L P Fisher sari. . ri ii . . orai j ; r i , 'mm mi in iiiiihim ii i i .11 mwi i.iimiuih-iiij-iiu-ii mi mm-'''inMmmmKKtammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm VOLUME Y ALBANY, OREGON. JANUARY 24, 1873. NO. 21. An 4 walling RiKroverjr by rl nlialH Tlie 1'iifled Statin Willi 'lv oilier UovcriimKUtK, tveroltji oiiildiie. THE KAK'IM' VUVSt IHtOKKS. An ArtMeii.l Volcmio Rumfe Forti:, Ovt-rwEii luting Win. I Villages. with Xortlieru Europe Thronteui l itiuiiilMloii. I'ncle Stun Pays S7,ooo ns his As . fotmi'iil. A liiiJIAItStAIIIil. iikpobt. fKrom tlio 8. F. Clironiclo.) We have nwlved the following doc ument which purports to be a report prepared by the United Stiffen fVawnl ;it Bruges in Belgium. It is singular that no telegraphic mention ot so start ling an occurrence has been made,. The report is one that will excite tlie deepest Interest, and. although not vouching for its correctness, we here with present it to our renders. Noth ing of a more startling nature than the events described ever occurred in the world history : 0K3J. FLANAGAN'S RETORT. Before piweediug to detail the ac tual state ot a Hairs at Dudzeele. near me line, oi canai connecting unices with tiie North Sea, it may not be out I of place to furnish a succinct history of the orisrin of the exuloratinn out of! which tlie present alarming events have arisen. It. will be remembered by the State Department that during the short inteiTegnmn of the Provis 'oual Government of France, under Lamartine and Cavalgnae in 1848, a proposition was submitted by France to die Government of the United .States, Great Britain and Russia, and which was subscqiiciitly extended to Jlng I.eojioid of Belgium, to civatean International Board forSubterraneau Exploration" in furtherance of science, and in order, primarily, to test the truth of tile theory of ' j KiKEOrs VENTRAL FUSION, first propounded by Leibuits. and af terwards embraced by most of cotem porary geologists ; biit also with the further objects of ascertaining the mag netic condition of , Tim earth's ciu st, Tlie variations of the pole at great depths, Mitl finally to set at rest the doubt of some of the English miner alogists concerning tlie permanency of tlie coal measures, about which consid erable alarm has been felt in all the manufacturing centers of Kurojie, The protocol of a quintuple treaty was mwlly drawn by Professor Henry of I he Smithsonian In-iilute .-mil on. proved by Sir Bwlcrick Murehlsgn, nt that time President of the Royal Soci ety of (ireat Britain. To this project Arngo lent the weight of his great name, and Xesselrntle affixed the ap proval of Russia it lieing one ot the last official acts performed by that vet eran statesman. The programme called for annual appropriations bv each of the above named powers of 100.000 franc (about $20,000), the appointment of Commis sioners and a General Suierlntendeiit, the selection ot a site for prosecu ting the undertaking, and a Board of .scientific visitors, consisting of one membership from each country. It Is unnecessary to detail the pro ceedings for the first few months after the organization of the Commission. Profossi.r Watson ot Chicago, and the auithor ot a scienttftc treatise e!ilhd "Prairie Geology," was selected by President Fillmore as THK KIKKf REITIESKNTATIVE OF TIIK fNlTI.l, STATES; hmhi mt Olgokoff ? France. Arngo i Knirlish feet !. ....... . l....l.....l OI- IV 1 1 ; . ;"S! -inn-, i.iifiuum, oir i'.iin,(ii ,-ioine. the present Prenident of the Royal So ciety ; and Belgium, lr. Sechi," since so famous for his sjiectrnseopic obser vations on the flxl stars. These ,reu. tiemen, after organizing at Paris. Sient almost an entire year in travel ing before n site for the scene of opera tion was elected. Finally, on the 10th of April. 