24 THE WEST SUORE. October. "WEST RHORE" PRIZES. It will be remembered that Mr. L. Sam uels, the enterprising proprietor of the Wist Shore, offered several prizes for es says to be awarded at the State Fair. The awards were made yesterday, and are as follows: I'rire essay on the "Resources of Ore gon," premium, $15 gold coin, was award ed to Milton Richardson, of Tualatin, Washington county. Prize essay by a boy or fcirl under 18 years of ago, premium, Webster's Una bridged Dictionary, value, $13, was award ed to Miss Ida h.Campbcl1, of St. Helens, Columbia county. Prize essay by a boy or girl under 13 years of age, a beautiful writing desk, valued at 810, was awarded to Miss Lucie Mason, of Portland, Oregon Satim Statesman. Referring to the above, we will merely stale that one more prize of $1 5 for an ar ticle on the Resources of Washington Ter ritory was not competed for at all. All the ..essays which have taken prizes will appear in our November number. Rejected ones will be returned if the necessary postage is furnished. On the first of December we will award tiS IN U. S. GOLD COIN, to the person sending us the best original Christmas Story said story to appear in our December number. The First Congregational church, of -which we give a correct engraving in this issue, is located cor. of Second and Jef ferson sis., Portlan d, and was constructed in 1870 at an expense of about $20,000. Where there is much light the shadow is deep. F. W, Pettygrove, the founder of; Portland, was born nt Culms, Maine, in 1S1 J, uiul ut the age of 16 entered the army, under the renowned Sam Houston, of Texas notoriety, remaining '111 the campaign for four years. Im mediately thereafter, in 1841, he en gaged a passage in a sailing ship bound for the Pacific Coast. In the spring of iSn, lie located nt Oregon City, then .a place fust assuming metropolitan airs. In 1845, Pettygrove mid Lovejoy bought of Mr. Overton 640 acres of land for 50, uiul that same year they cut a roml from it to the interior, ut an expense of fi,8oo, and built n ware house on what is now known in this city as the corner of Front and Wash ingtoii streets. Some difli-reik-c now arose between the partners as to what the new town should be called, and they finally decided to toss up A piece of money. Mr. Pettygrove winning the toss, named it after the capital of his native State. And thus the log cabin on the banks of the Willamette received the name " Portland." That same year Mr. Lovejoy sold his claim to Hen Stark. In looking over files of the OrtfioH Spectator of iSi(i,we find Mr. Pettygrove to have been the lending merchant and heaviest advertiser In those days. In the Sftrtttur of Feb ruary 5, 1S46, he announces : "At the Red House, Oregon City, and at Port land, 1 1 miles below this city," on con signment, 20 cases wooden clocks, 3 mall mills, 450 hag sugar, 5o ci gars, oo dozen cotton handkerchiefs, 10 bales sheeting, 10 dozen linen duck Milts, &c. In 1S4S the discovery of gold in California attracted Mr. Petty grove, and he sold his claim of Port land for $5,000, part cash and part leather. After a time, becoming dis satisfied with California, and hearing from Commodore Wilkes about the rich soil and salubrious climate of Puget Sound, Mr. Pettygrove located a farm, and being convinced from its superior location that some day a large seaport town must spring up there, he, in 1851, laid out and named the present town of Port Townsend, now numbering about 1,000 inhabitants. Although Mr. Pet tygrove is now 64 years old, he is still hale and hearty, and on his recent visit to this city, the first time in 23 years, he expressed himself well pleased with the way his town had been handled during his absence. lie now spends life quietly, on a farm adjoining Port Townsend, and wc hope he may live to sec his wish realized, namely, that Port Townsend should be a city of 50,000 inhabitants, and Portland at least double that. NATURAL HISTORY OF THE HEE. Inquiries which wc receive from time to time reveal to us the fact that there arc some of our readers who arc beginning bcc keeping with little or no knowledge of the natural history of the useful insect. These matters arc elementary, and should be clearly un derstood before one can become thor oughly versed ill the higher subtleties of the apiarians science. To aid 111 the dissemination of the ground facts of the industry, we give in this issue an illustration showing the different stages in the growth of the bee, the three classes into which the occupants of the hives are divided, the structure of dif ferent parts of the hec as shown by the microscope, and the distinct kinds of cells which appear in the brood comb. Each figure in the engraving will be introduced in the proper place as wc proceed with the description, TIIK WOltKINO MRUS. Of the three kinds of bees inhabiting A hive the workers form almost the en tire swarm. They arc culled 'neuters," because they do not serve for the prop agation of the species. To explain this singular fact in the order of nature, it is thought that all the workers would have been females, like the queen, had not the eggs from which they were produced been deposited in cells too narrow to allow a proper development ol their sexual parts. They are much less 111 size than the queens or drones, being about half an inch in length. The working bee (Fig. S) is 110 less admirable in the structure anil form of its body than wonderful in its instinct or sagacity. It is perfect in proportion, and harmonious in the combination of its parts, all concurring to the design ol its creation. On each side of its head is a large, round eye, sufficiently hard on the surface to be proof against injury from contact with the substances it or dinarily meets. When these eyes re quire cleaning, it is performed by the brush of the legs. The head is' also furnished with two "antenna-," or horns, of delicate touch, by means of w hich they reciprocally obtain by feel ing a knowledge of each other, their queens, as well as their young. It is by these simple organs that bees arc guided in flic dark, and are enabled to construct their comb and cells and feed the young brood. It has a long tongue, protioscis or trunk (shown in magni tieil form in Fig. u) for licking and sucking the honey, and two strong mandibles or teeth, which enihl... ... construct