i - o o o ? 0 The roii. a. JfgT" - - - The Weekly Enterprise. . . n 4 n VI? i FOK THE - Business Man, the Farmer Aral the FAMILY CIRCLE. published every Saturday AT THK I Qffjc -Corner of Fifth and Main streets I Oregon City, Oregon. I TERMS of SUBSCRIPTION: Finglc Coiy one year, in advance, $2 00 I TERMS of ADVERTISING: ' Trnsicnt advertisements, including all ' notices, y sci- of 12 lines, 1 w.$ 2 50 I-or Jch subsequent insertion 1 00 one Coium", one year $120 00 Hdf " " 60 s (t inrter , ' bVine Card, 1 fquare one year 12 tie Remittance i to be made at the risk of . bniicribrrs, and at the expense of Agents. BOOK' AND JOB PRINTING. T!ie I'nterprisc office h supplied with ' V I'liifui. approved styles of type, and mod "fni MACIIIN'K PHESSES, which will enable i the Proprietor to do Job Printing at all times I Neat, Quick and Cheap ! i 7j- Work solicited. 1 JSHsine transactions upon a Specie baxi$. ' ' JOHN JIVE IIS, Financial Agent. jjUSlNESS' CARDS. V. C. Jl)lIN?ON. F. O. M COWS'. Notary Public. JOHNSON & McCOWN, Oregon. City, Oregon. Bff- " attend to all business entrusted to om- c:ue in any of the Courts of the State, '..;k-ct mnney, Negotiate loans, sell real estate (!c. Particular attention given to contested I.::il caerf. A. C. GIUUS. C. W. PARHISH, Notary Public and Com. of Deeds. GIB33 & PARRISH, A'-tomeus and Counselors at Law, I'oktlasd, Oregon. OFFICE On Alder street, in Carter's brick block. J. II. MITCH KLL. J. Jf. DOLm. A. SMITH Mitchell, Dolph & Smith, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, Solicitors in Chancery, and Proc tors in Ad mi rally. j7" Ollice o-er the old Post Office, Front utreet, Portland, Oregon. fiogan, Shattuck & Killin, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Xo. lO!) S'ront Street, 17 p Stairs, P0 RTLAN P, O UEGON. I AGE & TIIAYEK, ATTORNEY'S AT LAW. OFFICE In Cree'rf Huildinf?, corner of F.uut and Stark Mreets, Portland. 3:!:t( J. T. CAIM.E.-. J- C. MOKELAXD. CAPhES & MOH ELAND, ATTORNEYS ATfLAW, Cor. FRONT and WASHINGTON Sts., PORTLAND, OK EG ON. rilTwATKINS, M. D., SURCJF.ON. PoKTr.Axi), Okegc n. OFFICE I).") Front street Resideuce cor ner i)t' Main and Seventh street!. J. WELCH, DENTIST. I'l'rmaneiitly Located, at Oregon City Oregon IiOOMS With Dr. Rnffarrans, on Main st. A. II. CELL. E. A. 1' AKKEK. BELL & PARKER. AND DEALKRS IK Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Paints, Perfumery, Oils, Varnishes, And every article kept in a Drug Store. Main Street, Oregon City. i. O V s EXCELSIOR MARKET ! Corner of Fourth and Main streets OREGON CITY. Keep constantly on hand all kinds of m-Mi and salt meats, sucn as BEEF, POKK, MUTTON, VEAL, CORNED BEEF, IT A MS, PICKETED PORK, LARD, Ad everything else to be found in their line of business. JOHN II. SCTIIIAM. Manufacturer and Dealer in SADDLES, HARNESS, etc., etc., Main St 'ret, Oregon City, "3Wiues to represent that he is now as well prepared to furnish any article in his line as the largest establishment in the State. He particularly requests that an examination of his stock be made before buying elsewhere. "112 131 FRONT STREET, FIRST STREET, Near Morrison Street, Near Yamhill. KAST & CAHALIN. New Stock of Boots and Shoes JUST RECEIVED! Best Selection in the City Comprising all theleading and best brands known, such as P.enkerfs, Tirrell's, Fogg's Honyhton & Coolidge's, Reed's, GodtreVs and numerous others, of gents' and bovs' wear. Also Mile's, Sieberlich's, Burt's Sun Francisco and custom-made ladies and childreu's wear. Oar customers and the public in general are invited to call and examine our stock which we will sell cheaper than ever. ' F. S. Boots made to order, and an assort ment efcur make cousUutlv on hand. 5; ALBRIGHT. IN THE COUXTItY ET JfLIA A. SnEAKMAX. O'er the smoky track of the railroad, Stretching in from afar, Borne by the snorting iron horse, In the dusty, crowded car. From the city's noise and glare I come Occe more to a realm of peace, Where the din is all hushed in silence And the turmoil seems to cease. Yesterday hosts of pale, careworn men, Threading the crowded street, With eyes that scarce see the blue of heaven, For watching the weary feet. To-day, the sweet, happy, careless birds, Warbling from tree to tree, Drinking in life with each balmy hour And breathing out melody. Yesterday sad looking, patient beasta, Dragging