THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO. PA. Blackmail is Carried on in the Oil Fields of Russia. VALUE LIFE CHEAPLY. Receipts Given by Revolutionists to Their Victims The Money Ac counted Fcr, Too The Counter Sys tem of Assassination J'igandage Out.ide the Town. "You parasite!" When you open a letter at Ureal. Cr.st and find that written at the top lu raJ of "Dear Sir,'' or 'My darlins Ijvv," your attention is iuimtdiau:y trawn to the contents. lint in LaUn, if you huppen to bo the hard working taanast r of a rich tt i 1 with Kits of welis jieldi-s some Iu'.khi barrels of oil ai;ci e eve.y ft lily-four hours you w ill not U- to tu'i' .1 surprised as at home. You v. iA l.:;;.v fli once what U ecn.i:; jof.r first thougiu will to a v yo'ir batiUt r's. s ;;. a w..;e.- a.. J il.e is'ew York tjtiu. "our n;-'euts," the lottt-r rir-s .:.. v.. tlu.ush solicit ir.jj the fawr of : c :r esteemed crdeis, "will cuil :i vc- . i:;,rrow afii t r.oi ii at 5 o't ',:..;. . : fi ,v.g you nice tiiiU'. you ' lo; in at the hau'.i Ur.-re th. a" be l ack again, "isnJ you v,i:: ; . i tt.c.M the sum of 17,0. H.ofk! .-.. reuse you will be killed tu:.r..: r v. ... t;e:.t day. Should you betray or fc tits or give the sniai'.ejt hir.t to t'r.- ;;)llce the whole of your f.iii.l. v.. i share your fate. fclsntil fceuled, for the comiuittee." The seal is a rubber stamp in icJ, e: i.:eti::ies. bearing the words, "So. ial euioratic Federation," sometiiiKJ "Anarchist Commune." Tl.e sum demanded varies consider ably. I think it is seldom more than i.-dd, for one must be reasonable in tiuse matters; and usually it Is ices. have known a popular and capable English manager to get oft with 5, a ludicrous exchange for life. But when the agents ring at the door and ask the servant If you arc at borne and disengaged the only thing to do is to pay unless, of course, you happen to be on the verge of suicide and wish to save yourself trouble and expense, or think the world would be all- the better without the kind of lamily you have produced. For there is no pretence about the threats. Refusal or betrayal means teat a, probably within the day. It has been proved over and over again. The government is too busy with the troublesome and expensive task of shooting its political oppo nents or sending them to Siberia to undertake the protection of common jiiace citizens who have no perilous notions about freedom. So the para Lire pays, valuing his life as even j-urasites will. The agents have given k!m a formal receipt and politely de part. In some cases a formal account f expenditure is afterward forwarded 1;' post, giving the items to which the contribution has been devoted. Of course, the men are not really anarchists at all, for the anarchist is the Salvationist of revolution and will die rather than kill. Nor are tney '. Sal Democrats, except in name. Some may be genuine political revolu tionists, but most com:? of the class t'.iai always hang3 about a gambling mining city like Baku and they use t political opportunity just la the U:ren path of livelihood. I have more sympathy personally with another method of brigandage which flourishes in the wild and dts e;t country outside the town, where caravans of camels go plodding into Ax:: and members of the English ctv.b go killing things for fun. Seme time ago three of these sports Deti had traveled out some twenty ui'.es for a week when they were Approached by the Tartar chief of a r.e'.ghborins village, who captured, then with great politeness and held them to ransom for 100 apiece. At first he demanded four times that amount, but when they represented that they were only cltrks after all aud had relatives depending on their salaries he desplayed great considera tion and concern at their unhappy lot and allowed one of their number to return to Baku for the 6ruuner sum, while the others were hospitably en tertained in his own house. When the money was brought he r.ot only handed back 4 apiece so that they might travel first class on leeching the railway and enter the town in style, but gave them permis sion to shoot over his country in future, making them life members of hU hunt. It was an action that must cereal to our own game preserves at home mid his whole method of re itr.'