the Columbian; bloomsburq, pa. OLD TIME RAPID TRANSIT. EATING POWER OF TOADS. IP A UNIQUE MANUSCRIPT. am u Earns a Salary of 4,800,000 a Year. HAS ?0,000 SERVANTS. The Czar at Managing Director of the Vaat Russian Empire Receives I $400,000 Every Month by Special Messenger from the Treasury . Has 100 Palaces. The czar earns a bigger salary than my other man In the world, for the ubllc exchequer of his country pnys ni the sun of $4,800,000 per annum r acting as managing director of the tssian cniplro, with Its area of 8.000, ) Hquare miles and its population of .1,000,000 persons. But, considering the crushing 'irtht of care and responsibility fhich he bears on his shoulders, his enumeration, high n it Is, does t appear excessive. li s salary is .;ld klm In monthly Installments of $400, KH each, which are sent to him by a special messenger from the treasury bunding in the form of a check on the national bank of Russia, Just as an office clerk receives his monthly wages; with the difference, however, tli at the czar's talent and industry exercise no Influence on his paymo.it. At the same time, he is expected to maintain a certain standard of living which he would be unable to do In the style required of him If he did not pos sess a private income of three or i ir times as big as his official Bulary. Ho Is the owner of over 100 estates, all of which supply him with private rev enues, but he is also the possessor of 100 pnlaces and CHStles, which have to be maintained In imperial stylo at a great expense to their owner. -lie has more servants than any one else in the world, for a veritable army of over 30,000 domestics, cooks, pn;;,e3, but ors, grooms, pardeners and so forth is employed on his hundred or more estates. He possesses over 40 residences which he has never seen, a score of homes which he has viewed externally, but never inhnbited, even tor one night, and another score in each of which he has slept on only occasion. His private stnblea contain over 6, 000 horses belonging to him, and the kerds of cattle feeding on his own kinds are estimated to number over M.000 head. His wealth is enormous, yet there Is no doubt that he extracts iry little pleasure out of his life of perpetual toil and worry. ! He habitually rises at 6, and eats a Jaaracterlstlcally English breakfast of heun and eggs, bread and butter with armalade specially and privately e ared for him, and tea. This pre lection for Enriish manners and cus cr.s Is common to both the czar and e czarina, for both like English re best, prefer using English to their i;ectlve mother tongues, and are igrced upon the necessity of educat ing their children according to Eng lish method. Immediately after breakfast the czar begins to smoke some of the heaviest brands of Havana cigars, which he continues to puff almost con tinuously till bedtime, notwithstand ing the fact that his doctors have warned him again and again that ex cessive Indulgence In this habit is ex posing him to the worst dangers of nicotine poisoning. By 7 o'clock in the morning he is at his desk, perus ing an enormous heap of state docu ments sent to the palace for his in spection. The variety of subjects with which he is called upon to deal Is astonish ing, for he Is not merely the emperor, but also the father of his people. No order or instruction or communication of uny kind can be dispatched from any ministry or state office in St. Petersburg to local or subordinate au thorities unless It bears the signature of the czar, indicating his assent and approval. Every communication sent from the ministry of war to the representa tive officers commanding several hun dred garrisons throughout the Rus sian empire, every dispatch sent to the captains of Russian warships all over the world and every circular Is sued by the ministry of the Interior to the police and to all varieties of local authorities have to bear the czar's own signature. Success. No "Swear Words."' It is Skid that not a single "swear word" is to be found in the Japanese language. That means that the Japs have no need for such words. And no wonder! For they think it is very silly for any one to get angry. "What's the uiie?" they say. "There's no use kicking about things we cannot help." The Cholera Epidemic. In the cholera visitation in 18G6, the proportion of deaths to each 10,000 In habitants in the various cities of Eu rope were as follows: London, 18; Dublin, 41; Vienna, 51; Marseilles, 64; Paris, 66; Berlin, 83; Naples, 89; St. Petersburg, 98; Madrid, 104; Brus sels, 184; Palermo, 187, and Constan tinople, 738. Perfume a Protection. Lion tamers frequently perfume themselves with lavender. There is, It is said, to be no record of a lion ever having attacked a trainer who fad taken the precaution of using this perfume. The title-hunting heiress is never satis fled until she purchases a gold brick. A. W. Payne of Bangor, Me., is eredlted with being the oldest prac ticing attorney in the United States. Four Miles an Hour was the Time Made on Stage Coaches. In the middle of the elghteeith century English stage coaches were covered with dull black leather, stud ded with broad-headed nails by way of ornament and possessed oval win dows with red frames. On the pnnls of the coach the nnmes of the places passed through were painted In large letters, and the roof, which had nn iron rail around It, rose in a curve. Tho speed of the ponderous vehicles was often but four miles an hour.