their straining loads, Forced by the whip and the cruel rein Over hot and dusty roads. To-day herd.s of well fed cattle Grazing beneath the trees, Or chasing each other in frolic While suuffing the sweet, fresh breeze. Yesterday rows of gaudy windows Flaunting their showy wares, And groups of unnatural women Parading their silly airs. To-day sweet Nature's own drapery Hanging in exquisite grace, Green grasses for carpets, aud flowers For delicate woven lace. And across the road at the window A fair young face I can nee, 'Tis Sally, the farmer's fair daughter, Watching, yes, watching for me. With her sleeves rolled above her elbows And hands that can work with a will, I'll match her with any town damsel Decked out on BioaJwayto kill. Breathing freely amid this beauty I'll forget the city' ways. Sheltered here alike from its labor, From its censure and its praise. FISIIINO IN AMERICAS WATERS, TheV disciples of Izaak "Walton, owe Mr. Genio C. Scott a debt of obligation for the ample vol time just issued from the press of Har per & Brothers, New York, en- - - a -trr titled Jushinq in American a- ters. lie has endeavored, and Ave think successfully, to portray the recreation of the angler in Ameri ca with his implements and his game, adding a tribute to the tem perate and industrious class ot men wno ionow lor a mcunuou the hazardous business of fishing on the broad seas. He considers the general characterization of fishes : ceneral habits and senses of fishes ; taste, smell and hearing m fishes; fecundity of fishes; variety of fishes ; times of feeeding and haunts of lishes ; coast and estuary fishes; angling and trolling for bass; Southern sea trout ; angling for sheepshead; freshwater fishing with fly and bait; coast fisheries and fineries of the United States; ancient and modern fish culture ; fih propagation assisted by art ; Iethyology, etc. The author is an enthusiast in the " gentle art." lie writes warmly, sometimes extrava gantly, almost gushingly on the subject of the tinny tribes ; but he is so sincere in his enthusiasm, so truthful and withal so intelligent, that we have no disposition to be over critical with regard to those blemishes of style and crudities of thought that occasionally force themselves upon our notice. "We give some extracts below : FECUNDITY OF F1SHFS. First, Mammalia, including whales, porpoises and all fishes which bring forth alive and suckle their young, whether herbivorous, or carnivcrous seldom have more than one or two young at a birth, which sailors term calves. Second, The families of which the salmon and trout are the heads are called by naturalists the remis Salmo. These fishes have the palpable mark of an adipose second dorsal fin ; their meat is of a tint between mallow and pmk, and they are regarded by anglers and epicures as the highest game and most luxurious fishes of the oviparous class, or those fishes which replenish their species by laying eggs, Avhich arc vivified by the milt of the male, and then, af ter a time, the eggs hatch in the water. This process is common to all egg-laying fishes ; but, while eirgs of the salmo genus require from three to four months to hatch, those of the clupca genus hatch in as many days. Seth Green hatch ed shad artificially on the Connec ticut river within 40 hours from the time the ova and milt fell into the hatcing-boxes in the stream being the main current of the river and not in boxes so placed as that a stream should run through or over them, but anchored so as to float in the current of the river, submerging a sufficient portion of CITY, OEIOI9 SATUEDAY, SEPTEillBEB4 them, for keeping the ergs covered with -water to a sufficient lcith. A salmon is supposed to lay a thousand eggs for every pound'the mother fish weighs consequently they average from ten to thirty thousand fur each pair. Third. Included in this class are all the oviparous tribes but those of the genus sahno. The number of eggs in the roc of some of these fishes is so great as to appear al most incredible. "While the caro and the sturgeon produce from half a million to a million and a half, the celebrated Dutch natural ist Lemvenhocc reckoned that the codfish contains over nine million j ot eggs.