V. F THE FOREST REPUBLICAN RATIS Or ADVERTISIMOl ' One Sqnara, one Inch, on Inasrttoa. .1 1 On. Hquare, on. inch, on. month .... I OO On (Square, on. Inch, tnrae month. , 00 On. Square, one Inch, on year...... WW Two Hquarjn, one year 1B0C Quarter Column, one year. .......... W Half Column, one year .... WOO One Column, on year, -r 100 H Legal adTertuwnwitf ttr eanta par Ma earn Inaertion. 41 arrlages and death notices gratbi. m II bills for yearly advertisement tuPaaSag qnartarly. Temporary advertisement ataaat be paid In advance, i Job work cash on delivery. b pablhhtl rirjt Wadaeatay, kv J. E. WENK. Offlo In Bmearbaufh A Co.' BuHdlng xm min, tionbsta, r. cm JDOJKJi, Ttrmt, II.VO prTur. Ttpln raealvaa fat ekartar Mrloa ta tkir months, OKiTMpondane allelM fiwm al Mrta f the enurirr. Na aaUce wlU he laaea el unrMu oaunialcaueaa. VOL. XXVII. NO. 24. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCT. 3, 1894. S1.00 PER ANNUM. REPUBLI The rate of taxation Las nearly quad rupled in Franco sinoo 1830. . Tbo centre of population in now niid way between Cincinnati and Indian npolis. The Slav has not turnod ont an in dustrial or social success in tbo coke regions, confesses tbo New York Tri bune. . President Harper says tbat bo en tered upon bis dutios at Cbicago Uni versity opposed to co-odncatiou, bay ing great misgivings becauso of the prosonce of the girls. He now de , clares tbat tbo young women's depart ment of tbe university is tbo only ono that never gave him any trouble. Tbe World' tunnels are estimated to number about 1142, with a total longtb of 514 miles. Tbere are about 1009 railroad tunnels, ninety canal tunnels, forty oonduil tunnels, and twelve suba nn nous tunnels, havinar an a?rrocrnta length of about 800 miles, seventy miles, eigbty-flyo miles, and nine miles " respectively. . Tbo University of Lille, France, Is said to be tbe first institution of loom ing on the Continent to add a depart ment of journalism. Abbe Dr. Cootcn Trill read lectures on tho great editors of England aud Germany. Professor Gaud will leoturo on the laws govern ing tho press, and M. Taverincr, of tho Paris "Uuiycrs," will sp?nk upon tbo duties of newspaper men and tbo way a paper is printed. California, will pay dearly in tbe end for tho bounty of $3 granted for every coyote scalp presontod to the State Treasurer, predicts tbe ' New York Tribune, This bounty law was passed to protect sheep, but it has been costly. Last year over $500,000 was paid out, and this year it is esti mated that $G50,000 will be needed to satisfy tbe claims. As tbe coyotes livo on jack-rabbits, tho slaughter of one pest will simply lead to tho increase of tho other. . There are American ladios who have moro valuable lace than any European potentate. Tho laces of tho Astor family are valued at $300,000, those of the Vandorbilts at $500,000. More lace, it is said, is bought- in Now York than any other city in tbo world. The Pope's lace treasures are said to be worth $875,000, those of the Queen of England '375,000 aud those of tho Princess of Wales $250,000. Tba Queen's wedding dress was trimmod with a picoe of Honiton oosting $5000. Maine has produced men of aston ishing vigor and longevity, but none more notable in this way than Dr, Westbrook Farrer, of Biddeford, if the stories told of him are true. He is said to be a pbysioian in active practice, though ninety-eight years old, and, still more romarkablo, to be in the habit of visitiug his patients regularly on a bioyole. He attributes his exceptional vigor at this advanoed go to the use of wintergreon tea, of which he is said to be an ardent advo eate. ' Tho Province of Quebeo has a law bestowing 100 acres of Government land on every father of a family who has twelve living children. Up to tho present time 174,200 acres have been given under this law. Not all of these fathers, however, are satisfied with tbe amount of this bounty, for families of twenty children ere not rare, and the fathers of these want a proportionately higher reward. One old gentloman, Paul Belanger, of Iiiver da Loup, wants 300 acres in recognition of his family of thirty-six living children. The Ban Franeisoo Chronicle re marks: When Colonel Sellers in "The Gilded Age" spoke of the im- mouse sums of money ho proposed to make by dispensing his eye water to the orientals ho threw out a. hint which inventors have been slow to act upon. The conditions of life in the Orient are very peonliar, and tbo peo ple have oertnn wants which we in tho Western world are hardly more than aware of. Among thuso is some rem