228 THE WEST SHORE. nanza district, the probabilities are that capitalists will bo moro than usually timid about investing in its pros pect holes, and will pass by Coour d'Alene to place their money in some one of the many older districts, whose ledgos have boon worked sufficiently to remove the ele mont of speculation as much as it is possible to elimi nate that element from the business of quartz mining. If this very natural result should follow, the owners of this choice collection of prospect holes can lay the blame upon the shoulders of the newspapers published in the mines and adjacent towns, the too eager business men, tho cloud of real estate speculators, and every one who, for a financial consideration, or to create a temporary business activity, aided in promoting the gigantic fraud by which so much physical suffering and financial dis tress wore caused to thousands of deluded people. It is to bo hopod, but, alas, hardly to be expected, that the history of this excitement will serve as a useful lesson, to bo hooded by nil who may bo brought within the influ ence of another mining crazo. A fatal charm attends it, whoso power is utmost irresistible when exerted ujxm tlioso strango to its influences, and is absolutely so with tin wo who have surrendered themselves to it for years. Man is n roosoning animalso it is said, though there often Houms a dearth of evidence to support tho state mentbut at times this ixwor is manifested in peculiar and unuccountablo woyB, so peculiar, in fact, that its manifestation at all may well be questioned. Mining exciUmienU and all forms of speculative allurements, whore the desire to acquire wealth quickly creates an abnormal action of tho roosoning power and diverts it into strange nnd erratic channels, should receive the prompt nnd earnest discouragement of evory one inter ested in the stability of business and permanent welfare of tho country. Wo hopo to see less of them in the future. , SCIENCE IN THE ARCTIC. At last the full extent of the sacrifice demanded by tho grim Moloch of the North Polo has been made known to tho millions who hnve anxiously waited for the result of Gimmnndor Schley's efforts to roscuo the unforbnute jNirty of Lieutenant Greely. He has boon robbed of five of tho victims already in his clutches while yet they luul sufficient vitality remaining in their famished bodies to bring them back to health nnd strength. And what ha Umn nccomplished of sufficient value to compensate for tho score of lives that were laid down in tho effort to gain it? The verdict of the great majority of humanity will be, "Nothing in the least degree worthy so great a sacrifice." Ou the contrary, the scientific enthusiast will point to what, iu his eyes, are glorious achievements. Gnnnoll Lnnd was found to bo a comparatively narrow atrip, to Uie west of which lies another, now Waring the name of "Arthur." North of Grinuoll Land they ap proachod within m miles of tho point whore all liue8 0f longitude are supposed to meet, and from nn elevation of 2,000 feet on Lockwood Island discovered Umt to the north and west was a vast ho. of ice, while to the north east the continent of Greenland still extended northward beyond the line of vision. At two points, in 1883, neither of them as f nr north as Lockwood Island, the opoa ocean was encountered, the sea whose rolling billows had been before observed, though only at a distance, and the existence of which has been a mooted question among scientists for years. Full and accurate meteorological astronomical and botanical observations and researches were made and the records preserved intact. From a scientific point of view Lieutenant Greely has accom plished much. We know a little more about the geography of a region universally conceded to be uninhabitable by human beings relying entirely upon the resources of the country for subsistence, and valueless to the world for all practical purposes; and this has been learned at the sacrifice of much human life and suffering and the ex penditure of large sums of money. Yet it is not to be presumed that these facts will serve in the least to prevent the further waste of life. On the contrary, new interest in the Borean regions will be aroused; the zeal of would be explorers will be whetted; other vessels will sail Poleward, to be crushed in the ice and engulfed with their load of human beings in the frigid waters of the Arctic; disease, famine and exposure will claim their victims by the score. Thus it has been from the first, and will continue forever among enlightened nations, The desire to accomplish something never before at tempted, to achieve success where others have failed, or to discover something " new under the sun," is one of the most potent motives to exertion among a progressive people. When it ceases so to be; stagnation sets in and advancement towards a higher plane ceases. There is one feature of these latest developments which is of peculiar interest The open polar sea was encountered by two parties in different longitudes. One of these drifted for a day upon that mysterious ocean, and only regained the land by abandoning nearly its entire outfit It is evident that the advocates of the "Symmes Hole" theory will receive fresh encourage ment from this proof, not only that an open sea exists in the vicinity of the theoretical pole, but that a current sets in towards that great longitudinal center. The dis cussion of the question, "Is the earth solid or hollow?" will probably be resumed with much enthusiasm by those who hold opposing views on the subject This expedition, much as it has learned, has discovered noth ing to prove there is not a continuous waterway into the interior of the earth by way of the North Pole; but on the contrary, has established the existence of that open sea which has been pointed to as one of the greatest evi dences that such is the case. The existence of a mi& climate and a sea devoid of ice, north of that region which is perpetually bound in icy chains, has yet to be satisfactorily explained. This is now the riddle for future explorers to solve, and there need be no anxiety felt lest there be no one willing to attempt its solution. Sufficient cause for anxiety will appear when the tim again comes for half a dozen' of these venturesome ex plorers to be rescued from the perils into which they iy rusn.