AUGUST 28, 1903. in London an electric sculpturing machine, the solo rights of,whiclvthoy have purchased from a Mr.' BontempI, of Naples. The workman is seated on one side of the machine. In front is a plaster cast, and with one- hand he guides a rod 'backward and forward 'over the plaster. A revolving steel drill protrudes from the machine two feet. away, and another further on. In front of each of those drills is fixed a block of marble, and a jet of .water is played on the point of each drill. Every movement of the "rod in the workman s hand is followed by a similar movement on the part of the drills, which rapidly cut away the surface of the marble until it corresponds with the sur face tof '-the plaster." . . : rpHE LONDON CORRESPONDENT FOR THE X' . New. York World further say that when he saw .the "m,aqhine jit had roughly cut the face of a classic, poet out oftthe marble, aijd was at work on the side of the head. Some superabundant stone having been rapidly cleared away, the rod .was applied to the fillet binding the poet's hair, and in a few minutes the ribbon was reproduced in marble. The rough outline of the "hair then made its appearance, every lock being hewn but of the jhard stone with astonishing celerity and mar vellous fidelity. This machine can sculpture two busts simultaneously, and this number is capable .of '.considerable increase. It is believed that the .invention will have a great influence on the future o sculpture. A' STRANGE FUNERAL RECENTLY TOOK XJl place at Kishineff, Russia, at which place, it will be remembered, outbreaks against the Jews took place not long ago and many Jews were killed by mobs. The New York Times says: "During the troubles in Aishineff, thirty of the parchment scrolls, containing the Jewish law and held in the holy ark at t-io synagogue and taken out only am great occasions, either of mourning or of joy, .were so mutilated that it was decided to bury them with the honors of the dead. Accord ingly, ai great ceremonial was arranged and car ried out Oh August 2, which is the 9th day of the Jewish month of Ab. It was on this day that -the temple at Jerusalem was destroyed, and it is therefore observed with great ceremonial by the Jews. But the ceremony of the funeral made it an extraordinary day among the people of Kishineff. The scrolls were placed in vases, on which was written the story of the massacre, and ' followed by great crowds to the cemetery, this cemetery being the one near where the massacre took place, 'ine scene of the funeral, recalling as it did thoughts of sorrow to the Jows, is said to have been moving, the crowd weeping while the rabbis conducted the ceremony." TRAVELERS IN THE ALPS AND OTHER mountainous regions of Switzerland will re-, call the pretty mountain flower known as the "edelweiss."- For some time it Was feared- that this flower would become extinct, owning to the great demand for It. Recently a dealer in Zurich advertised for 125 pounds of the flower and this prompted a writer in the New York Herald to say: "The trade in this pretty Alpine flower has 'within the last few years developed into quite a large industry In Switzerland. It is extensively used for funeral wreaths and some time ago a large wreath was made here composed entirely of edelweiss, the value of tLa flowers being over seventy-live francs. It may be aaued that a fair- ly extensive allied industry is the manufacture of artificial edelweiss. The disappearance of some of the rarer Alpine flowers is continually being reported in the Alps, and edelweiss in particular is altogether extinct in some places where it was abundant not many years ago," af ? A. QUAINT CUSTOM OF ANCIENT ORIGIN IS about to terminate in London. According to the New York Tribune, "London bridge pays taxes for imaginary houses on it. At any rate, it still yields the rates and taxes of the houses which the old bridge supported. A correspondent of the City Press explains that when, about the year 1756, it was decided to clear the houses from the bridge, certain taxes and tithes survived, and have been paid, ever since by ttie Bridge House Estates to the rectors of St Magnus and St Olave churches. Not less than 60,000 has been paid to these two parishes since the decrepit houses which formerly yielded them were pulled down. They survived not only the houses, but the old bridge itself. And now there is a movement to stop this serial ghost fltpry of taxation. But it Is certain that the stoppage can only be effected by regular commutation or some other equitable arrangement" The Commoner, SO FAR