1 -U0, the first ' ground wa broken by aetunl work, at liudzeide. in the neighborhood of Bruges, in the Kingdom of Belgium. The eoiisidcratlous which led to the choice of this locality were the follow ing: First, it was the most central, regarding the capitals of the parl ies to the Pr 'tocot; secondly, it waseisy itf access and connected by rail with Brus sels, Paris and St. Petersburg, and by line of sieiMuers with J-oudou. Mug situated within a short distance of the mouth of liis Horn! or West Stlieldt; thirdly, and iierlmps as the inosf m portuut en HMeralloti of ail. it was t he seat of the deepest shaft then in the world, namely, tlie old salt mine of Dmlzetiie, which had len worked from the time of the Hoiiimiisi ilmvn tn tlnm v.. iv i ,iie , t.lllllll-llll llflc II eomuienooment of the nrisiiil:i.iiiii-v. . ,.,i,. ii,io i.... i at wlileh time It was .ilmndoued. prln-1 ciimlly M mm of ilktom Jieat I The report then pnxwls to give the It the .wt,m of t).e excavation, und, details pfa very sticce.f.il contrivance wiiich could not entirely be overcome except by (lie most costly modern scientific appliances. There was still another reason, which in the estimation of at least one member of the Commission. Professor Watson, overrode them all tlie excep tional I'acjiKtoe ' lienl im'th depth, which was its main characteristic. THE SCIENTIFIC FACTS Upon which this great work was proj ected may be stated as follows : It is the opinion of the principal modem geologists, based primarily upon the liyiiotiiesis of Kant (that the solar Uni verse was originally an immense mass of incandescent vaporgradually cooled and hart lenexl after beiny thrown oft" from tlie grand central bodv after ward elaborated by La Place into the present nebular hypothesis), that "the globe was oik in a state of iynmux JmioH, and that as its heated mass lie gan to cool an exterior crust was formed, first very thin, and afterward gradually increasing until it attained its present thickness, which lias been variously estimated at from ten to two hundred miles. During the process of gradual refrigeration, some portion of the crust cooled more rapidly than olliers, ami the pressure on the interior igneous mass oemg unequal, tlie Heat ed matter or lava burst through the thinner twits, and caused high peaked mountains; the same cause also pro ducing all volcanic action." Tlie ar guments in favor of this doctrine are almost innumerable: thpsp am. mnnnn tlie most prominent : First, The form of tlie earth is just that which an Igneous liquid mass would assume If thrown into an orbit with an axial revolution similar to that of our earth. Not many years ago Professor Faraday, assisted by Wheat stone, devised a most Ingenious aji pnratus by which, In tlie laboratory of the Royal Society, lie actually was en- auiea. ny injecting a name Into a va cuum, to exhibit visibly all the phe nomena of toe formation of the solar universe, as contended for by La Place and by Humboldt in his Comwm. Secondly. It is perfectly well ascer tained that lieat increases with depth, in ail subterranean excavations. This is THE niVARIAIII.E RILE 111 mining shafts, and preventive, measures must always be devised and used, by means, generally, of air ap laratns, to temper tlie 'heat as the depth is augmented ; else deep mining would have to be abandoned. The rate of increase lias been variously es timated by different scientists in wide ly distant portions of the globe. A few of tla-m may lie mentioned at this place, since it was upon a total miscal culation ou tliis head that led to the present most deplorable results. Tlie editor ot the Jimrtuii f .Seitmet, in April, 1831 calculated from there suits obtained hi six of the deeiiest coal mine!" in .Durham and Northumber laud, tlie uieau rate at 1" ot Fahren heit for a descent ef 44 English feet. In this lusitance it is- noticeable that tlie bulb of the thermometer was in trodueed into cavities purposely cut Into solid rock at depths varying from 200 to flOO feet. Tlie Dolcoatli mine in Cornwall, as examined by