keep birds?" inquired Mr. Younghusbaud, who was looking at the Hut. "Well, you can keep canaries and such birds as them," replied the genial landlord, "but there's one bird barred from the.e apartments." k'What bird is that?" "Stork." Louisville Courier-Journal THE AMAZING MINK. Hotv Does This Animal Succeed In Terrorising the Hahbltt The mink Is as slow a runner as tho rabbit Is swift. I have seen minks run several times, and their peculiar, meas uring worm gait lakes them along1 about as fast as a man can run. Tiic rabbit cannot only go with Incredible; speed, but enn course for hours. And yet the mink Is able to ruu down (lie swift rabbit. The rabbit seems to give up the race; it woultl look almost as If some unknown law of nature made him the prey of minks, as If ho felt that was his destiny, mid did not try to escape from It. In the eases we ob served the Jump of tho rabbit grew shorter aud shorter until it became lit tle more than a helpless hop. Tho marks In the snow Indlcaled that the mink was not being dragged by the rabbit, but that the mink ditl not over take Ids victim until tho latter, for no apparent reason, had given up the race. And yet n fox seldom catches a rabbit, and probably never In open running. Then It would seem as If these blood Backers have some power of which wo know nothing. As It Is, only one expla nation can be offered why so slow run ning an animal as a mink or weasel can catch as swift an animal as a rabbit. We know tlie mink does not tire out the rabbit by following him leisurely, maintaining his slower gait relentless ly, never giving his victim a chance (o eat, and so by (he slow, sure process of work and worry wearing out poor Bunny. Hence It must be that the rabbit has, in common with other small rodents, that terrible, demoralizing or panicky fear of all the weasel family a fear so great and bewildering that once a mink is on Us trail the rabbit becomes paralyzed with It, and, In stinctively knowing that bo cannot es cape by running In n bole, gives up. If this is so, then there Is a law In nature that we do not fully timler Rtnnd, a law akin to tlint which makes a rabbit n coward and a woodchttck brave to his dying gasp. A ferret put Into a gray squirrel's hole was at onco driven out by the lndlgnnnt squirrel. A rabbit has as sharp teeth as a squir rel, and surely might defend Itself ns well as a young woodchuck, yet tho latter will face unflinchingly two dogs and a man. After his back Is broken and he Is helpless he will hold up his bead and whistle a fierce defiance, yet a rabbit will not even try to es cape apparently from an animal It could Just as well elude as not. It seems almost as If the rabbit wero meant for food for other animals, na ture having given him great reproduc tive powers and unlimited food, and then saddled blm with some strange fatality that makes him play his part in spite nf himself ' in the general scheme of wild life. Outing. The F.nsiish Royal Plate. The royal plate at Windsor Is gener ally reckoned to be' worth about 2,000, 000, nnd It Is no unusual thing at a state banquet at the castle to have plate to the value of 500,000 In the room. There are two Btate dinner services, one of gold and one of silver. The gold service was purchased by George IV. and will dine 120 persons. The plates alone of this service cost over 12.000. On state occasions there are usually placed on the dining tablo some very beautiful gold flagons cap tured from the Spanish armada, which are now of course of priceless value, while the grent sliver wine cooler, made by Ituudell & Bridgo for Goorgo IV. and weighing 7,000 ounces, always adorns one corner of tho apartment. As sideboard ornaments there aro pretty trifles In the way of a peacock of precious stones, valued at 50,000, and a tiger's head from India, with a solid Ingot of gold for its tongue and diamond teeth. This wonderful col lection of plate is crown property, which practically means that it be longs to the country. Execution nf Louis XVI. The crowd which surrounded the car riage closed around me, bore me along to the place of execution and placed me, so to speak, In front of the scaf fold. I beheld the appalling spectacle. The crime had been hardly accomplish ed when a cry of "Vive la nation!" roso from the foot of the guillotine. It was repeated by the bystanders; It passed through tho crowd. This cry was fol lowed by silence most wonderful and most profound. Shame, horror and fear already hovered over the wide expanse. I passed over it a. second time, carried along by the flood which had brought me hither. Every one walked, slowly and scarcely ventured to look in his neighbor's face. Tho rest of the day was spent in deei stupor, it bad spread over the whole city. I was obliged to go out twice and found tlie streets deserted and silent. The assassins had lost their wonted daring. Tlie public grief made Itself felt, and they quailed before it Mem oirs of Chancellor Pasquler. Ethel Are you sure h ti.iu nwr loved before? Edith Yes. ne told me to go round to the Jeweler's nnd nick eot any ring I wanted-Judgr. Every wise man has a parachute, or prudence attached tu his balloon of tbtuiasm.