——————— o_o or AS AAA SN, I OLD PETS MADE OVER AT THE MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY THEY APPEAR AS IF ALIVE. The Vicious Old Elephant Will Be Stuffed Like Other Park Animals Which Died Before Him. Few New Yorkers appreciate the mine of information and entertain- ment that they have at their com- mand in the American Museum of Natural History. The immense mu- seum buiiding in its park between 77th and 81st streets, and Columbus and Eighth avenues, sight to all, but of the interior and its contents it is surprising what a large proportion of old New Yorkers are blissfully ignorant. How many people are there who know what be- comes of their old pets at the Central Park ‘‘Zoo’' after they are missed | from their cages and reported as | among the long list of the dead? is present trip is of the western southern. const down to be a very fine one. Museum, but they have not been un- packed as yet, for there is no room to exhibit them. when the new building is opened. But the most interesting part of the work at the the 18 bones are idermists’ department, and in where the skeleton and mounted. paring for exhibition, the animals which die at the Park Zoo, and those which are presented to» the Museum, is carried on. A force of men is kept constantly at work under mist John Rowley, ing and mounting the skins of speci- mens for exhibition. It was to this department of the Museum that the of the murdered Tip was given after the vicious old brute had received his quietus. The work of preparing the hide and bones of the CARrcass and the terror of his keepers, was a difficult one and will take many —— BUFFALO COW AND CALPF. — i Would it not surprise a great many of those who were on terms of famil- iarity with Crowley, the* almost human chimpanzee, which attracted so much attention for several years at the Park menagerie; with Kitty, his mate, whose antics when she was first introduced to her future lord and master, were all told in the news- papers; with Bombe, the great un- wieldly rhinoceros which was fed every day by an admiring fringe of awed visitors who shrrounded his huge swimming tank; with dear old Jumbo, upon whose broad back half the children of New York were car- ried around Madison Square Garden; or with Tip, the vicious old elephant. which had such a long record of crimes committed, ‘‘with malice and! intent aforethought’''—would it not Tip was skinned at once in the cage was killed, and the flesh The skin was taken to the museum to be prepared for mounting, while the bones were sent into the country to be macerated. They now lie in tanks of water up in this State near Scoha. rie, slowly rotting off the flesh, to prepare them for being mounted. The hide was at taken to the basement of the museum and a force of men set at work paring it down for mounting. An important moose was in praparation when the skin of old Tip arrived, so his mount- ing had to bedelayed. The skin, when cleaned and thinned down somewhat with drawer-knives, was put away in the cellar to soak in an antiseptic so- lation. The moose group will occupy the attention of the taxidermists for some months to come, so it is not ex- pected that the work of mounting Tip's hide will begin until the first of Once group of surprise the old friends of these | former pets to suddenly come upon! them all now, years after they have passed away, standing in the muse- um, in their accustomed positions, just as they did in their days of former glory? It is intended by the trustees of the American Museum of Natural His- tory to some day extend the building until it almost entirely fills the park in which it now stands. Up to this year, however, there was found to be enough space for all the exhibits available within the limits of the single wing completed, that facing on 77th street. year a second wing has been building, however, and when it is completed and opened to the public the facilities of the mu- seum will be nearly doubled. There are now in the possession of the in- stitution enough exhibits to fill both wings, and additions are constantly being received. This new wing is being built on the southeast corner of the plot of ground | and connecting with the old building. t will be a five-story structure faced | with red granite, like the other wing. It will be 70 feet deep and have a | frontage on 77th street of 175 feet. | The work on this addition is progress- | ing rapidly, and it was said at the | museum last week that all but the | interior work on it would be com- | pleted by the first of next November, | The woodwork, plastering, show-cases | and installation of specimens will | take several months more, so that it | is hardly expected that the public | will be admitted before the early part | of néxt summer, When it is allowed this privilege | the change