- An advertisement regarding the Beehive coach, which ran between London pkI Manchester, is worth quoting. It r-nd thus: "In order to Insure safety anil punctuality, with respectability, no large packages will be taken, or fish of any description carried by this con veyance. The inside of the coach is fitted up with spring cushions and a reading lamp lighted with wax for the accommodation of those who wish to amuse themselves on the road. The inside backs and seats are also ft' ,jd up with hair cushions, rendei.ng them more comfortablo to passengers than anything hitherto brought out In the annals of coaching, and to pre vent frequent disputes respecting seats every seat Is numbered. Persons booking themselves will receive a card with a number upon It, thereby doing away with tho disagreeables that occur dally In the old style." A fenture of one promoter's scheme was that each mail coach should be properly guarded by retired soldl-a, who would naturally be acquainted with the use of firearms; but this lilea was not adopted, and the contractors at first supplied guards nnd arms often of a worthless charncter. Ulti mately, however, the postofnee under took to appoint Its own guards, but thf-se were at first so zealous that Pennant records (1792): "They shrot at dogs, hogs, sheep and poultry as they pass the road, and even In towns, to tho great terror and danger of the Inhabitants." The mail coach was luxurious when compared with the old stage coaches. A coach was often called "a God permit," because the advertisement stated that the Journey would be "performed if God permits." In 1836 the mall coaches had proba bly reached their prime. According to a historian, "eight or nine miles an hour had hitherto been their highest speed, and now, with vehicles of light er build, the speed was advanced to ten miles an hour, and even more. While the fastest mail coach on the road traveled at the rate of ten miles and five furlongs an hour,, a private coach accomplished within the hour rather more than eleven miles. This was the coach between Edinburgh and Aberdeen, of which Capt. Barclay of Ury the celebrated pedestrian was the proprietor. Besides coachman t id guard, it carried fifteen passeng.i, four Inside and eleven outside, while a mail coach carried four In and four out, or eight altogether." Restored to Relative After 17 Years. Julius Spears of Saline county, aged 20 years, has Just been restored to his relatives, after having been separated from them ever since he was 3 years old, and having never, as far as he tan remember, heard of them. Young Spear's parents lived In Illinois. One night Willard Spears, the fath er, disappeared, taking his youngest child, Julius, with him. He went to Arkansas, and luter came to Missouri, locating near Camden. The father die! several years ago, leaving his son without any knowledge whatever of his family connections. While in Bedford, 111., a short time ago, a man ! from Marshall met a family named Spears. Conversation revealed f"at they were relatives of Julius Spears, and the old mother has recently had restored to her the son whom she thought she had lost forever. Kansas City Journal. Understood His Business. Gen. Adna R. Chaffee told the fol lowing story recently, as illustrating , the unconscious humor of many Irish ! men: "A true son of the Emerald Isle had applied at a recruiting sta tion in Buffalo for enlistment in the army. The officer in charge asked him Jokingly, if he knew anything about drilling. 'Drillln', was it ye said, sor?" replied the Irishman; 'an' shure I've worked In the New York subway fir two years. Drillln' bedadl Auk me another, sor.' " Natural Mourning. Fifty years ago the British minister at Dresden, Mr. Forbes, had three lit tle dogs of the Pomeranian breed, one black, one gray and one white. When the court was in mourning he went out with dog No. 1, when it was in halt mourning with dog. No 2 and when all was going well with dog No. 3. Only Parrot Talk. Abroae Austin, an English music1 in, bad a parrot On one occasion ie late duke of Edinburgh, son of Qu 'en Victoria, spoke to it. Thereupon .he parrot angrily said, "You're a snob!" to the horror of its loyal owner and the delight of his royal highness. Lion and Unicorn. The lion is the emblem of England and the unicorn of Scotland. On the union of Sootland and England In 1603, one of the lions was removed from the British coat of arms, and the unlooro substituted. He Wen the Race. After the battle of the Boyne King James escaped to Dublin and inform 44 Lady Tyroonnel that her fellow iountrfmen had run away. "If they nave, sire," she replied, "your majes ty seems to have won the race." One Was Made That Act- , ually Lifted Itself. POWER FROM STEAM. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler Wanted to i Know About the Movements of the Eenemy While In Virginia and Ordered the Machine to be r Built. ' Wellman Serrell tells about an air ship MaJ. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, commander of the army of tho James, ordered to be built soon after the 10th army corps moved Into Virginia. All the commanders desired to know what the enemy was doing, and Mr. Serrell says that "when the as tronomer Gen. Mitchell commanded at Port Royal during the Civil War, the matter was discussed with his chief engineer officer, who brought forward the proposition to make a machine wit jut inflation, and exhibited a tin mon d that wound up with a string and handle and spun like a humming top and would fly into the air 100 feet or hiore vertically, according to the force exerted upon It, and would car ry a bullet or two if the itrlng was pulled hard enough." Gen. Mitchell died, and, upon Beeing what the tin toy did, Gen. Butler ex pressed the belief that a machine could be built to navlgnte the air. Drawings were made, the theory be ing "to Imitate the little tin model and add to Its gliding planes. The draw ings," according to Mr. Serrell, "show ed four fans to lift, two above an en gine, two below, and two fans to pro pel and steer, one in front and one be hind; the rear fan on a shaft that moved in a horizontal segment, so as to change the direction of the push, and make the rear fan not only a pro peller, but a rudder at the same time. Across the machine was to be a horizontal shaft, on which on either Side of the machine were to be glid ing planes and automatic balancing balls. These were to slide in and out so as to maintain an equilibrium. The body of the machine was to bo about 62 feet long and shaped like a thick cigar. It was to contain fuel and water and a high-pressure bo. r and engine. From the middle of the body a weight was to be hung, so ar ranged that It m'.ght be lifted or low ered like the legs of a bird. Private subscribers offered to pay for the ma chine, and Mr. Serrell says: The first thing done was to make a fan 18 Inches in diameter, rotate it at different speeds and see how much It would lift. It was found that very considerable weight could be lifted, and to try what could be done on a large scale, a fan about 32 feet in dia meter was made, the blades of the thinnest sheet iron that could be pro cured, and rotation by belt was pro vided. Contrary to expectation, when the fan was first rotated at great speed in a foundry that had a high roof, the weight that could be lifted was much more than the wheel Itself, some 600 pounds or more, aud then within 40 seconds of time the wheel and the weights would drop back to where they started from-, It mattered not how fast the fan was driven. It was found after a long Investiga tion that the fan wheel of any size, when rotated In one place, set up a downward current of air that soon be came nearly or quite as fast as the pitch of the fan, hence it would lift nothing. When, however, the fan was mount ed at the outer end of a long boom, which revolved around a mast, so as to constantly bring the fan Into new air, its lifting capacity never deserted it and bore a certain ratio to the veloc ity, and data were accumulated for proportioning the machine. The questions Involved seemed to be the site of the fan, the shape of the blade, the power required, the weight of the engine, boiler, fuel and water to develop the power. There were no dynamos or storage batteries, liquid air engines or sources of pow erful energy using light-weight ma chines, and the only prime motor suffi ciently reliable was the steam engine. It is true that carbonic acid had been liquefied some years before then, but no one knew how to harness It. Having determined the probable force wanted, the question remained of how to get and maintain pressure enough upon the piston of the engine. A great many experiments were made, but the "needful force of steam was Dot reached before the coming of Ap pomatox." Science. To Make a Compass of Your Watch. Get the number of hours from mid Bight, divide by two and point the hour at the sun so that the shadow of a match or lead pencil falls directly across the center of the watch; 12 o'clock will be north, 6 south, 9 west and 8 east. Suppose It is 9 a. m.; number of hours from midnight Is 9; one-half is 4 1-2; point 4.30 at the sun so the shadow of a match or lead pencil falls across the center of watch, and 12 Is north, 6 south, 3 east and 9 west. Suppose it is 6 p. m.; number of hours from midnight 18; one-half 9; point 9 at sun and 12 Is north, 6 south, 3 east and 9 west. Also, when the sun 1b hidden on a cloudy day, take a lead pencil or stick that Is well sharpened and place It on the thumb nail. By looking closely you will see a faint shadow, which will give you a very good idea of the direction of the sun and may be use ful to one lost on a cloudy day. For- est and Stream. To manufacture tobacco grown in Canada a factory is about to be open ed In Winnipeg. Makes Little Discrimination, If His Prey Is Alive. Tho toad Is a gross feoder. He sal lies forth usually after sundown In search of his prey, which