Mr. Fox. at the depth of 1,3'0leet, gave an aver age result of l" for every 75 feet. Kniifler eoninaned ivoilts nbt'iimxl from the silver mines in Urfvlon Purn I and Freiburg, from the salt wells of I Saxony and from the copper mines in ' the Caucasus, together with an exam i iuation of the tin mines of Cornwall j and tlie coal mines in the north of ; England, and fmind tlie average to be J at least p1 of Fahrenheit for every 3" .nglisii feet, Conner, on tlie contrary. cousulers this amount sooii-u hai over stated and reduce THE GIvKElUI. AVERAGE To 1 centigrade for every 25 meters, or alsHit 1" of Fahrenheit for every 45 teet f.ngusn measure. Thirdly, 'tl.at (he lavas taken from all parts of the world, when subject to chi'inical analysis. Indicate that they all proceed from one common source; and Fourthly. On no other hypothesis can we account for the change of cli mate indicated by fossils. Che rate of increase of heat in the Dndzeele shaft was no less than w Fahrenheit for every 30 feet English nitf-nre. At the Mine of recommencing sink ins; in the shaft on the 10th of April, lJS). the perpemllcnlardepC was 2, 370 feet, tlie thermometer making is-' Fahrenheit at the surface : this would give the enormous heatof 127l'Fahren- ncir at tne bottom of the mine. Of com e. Without ventilation no human being eould long survive in such at mosphere, and the first operations of me oinmission were iliri cted to rem- for forcing air into the shaft at the greatest depths, only a portion of which do we deem it important to quote, as follows : The width of the Moer-Vater, or Lieve, at this point, was 1.080 yards, itnd spanned by an old bridge, tlie stone nlers of which Werp inr together, having been BUII.T T THE EMreiiOR HADRIAN III the early part of the second century. The rise in the tide of the Xorth sea, close at hand, was from 15 to 18 feet, thus producing a current almost as rapid as that of tlie Mersey at Liver- pom, ine MmimisaioQcrsucterimned to utilize this force, in ; reference to the erection of expensive steam works at the mouth of this mine. A plan was submitted by Cyrus W. fjeld and at once adopted. Turbine wheels were built, covering tlie space betwixt each arch, movable, mid adapted to the rise and fall of the tide. Gates were also constructed between each arch, and a head of water, nnrlnir from 10 to is feet fall, providedfor eaeh turn of the tiue nom in tlie enu ami the flow, so that there should he a continuous mo tion to the machinery. Near the snail two laiw. on cv-imn rr.- ervoirs were oniistriicteoV cannhlp nr l. -1-1! 44 - 4W.4. . ... J'..- Homing iroiu lou.uuu to 2011. oou cube ieei 01 eomprcsseti air. tne average rate of condensation being about 200atmo3 nlieres. These reservohs nnm- erly connected with the pumping ap paratus of the bridge by large case-iron mains, so that the supply was contin uous aim at an almost nominal cost. It was by the same power of com- uresseu air mat tne tunneling through Mount St. Cot hard was effected for the Lvons and Turin Railway, just com- pieieu. The first operations were to enlarge me suait so as 10 lorm an opening 40 bv 100 feet. Knirlish measmp "riil consumed the greater part of die year iraa. so tnat the ieai work of sinking was not fairlv 11111W u-iiv until ir iii 1850. But from that period dowii tome memoranie Dtn ot Aoveinher. 1872. the excavation steadilv iimm-s. ed. I neglected to state at the outset . 1... . M I I . . .. II HI l. .CTI1 iiisoioy, THK STATE KKCrHKRH flV HITIJirM Was annoinreil (Jeneral SmiorlntPiiH cut, and continued to till that impor tant office until lie lost his life on the morning of the Otli of November, tlie mei.-iucnoiy ucuiiis 01 which are nere inafter fully narrated. As the deepening progressed, the lt.4t,f Bft tl.4. 1.4..4.... 