that will have occurred in | the museum will astonish even the oldest frequenters of the place. The classification, as at present arranged. by floors will be retained, and the collections extended out through the new building as well as the old. There are already a number of exhib- its at the museum which cannot be shown for lack of accommodation, and these, with many others, which are expected before the new building is completed, will be found within the walls of the new wing when it is opened. The Museum has many other ‘irons in the fire.” It has collectors in its employ in both Mexico and Peru, : explorer down in Mexico made _ his first trip some time ago, and sent up the results of his work this winter from Arizona. He went then trom “his the northern part of Mexico to the “central part of the country, His next year. Then it will be put through at once, and will be exhibition early next Spring. The skeleton of Jumbo, Barnum’s giant elephant, has been loaned to the Museum by James A. Bailey Mr Barunum's successor, and his mounted hids will soon be in the Museum as well. It is thought to be very doubt- ful if either will be taken away again, When the new wing is opened next year the present position of the buf- falo group in “Mammal Hall’ will be given over to the exhibition of these two elephants. Jumbo was an African elephant, while Tip was a specimen of the Indian variety, and both are very fine examples of their different breeds. One of the finest and most recent additions to ‘Mammal Hall"’ is the group of buffaloes. This is composed of seven specimens, including differ. ent ages and sexes of the American bison, all mounted in a life-like man- ner, with accessories and surround- ings made from studies made on the plains, and all inclosed in a huge glass case. The big cow with the little calf by her side was presented to the museum by Buffalo Bill. These two specimens died at his Wild West camp at Erastina, 8. I., two or three summers ago. tg ug on group, the taxidermists are now at work on a group of moose. bo the masterpiece of the tion, and Mr. Rowley is taking won- derful pains to have it correct in every particular. There will be seven to the museum by Dr. Edgar Mearus, a surgeon in the United States Army, stationed at Fort Snell- cow to the collection. The largest specimen of all, an enormous bull with antlers spreading five feet from tip to tip, was shot by Taxidermist Rowley Pr up in the wilds of the Province of New Brunswick, last October, The last piece of work done by the osteologists under Wiliiam Richard. son, who Is head of that departmend, was the mounting of the skeleton of Bombe, the great wrinkled rhinoceros, which died at Central Park ‘Zoo’ in 1886. The hide had been stuffed and mounted two years or so ago, but the bones were set up only last Saturday in ‘Mammal Hall.” Bombe was an Indian one-horned rhinoceros, and originally possessed a long horn that his keepers in captivity decided that hig hugh tusk was dangerous to his visitors and themselves, as well as to his cage, and it was gradually sawed off closer and closer, until at his death Bombe had only a short knob left. This omission has been with an imported horn, taken from some more fortunate rhi- noceros out in India and shipped New York for Bombe's special HE RHINOCEROS ‘‘poMne.”’ One special feature of this speci- men which Taxidermist Rowley called attention to was the beautiful wrin- kles in the skin. These might not ordinarily be looked upon as great ¥ OCEAN CABLES, FOURTEEN OF THEM CROSS THE ATLANTIC. How the Continents Were First Con~ nected By Telegraph -- Materials Comprising Submarine Cables«- Cost of Cabling. Of the fourteen submarine cables vhich lie at the bottom of the Atlan- tic Ocean, connecting the United states with Europe, the oldest now n use, according to the New York News, is that laid in 1878. years ago to-day sinve that elephan- ne monster, the cumbersome side- wheeler Great Eastern, compieted the laying of the first 50 miles of the sable westward from Valentia, on the southwest coast of England. It is 21 There are now over 1,500 telegraph | ables under water in the different oarts of the world, 1,277 of which | wonnect wilh London, and thus indi- | ceetly with this country. These measure in length 178,000 miles, and as seyeral of the longest contain two r,three conductors, they make in all rhinocerous the d hide put in reatest trouble, first 19 én JOY jombe i the this country of having wrinkles in death, and that 1 ly the g Long iron rods had to be placed un- der the skin in the ridges were in lif the out. One of the most the i seam stuffed 8 istinetion i% ney were there on after places where the 10 kes Pp nn order wrinkles from be ing sn oothed afiraclive cases to many children who vigit the ig that which contains bodies of their