Includes pretty nearly every variety of Insect nd worm, and experiment proves that In 24 hours he will consume In lect food of a volumo fourfold the ca pacity of his stomach In other words, he enn fill up four times. Of anglo worms ho does not seem very fond, though his gluttonous habit extends to them If they are too temptingly abundant, as after the earth haB had a good wetting. Ants appear to be his chief delight, with cutworms and thousand-leggers next In order. Then come caterpi,.are and bettles. Grass hoppers and crickets furnish but a mall part of his bill of fare, and spid ers still less. He has no use, appar ently, for dead prey; but when an In oct or worm comes near him In mo tion he makes for It eagerly. A cut worm which has discretion enough, when in his neighborhood, to keep curled up may easily escape; but as soon as it begins to crawl, let It be ware. His method of capturing a bug Is to dart out his tongue, which, by the way, reverses the usual order of nature In being fastened In front and loose behind. It Is coated with a glu tinous secretion, and when it strikes an object Is fastened firmly to it and conveys it into the toad's mouth. If the object, like a big worm, for In stance, Is too large to go unassisted into his gullet, he uses his forepaws, like a greedy child, to stuff It down. Most of the viands which the toad loves are, In their living state, pests of the farm and garden. It is hard to say Just where to place ants In this classification. Nearly all students of nature, as well as persons who have nothing but the traditions of their childhood to guide their Judgment, have acquired a certain affection for the ant. Its seeming Intelligence, its artlstlo or mechanical insect. Its un tiring industry, its courage, Its care for Its dead and wounded, its nice domes tic economy and its habit of providing against tho "rainy day," all tend to give it a sort of human claim upon us. ' Still, the fact cannot be Ignored that the ant Is an active distributor of plant lice, that it detsroys lawns, spoils garden walks, Infests dwellings and makes itself a common nuisance In the kitchen and pantry, driving the dainty housewife almost to distraction. In the same category with ants, as to human regard, might be placed honey bees, which the toad will eat when he gets a good chance. One of his tricks Is to station himself at the en trance to a hive and capture the be lated home comers. As the toad does not spring Into the air for his food, however, any aspirant may avoid this danger by raising his hives well above the ground. Cat Adopted Orphan Coons. Col. L. L. Hawkins yesterday so cured a new prize for his collection of weird and wonderful exhibits at the city museum, in Portland, Ore. The doughty Colonel has excelled himself in his latest acquisition, and, if one desires to see such a bizarre thing as a pussy cat mothering a litter of young raccoons he may be gratified at the city hall. AH previous happy family records have been broken by an old mother cat rejoicing in a fam ily of two baby coons and her own proper kitten, which Col. Hawkins se cured at Beaverton and has now com fortably Installed at the museum. A few days ago some boys killed a female raccoon near Beaverton, and upon beating the bush discovered her nest with four little ones In it clamor ing for their mother. The baby coons were taken to the home of Mrs. B. L, Griffltts, near by, where a cat was rearing a family of four kittens. The kittens were given to another feline, in which the maternal instinct was strong, and the little coons substitut ed without protest from the mother. In a short time two of the little wild kittens died, but the other pair thrived In their new environment, and the story of the cat with the coon family ber me something of a sensation in the neighborhood. C'il. Hawkins heard of it and made the twenty-mile drive out and back for the purpose of bringing the won der to Portland. Mrs. Grlffltts finally consented to lend the family to the museum, and as an evidence of good fait'' one of the kitten was brought ah g with the little coons to complete the picture ' of mixed domesticity. Portland Oregonlan. Grant's Marvelous Memory. Gen. Grant's retentive memory was simply marvelous, more especially to those most closely associated with him from day to day. In the midst of absorbinng thought, and with ap parently unobservant manner, his ear and eye seemed to hear and notice everything, and two weeks or months later the slightest details had not escaped bis attention or memory. This power was unmistakably de monstrated In a game of whist with his guest, MaJ. Gen. Doyle, of the Brit ish army, between Baltimore and Fortress Monroe. Two staff officers completed the players. With Gen. Doyle at his right, It was simply amazing to discover Grant's ability to discover strategic points. Ho never failed to remember every car I that bad fallen, whence it came and who was to deliver to him all re ma nlng, which he scooped In as a matter of course, although he never seemed In the least absorbed in the game. He was Indeed an enigmatic composition in this as well as in other