.inlng poachers appears to me far J. referable to theirs. On the day of my arrival, seeing iHfople tunning for their lives In front cf the Metropole, I naturally suspect- J the police, were at work, but on approaching I ouly found two men 1,-ing on the pavement, shot by eac'a other lth revolvers. I thought it an Armenian-Tartar feud, but hearl a." t.rward the cause was an old family mdetta. between two Tartars. ONE WHO NEVER CAME W No Trace Was Left by Swede Who At tempted the Pole In Balloon. "The One Who Never Came Back' was a , newspaper headline,, of las. week In recounting the various expedi lions to the north pole. Of the long list of those who have braved the frigid terrors of the arctic seas in the Interest of science or to grasp the wlll-o'-the-wlsp of fame there are end Icps talcs to stir the souls of men and arouse sympathy, but It Is the chatter dealing w ith "the one who never came back" from which the world turn j with a shudder. It Is twelve years I now since S. A. Andree tnndu his Car- ing and, as It has proved, foolhardy I atten.pt to sail over the north pole I In a baloon. How he perished, t.nd I when nnd where. Is one of the secrets j locked In the Icy fastnesses of the re ' cion of everlasting cold. What terri ' Uo suffering, what horror of lonell : ness and des-pair be.et him before he s erished, is dreadful to contempla'o. j Andree was a Swede. He v.na a i c:i;bcr of the Swedish tnternation.il polar expedition of 15J rt:d IS'A .m l , . n aeronaut of considerable skill. He ' had his own ideas about re. a-!. '.;", Mi' I ,n..l of the age. o had observed , 'iai at certain seasons of the ye ir r. i -uauy current of air flowed to:i:ri 1 ';e IV r'h po!e. What coald be v.vler ; Auil'. ce. than iY.r a v,-t r; d balloon to set sail in this c.;.'.t. ' nir, float over the pole, dev. v,'. '..e oVervations, and then lloat a-vi; r .in to carry the word to a wait!;... i !d. i' .-re-ate as appeared the r.z.Cr. Andree four.d cm wnn v, . i ;Ur.g to aid hint In carrying it ; . 'ven more, he found two men v.a;. ere v.il'ins to take the s'.r::c; ;..vi3 with hint and stake their l.vc or fame and adventure. 0.car, late King of Sweden. v.v :i.fng tho.-e who gave their f.ippor. i the venture. It was in 13 tlia ::ilree went north to Danes 1;-1. v. d. "pltzbergen. and made preparat m f the Journey. A balloon house wan i-iilt, and the big bag was Inflated. I: as found, however, that the gas c. r.ped more rapidly than was expec--il, and the trip was postponed a yiar. Two Swedish war vessels escorted t'.". 'x; edition to Spitzbergen the follow ng June. Experiments had shewn that the gas w ould keep the balloo i afloat thirty days. The plan was to liave the balloon drift along nbout $00 i'eet above the surface of the ice. Of men, freight, food, and ballast the craft carried a weight of about Eve tons. A favorable breeze was awaited. At last, July tl. 1897. it came. The ropes were cut and the balloon shot upward. Suddenly, for some reason never known, it dropped rapidly al most to the surface of the sea. Bal last was thrown out by the men oa board, and the balloon arose again and sailed away over the mountainous isl and of Vogelsang, an altitude of 1,500 feet being necessary to make the pas sage. When the watchers on shore and on the war vessels lost sight of the bal loon It was the world's last glimpse o: Andree and his two intrepid compan ions. Three message buoys dropped by Andree the day the start was made have been found. The. latest wa3 dat ed at 10 o'clock that night. An alti tude of 82 degrees, 8 degrees from the pole, had been reached at that time. The brave aeronaut reported that all was well. But of the ultimate fatu ol the balloon and its passengers search ers have found never a sign. Jukes Family Record. One argument that caused the In liana niarriag'j law was the Julte. 'arr.l!. Ancesror Max Jukes, born In "?w York in 1TC0, was a lazy druu!. nil. Of his descendants 1,200 were roved to bo occupants of penal and heritable Institutions before S"i. Wt one was ever elected to public jt-lte and not one ever served in the r.T.y or Navy or in any way hr:';;ed ju"!'. ic welfare. On the contiary, they o.-,: society more than $1,000 each, or a total of ?1.2r.y.f00. Three hundred md ten were i:i pcorhouscs, 2.S.0 ivsrs in all; JC0, one in four, of hi. Jcs,o:sdun?3. died in childhood. 