mu- two fiancee, Kitty, which died in captivity at Crowley mounted and time. though ely recent addi- died, it broken has been on exhibition for s« Kitty ! tio He is A comparatiy to the be remembered, She of 1 museum, will heart tion of n and, incidentally wher and New features are constantly being added to the when the new year, and the capacit} is increased, as be many new there, At any I repay museums stock wing a 1 opened there will be il even now LO Bean ¥ any one to make avisit Lo Natur "i of al itn Of ni History 1 he View ries sensat can clouds lessly break ' he faces cliffs Occasionally dee depths ben £ tl ' of the ( broken by ths rom the the voice lor were dict Oi on the h o ind, a rattle of ing a stern © destructi SLOorm rises, envelop hail (1 o0n F103 $Y Ort fore entering and hold up your hands. You feel the sharp tingle of the electric cur rent as | from your fingers tips. Ti over, and you can sunbeams gilding the upper of the white clouds that and swing below you, half way down sides, and completely h the shifts: Bi Can gtorm is soon soe he surfaces EWaY the ide from view The scenery like a drawn curtain the clouds part, and, as from heights of another sphere, we look forth upon the majesty of the mountains and the plains. An ocean of inextricably entangled peaks sweeps into Forests dark and vast vague shadows on distant mountain sides, A city dwarfed into the compass of a single bloek; courses are mere threads laid in graceful curves upon the green Worl beneath. seem is The red granite rocks beneath our feet are starred with tiny flowers, so minute that scopie, yet delicate and the colors. tinted with tender most copper wire, sufficient to go around the earth 20 times. Only a small fraction is owned by the different European Governments, the bulk be- ing in the hands of private concerns, nearly in) (MMs END, Government { apitalize d for I'he British has more under water than any They are 118 in number, and bring the most remote portions of Hindostan or other ob- India in juick touch with the Government at is Cork, Ireland wildly pictur- naturally cables otl ier nation. ns London, as The Pacit with $e i Ocenn its thousands of fathoms cover up and mountainous bottom, in weipices sand yawni efied man cable in- genuity. The sea is copper-bound New York and Halifax eastward to Gibraltar Mediterranean, the Black. the Red, the Arabian sens and the Indian Ocean, but the great Paci- fic remains iil free ] from Sydney, Australia “ n sidered ue water which an abounding uneven of huge pre ng chasms, has d hit f ¥ irom the a short New this unless 10 ‘0 as in k ne ntic Was if mey raised by Cyrus W. Field . ’ in 1856 the with He everybody WHE cable aid nt abroad from here i 13¢ i. Lhd A ngust 1807. in belonging mpany was formed and on Agamemnd shh Lrovernnmu and Lh States left Valenti; which was Niagara gleam hat which 11608 (lee ld i ‘ ARR. ¢ WHS Sa INIGE ONY atiempis 1858, thirty-six 3 t work was accompl bye opened an 3 f that year ing the How- sent O ever, only messages ne enable was im- t and was never opened for toll The fifth dispa ch was from New York to Mr. Cunard at London, telling him of a collision steamships Europe and werd over this line the a rioe business nt sent between the Arabian. The breaking out of the pped Of in business this ¢ England, and during th we had no tions with the other side. After peace was restored, however, Mr. Field was London organizing another company The new cable was made +h stronger, and the Gre eivil the war cable yuntry and e great strife telegraphic commaunica~ sie negotiations between again in 1 u at Eastern was chartered for the Iaying, the sup- position being that the vessel's pro- digious size would relieve the cable of any sudden jerks or strains. It was on a lovely evening, July 24, 1860, that the Great Eastern, with the cable stored comfortably away in her hold, steamed westward from Valentia. All went well until she was within 600 miles of Heart's Content. New. foundland. Mr, Field was on board, nn to face. to deseribe who have beheld its grandeur and [Cassier's Magazine, the scene, it can magnificence, = Sparrows Kill Locusts. The English sparrow, which has been voted an unmitigated nuisance in this country, seems to have at least one redeeming trait. He loves to kill the seventeen-year locust, It is reported from Woodbridge, N. J, where the locusts are superabundant, that the sparrow hes evidently de- clared war on them, and has killed large numbers of them. The spare rows do not seem to care to eat the their eyes. When these are gone, ground and die.