SULLIVAN JB&k REPUBLICAN. W. M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. XIV' Socialism is said to mako rapid progress in Spain. Ordinarily when a European says "America"he means "the United States." The Pleas.nt Sunday Afternoon movement in England has enrolled ie hundred thousand members, and •adily auvaucinc-. ensus of 1895 shows that the Empire now has a population ',009, despite emigration, an ? 2,330,000 in four and n osing a row in Wisconsin i university. It is being converted into he sons of rich have no show death of a public ■h generous, almost practically universal .ein both for the man ;al leader,'' notes Publio nave been accorded the or Tiinrman." official census of 1811, taken ar preceding the beginning utilities with tho United States, population of England was 10,- >O,OOO, of Scotland 1,800,000, and of Ireland 0,000,000, a total of 18,000,- 030. The census of the United States taken in 1810 showed the total popu lation of this country to be, States and Territories, 7,239,000. The last official census of Great Britain, taken in 1891, showed the population to have been 37,858,00!>, and the census of the United Stater, taken tbe year previous, showed the population of this country to be 02,622,000. Dr. H. K. Carrol!, in the Independ ent, says that tbe aggregate oT colored church members in the United States is, in round tributed as follows: Baptists, 1,403,- 559; Methodists, 1,190,638; Presby terian?, 30,000; Disciples of Christ, 18,578, and Protestant Episcopal and Reformed Episcopal together, some what less thaa 5000. According to the census figures, there has been an increaso of 1,150,000 colored church members during the last thirty years, which Dr. Carroll thinks is unparal leled in the history of the Christian Church. The value of colored church property is $26,620,000, and the num ber of edifices is 23,770. Aii Australian agriculturist, Mr. Kricliauff, has called attention to the fact that the potato will celebrate the 300 th anniversary of its introduction into England this year. It was in 1590 that- Sir Walter Raleigh returned to England from America with the first tobacco and potatoes which originally grew in Pern. Although the potato, it is estimated, now furnishes one sixth of the nourishment o" the human race, for a long time it was a delicacy for the rich alono. Even at the be ginning of the seventeenth century noblemen paid two shillings a pound for potatoes and eeasoned them with sterry. People often visited the gar dens of the botanist Gerard at Hoi born to see the plants in bloom. There is talk of a celebration in honor of the anniversary. The American Cultivator remarks: The fire fiend is an enemy to forestry. More stringent measures are necessary to prevent forest fires. The forests aro becoming too valuable to ba neg lected. Their destruction by fire means not only the loss of property, bat the serious loss of employment to woodsmen, teamsters, sawyers, wood workers and all the kindred trades. Ordinary cutting of trees need not destroy a forest, bnt a heavy firo works destruction. Dr. Rothrock, of the Pennsylvania forestry commission, thinks it an outrage that while a man under our laws cannot set fire to a ben coop without Eevere punishment, be may carelessly or willfully set fire to a forest and burn up many thou sand dollars' worth of property with out being molestod. Pennsylvania loses 31,000,000 annually through forest flres, -and $50,000,000 would not cover the annual loss to the coun try from this cause. It is found in many cases that when a man is 'pur sued by one holding a mortgage on bi? woodland he sets fire to it to spite the man who forecloses. It is very difficult to convict surh a man. Care lessness and ignorance are responsible f