edy against the cucroachmouts of white ants. Those destructive insects make life a burden to the Europeans living in China and other oriental countries. They oat everything made of timber, and as a consequonoo it is almost impossible to keep a bouse or its adjuncts in repair. A correspon dent suggests that the kuown fact that these auts have an aversion to lime may put some ingenious American on to an idea which if properly worked out would be a benefaction to people living in the Orient, especially Euro peans, who would pay liberally for some practical remedy for the uui-tofiOe. THE BUGLE CALL, Have you beard (he troops a-marchlng? Marching, mnrohlng, O my soul, to bear tho bugle and the long roll of the drum I In the hill and down the valley, I ean hear . bis (tap among them. Before you ane hi. soarlot ooat, I'll know my love has come. "I oan see the troops a-mnrohtng, Slowly, slowly. As they near, the pnle loaves tremble at the coming of that band i tbere Is neither sound nor footfall, nolthor buglo-blnst nordrum-oall, A silent host they paw from sight Into a silent land." Nny, I hear the bugle culling, Calling, calling, O tho footsteps of my soldier, I can count them ns (hoy fall i Ultimo mine to the echo, over hill and over vnlloy, I am mnrohlng. marching ever, to that nn soon bugle's call I Mary Stewart Cutting. A KOREAN REBEL'S FATE. DV CYRUS O. ADAMS. KOREAN of noble birth, long prom inent in publio life at home, stepped from the Yoko liama steamer in March last to the wharf at Shanghai and a few minutes after lay dead in the street, the vio tira of an assassin. A fellow country' man who had in duced him to eo to ttlianguai, bastened ostensibly to greet him, and they had hardly exchanged a word before the false friend stabbed the newcomer to tbe heart. Tho crime was a political murder, planned in the court of Korea, connived at by the Chinese authorities, and the story throws a curions light upon the meth ods and practices still in vogue in oriental society. The victim was Kim Ok Kinn, who, ten years ago, headed nn unsuccessful revolutionary attempt at Sooul, the capital of Korea. From the day he failed he had been followed by emissaries of the Korean eonrt, bent first upon his extradition to the home from which he bad fled, and finally, equipped with instructions to kill him, and to carry out this meri torious sorvico to their country in such a way as to save the court from any appearance of complicity. When the deed was done last March, it was evident that China and Korea had a perfect understanding in the matter. The murderer was not dragged off to tho Shanghai lock-np, liko a oommon malefactor. On the contrary, be was treated with respect ful consideration, as soon as his name and that of his victim were made known. lie not only went free, but he was permitted to buy tickets for one passenger and one coffin to Korea, and ho departed for home with the body of his victim and the distinction due to n man who had rendered a publio 6orvice. In the capital of Korea the assassin was honored as no ordinary patriot. The body of the murdered man was divided into eight parts, and one part was sent to each of the provinces of the kingdom to be exposed to view on the publio high ways. This much of the tragedy has been published. It is believed, however, that the extraordinary story which bad this bloody termination has not been retold, and it is well worth re lating in connection with the crime that has closed tho chapter. It was told in October, 1886, when the Jap anese newspapers were alluding in every issue to the lively correspond ence between the Governments of Japan, China nnd Korea, concerning Kim aud the attempts of bis enemies to kill him; and he himself appeared in print with tho evidence of the plots agaiust his life, which were the basis of bis appeal to the Government of Japan for protection. One night noar the end of Decem ber, 1884, a number of the highest officials of Korea gathered at a ban quet in the new postoffioe building in BeouL A servant suddenly opened the door and cried that the house was about to be attacked. The men at the tables fled into tbe darkness, only to find that enemies surrounded them. Some of them were killed on the spot, and others were severely wounded. Then the mob and its leaders rushed to the palace to secure the person of the King. By this time news of the uprising had spread through the city, aud the guard' of the legation had hastened to the palace to add their strength to the King's bodyguard. The rebels, who were attempting noth ing less than