410 were vl iously diseased; 400 were pay .;iial'y wrecked early by their own v!i"!o'.:rrer.s; filty were notorious wom en; seven were murdeters; 6ixty habi :ua! thieves; 13) wc-:e convicted for n.lsccllancous crimes. When It's Gore, It's Gone Forever. There Is yet to come no end of fakt serums, hair restorers, to make bald heads dream of hyacinine locks, de parted never to return. The hope of the bald head Is one of the 6tran;e and positive delusions of men. It Is an old stale drug store Joke how a bald-headed man will buy hair "re storer" from a baldheaded drug.u;lut. Baldness is largely a natural pro -ess In many higher types of man and rather shows such men to be still growing and changing, even for Into senility, and that science is still very much in the dark about Nature's al;n and purposes in old ae. Handing Down Bad Eyes. There is no certain or een marked relationship between bad homes nnd bad eyesight. It is mostly a matter of heredity and disease. As Tip pointed out years ago a mother with rare and complicated eye defeats transmitted these same defects !n every detail to every one of her sons Here coincidence was out of the ques tlou. National Development of Colleges. One of the differencbs between love and a puppy Is that a puppy ceases to be blind when it is about nine days old. Sometimes it takes love a little long er to get its eyes open. Romance i mi an ntj "You don't want to stay for the pic tures, do you?" asked Molly in the tone of one who expects the answer to be "No." Bess blushed. She took a childish delight In motion, but her cousin sad ly disagreed with her tastes. "Do you mind?'" Bess asked timid ly. "They're Are department pic tures."' With a shrug of her shoulders hor cousin settled back In the seat as the lights went out and the first picture was thrown on the curtain. The property man and his fellows on the stage supplied the clanging of the bells and the screech of the whis tles, and to Bess It was all very real. Then the street with its onsltn'S vanished from the curtain, to be re placed by a contrasting picture? of three firemen sitting In quarters en gaged In a game of cards. Their f ires were shown large enough to ilhc-trv.o the play of expression, and the audi ence shrieked at the panto".. i:i:lc humor. But Bess had leaned forward and was looking engerly at the curtain. Molly tugged at her skirt, but the girl did not realize It. There uixm the curtain was Ted Prescott. She was sure of It. The picture changed again and she sank back In her Feat quivering In every muscle. Rapidly she explained to Molly how Ted had gone away from hn:ue, how his letters had stopped and his moth er could find no trace of him. "His mother's heart la breaking for him," she declared. "I must find hlm and tell him to write home." She left her seat, greatly excited, and started up the aisle. Molly fol lowed her country cousin curiously. An usher directed her to the balcony, where the machine was operated, and she waited until the operator had fin ished. He could give her little In'or mation other than to furnish her with the address of the firm that had tak en the pictures. She could scarcely wait until 'he next morning to continue her search, and she started Immediately after breakfast, with a male cousin as an escort. The manager was courteous and seemed to take an interest In her quest The pictures had been made In town, he explained, and he gave her the number and address of the engine company. It was far up town, but she could not rest, and in a short time she stood in front of the 'tiny desk beside the glittering engine. "Is Mr. Prescott, a fireman, here?" she asked wtlh trembling voice. The man in blue shook his head. "Jimmy Prescott is with Seven Truck," he explained. "I am looking for Theodore Pres cott," she explained. "He was photo graphed here for some moving pic tures." "Pratt, French and Roe posed for that picture," he declared. "You mean this?" He took down from the wall a small framed photograph, evidently an en largement of the picture film. "That's" Ted,"' she cried. "I'm sure of It" "Call Roe down,,' demanded a voice behind her. The fireman sprang to obey orders and she soon found that the captain was the man with the gold Instead of silver buttons, nnd crossed trumpets on his cap front. "Stand where you will be in the light," directed the newcomer, as he stepped Into the backgkround. Won deringly she obeyed his directions, as in answer to the ,c a 1 1 a man came sliding down the brass pole. Before she could speak ho had turned around and came toward her. "Hello, Bess," he cried. "Where