- lhis estimate was based upon weighing accrrrritely a small part of the roe and counting the eggs then weighing the remainder, and estimating the Avholefrom the part counted. AVithout doubt the fe cundity of all the food-fishes of the sea is beyond human estimate; so that, if all the spawn should be fructified by the male fishes, the vast body of lishes M ould, within a few vears, become too great for the waters to contain. VOKACITY OF F1SIIKS. ' The innumerable shoals of young lishes constitute the chief part of the food for larger ones, and even those full grown often meet in fierce combat, when the one which has the widwst throat comes oil victorious by swallowing his oppo nent. Fish being cold-blooded animals tire not susceptible to an acute sense of pain ; thus it does not hurt an eel much to be skinned, and a shark has been observed to seek prey for some time after he was split open and entirely eviscera ted. The prettiest and most play ful of fishes, almost domesticated in private ponds, do not fail occa sionally to devour such members of their own family as venture near enough. Sir "William Jardiue states that "the lake trout arc very rapacious, and, after attain ing the weight of three or four pounds, feed almost exclusively on small fish, not sparing even their own young 75 This being true of the finny tribes generally, how malapropos is the sympathy extended for them by good souls who do not under stand the savage character of the objects of their solicitude. Instances are common of fishes following a hooked one, and while it is being played by the angler, biting pieces out of it, and some times swallowing it, so that both are landed. It may be readily in ferred from this that small fish form attractive bait. Fish evince no mercy for any living thing which inhabits the waters, and most of the angler's lishes feed readily on their own broods. As fish are generally attracted by the sight or smell of blood, red feath- ers, burnt wool, and scarlet braid, etc., arc found to fascinate them attached to trolls; especially is this proven to be the case in troll ing for bluctish, black bass and maskinongc. I therefore conclude that, as the principal food of all fishes consists of animals and animalcules, with water-insects and the spawn de posited in the waters, these last seeming to form the dainties most eagerly sought by them, so the un limited voracity of lishes, which has no counterpart in any other branch of animal creation, may. be one of the means wisely ordered to check an excessive multiplica tion ; and that their extraordinary fecundity is probably a provision of nature for supplying an ade quate amount of food, upon the same principle that land insects are so greatly multiplied probably for supplying foods to birds. STKKNGTII AND PUOrUXSIVE POWKU. The true indication of a fish's strength is found in the shape of its head and shoulders back to the first dorsal fin, while its speed, or propulsive power, is shown by its shape from the front of the second dorsal and anal fins to the end of the tail, and the shape of this cau dal continuation. Of the forked tail, it has already been remarked that the sword fish and salmon arc supposed to be the most rapid swimmers, while of the square-tails the brook trout and squerteague are supposed to propel with the greatest velocity. Among fishes which unite the greatest velocity with the degree of strength must be reckoned the "Whale ; for, struck with a harpoon or spear with a line attached, the leviathan of the wa ters darts down into the deep with such velocity that if the line were to entangle it would cither be broken or the boat would be capsized. Upon the act of striking a whale, therefore, one man is stationed to -ive his whole attention to the line running off clear, while another is employed to pour water continually on the wood over which thd line runs, to prevent ignition by fric tion. The angler knows that the sheepshead has this power of div iner with the velocity of licrhtnino-; so have all lishes which arc swift and wide compared to their length. In diving or darting upward, the swim-bladder is a great assistance, as it is found to be compressed while the fish is at the bottom, and expanded when the fish is on the surface- of the water. Probably the salmon and the bluehsh unite the greatest amount of muscular strength to the greatest power of propulsion. Other fishes of our coast, such as the Spanish mackerel, bonetta, cerus