the destruction of every leading official of the Government, beseiged the building, but the pluck and discipline of the Japanese kept them at bay. Then the Chinese troops, hearing that the Japanese were inter fering unwarrantably in one of the internal commotions of Korea, marched from their camp outside the city and gavo battle to tho Japanese at the pal ace, but tbe latter ld their own throughout the ni u the morn ing it was founu w the King had fled, and the Japanese had to fight their way to the coast, where they were protected by their warships. Tho rebellion was soon put dowu, China and Japan patched up their misunderstanding aud the matter ended. The principal' actor in this furious outbreak, and the instigator of all the assassination, was Kim ok Kiuu, who bad held tho highest otlice in Korea, and was jealous of tho preponderance iu the King's councils of the members f the Min family. The Queen, a wo tutftt. of strong character, belongs to this family, and through bor in fluence, it has been the predominating power and has controlled all the prin cipal offices. It is the opposition to this family, led by tho King's own father, that has stirred up the recent insurrection. In 1884, the leader of this opposition was Kim Ok Kinn, and be hoped, after murdering bis leading rivals, to seize power for himsolf and his adherents. Failing in his plans he flod with some of bis fellow con spirators to Tokio, Japan. Then bo gan tho efforts of Korea, abetted by China, to induce Japan to givo tbo arch rebel up, and failing in this, to assassinate him among his protectors. A Korean mission was despatched to Japan in a Chinese man-of-war to de mand the extradition of Kim and bis followers. Thoy wore assisted in their efforts by the Chinese representatives at Tokio and, it is aid, by La liung Chang, tbe great viceroy of (Jhi-Jji. Many -reeks wore spent in the negoti ations, but Japan was firm in her re fusal. She took the ground that she had no extradition treaty with Korea; furthermore, she alleged, that tho crimes for which the fugitives were wanted to answer in Korea were of a political nature, and it was against the law of nations to surrender politi cal offenders. So the mission went home defeated. Kim and four of his associates lived for a while in peace at lokio. Three of his comrades, doubt ing the ability of Japan to withstand the pressnro, II oil to San 1' rancisoo. Had Kim respected his asylum it is barely possible that he might have lived there securely for the rest of his davs. But in the following year, 188o, there was another plot to over turn the Korean Government, and there was evidence that Kim, the dar ing, restless and designing politician, was at the bottom of it. Demands for his extrdition were at once renewed. China and Korea both asserted that as long as Kim remained in Japan he would bo able to create disturbances in his nativo land. Japan remained firm in her refusal, giving as her only reason that political offenders were never extradited in Western countries, and if the Eastern nations desired to be treated as equals by those of the West, they must learn to act npon the same prinoiples. JNo further attempt to socure the extradition of Kim was mado, but Korea at onoe began to take measures to effect the removal of this troublesome person by other pro cesses. Three futile expedients for the as sassination of Kim were attcmptod in the following year, and were described in the public prints, as far as the de tails were known, late in 1SSG. The instrument in the most interesting of these attempts appeared in Japan in tho person of Chi, an official in the Sooul war department. In Kim's palmy days Chi had been an ardent disciple of the advanced views of that astute politician, but he was now faith fully serving a Government composed of Kim's enemies. He traveled quiet ly to Japan, acd took lodgings in an ordinary inn in Tokio. On May 2, 18S8, he wrote to Kim, protesting that their old friendship still continued on his part, that he deeply sympathized with Kim in his misfortunes and exile, and requested an interview. Tbe old assassin was too sharp for the young ono, however, and Kim bluntly re fused to see him. At the same time ho directed his friends to worm their way into Chi's confidenoe, and one of thorn did so with considerable skill. He told Chi that the exiles were tired of their life in Japan, sorely re' gretted their folly, and longed to be baek in Korea. Kim wis the cause of their presont plight. He had deceived them, and they all hated him for it. Would Chi intercede for