AS KNOWN, THERE ARE, VERY FEW .. . , factories in htwcountry for making artl iicial flies for bait, nnd of these few, one is sit uated at btevons Point in Wisconsin. The Mil waukee Sentinel, which makes this claim, also Bays that the factory is owned and operated by a "woman and all of the employes aro girls and women. The Sentinel adds: "Miss Carrie Frost, who is the proprietor, learned how to make artl licial flies from her fishermen father and uncle, who learned in England and have always been enthusiastic sportsmen. Sho herself can chooso her bait and cast and catch as well as any, and frequently indulges in the sport Sho made her fly hooks so well for her father and uncle that their friends clamored for her work, and when she soon had so many" orders that she could not fill them she began to employ and teach a few girls to help her. After that she undertook the manufacture of fly hooks as a regular business. She rents a long, low one-story building, original ly put up for a' bowling alley, xhcro sho employs from sixty to seventy girls, who, working all tho year around, turn out 3,000 and 4,000 flies every day. Miss Frost herself manages tho whole busi ness, sees to the ordering of supplies, teaches mo girls how to do tho work, fills her own orders, keeps the books, and, when sho wants an extra good one, makes It herself." sc tr THE BERLIN UNIVERSITY HAS FITTED out an expedition to hunt for and capture a huge bird that has for mar years been reported as extinct, but recent reporta encourage the belief that it is yet to be found far In tho interior of Madagascar In Africa. Prof. Krause has been appointed as tho head of this expedition and has already started on tho hunt for the giant bird. Ihe Berlin correspondent for the St. Louis Globe Democrat says: "Tho scientific name of the giant bird is Aepyornis, and it was supposed to be extinct up to a short time ago, when one of Its eggs was found on the southwest coast of Mada gascar, swimming in a river that had carried it' from the interior. .This egg was 16 inches high, measuring 12 inches In diameter. It was sawed apart and Its contents filled a liters vessel, being i" equivalent of 190 chicken eggs. fThe weight of tho egg was 27 pounds and the shell measured G millimetres in diameter. Madagascar being a tropical country it must bo assumed' that the egg was laid no more than eight days ere it was found, as otherwise it would have gone putrid. For that reason the Berlin university fitted out an expe dition to hunt and capture a giant bird and find out all about its life and condition. The bird is supposed to be between 14 and 15 feet high." AN INTERESTING EPISODE TOOK PLACE in Pittsburg, Pa., recently. On August 10, . according to a correspondent of the New York World, $8,500,000 passed through the streets known only to a few persons. The Pittsburg cor respondent says:- "The money comprised the contents of the vaults of the Tradesmen's and Columbia national banks, which were moving from their former locations to the new Jb armors' . Eank Building. Tho treasure was made up of specie, securities and the contents of the safe de posit vaults. It was all placed in huge sacks. In some instances two men were required to lift a sack. Two trips were made, and in both in stances the wagons were filled. A score of city and private detectives were about tho neighbor hood to see that nothing happened to the treas ure." AN ENORMOUS INCREASE IN THE NUMBER of insane in England and Wales has been noted in recent years. A writer In the Kansas City Journal, speaking on this subject, says: "In 1859 the total number of Insane was 36,762", or one in every 536. On January 1, 1903, tho number had risen to 113,964, or one In every 293. The rate of Ircrease has been greatest since 1894, the leap be ing from 92,067. In 1902 tho increase over 1901 vas 3,251. The total number of insane cases In 1902 was 22,581 over 400 a week. Of the increase over tho preceding year 188 vere private, 48 crim inal and 3,015 pauper. The proportion of private cases is about the same now as in 1859, but the pauper rate has doubled. To drink Is attributed t 23 per cent of the male cases and 9.6 of the female. ' To herldity is attributed 18.8 per cent of tho male cases and 24.6 of the female." THOMAS A. EDISON, THE FAMOUS .INVEN tor, has perfected a phonograph which, It Is believed, will revolutionize the taking and pro ducing of testimony and dictation. Mr. Edison claims that with two machines, om for recording and the other for reproducing, a single operator can do tho work of eight under the present y- . tern. Tho Orango, N. J., correspondent for th Chicago Chronlclo says: "Although no larger than ordinary phonographs, tho now dovlce Is dif ferent In many particulars. Tho record In nine inches long and half an inch thick and will tako lrorn eight to nine lottors of ordinary length. An other advantage claimed for the record of tho now machino is that it can bo shaved 175 times, mak ing its cost no more than tho cheapest papor. 