did you come from?" "What is your name?" demanded the battalion chief. Instinctively the man's hand went to salute, and he gave a puzzled laugh. "It's Prescott," he said. "Yet I know I'm called Roe. What's the mat ter?" "You remember the Douglas street fire In the shop where you worked?" suggested the chief. Ted nodded. "But you forget that In Jumping to the net you fell short and struck your hed. When you came out of tha hospital you had forgotten who you were." "I remember now," Ted exclaimed. "The boys were interested in me and kept me going until I could get in the department You gave me Richard Roe for a name, eh?" "I Baw you in the pictures at the theatre," Bess explained. "I knew tt was you." "Which Is more than I did," he laughed. "I've been someone else for nearly a year now. Ij mother " Bess nodded, as he faltered. "She is alive," she assured, "but very lone some. She thinks you are dead." The captain stepped forward. "I'm going up to see the chief," he said. "Put in your application for leave and I'll see that headquarters grants it." As he left the room Ted turned to Bess. "And you," he asked. "Have you " "I've been waiting, too," she as sured. "We can have a pretty good honey moon in 30 days," smiled Ted. "We'll send the picture men some of the cake." "We must," she agreed, as he kissed her right before the man on watch, "for I found you in the pictures. L M. RE1NHALTER. v USE8 OF SAWDUST. Too Valuable now to Be Put to the Uses it Once Served. Many are the uses of sawdust. In the days when the sawdust wagon made Its lumbering rounds through the streets of most large cities Iwo commercial uses of sawdust were to sprinkle floors and to shelter load pipes from cold nnd glass bottles from breakage. Near every sawmill was a vat for the sawdust and It was carted av.ny free by any one who had any use for It. In this era of the use of by-products sawdust has a commercial value. It is no longer given awuy, but Is sold. One of the recent uses of sawdust is its distillation. rcsuUlns In nettle ncid, wood naphtha, wood alcohol p.nd tar. Sawdust may nlso be burned In special furnaces or mixed with oilier material for fuel. Sawdust, when saturated with chemicals, can bo effectively urcd In the manufacture of explosives, but it Is more particularly In demand l'l paper making than fcr any other pur pose. Such a thing as- sawd'.K on the floor of a room ns n substitute f;r a rng or carpet Is now practically un known. Sawdust has Joined sand in this respect. Cotton felt tins brcn substituted for sawdust as a non-conductor of cold In win'er. tins can be made fro:;i paw dust. It Is also used for briquettes. I. e., blocks of compressed raw-dust and wood chips burned for fuel. Kve-i in the protection of glassware nsair. t breakage sawdust has been su;'or:vl "( by excelsior, sawdust belnr; re3 :rJ od as too valuable for such uto. San Salvador Prosperous. "?an Salvador is in a good niMiy rr-pocts the best country In Crntrr.l America," declared Felix Mugdcii, n merchant of that place, who has Jir-t ve. limed from a trip to Europe-. "1 Tnr.'iie this statement because I br Hove that It Is true. Financially cn 1 I - in a great many other respects the country is far ahead of its neighbors. We have not the disturbances that have racked some of the other Centra! Amertcnn nations, and we have l.ot interfered in the troubles of others. The President of our country, Fig up roa. Is a fine man in many ways, cn;! we all love and respect him. He ii do-ng much for San Salvador. He Is honest and Is an able statesman of the highest type, besides having a fine record as a soldier. He has been a conspicuous figure In public affairs for t.iore than forty years. We did not feel the depression that disturbed jusiness in this country, and commer cially we are prosperous. The Indi cations are that the coffee crop this year will bo good, and prices promise also to be very favorable." The King and the Boy. An amusing anecdote relating to the King's recent stay at Brighton was related last evening by the Rev. Cecil Maunsell, vicar of Thorpe Mais or, to a gathering of his parishioners, who made a presentation to him In celebration of his return from Brigh ton, where he has been staying for the benefit of his health. The reverend gentleman, who vouched for the authenticity of the story, said that a few days ago a boy walked up to his Majesty as he was strolling along