them with the King and the Government I They would cheerfully seize Kim and carry him off if they could. Nay, they had become so embittered by bis conduct that they would kill him, if ridding the country of him would be the means of making their peace with their sov ereign. Kim was very wary, bnt no one could lull his suspicions to sloop as his companions could, and thoy would do anything to show tho sin cerity of their repentance. Chi listened seriously to these things, but was quite non-committal. It took some weeks for confidence to beget confidence. At last ho convinced him self of the sincerity of the exile. Then Chi confided to him that he had been sent to Japan by the King for the ex press purpose of killing him, and that he would pay a sum equivalent to $5000 to anyone who would give him effective assistance in carrying out this bloody task. Kim's envoy at once became very circumspect. It was a perilous affair, he said. Ho was will ing to do the work, but suppose, for instance, that Chi had never received a commission from the King, then any oue killing Kim would be seized by the Japanese, and would be repudia ted by the Koreans. Chi was ablo to soothe these suspicions. He first pro duced a large Korean dagger, which, he said, had been given to him by the King for the purpose of slaying Kim, and finally bo exhibited this mandate, to which the royal seal was actually attached : 'We hereby commission you to cross the sea aud apprehend the rebel, to accomplish which object you shall have full power to act according to circuinutauces, using duo caution not to make fruitless attempts." On the same day, tho supposod con spirator also secured in writing from tho unsuspecting Chi a promise to pay him $5000 for his service, and on the next day Kim, armed with these docu ments, which he laid before the Japa ueio Government, demanded protec tion. A demand for an explanation was at once telegraphed to Seoul, and, of course, all knowledge of the plot was st once repudiated by the Korean Government. These proceedings may seem almost incredible to us, but we ciunut apply our rales of morality to Korea, Kim was a leading statesman of tho country, and if not an assassin himself, he had inspired assassination. According to Korean ethics it was not improper for his enemies to remove him by the knifo or bullot, political methods that have neon employed more than once in tho East in this genera tion. Japan now decided that Kim was a heavy load to carry, and he wai or dered to leave the country by June 27. Kim, however, had other views. When the police went to see him at tho expiration of tho timo, he fled to the French embassy and appealed for protection. He was, however, turned over to the authorities, and his forc ible removal from the country was or dered on the ground that his presence tended "to endanger the peace, tran quility and external safety of the em pire." Whot to do with him, though, was a knotty problem. Japan wished to insure his safety. If he was sent to China he would bo killed. Russia would not harbor him. San FranciBCO was proposed, but Kim was without means, and it was feared that he would btarvo there in a land of plenty, unloss tho Amoricans took very kindly to him. It was finally dooided that it was not desirable, for his own sake, to turn him loose upon the world. Japan has a little group of islets in the Pa cific, the Bonin Islands, which at that time were uninhabited save by a few retired pirates and runaway sailors. So Kim was sent to those far-away sunny islands to be supported by the Japanese Government. For some years he contemplated the mutability of for tuuo in this retreat, but at lost, just as the littlo islands wero beginning to blos som under the nurture of the Japan ese farmers who had gone to them, the Government listened to Kim's piteous appeal and took him baek to Japan. The fact was not generally known, but it had not escaped the observation of Korea's agents. In his retirement and obsonrity Kim, on an evil day, made the acquaintance of a fellow countryman. The man ap peared to be of very little importance. He did not thrust himself upon Kim's notioe nor appear at all anxious to cultivate his acquaintance. He was an agent of the court of Korea, but Kim seems never to have suspected it. For weeks and months he would never go near the man he iutended to mur der. He was carrying on a legiti mate business in Japan, and was so slow, discreet and pa tient in promoting tho real purpose of his sojeurn there that his conduct excited no comment. Very little is really known