1 ho machino Is operated by olcctrlcity. After tho person dictating has finished his work tho typo writer operator takes the record nnd transfers It to a phonograph nt his desk. When ho touches a button wan hlB foot the machino begins to repro duce. The invention is not claimed to bo an n t rely now and untried ono, but K has not been so thoroughly perfected that it could be profitably used for the purposo referred to until now." a? ar TVrEWSPAPER READERS ARE FAMILIAR IX with the rigid censorship exorclsod In Rus sia as regards publications. The London Express recently gave a curious example of the uso of this powor In Russia in another direction: A manufacturer of swoots was In tho habit of wrap ping up bonbons in colored paper, which was cov eied with' all manner of little pictures. Ono of these pictures was that of a landscape with a storm coming up from tho sea. Underneath was tho sentence, "Tho storm rages; it approachen nearer.' These papers were confiscated by tho censor and their further uso forbidden under a heavy penalty, as it. was thought that they wero political propaganda. ' FOR-MANY YEARS THE FORTH BRIDGE IN England has been regarded as tho largest bridge undertaking ever completed In tha: coun try. ThiB fame is in a fair way to be eclipsed, however, by a now bridge that is to bo erected over the Tyno at Newcastle, England. The Phil adelphia Public Ledger says that tho estimated cost of this structure is $2,350,000, and adds: "Tho new bridge will be used for railway traffic only, and besides affording greater care and speed in working the railway lines 'concentrated at Now castle, it will save at least $100,000 per annum in locomotive power. The three main piers will be rounded on steel caissons 4o feet long by 35 feet wide, sunk 69 feet below high water mar .. The ?ianIn ,brd,ge wlu b0 a Btcel rioted lattice truss, 1,100 feet long, consisting of three river spanc each 300 feet long and two side spans of 540 feet. Each main span will include five lattice girders 320 feet long, 27 feet deep and .4 feet wide, and each main girder will weigh over 300 tons. The four lines of rails on this bridge will bo 110 feet abovo high water, with 83 feet headway under tho Kir dors." A STRANGE STORY IS REPORTED FROM Oacoma, S. D., by tho correspondent for the Qhlcago Tribune. This correspondent says that immediately preceding a heavy showor, nearly every kitten less than six months old In the vicin ity died, apparently from tho effects of some gaseous matter In the air. A bunch of eighteen cattle was seen coming from the flats, when eight of them fell to the ground. A farmer living near by ran out to them and found six of the eight al ready dead. John Morris, a stockman living on White river, reports the loss of six head in tho same way. It is generally believed that the copi ous rains which have fallen since haye neutral ized whatever poison to-anlmal life may have been in tho air. It was a phenomenon heretofore un known there. r THE LONDON DAILY MAIL RECENTLY AN nounced that another of London's show places was to be taken away from that city. Tho building known as the original of the "Old Curios ity Shop," which was immortalized by Dickens, tho novelist, has been sold to an American who in tends to take It to pieces and re-erect it in tho United States. According to a cablegram from London to the St Louis Republic, the Drily Mall says: "Thousands have paid for the privilege of seeing the venerable edifice and of purchasing Dickens curios, caring but little whether the house written about by the master novelist really ex isted there, or, as many suppose, in Fetter Lane. Thirty-five years ago the observatory of a house in St Martin's street was bought by an American syndicate for ?500 and shipped across tho seas. The Yankees were delighted, for they thought they were purchasing the room which had ben used by Sir Isaac Newton. Plenty of English people, how ever, knew better." 4 11 i i ) . . -. 'i " I-- sui- f " a. , 3 U t Mffl' iafciftfe 'M,1 tijlr .... . ...i, t.. i. e "T"" ' w,w,wM,'1WWPwMwlJMMMjKilMiyiiMBBl kkf tiWU-Jhifc.23lfti flfei. BFa .jiuu ii i mm atvr; .'