the esplanade at Howe and said to him: "Mister, can you tell me the time?" "Yes, replied the King, taking out his watch; "it Is a quarter to one." The boy then informed his Majes ty that he had "been waiting two hours to see the blooming King," add ing. "I am not going to wait any long er." "Neither shall I," replied the King;, aa he resumed his wulk. His Majes ty himself, said Mr. Maunsell, after ward related the incident with much gusto. London Globe. Discovery of Peat Bog In Maine. An analysis of the strange mixture which spurted ten feet in the cir when Henry Hagan was d'pclns a trench on the Alonzo Davis plac :.t Norridgewock. Me., a few weeks pijo shows that it Is the finest peat. So finely separated are the parti cles that the substance after the wa ter evaporates from it Is nearly all carbon. It hardens quickly, and when in this state burns readily. Hagan was digging a trench through it piece of low ground when he struck the vein. It spurted Into the air with r. rush that drove the men from the trench. The substance was so fine that the men thought It contained oil, but the analysis showed this conclu sion to the erroneous. About ten tons are In sight, and It is believed that there Is a still larger deposit under the surface. These suppositions are borne out by the fact that the stuff spouted out like an oil well for a while, indicating that somewhere It is under great pressure from a clay or other deposit A Good Bargain. "I wish," said a Capitol Hill man recently, "that peddlers would keep away from my house. Somehow or other my wife can't help buying their wares, whether she needs them or not. All the peddler has to do Is to say his article Is cheap. When 1 get home at night I usually find some new stove polish, a new tangled kitch en utensil or something else lying around. Last night my wife had a bottlo of something to show me when I entered the house. " 'It's an asthma cure, John,' she said. "'Asthma cure?' I repeated with a frown. 'Why, Mary, no one In our family has asthma. Wo don't need that stuff." " 'But, John, Just think bow cheap It was,' she said, 'It only cost a quar ter.'" Denver Post. The Kind You Have Always in use for over 30 years, - and has been made under his pcr jtyfzV Bonal supervision slnco its infancy. 'CyCCAX Allnw nn nnA tn dmpl vn vnit In lila. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Jnat-aR-pood" nro but Experiments that triflo with nnd endanjrer tho health of Infants nnd Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, lrops nnd 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 Plarrlnua and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep, Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. ' VMS CtMTCUft COMPANY. TT MUHIUV aT'fT. NIW VOHK CtTV. BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal of the Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Farmer is the only Literary Farm Journal pub lished. It fills a position of its own and has taken the leading Elace in the homes of rural people in every section of the United tates. It gives t .e , 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 One: THE COLUMBIAN The Oldest County Paper and THE AMERICAN FARMER BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO 11 This unparalleled offer is made to all new subscribers, and all old ones who pay all arrears and renew within thirty days, bample copies free. Address : THE COLUMBIAN, Bloomsbunr. Pa. TO PUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS. We Manufacture the Very Highest Grade of Type Brass Rule in Strips Brass Labor Saving Rule Brass Column Rules Brass Circles Brass Leaders Brass Round Corners Brass Leads and Slugs Old Column Rules reftieed cost n,lrarr,eHe,;il,erlhat w? nre ,,ot ,n Trunt or Combination with ul W a" nmke U grefttly t0 'our vantage to deal tlon CPy f "r CataI8ue wU1 b cheerfully furnished on appliea- Pa jy('f1r.e.,'"tly ,'.'fve Hd barpaiiiK In second-hand Job Pre, 1 aper Cutters uml other prluting machinery. Philadelphia Printers Supply Co. Manufacturers of TYPE AND HIGH GRADE PRINTING MATERIAL. Proprietori PENN TYPE FOUNDRY. 12 - 3 Bought and which lias bocn has borne the Blprnaturo of Signature of Brass Galleys Metal Borders L. S. Metal Furniture Leads aud Slugs Metal Leaders Spaces and Quads, 6 to 4S point Metal Quoins, etc. and made aa gcod as new at a small 39 North Ninth Street 10 - K nios PHILADELPHIA I