of his acquaint ance with Kim. What he proposed to do was to murder the man on friendly soil where he would not be called to account for the crime, and he bided his time. At lost his oppor tunity came.. Kim had a claim for a considerable sum of money in South China. His pretended friend under took to negotiate for the settlement of this claim. Ho knew that ho had completely deceived the old man when he went to Shanghai to prepare for the donouoment. His dagger was ready for the victim whose perfect confi dence he had won. His plans were cunningly oonceived. The problem was to get Kim to Shanghai though he seemed to bo doing everything in his power to make it unnecessary for Kim to make the journey. He reported at last, that it would be positizely nec essary for Kim to go to the Chiuese port to sign doouments that would not or could not be sent to him. He knew very well that Kim would not consult anyone with regard to a visit to China, and he assured his dupe that there was not a particle of danger. He could travel in disguise, transact his busi ness in a few hours and return to Japan, in perfect safety . by the next boat. Kim's cunning bad apparently do serted him, and he went unsuspect ingly to the cruel death prepared for him. The Japanese Government did not know he was out of the country until the news came- that he had been butchered on Chinese soil. They made some effort to investigate the matter, but finally decided that Japan had no jurisdiction, as Kim was a foreigner murdered on foroigu soil. So the chapter ends. Kim died as he had made others die. Ho became the vic tim of political methods that he had used with considerable effect upon his rivals; and the manner of his taking off shows how stealthily and persis tently some Governments of the Orient are still capable of plying the arts of the assassin iu the pursuit of their enemies. Detroit Free Press. An Interesting People. Interesting information is given by a French traveler in China of the Mau tzu, a people who occupy all tho ter ritory between Cukia proper and Thibet. The feudal system prevails among these mountaineers, who are divided up into more than eighty small States. Lamaisiu is the religion pro fessed by tho majority. The lau guagos of these States, which are more Thibetan than Chiuese, differ very much one from another. The Mau tzu are fairly well made and strong. They do not wear a que like the Chi nese, aud dress iu coarse woolou fab rics, which they make for themselves. The men wear a shirt with a collar, aud the womeu wear dresses consist ing ol body aud skirt, two styles un known iu China, aud reminding one of European fashions. Their houses, too, built of stone, have usually oue or two stories above the ground, the latter being always occupied by cattle, upon which they ehiufly depend. The animals reared by tho Ma i-tzu are tho horse, the horned aud the horulesi yak, two species of cow, sheop with long, spiral horns, aud the goat, one variety of which has four horns. The pigs, dogr, cats aud fowls which are bred there are identical with those found iu the rest of China. ltouheatur Post-Express, SCIENTIFIC ASD ISDUSrRlAL. A flash of lightning oqnals 12,000 horse power. The mouth of the starfish is exactly in the centre. Tho wrist contains eight bones, tho palm five and tho fingers fourteen. During digestion tho flow of blood to tho stomach is increased tenfold. The principles of rainfall were first correctly sot forth by Dalton iu 1787. In proportion to tho weight of tho body, woman's hair is longer than man's. Enamel of the teeth contains over ninety-five per cent, of calcareous matter. Four-tenths of the working ex penses of an electrio light plant are for coal. In London, according to Halley, there was no total eclipse of the sun between 1140 and 1715. Soap babbles are round because every part of their surface is equally pressed by the atmosphere. The heart ordinarily beats about seventy times a minute, and throws about two ouncos of blood at each con traction. The chemical composition of tho epidermis of the heel is nearly the same as that of tho matter of nails, horns and hoofs. The song of wild birds is usually a sucoession of three or four note3 con tinued dining tho same interval, mostly without interruption. It is so hot at Massowah, Abyssinia, that when the northwest wind blows from the desert tho thermometer sometimes registers 1G0 dogrees. In tests last year in the German town of Dessau it was shown that cooking by wood and coal costs a little more than twice that done with gas. Of the mineral