the cells and combs, as well ! as to carry all obnoxious substances ' from the hive. It has four wings and ' six legs. The third pair of the latter is much longer than the others, each containing a triangular cavity lined with strong curved hairs, used for the purpose of holding and carrying to tne hives the ocllets or little balls of pollen which it gathers from the anthers ot flowers. Thus, when a bee enters a flower the pollen adheres to its body, whence it is collected by the hairy legs into the form of a pellet, and deposited in the cavity for transportation to its home. At the extremity of each of the six feet are little fangs, with which they occasionally attach themselves in clus ters to each other, and to the sides of the hive. The abdomen is provided with two stomachs (magnified in Fig. 15) the first being only a simple bag, which is transparent, and, when filled, Is of the size of a pea, containing noth ing but honey, as it is collected from the fields, a portion of which is dis gorged into the combs, to serve as a store for the future, whilst another por tion passes for nourishment into the second stomach. At the extremity of the abdomen there is a sting (magnified in Fig. 13), its weapon of defence, not consisting of a simple sharp pointed in strument, but of two lancets, concealed in a director, and operated upon by muscles of uncommon strength, which to a casual observer would seem to be the sting itself. The external side of each of these lancets is provided with numerous nrrow-shaped barbs, which prevent their extraction when pierced into the flesh, without great pain. When the retreat of the bee is hurried, or when the part stung is too firm, as the skin of man, the sting remains in the wound, and the bee thus injured only departs to die in a few hours. Not withstanding the sting has become de tached from the insect, it still retains its power of penetrating further into the wound. Again, the embarbed part of the sting is so finely polished that even with the best microscope no inequalities of surface can be discerned, TUB QUEEN Is distinguished from the others by her form and size (Fig 7,) being usually about Kvicc as long as a worker, with a color tending to a deeper yellow, although queens vary in sisc, according to the cells 111 which they are bred, some being scarcely larger than the working bee. Her abdomen is longer 111 proportion, and its thickness is aug mented when filled with eggs. Her legs are neither provided with bristles nor cavities, and her wings arc much shorter than her body, in consequence of which it is somewhat difficult for her to fly. Her sting, w hich she seldom uses except when in combat with a rival, is strong, and bent at the end, The queen lays all the eggs in a colony. Fig. 14 shows the ovigerous tubes and appendages in a magnified form. The eggs are quite small (magnified in Fie. 1), elongated, slightly curved, of a brown color, and arc deposited into cells adapted in size and shape to the kind ol bee that is destined to occupy them. The queen, before she deposits an egg, examines whether the cell is clean and suitable to its future occu pancy, being aware which kind of bee will he produced from the egg she de posits. She lays profusely in the spring, I less in summer, but little in autumn, and I in winter not at all. She first denosi.s I eggs for workers, one, or rarely two, I at the bottom of a cell; and, as the! combs are placed perpendicularly, the I eggs, of course, rest in a horizontal no-1 at every successive brood. Each sort is hatched in three or four days by the warmth of the hive, according to the season or climate, into "larvse" or white worms, which lie in a curved position on the bottom of the cells (Fig. 3), sur rounded by a thin, transparent fluid, or bee-bread, believed to be prepared from pollen, mixed with honey and water, which appears to be adapted to their age. As they advance in growth, they lie horizontally, with their heads toward the entrance, and repeatedly moult or shed their coats. After the larva; are sufficiently large, nearly to fill their cells, (Fig. 4), say in about eight days, they prepare for another state, called "pupa," "chrysalis" or "nymph," (Fig, 5) during which they require no food. The workers being aware of this change, cover the mouths of the cells with a light brown wax. When they are thus entombed, they are at first milky and soft, in which state they con tinue even after they assume the insect form, until they gradually harden and change color, and in eight days more, at a trying moment, resulting in the death of many, break through their covering, and, without assistance, come forth perfect bees, the whole period of metamorphoses occupying about 20 days from the time of depositing the eggs. As soon as the young bees emerge from their cells, they are wiped sition (Fig. 1), and not on one ,i,U r the cell like those of wasps. She next ! ") eggs in the male cells, intended for drones, and, last of all, in royal cells for queens. She alwavs lavs in the ' same order in respect to the kind of eggs, though thev are !& in ...!. ' FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHtTBCH, roBTLAiro, OfiKoov. clean and presented with food by the workers, and in 24 hours after birth are capable of sallying forth into the fields, changing from a grayish or silvery hue to a yellowish brown. The larva of drones are hatched in the same way as those of the workcrsj yet the time of their growth is somewhat less than that of the queens, which is usually about 16 days. THE DRONES (Fig. 6) arc larger and thicker than the workers, though similar in color, and arc shorter than the queens. As they never visit flowers for collecting sweets, their proboscis arc shorter than those of the workers, and they require no strong hairs to brush off, nor cavi ties in their hinder legs to hold pollen, and accordingly have not been provided with them. They arc known to be males, and arc only useful in propagat ing their species taking no part in the construction of the cells, in collecting the food, nor any interest in the eco nomical duties of the hive, which they seldom leave, except in the middle of Warm days. THE COMB. Those who have seen a honey-comb must have observed that it it a flattish cake composed of a vast number of cells, j . Ilulllucr for the most part hexagonal, regularly (