4U.ULHJ . ! .. i.uai UK uubbUIII c.'IIUIMieu IUIIRTHS. but it was soon observed, in a differ ent ratio, from the calculations of the experts. After attaining tlie depth of oi.ouu ieei aoour tne nignt 01 .viouut Blanc which was reached early in 1864. It was noticed for tlie first time that the laws of temperature and grav itation were synchronous; that Is, that me neat augmeuieu in a ratio propor tioned to the square of tlie distance from tlie surface downward. Hence the increase at great dept hs bore no re lation to all the Dnniiiwiitlv irrnrinul augmentation near the surface. As eany as .nine. iw it oeoauie appa rent that tiie sinking, it carried ou at all, would have to lie protected by some athennanous or adiathemiic cov- Cl'inS' Pl'Otlotr Tvrwllll vi ili.nlllwl to, and, at the requeat of Lord Pnlm erston, made a vast number of exper iments 011 iioiMWiUucting iKxiies. As the result of i.ls labors, he prewired a comixmnd solution alwut tlie density of white lead, composed of seleuite alum and sulphate of copier, wliii h was laid on three or four thicknesses, first upon the bodies of tlie naked miners for in all deep mines the op eratives work in purls mitwdibw-mirt then upon AX 6VAt ttlAFED CAflE Made of papier inaehe. with a false Ixittom, Inclosed within which the miners Were pnnbleil m enilnre tin. in tense heat for a idilft of two hours each day. Tlie drilling was all done by means of the diamond-pointed in strument, and the btastii.ghyii.ro glycerine from the outset, so' that ihe priueiial labor consisted in shoveling up tlie debris ami keeping the drill point iuxitii. Before proceeding further it may not be iintimner to eilliinerati' a few of the more Important scientific facts, which, up to the 1st of November ot the past year, had been satisfactorily established. Fir.-t in importance is the one alluded to in the above the rate of increase of temperature a we flesoi.iiil liiti, llip hmeplc nf lli.. purrli j 'l'his law. shown above to eorresiund exactly with the law of attraction of j gravitation had been entiifly over I looked by nil the scientists living or . dead. No one had for a moment sus j nected that heat followed the universal I law of physics as a material body ought 1 I.O do. .ulinntv tn'e:IIKe t'lnm lllp time of IX, .Saussi'ii-e lu at had been regarded only as a Jii'c or eii rVtruml ot as a ponderable ijuallty. But not only was beat found to lie subject to the law of inverse ratio of the square ot the distance from the surface, but tlie atmosphere itself fol lowed the same Invariable rule. Thus, whilst we know that water bolls at the level of the sea at 21 2 Fahrenheit, it readily vaporizes at 188" on the Peak of Teueritte. only 15,000 feet above that level. This, we know, is owing to the weight of THE SI 1'ERINCU.MHENT ATMOSPIIEKE, There being a heavier burden at tlie surface than at any bight above it. Tlie rate of decrease In weight Aore the .surface is perfectly regular, being A I H litUmil. f..W 4.1',.--. ,no t 4 c P . v.vg.v.4 tvi t,ci y uw irvt (H a-Heill . But tlie amazing fiict was shown that the weight of the atmosphere increased in a ratio proportioned to the square of tlie distance from the surface down ward. The magnetic needle also evinced some curious disturbance, the dip Mug in variably Mimvtrrf. its action also was exceedingly feeble, and the dav before tlie operations ceased It lost ail polar ity wnacever, anil tlie tinest magnet would not meander from the point of tlie compass it happened to be left at for the time being. As Sir Edward Sabine finely said. " The hands of the magnetic clock stopped." Bntthe ac tivity of the needle gradually increased as the .surface was approached. All electrical action also ceased, which fully confirms the theory of Professor Faraday, that "electricity Is a force irenemted bv the mnld myU'i revolution of the earth, and that mag netic attraction in nil imisps luilnt.a nr operates at risrht ancles to its current." Hence electricity, from the nature of its cause, must be superficial. Kverv annpiiniiuv nf witer illuin- peared at the depth of onlv 0.000 feet. From this depth downward tlie roek WllS rf a basaltic ebflrncfpr tin vine unf the slightest appearance or a granitic t'i iiMmit t. 411 1.441 . Oi....... 1.. - Mi .,vivu, uitiiii fuiiiu, in h mosi re markable manner, the discover.