spangolite only two specimens are known to exist. One was taken from Cornwall, England, and the other is near Tombstone, Arizona. The hair has a life of its own apart from that which animates the human body. This accounts for the growth of hair on the dead long after their interment. A mechanical fluid is the recent in vention of an American engineer. It is a mass of hard steel balls of two sizes, one-eighth and one-fourth of an inch in diameter, respectively. Under pressure this mass flows and transmits pressure in all directions like a fluid. The device is calculated for use wher ever fluid pressure is desired without leakage, and it has already been em ployed for tightening the brasses of connecting rods, a pocket at the sido being filled with the balls and pressure applied with a set screw. The Worcester (England) munici pality will utilize its plant, put in for supplying electricity for lighting, to run electrio motors for pumping pur poses at its waterworks, instead of employing steam, as originally in tended. There will be two thirty-horse-power alternate current motors having a guaranteed efficiency of ninety per cent., working pumps capable of delivering 10,000 gallons of water per hour to an elevation of 300 feet through three milos of ten inch pipe. Hoisted by Her Own Petard, When Yalo athletics were in Now York, piior to their departure for Ox ford, a well-known Brooklyn society woman gave them a dinner. It is part of the creed of these young men never to express surprise at any joke at their expense. This their hostess knew. She was determined to oompel a departure from this law and con ceived her plan with tbat objoct in view. The women of the party had been notified, but were bound over to silence, until some comment should be made by tbe broadclothed guests. At au exquisitely appointed table tho party sat down. The butlers first served coffee, liquors and candies. Next came ices. Then salads. Talk flowed on brilliantly and easily. Evi dently there was no stupidity ou tho part of the servants in serving thus contrary to established etiquctto, for the hostess remained unconoernod. So did the Yalo men. The reversed dinner went through its courses without hitch or jar, until after the soup aud just before tho clams were served. Then tho Yalo men asked to be excused. Tho host ess acqniosod with a broad touoh of wondor on her faoo. In ten minutes tho team filed back into tho diuiug room, each with his "swallow-tail" ou "hind part before," Thoy had done honor to tho reversed dinner. The surface of uuconoorn was brokou dowu. The hostess was hoisted by her own petard, but the table rnug with ap plause. Argonaut. Cockroncho With Kix-luc'i Win?. When the transportation company's barges brought tios for the trolley bore thoy also brought some Southern cockroaches that dwarf tho local speci mens. Tbe tios come from North Car olina and Georgia, where thos fiuut oookronohes aro abundant. Thoy arc about two inches long, uud whou thoir wings aro spread out iu flying they measuro nearly six iuuhos across. Thoy aro harmless aud look something 1 1 k u a bootlo when their wiu's an ilr.iwu iu. Hartford (Conn.) Courant. Smallest llil'J Known, The fly cater of Cuba is tho smallest bird know to ornithologists. It iu about ono-third tho sizo of tho hum ming bird. In tho year 1592 llesaca Espisioto, a man of fabulous woalt.'i, caused 7000 of those birds to be caught with nets and mado into a pot pie, which he ate at one sitting, aud even then ho complained of beiug huury. Espieioto was a ttiun of most capricious ppgtite. BIBLES FOR THE BLIND. FIRST EDITION EVER PRINTED lit THE POINT ALPHABET. The Book Is In KIcven Volumes Kach better Represented by a Dif ferent Number of Raised Dots. TnE only Biblo published in the point alphabet to bo used by the blind has lately been printed in Louisville. It con sists of 18:1'J pages, is in cloven vol umes and was turned out by tho American Printing nonso for tho Blind, an annex of tho Kentucky In stitute for the Blind, The eleven em ployes of tho printing house wcro en gaged on the work for about ten months, and on May 7, 1894, just a little over a year after the work was bogun, the first shipment to tho American Bible Society at New York was made. Of course this is not tho only Biblo that can be read by the blind Those thus afflicted have beon reading a Bi ble for forty years, but it was pub lished in what is known as tho liua alphabet. The line alphabet is mvlo up of tho Roman letters enlarged and raiso 1 on the leaves of the book, so that the blind reader may know