~{New Orleans Plea- yure. Antidote for Cyanide of Potash. One of the deadliest and most sub- tle poisons known to the pharmaco- paeia is cyanide of potash. It is now reported that a Hungarian chemist, Dr. Johann Antal, has discovered a sure antidote for it, the efficacy of which he has proved in numerous ensos, first on animals and afterwards on more than forty living persons, who had been accidentally polgoned with prussic acid. The antidote did not fail in a single instance. The antidote is a newly-discovered chemi- compound, nitrate of cobalt, 1 § i teries aboard, trials were made to see if it was all right. Suddenly it broke in the very deepest part of the ocean and was lost. Having lost all the grappling gear the ureat Eastern steered homeward, The next year the Great Eastern tackled the job again, and on July 27. 1866, landed the shore end of a cable at Heart's Content. Then the expedition returned to the spot where the cable was lost the year before, succeeded in grappling it, and in a short time America and Europe were connected by two lines of telegraphic communication. Submarine cables are now con- structed differently than formerly; that is, the different sections vary in size. The shore ends are two inches in diameter and heavily armored, while the deep sea section remains about as of old, viz: three-quarters of an inch in diameter. In the new pounds of copper, 9,500,000 of steel wire, 1,800,000 of jute yarn, 1 ,800,- 000 of compound and 800,000 pounds of pure gutta percha. This costs about $1,500 a mile, and laid, nearly £3,000, so it is safe to estimate that the actual cost of laying all the submarine cable in use to-day is $500,000,000. The heavy eable costs $2,000 a mile, as it is armored with 86 steel wires three-sixteenths of an inch in diameter, and 20 of one sixteenth inch. The cost of maintaining ocean ea- bles ia also Immense. Ab present there are 40 steamships employed as repairers in the service, and these generally have to be built for the jiepose. Cables about the fishing nks of Newfoundland are often broken by the anchors of fishermen, down go fine that they soon have it mended again. The repair-ship ar. riving at the point of breakage, which, by a peculiar sounder, can be readily ascertained at the nearest terminal, drops its grapnel overboard and steers at right angles with the line back and forth until the liook catches the eable. This is then pulled up and anchored to a bugy until the other end is found in the same way. Then the two ends are scientifically spliced with another piece and let go again to the bottom of the ocean. Only 18 years ago it cost Dom Pe- late Emperor of Brazil, $20 a cable back to Rio Janeiro Centennial Exposition. can be sent all over world, starting at San thence the conti- Messnre known fCTrOss Pacific to New York; thence follow- ing the world’s northern telegraphic through England, Nor- way, Sweden, Russia and Siberia, go- ing south touching at Wagasaki, in Japan, Hong Kong, China, Singapors Sumatra Australia to New Zealand; thence to Bombay ; thence to Ceylon and Aden, around the Cape of Good Ho leaving t line at Zanzibar for interior lines in Africa, up the West Afri St. Louis, to Senegal, acro HOTORS he ie an Coast to Atlantic to Pernambuco versing South America over to Valparaiso, Chil thence north th to Galveston, Texa for $18 a word. COAsL ; “ BURIAL AT SEA. it Sobers Crew and Passengers and Is Oppreusively Solemn, I can’t sively solemn ceremony than a burial ut suid A. Denny, to a St. Louis repor It is sol- Cri } yu Ai cept when remain i Carried charge of a Congre but ceremony ity as much as the aw{ imaging: Bea, emn the peng ugh « rf % O lamented nro : a burial at on and ur of , soft nie Rr wild mid-ocean iia beauty the sea are surg fission a tranquil not gi of ven musit 0 as. he makes them jut when i the ship characte stant red dea con ribal i. board piety in i Nee 1} » which great, with desoiate sire its fio mountainous Hilloy and its howling gaies, seems to} the grin reaper i character the livir CRS ninds of f the terrors o land, with trains nd a trenody he line of to graveyard. You can « it, matter bh nardened i i fron vl DOU that no the hat and bares his head t« he i g of oppression over the death occurs is 80 over] for this very reason, | rid of spe il. snlior yaEses the sky whenever “The feelin hich extends all ship when owering that { for no other it is necessary to get tiie « with all getting And isa climax to possible rid of it the man who has never exp it can imagine. The idea of d the cold insensate clay into the bottomless ocean, to be gnawed at and n by the greedy monsters of the is horrifying to the stoutest mass of limitiess done, and doi do it must be shrinks from upon him to hands. ne E it it i with his board, face up. To the foot of the board are attached heavy weights, usually cannon balls. Then the ship by some of the crew, who, after doing this, make haste scurry back out of sight of the final proceedings, leaving no one but the captain, whose duty it is to tip up the board and let it drop into the sea, feet foremost. Maybe you think you can sleep after doing that. If you do, just volunteer to perform this service for the first captain on whose boat you are passenger, when a death occurs. 