- mm).. only last year, that all rmUte are of ihwu. msreauoi tynmw, Ueposition. As a corollarv from the Inw nf plieric pressure, it was fouud utterly IMTOSSntLE TO VAPORIZE WATER At a greater depth than 24.000 feet, which point was reached in 1869. No amount of heat affected it in the least nercentible manner, and on a-xiorhiinr the liquid at the greatest depth attain ed, by means ot a nicely adjusted scale, it was found to he. nf m'lpnsttv ed thus ! 108.0730. hplnir hm .Wnux. or integers 01 atomic wmgm Heavier I ftl... J .4 11 4 D ..nun gum, 111 me surrace. w " Tlie report then proceeds to discuss the niK'Stion of the true flmirp nf tlu earth, whether no itblate enhpmlil n generally snpiosed. or only truncated at the poles ; the length ot a degree of lomritude at the latitude nf 1 iiuItppIa 51" 20' N.. and one or two other prob lemsnot hearing on the points of the report we do not wish tn lv hifhn the readers of tlie ChromMt, The con cluding portion of the report we re- prouuee 111 iuti.j For the nast twelve mnorlia tr ati fouiHl impossible to endure the heat, even sheltered as the miners wpih bv the adiathemiic cover and caire, for more than fifteen minutes nt a time. sc. that the expense of sinking had in creased geometrically for the past two years. However, important results lad been obtained, and a neriu.niliiili. depth reached many thousands of feet 1... 1 t . 4 . i-iow me oeejiesi soimdings ot l.ieureuanr. iniHiKS. in lact THE EXOR5I01TS KXPAVATlftv On the lt of November, 1872, meas ured. iMM'nendienlarlv. no luoa tlmn 37.810 feet and G inches from tlie floor of the shaft bnlldinff! The hhdipst iM'ak of the llimalav.is is onlv 11 litilo over 28.000 feet- so that it can at once tie seen that no time had lieen thrown awav bv the ( 'ominissioneix :t lli'n t tut Inception of the undertaking in April, liMil. 'file first svmnfoms of alarm irm felt on the evening of November 1st. The men eninnlained of a vast Increase of heat, and tlie i-mms bail in hp iin.i.. ied every five minutes for the greater part of Ilieniirht: and nf those, who attempted to work, at least one-half were extricated in tt condition of faint ing but one degree from syncoiie. To ward niornillff. hoarse, nrofnimil and frequent subterranean explosions were heard, which had increased at noon to one dull, threatening and continuous roar. Bt the miners went down brave ly to their tasks, and resolved to work .so long as human endurance could bear it. But this was not to lie much longer, for a late hour nt night on the 4th. after hearing a terrible explosion, which shook the whole neighlHn hood. a hot sirocco issued from the bottom which drove I hem all out. in a slate of asphyxia. The heat at the surface be came absolutely unendurable, and on sending down a cage with only a dog In it. the materials of which It was voniposed took (ire anil lie animal perished in the flames. At 3 o'clock A. M.. the Iron fastenings to another cage were found fused and the wire ropes melted for more than a thousand feet at the lower end. THE DETONATIONS Became more frequent, tb trembling of the earth at the surface more vio lent, and the heat more oppressive around the mouth of the orifice. A few minutes before 4 o'clock, a subter ranean crash was heard, louder than Alpine thunder, and immediately af terwards a furious cloud of ashes, smoke and gaseous exhalation shot hiElt up into the still darkened atmos phere of night. At this time, at least one thousand of the terrified and half naked Inhabitants of the neighboring village of Dndzeele had collected on the spot, and with wringing hands and fl. 14.. 4.4 1 1..,. 1... . ! t 1 iS 1 .. . 