them by fol lowing their outline with his fingers. Every school child can road a boo't printed in that way. But with tho Now York point alphabet each letter is represented by a different number of raised dots arranged in a fixed posi tion. Strange to say, this 88331 method is the easier to learn, anl ii always taught before the liuo motho L That any sort of a Biblo for tha blind came out at all is due to a bj qnest of $40,000 mado to tho Araariciti Bible Society by a wealthy wotmu o.f New York City. It was ma lo a per manent fund for printing Bibloj for the blind. The four girls who do tho typesetting began thoir part of tho work April 23, 1853. As soon as on 3 page was set up it was carried into tin molding room and an impression taken. The page was then ready to be cast. It was carried down sUirs and placed in tho stereotypiu; mi chine. A thin coat of tin foil was thja laid over the mold and a light pouriu j of metal mado, so as to melt tho tiu foil into the mold. Another pouring was then made to fill in the blank spaces betwoen lines aud re-enforoa the back. A piece of ordinary roof er's tin the size of tho page was then laid over the back of the thfu metal impression, and another light pouriar made to make the two adhere. Wtieu this had cooled off tho workiniu hi I a true copy of the page on a very light, flexible plate of stereotype. All tin rest of tho 1030 pagos were tr:ated in the same way, and on January 24, 1894, the day the last page was set up, the last plate was also completed. The work of printing was then be gun. The loaves are necessarily very heavy, and, of oourso, can be printed only one side. Four sheets, or page), were printed at a time. When thi pages were ready for binding six of them were grouped together au 1 stitched with wire. Tho insida edg of each s9xto is bound by a cloth-lino I card-board guard. This is mlo 1103 essary by the thioknesi of tha loivei and the constant hindling by thj rod der. When those sextos are bowa I to gether they make a volume varying iu thscknessof from three to four inches. The New Testament is include 1 in three volumes, the Old iu eight. The whale work of printing the first set of this Bible cost just $1)0). The cost of biadinj is $1 a volume. The interest on the bequest nearly half a century ago has growu so tint the books can ba sold to the blind at loss than the cost of the binding. The whole set is sold at $7, and tho New Testament alono can bo secured for $5 los,$. These Bibles are beiug sont out to all the schools for the bliud in the oouutry through the American Biblo Association. Mining and Milling Yellow Ochre. "A very important Georgia in dustry that has sprung up in the last few years is the mining and milling of yellow ochre as carried ou at deters ville," said Captain B. M. Hall, tlu well-known mining engineer. "Like most new industries, it made a small beginning aud the product ha 1 a vory limited market. But its superior quality soon gained for it an eaer demaud at a high juice. It is now sold at Cartersville for $10 to $1S per tou, while the standard Pennsylvania ochres ssll for less than half thatpricj in Philadelphia. Tho Cartersville ochre, account of its great purity, is essentially a metallic paint, wliilo the ordinary oehres of commcrcj arj tuerely clays staiuo l with iron oxide. Its beautiful greenish ycllo.v c jlor and its high per vent, of iron make it peculiarly valuable as an ingredient in the manufacture of linoleum. A large proportion of tho Cartersville product is Mhipped to Europe. Two new mines are boiujr opened aud put iu operation that will greatly increase tho output. Oue of these belougi t J William B. Shaffer, of Peuusylvauh, and the other to T. II. Jones, of Car tersville. 1 cau say from a person il examination of these properties that their operutiuu will udd largely to th material wealth of Georgia. " Atlanta Constitution. A Colonel at Tell Tho third sou of the Emperor Will iam, Adalbert Ferdinand, cjleltr itj I his tenth birthday, by hU fonuilou trauco at Berliu, into th) im.ieriil army, tho youugster iu knickerbock ers bocomiug a Colonel of the famous Uhlau lUgiiuout. Tho entrance was marked by ceremonies of considera ble pomp, aud at night the re.