The West Shore. VOL. 6 No. 1. L "ral, PubllihM, Pl j n t ' '"Mnin8M 1 ortland, Oregon, January, 1880. Per Annum, I Nlnilr rnnle too. I "ViHi OUR MAMMOTH NUMBER. As rapidly as possible the material ior me mammoth number of The West Shoke is being gathered, and in aalv spring we hope to have the same ready tor delivery to our subscribers. It will consist of 160 pages, will be handsnmPlv illustrated, and contain a vast amount ot historical, statistical, and literary ar ticles of rare merit. This number will be alone worth the entire amount which we charge for a year's subscrmtion We shall, however, furnish one copy of the same free to every one of our yearly subscribers. A limited number of extra copies will be sold at one dol lar eacn. Persons who want this num ber ought to send their subscriptions in witliout delay. SEEDS FREE OF CHARGE. Any of our readers who will send us one new subscriber for the West SHORE for iSSo, may select fifty cents worth ot flower or vegetable seeds from any seedsman's catalogue, and we will for ward the same free of charge. For a club of five subscribers, we will give as a premium seeds to the value of three dollars. This seed offer will hold good only during the month of February. shell beds ok clatsop beach, ore;on. T II. B. CI.AKKR. The coast of the Pacific ocean, some distance below the mouth of the Co lumbia and above, even to the colder latitudes, show, in its shell mounds or beds, evidences of a dense population that must hive long ago lived and thrived on the bounteous sea-food that the ocean provides. Up the little streams and inlets may these beds ulso be found, but not of the immense pro nortions to be seen on this ocean beach. While swimming at the sea-side house at Clatsop, my attention was drawn to the material with which the roads were being macadamized ; shells of oyster and clam predominated, but the rather frequent sight of human bones and skulls excited my curiosity. Following the wagons, I found my way to the pits from which this dump was taken. The excavation showed a depth of from five to six feet of this debris, and the original dirt strata had not yet been reached. I stood by the wall of this seemingly unlimited bed, and with a stick duff into the bank, finding shells of various kinds, some of which are not now found on this coast, all bearing evidences of having been used for food, sometimes calcined; also the bones and vertebra of fish, bones of birds, deer, and other animals, and among them the bones of the human body, sometimes the tiny rib of a little child, and sometimes the arm bones or the shoulder blade of an adult ; skulls, too, were not infrequent. The horrible suspicion of cannibalism suggested itself to my mind. These remains were scattered indiscriminately. just as one might imagine the garbage of a house might be thrown dav by day, and so accumulate in a heap, while earth and stones were mixed with the bones. Of the length of this bid I have no knowledge, and can only imagine the age. It was in shore half a mile, and must have, in ancient times, been the beach proper. Ages have passed since these wild people encamped by the booming waves, for immense old firs, five and six feet in diameter, arc growing over the prostrate giant trees that preceded them. I saw no implements of any sort, nor did I hear of any leing found in these bed, though they might be easily overlooked, as no one had ever before exhibited any interest or curiosity in the matter. I have been told that similar beds are found on the Alaska coast. Remain! of ancient junks are said to be found there. Certainly the almond-eye may be traced in the physiognomy of the Indians at this day. While Lewis & Clark, and after wards, Catlin, found in the North west, on the upi)cr Missouri, three small, neighboring tribes, one of whom the Maudlins had no affili ation with any other known family. They lived in huts which were very neat in BppcaflUKsl and had separate apartments for lodgings. They were a mere handful of a tribe, and, while they acquired the language of other tribes, none learned theirs. They made a great variety of ottery, and manu. factored beads which were highly prized. Catlin suggests that they are the re maining tribe or descendants of the Mound-builders which have been driven from the valleys of the Ohio and Mis sissippi. Among the many relics of this ancient race, which were found by Squicr during his cxploiations of the valley of the Mississippi, was a most characteristic head, made of red nfoa clay, the workmanship of these un. kiiown builders, which exhibits the ne. culiar Indian features. He says, further, "that the Mound. builders were American Indians in type, that time has not changed the type of this indigenous group of races. and that the Mound-builders were probably acquainted with no other race but themselves. In every way proving ine views oi the author of Crania Americana." As to what became of this nre- historic race of Mound-builders, but little can be said beyond conjecture. I he numerous temples of Mexico and Central America arc said to be as ancient as the mounds found in various parts of the United States. These two lucidities may have been the birth place and centre of original American civilization, or the Mound builders may have been the original occupants of the Mississippi valley, and themselves given the civilization to Mexico, but in reference to these ques tloni no decision can yet lie given, and every one is left to his own conjec ture. AT TIH HIIII' YAkl). Messrs. Hall brothers, of the Port Ludlow ship-yard, hove just launched the schooner Kau Kioule," mid will immediately place another one of the same size and model on the stocks. They disposed of the one just com pleted, to Allen k Robinson, of Mono lulu. She is iGo tons measurement, is exacted to lie n rapid sailer, and will at once enter into the Islmtd trade,