respects. National Magazine. If wishes were mules beggars might have more kicks coming.. HI 1 1 0 Watery Wastes as Dreary as Any on Land. BETWEEN OCEAN LANES. Generally 8upposed that Every Part of the Sea Haa Been Traveled, fiut 8ueh le Not the Case Much Remains that Has Never Been Explored. Oceans, like continents, have their deserts. On the high seas there are vast spaces whose waves have never beisn parted by the prow of a sailing vessel or Is shed by the propeller of a steamer. Immense solituilos where the flap of a sail Is never heard nor the strident cry of a siren; vtrmtdie deserts, whose silence is broken only by the howling of the wind and the roar of waves which have been vain ly pursuing one another since the day of creation. Theso deserts He forgotten betwixt the narrow ocean highways traveled by vessels. In such waste places of the sea a disabled ship, driven out of Its course by a hurricane, may drift Tor months, tossed by the ceaseless ground swell, without being able to ball assistance; her only chance of es cape Is the possibility that some Dceanlc current may drag her Into a more frequented region. It is generally supposed that by rea on of the universal Increase of marl Lime traffic the sea is everywhere fur rowed by vessels. That is a mlstnke. The gradual but constant disappear ance of sailing ships made the ocean more of a desert than before. Sailing vessels had their established routes in accordance with winds, currents and seasons; the gaps between tho gaps betwoon the routes taken by autward-bound and home-ward-bound ships aro often considerable. Moreover, the capricious elements not Infrequently played the mischief with nautical Instructions, and an a result the field of operations for ocean shipping was vastly extended. This Is no longer true to-day. The liner goes straight ahead in deflanco of wlJ and wave. The ports between which she plies are great Industrial or commercial centers, whither come numerous railways, serving as pro longations of the lines of navigation. Freight cars carry their loads of mer chandise to the lesser portB and the cities of the interior. The railway has killed coastwise navigation. The ocean highways are, therefore, anything but numerous. The most frequented of oceans is the Atlantic. Apart from polar seas we see that In its northern part there Is only one desert zone a d ready waste of wa ters between the routes from Europo to the United States or Canada aud those from Europe to the Antilles. In the south, between the routes from South America or the western Ameri can coast and the routes from South Africa, extends a desert occasionally traversed by the steamers of the lines from Cape Town and Mozambique, which, when the coffee season Is at Its height In Brazil, cross the Atlantic for cargoes at Rio Janeiro or Santos. The Indian ocean is frequented only In the north by lines out of India and Indo-Chlna, and a little In the west by liners from Oceanlca, which call at Colombo and then make straight for Australia. Two lines, each with a steamer a month, follow a slender lane from Australia to Cape Town. The Pacific Is the Sahara of the great seas. Sav ing only the steamships from the far cast to California and British Colum bia, a line from Sydney to San Fran cisco and a one-horse line (with sail ings four or five times a year) be tween Tahiti and the United States save for these mere ribbon-like streaks the Pacific Is a desert. Only a few native canoes ply dar ingly from Island to Island in archi pelagoes girt round with coral reefs veritably ocean graveyards, the terror of seafaring men. Le Matin. Cultivating Sponges. An Mnteresting investigation now being made carried on In Florida by the Bureau of Fisheries has for Its object the discovery and development of methods by which the valuable sheepswool sponge may be cultivated artificially. The method which promises the most satisfactory results, says Dr. Everman in The National Geographic Magazine, is that of using cuttings. Large sheepswool sponges are cut In to small pieces, which are fastened to an Insulated wire fixed in the water, so that the sponges are supported a few inches above the bottom. These small bits, placed at close Intervals along the wire, soon heal and form an organic attachment to it, and very soon begin to grow. It is too soon to predict Just what the results will be, but the indications are so far very encouraging, and It Is believed that the time is not far distant when the sponge fisheries of Florida will be vastly Increased In productiveness and value. Takes Two Days to Ascend. ' The Alps comprise 180 mountains from 4,000 to 15.732 feet high, the lat ter being Mont Blanc, the highest spot in Europe. The summit is a sharpe ridge, like the roof of a house, of nearly vertical granite rocks. The as cent requires two days' time and the assistance of six to eight guides. It was first ascended by two natives. Jacques Belmat and Dr. Packard, on August 8, 1786. Imports of palm oil into the United States increased from 8,081,252 pounds in 1901 to 87,822,806 pounds in 1903. The 1902 Imnnrli wsm t mn ' 083,606. A Lectionary of