-;imjiit had a grand bauquet iu celebration of the evonU Nsw York Advertnter. MY SERENADE. I have a envnller. it dusk ho drnwoth noar To wait outsldo my wicket. I hear him draw hla bow f Ho playeth soft nnd low, ,. Hid Id the mnple thicket. y Tim listening leaves nro stirred The dreaming flowers have benrii His strain from out the shadow. Tho brond moon, whltu nnd still, Climbcth tho dusky hill ; The mists d.mce In the meadow. My faithful ravnller, At dusk ho drnwotli no.ir To wait outsldo my wiokct. t I hear him draw his how j Ho playoth soft nnd low, My droamy littlo cricket. -Dorothy Dean, In Kato Field's Washington. HUMOR OF THE BAY. There aro some very good peoplo who love to tell bad news. Barn's Horn, Tho world owes a man a living, but ho must go after it. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Love abhors a crowd, but docs not want to bo left entirely alono. Gal veston News. If you notice, the fellow who pays his way is the ono who weighs his pay, Buffalo Courier. A growler is a man who would much rather sleep in a cyclone than in an ordinary draft. Galveston News. When men speak of a woman, tho first question, and frequently tho last, is "Is she pretty?" Itam'B Horn. A setting hen is quito anxious as to tho outcome of her mission ; she broods over it constantly. Lowell Courier. Ajbout tho only martyrs for con science's sake that we have in modern times are our baseball umpires. Dal las News. A "forelady" advertises for work. We hope she is accustomed to the management of "sales-gentlemen." Ch'cago Post. He "I love yon. I know that I am not all that I ought to bo " She "Yes, everybody has told me that." New York World. A head-lino in a contemporary reads, "On to Chicago!" Tho coun try has been on to Chicago for somo time. Kingston Frooman. Mother "Tommie, I am going to spank you. Do yon know what for?" Tommie (indignantly) "Yes. You want to ease your own feelings by hurting uiino." Harper's Bazar. Stranger "What price do yon set on that red cow of yours?" Mr. Hai cedo "See here, mister, uir you a as sessor, or has she been run over by the railroad?" Indianapolis Journal. The Judge "I should think you would be sorry for having so forgotten yoursolf as to throw a plate at your wife." Tho Prisoner (penitently) "I am, your honor ; that plate cost ten cents." Buffalo Couriei. "I don't seo tho least uso of this tool enso bcinjr put on my bicycle." He "Why, in case of an accident, you'd have something to work with." "Oh, yon absurd man ; dou't I always have hair-pius with me?" Chicago Inter-Occuu. New I'so for .Natural (Jan. The possibilities of natural gas evi dently have not yet been exhausted; The latest use which would seem to have been found for it is the making of ice, tho idea being to simply expand the gas from its usually high initial pressure down to or near that of tho atmosphere, nature having done all the preliminary work of compression and cooling, making the gas ready to absorb heat from its surround in-js im mediately upon being released from coutiumeut, All that would be neces sary would brf suitable coils or cham bers iuto which the gaB could he- al lowed to expand. It has been calcu lated out quite plausibly, in fact, that with an ordinary gas well, furnishing 2,500,000 eubio feet per day, some thing like fifty tons of ice could be turued out daily at au expeusj of about fifty ceuts u tou. The gas lotes nothing but its pressure, retain ing all its calorific value, and hence, all its virtue for rolling mill an 1 glass works uso, for heating brick, lime aud pottery kilns, and the endless number of other furnaces to which it is adapted. In a certain way, therefore, tho gas may bo regarded as affording some thing for nothing a desideratum to which many in this world aro con stantly looking forward. St. Louis Star-Sayings. Ittisshni O.'llcluls ti'iir Turtle Dove?. Most people regard the turtle dovo as an ideally innocent creature, but the lUnsian Minister of War evidoutly looks upon it as u positive dauger to tho stability of tho Czar's dom iins. A lady prestidigitator from the Folies Berguro, iu Paris, was traveling to St. Petersburg to fulfil an engagement iu that city. Along with her she cirried a number of turtle doves for profes sional purposes, but ou reai.jiug tho llussian frontier t'uese wero toized iu virtue of tho War Ministers order really aimed ut tho suppression of car rier pigeons prohibiting tho intro duction of any kin I of pigeon ou uuy pretext whatever. Prayer uud ex postulations wero iu vuiu, but it is pleasing t think tint tho general couimau laut of tho town gallantly uudertook to take goo I care of the birds until their owner should re cross the frontier. Westminster tU zetto. The "Lump IlirJ." Some peoplo oall tho t;orir.y petrel the "lamp bird." It is so oily that tho fishermen of St. Kikla stick a wick iu tho mouth of a dead spuciuieu, lyht it and it bums for au hour. New Yo.c Advertiser.