'w ' uuiatito ue waned uieir late, and threatened instant death to the officers of the Commission, and even to the now terrified miners- Finally, just before dawn on the 6th of November, or to be more precise, at exactly twenty minutes past 6 A. mlttn lata viadii (tn appemtnee at the nmfm! The fright now became general, and as tlie burning buildings shed their ominous glare around, and the languid stream of liquid! flre slowly bubbled up and rolled toward1 the canal, the scene assumed an aspect ot awftd sub limity and grandeur. ,Tbe plains around were lit up for many leagues, and flip tnmrv cfrlna IntansliLut ..Tt - "WW '4-1 4 4.44 4.I4VI.CI ..4. 4111,1 . C duplicated the effects of the lllumlna- 'I, I - , ., A.-... mm nun. luwiini sunrise tne now oi Java was suspended for nearly an hoar, but shortly after 10 o'clock ft suddenly In creased its volume, and, as il cooled, formed A SORT Or'SACCEK-SHAPED FPNJflO. Over the edges of which it boiled up, broke and ran off in every direction. It was at this period that) the accom plished DtKeloy. so long tie Superin tendent, lost his life. As the lava slowly meandered along he attempted to cross tlie stream by stepping from one mass of snrtace-cinderetoairother. Vfaklng a fids step, the floating rock ingsnraieiTrytnrnexl UllOll Whieb ItPSnrnnc a Over, and before relief ennld ho afford. ed his body was consumed to a crisp. I reffret, to ndr) find UU tutu L-intlojl m. T7i ...... ..... ... ni 14 11 444 IV44 114.' sympathy amongst the assembled mul titude ; lait they rudely setecd his mu-' tilated remains, and amid jeers, exe crations and shouts of triumph attach ed a large stone to the half-consumed corpse and precipitated it into the canal. Thus are tlie lipmra nf tiiMu frequently sacrificed to the fury of a plebian mob. It would afford me pleasnre to in form the Department tliat the unfore seen evils of our scientific convention terminated here. But I regret to aikl that such is very far from being the ease. Indeed, from tlie appearance of affairs this morning at the volcanic crater for such it has now become tlie iiossible evils are almost incalcu lable. The Belgian Government was duly notified by telegraph of THE DEATH OK TIIE SUTERIVI ENDENT And the mutinous ili.nnnsitinn nf tin. common people about Bruges, and early on the morning of tlie 6th of November a squad of flying horse was dispatclied to the spot to maintain onhr. But this Interference onlv made matters worse. The discontent, augmented by the wildest panic be came universal, and the moo reigned supreme. Nor could the poor wretch es bo greatly condemned ; for toward evening the lava current reached the confines of the old village of Dndzeele, and about midnight set (lie town on flre. The lurid glare of tlie conflagra tion awakened tlie old Burghers oi Bruges from their slumbers and spre.iti consternation in the city, though dis tant several miles from the spot. A meeting was called at the Guild Hall at dawn, and the wildest excitement prevailed. But after hearing expla nations from the members of die' CommiaBloii the populace quietly but doggully diiersed. Tlie Government from fills time for ward did all that power and prudence combined could effect toquell tlie reign of terror around Bruges. In this country the telegraph, being a Gov ernment monopoly, has been rigorous ly wwcnfii nun a coition ot miiitarv posts established around the threatened district, so that it has, been almost im possible to convey intelligence of this disaster beyond tlie limits of the dan ger. In the meantime a congress of flic most experienced scientists was invited to tlie scene for the purpose of suggesting some remedy against the prospective spread of the devastation The fiist meeting took place at tlie o!.. Guild Hall, in Binges, and was strict ly private, none beiligadmitted exeepi THE WHLOMAT1C 11 EVREs-EN T.LT1 V ES Of foreign Governments, ami tin numbers elect of the college. As in Cuwcdtttetf oh .atn page. (