1 assure you that { you won't get any more sleep for a good many nights afterwards.” Science in Old Shoes. A French savant has invented » new science which he terms scarpol ogy, whereby he proposes to diagnos. ticate mental qualities from the ap- pearance of the shoes worn by the subject. He claims that shoes that { have been worn are full of faithful | indications as to lack of energy, fickle. ness, bad temper, or the opposite qualities, as the case may be. If the sole and heel of a shos, after two months’ wear are equally worn, the owner is un energetic business man, an employe that can be relied upon, a good wife or an excellent mother, If the outside edge is most worn, the owner is adventurous to rashness and of a bold and persistent turn of mind. Wear of the inside edge indicates ir- resolution and weakness in man and modesty in woman.—~{New York Tele gram. TC RH AN AR HER WANTS, Butcher—Have you any orders this morning, madam? Young Wife (who is keeping house)=Yes; that ecall’s liver you brought me last week was very fine. I want another one, but be sure bit the repairers now have the work and get it from the same calf, as husband ls very parieutar, | DISPERSED BY SAUERKRAUT, Peculiar Cause of the Children Quitting the Old Home. They were talking about the deser- tion of farms by the younger genera. tions for the alluring charms of the cities; how young men and women left the home nest in the country as soon ns they felt any confidence in themselves and flocked to the paved streets and brick walls of urban life in the hope that work would not be #0 hard and money would ese easier, “Our family furnirhes a in point,”’ said a young German who has latterly appeared in minor roles in ward democratic politics. “We're all in the city now except the old folks, who stick to the farm Our reasons farm, however, given, and I doubt if a parallel case be found.”’ Then he told hig CRs twenty-fourth and are doing pretty well for were n ning ne abando Of those usuunily Cal story With two ters and three gis. farm 100 miles they broth« rs he lived 0 on a ail aided a bos i { iw id ithier 11 wrating oid ft place. It and the fami i prosperous a the piece of and disaster came 3. The yi Y was J land mppy Ark shape of a eabbag: ia Croj i ” i t gp f si Ge ~ {farmer £ rop. he ping 144 sev- excellent cut up and market shows andthe a profitable ree DOYS eral acres in cabbage, with The d there Crop result d ar friend the North an mn DUSINess on Armer received order A few days later the that the best he iI, the nan All went well reers gan wo haa beet several t he ¥y au ed old T went t MIO | A Young Eagle. The eagle, as many of you know, is the King among Diras ist as ti is the King among Mammals eatest strength when full grown of ti The the ed tilt eps. ese qualities in eagle, just is the most (atare under the sun. a thick white coat of we slips out of the shell, and yy days afterward the young bird lies huddled against the broast of the mother-bird, for it cannot even Weeks pass by be- fore it can trot about the nest. The first ign of the flapping of the wings does not occur until the bird is ready to leave the The young birds are amply fed by which the their craws before it to the little ones. When they are about half grown the eagle nest looks like a slaughter house well stocked with provisions. The parent birds scour the neighbor. hood for miles, gathering all the prey they can. When the birds are full grown they are permitted to leave the nest. The parents go with them, teaching them first how to fly and then how to as enil and steal their prey. By that time autumn has come, and now the family separates. The youngsters leave the parental nest, and some- times roam about for eight or ten years before they set up an estab- lishment of their own and in their turn raise young birds. In 1719 an eagle died in Vienna, Austria, who had lived in captivity for over 104 years, ~[St. Louis Star-Sayings. royal emerged om helpless down, | for ny ma nest. latter digest in feeding She Swims in Her Sleep. A young woman of Crab Creek, Adams County, indulges in frequent freaks of somnambulism, One of her recent exploits was as follows: She arose from her bed about three o'clock in the morning and was seen to approach Crab Creek in her night robe. Upon reaching the stream the young woman waded in for a short distance, as if Jasling hee way, and swam safely across. Upon reachi the opposite bank she awoke, hal frightened to death, dripping wet, shivering from the cold, and made her way to the house of a neighbor, where she was cared for and taken to her home.~{ Morning Oregonian.