January, 1879. THE WEST SHORE. water seas, their snores barely produoing Aretio willows and sages. At present the warm strata of air are found high up the mountains melting the few, short glaciers away nearly to their founts. When an increase occurs that shall melt them and the Men (If Office all away, and there remains no morn nornetual snow and ice to koon snrinira and rivers alive in summer; the parched plains being mantled by a torrid substratum of moisturelees air, the poor inhabitants of earth, if living by the same means as we exist now, may sigh for the return of the almost unknown and totally un appreciated boon a condition of climate that admits of glaciers. THE BIRD OF AMERICA. The White-headed, but incorrectly called liald Eagle, is well known to every one as the emblem of the United States. Many, however have false ideas of its real appearance and habits, obtained chiefly from unnatural figures and fictitious storios, so we have reproduced here the excellent illustration from life made or the "Ornithology of California," published liy the legislature in 1870, giving also a short account of its natural history from the most authentic son roes. The colors of old birds of both sexes are dark chocolate, or blackish brown, the feathers paler at edges, the head and tail pure white, bill and feet yellow. length, 30 to 43 inohes ; extent of wings, 78 to 88 inches ; wing, 20 to 2(1 inches; tail, 11 to 1 ..', inchos; the female being con siderably the largest (as in all birds of prey), and l'ncitie coast birds are larger than eastern or southern. The young in tho first year is nearly uniform black, the feathers afterward growing out paler, and white near their base, every year becoming more white on head and tail, until the fourth vear when those parts be come entirely white. This ohange with age has led many to suppose that there were several kinds, esneoiallv as young birds often show white Hatches on the bodv. Such a ahowv and noble-looking bird of course attracted the attention of the first Ku roiuian visitors to America, north of Mexico, where it is not known to exist,. Its white head diatimui.huil it from the verv similar white tailed eagle of Europe and Greenland, lending the celebrated Linnaius to adopt for its aoienti lie name the (ireek word for White-headed, which, combined with the generic title of the Fishing Eagles, makes that used by naturalists m all enlightened countries since won, nameiy Hitliatu Uueotfvhnlut. About 177f! Conoreas adonted it as the em Mom for our coins, and other national devioes, . Hi.- :i,lvi.-.. ,.f that iiractical uhiloaophor, 1 ranklin, who thought that a bird which lived in great part by robbing the industrious fish hawk and killing defenceless lambs was un worthy of such an honor, advising that the honest and useful turkey should be adopted in its place, being also an American bird. This v, ..,,1.1 li.ua luu.li ....rl.x.u . . a, tt irollriato M the barnyard fowl of France, but the admirers oi the l Ionian cmtuera, ami we oignineo impe,. of the eagle, prevailed though it hat been recently supposed that the bird on coins may represent something quite different, almost any thing between vulture and owl in fact, perhaps ivarying with the baseness or intrinsic value or the metal. Thi. Kiwi inhabits the whole of North Ameri ca, except Mexico and southward, where other kinds occur. It leavca only the extreme nor thern shores in winter, remaining wherever it can obtain fish from unfroxen waters, or smso animals and birds near the forests. It is, how ever, a buy bird, never diving for fish or puiu ng game when it can find them dead or dis abled, and therefore watching the fish-hawk and the hunters to share what it can capture with their aid. It flight is heavy and slow compared with some birds of prey, whioh to some extent excuses it for "sponging" on others ; but it has been soen at times to fly with great swiftness, capturing the flying fish in its snori course ovor the wavos, ami certainly is swifter thau the laborious fish-hawk. At time it is forced to dive for fish, circling round high in mo air until it sees oue near the surface, and then plunging like a bullet headlong to tho water, though it does not go beneath it, hut seizes the fish in its long, sharp olaws. It also picks up dead ones and injured birds in the same way, while at times it varies its fare by hunting ground squirrels, etc., watching fur them from the air or a tree. The California Indians, and, to soma degree, the Spanish population, held this bird sacred, and formerly it was a numorous species, allowed to live around tho ranohos as a useful tenant, on account of killing many squirrels, though it might occasionally capture a weak lamb or pig. Instances have been published of infants heiug carried off by th is eagle, bu t loss of ten than by the fiercer and stronger golden eagle. Nowadays, as every schoolboy is allowed to carry a gun and hums', of Ciitotrxt r Taam The Compin Kmlnt of the French Academy of Solano con tains an interesting note by M. 1'lanohon on th subject of the disease at present prevailing among the chestnuts of the Cevenuca, and which is probably identical with that noticed in the Basses. Pyrenees and In upper Italy, The ohief symptom visible outwardly is th decay of the extremities of the branches, sometimes one after another, and aometiiuos all at onoa, la which latter oases the tree quickly dies, though in others it may hut la a more or less dlaeaaed state for two or three yean. This gradual or sudden death of the branches. M. IHanohoa found to lie onnaequent on an alteration of th roots. If these lie laid bare parts of tho wood and bark of the larger and miodle-siud on am seen to lie softened as if by a kind of gangrene, ami a fluid axudes from their tissues which, owing to its containing tannin, forma au ink with the iron in th soil, and slams th earth round about for a considerable distance. The roots thus affected, from the smallest radl oles to the largeet trunks, are characterised by the const nut presence of a mycelium or fungus which assumes various forms, hut which always Oil THE WHITE HEADED shoot what he can, there is no danger of eagles becoming too plenty. The nests of this eagle were formerly very oommon here, built often in some tall sycamore and large enough to mi a AMKIlll'AN KAUMC. iu th on th trunk of the ire. ii r being composed oi largo svm...,... feet long, piled together year .&"g the mass was five feet thick, having a l ttU cavity i 1 with a lew ei.sis oi , this are laid two to four BubatKiutsitlv sun form that it was preecat on th iimlrmround norlloii of It. It generally lift- sent itself in th (arm of more or las ramified wl, allied havoc witli fir Ills iioeu in wie lorm sssi tr I.iti.h yellow string, and is probably olus.1 had to th Aifitrima mtlUat, which play each How to Huoaa a Fira A erre.tideni of th New York give the subjoined informa tion To tho who are attached to th pip, it may h a matter of latorsat to know h w their Uat puff or draft of amoks may b a Iresh as th first. It la wall known that aamhing la Urn usual manner th lat pnrtloa of the Inbaeou btnooMe damp by pre nn of oil or aieotiue drawn from th heated kibeooo abe, which nausea a aioketiing anil nauseating effect, bitter to the taste, unpleasant and enhealthy, a earn- aired to the tirst half of a well III led pip. Th following I have foaad to bs ssTsotasI la giving me a aonii, Iresh smoke iroai nrst so wet: rases s small quantity of tobaaae la th bottom of the tassat huh! it. and when well afire, fill the imim g birds I and before each draft gtv a light patT outward Y... ... throuuh th.stem. who h causes the tolasaeo to hsv. often been rei"l iron. w. -, - M . MMwt. This always Tkl " m"klD though they were foTtajrly W "EK LtM. A atlU Water way woaU b th. ranch, going m "lalaU- and returning at night, .1 I lie tOII 71 t. .1... are laid tWO U four eggS nearly lllv rounded a. bath ends, whitlaK rough, and from two and one half to three P d tk.. .r. laid from January to T.VT.:Zlin, to climate, th. binl nesting . " i a:... I- f ... Utitll.lr PiM', 'XiX V7where tree, are al-en, the nest is often built on a cliff, but pin. Ires Ire th. usual kind .elected . The title Of fi.hmg eagle. HJ tb lead ei,,t or air, other foreign k,. ids, "f . li-roe manner. Youn t.HKl II. wr in - - . , way would be nut to saw