Reading In Pales tinian Syrlao. Our search for manuscripts In tha Coptic convents of Egypt was not re warded by any brilliant success, writes Agnes Smith Lewis in tho Cen tury. But several years earlier I suc ceeded In obtaining from a private source a manuscript to which I desire to draw the attention of tho American traveling public. It Is leetlouary of readings from the Old Testament and from St. Paul's epistles, written In Palestinian Syri ac; that Is, In the dialect of Aramaio which was spoken in Galilee during our Lord's earthly life and for two centuries afterward, the tongue which "bewrayed" St. Peter. It bears the same relation to the Edessan or liter ary Syrlac as the Doric of ancient Greece did to the Attic, or as English does to Scotch. This manuscript Is absolutely unique of Its kind, be cause, although three other copies of a lectionary in the same dialect exist, one In the Vatican Library and two at Mount 8lnal, they contain a text of the Gospels, while this one provides us with lessons from tho other books of the Bible. Several leaves have been torn from the bixik, one from tho middle and about eight from the end. The dealer confessed to having sold these piece meal to passing travelers. The leaf from the middlo has turned up In Germany, having been detected and edited by Dr. Frledrlch Sehultliess in the "Zeltschrlft der Deutschen Mor genlaiulisehen Gesellschnft," vol. IvU page 2G3. Its text exactly fits tho gap left In the manuscript purchased by me. It Is of some importance for the history of Syrlac literature that we siiould know the date, and that will probably be found written on one of the leaves which have been lost fioui the end. A Doctor's Rules for Old Age. It Is the theory of Dr. James Saw yer, an English physician of note, that there need be no trouble about attain ing tho uge of 100 years, if a few sim ple rules for health are faithfully ob served. Here are the principal re quirements ho makes: Plenty of sleep. A full supply of fresh, pure air, night and day. Eat but little meat, but eat fat food of some kind, probably rice, corn meal, nuts, etc., would do as well as fat food of some kind, probably rice, corn meal, nuts, etc., would do as well as fat meat. Fat, he says, feeds the cells that destroy the germs of disease in the body. Exercise is another essen tial, and country life is recommended, on account of purity of air, and against excitement and giving way to temper, and encourages frequent rest days or holidays. They are good, sensible rules, any how; although they cannot insure the observer that he will a hundred yeara there is no doubt but that their ob servance will add several years to the lives of those who practice them. Kuropatkln. Gen. Kuropatkln's hold over men I due to his reputation for absolute fearlessness. Five years ago he re ceived the information that the great powder magazine at St. Petersburg aud that at Toulon, France, were to he blown up within twenty-lour hours. Th .' General was in bed when he ho. i.rd the news, but he at once got up and started for St. Petersburg with out losing a moment. He summoned all the staff of the magazine and went 00 a round of Inspection. He found everything In order, and as a proof of his satisfaction ordered every one in the magazine to take three days' holi day and to leave at once. He then collected a new garrison and a new staff and set a ring of sentries all around the magazine. The conse quence was that nothing happened to the St. Petersburg magazine, but that at Toulon was blown up the next day. Leap Year Proposals. By an act of the Scottish Parlia ment, passed In the year 1228, It was "ordonlt that during the reign of her Maist Blesslt Mae .tie. Margaret, Ilk maiden, laldee of balth high and Iowa estalt, shall hae llbertie to speak ye man she likes. Glf be refuses to tak hlr to bee his wyf, he shall be mulct in the sum of ane hundrldty pundls, or less, as his estalt may bee, except and alwais, glf he can make It ap peare that he Is betrothlt to anlther woman, then he schale be free." But the ordinance stipulated that the lady should propose marriage only during the leap year, as allotted on the Gregorian calendar. At that time the custom became quite common, as Is shown by the number of proposals recorded In Scotland, and especially by the number of unwilling bachelors who were fined for refusing to marry. Egg-laying Competition. The 100 hens of pullets entered for the annual laying competition at the Hawkesbury College, Australia, re cently all started off scratch on their year's race. There were eighty-nine competitors from all parts of this state, seven from America, two from New Zealand, and one each from Queensland and Victoria. One of the Lost Cities. Speaking of lost cities, what has be come of Pithole City? In 18C5 it was, next to Philadelphia, the largest post office in the Statu of Pennsylvania, with a population of 16,000. There is a small post office called Pithole, but tho city has disappeared and on its Bite Is a flourishing farm. The genius ho Invented the hairpin must have groaned when he thought of the centuries that bad waited tor him In vain.