and the horse mack erel, add to the muscularity of the salmon aud bluelish the propulsive ower of the swordiish and the dolphin. The pectorals, ventrals and anal fino assist the fish in maintaing its balance or level posi tion of body. In expermenting upon the use of fins, Professor Bor elu, of Naples, ascertained that af ter clipping off the pectoral, ven tral and anal fins of fishes, all their motions became unsteady, and they reeled from rigHt to left, and up and down, in such irregular manner as to prove that they were left at the mercy of their voracious neighbors of the deep. vj- e-c. Heroisms of Humble Life--An Affect ing S1ory. From the New York San. Perhaps the linest of these mod ern instances occurred two weeks ago on board an English steamer. A little ragged boy, aged nine years, was discovered ;on the fourth day of the outward voyage from Liverpool to New York, and car ried before t lie first mate, whose duty it was to deal with such cases. When questioned as to the object of his being stowed away, and who brought him on board, theboY who had a beautiful, sunny lace, and eyes that looked like the A ery mir rors of truth, replied that his step father did it, because he could not afford to keep him, nor to pay his passage out to Halifax, Avhere he had an aunt avIio Avas Avell off, and to whose house he Avas going. The mate did not believe the story, in spite of the winning face and truthful accents of the boy. He had seen too much of stow awavs to be easily deceived by them, he said; and it was his firm conviction that the boy had been brought on board and provided Avith food by the .sailors. The little fellow was very roughly nanuieu m consequence. Day by day ho was questioned and requestioned, but always Avith the same result. He did not know a sailor on board and his father alone had secreted him and given him the food which he ate. At last the mate, Avearicd by the boy's persistence in the same story, and perhaps a little anxious to ex culpate the sailors, seized him one day liA'thc collar and dragging him to the foremast, told him that unless he confessed the truth in ten minutes from that time lie avouLI hang him on the yard arm. He then made him sit down under it, on the deck. All around, him Avcre the passen gers and sailors of the mid-day watch, and in front of him stood the inexorable mate, with his chronom eter in his hand and the other officers of the ship by his side. It was the finest sight, said our infor mant, that he ever beheld, to sec the pale proud, sorrowful face of that noble boy his head erect, his beautiful ees bright through the tears til at suffused them. "When eight minutes had fied, the mate told him he had but tAvo minutes to live, and advised him to speak the truth and save his life; but he replied, Avith the utmost simplicity and sincerity, lnr asking the mate if he might pray.' The mate said nothing, but nod ded his head and turned pale as a ghost, and shook with trembling like a reed Avith the Avind. And there, all eyes turned on him, this brave and noble little fellow, this poor Avaif, Avhom society owned not, and Avhose own step-father could not care for him there he knelt Avith clasped hands, eyes up raised to heaven, while he repeated audibly the Lord's Prayer, and prayed the Lord -Jesus to take him to heaA'en. Our informant adds that a scene as of Pentacost then occurred there. Sobs broke from strong,hard hearts, as the mate sprang fonvard to the boy and clasped him to his bosom, and kissed him, and blessed him, and told him Iioav sincerely he now believed his storv, aud Iioav glad he Avas that he had been brave enough to face death and be "will ing to sacrifice his life for the truth of liis own word. It A STRANGE CHARACTER The San Francisco Herald gives the following history of a species of vagabond that seems peculiar to that city: Early in the morning, rainy or pleasant, Sundays notf excepted, Ave behold a strange-looking, oil cloth clad old man, pattering along like a badger, near the outer edge of the sidew.dk, Avith his eyes fixed intently upon the gutter. His gait is quick and business-like, and his air the A'ery essence of diligence and independence. On Irs head is an oil-cloth hat of many summers, and over his back and shoulders is thrown a seedy and Avell-patched oil-cloth coat. With, this Avater proof habit, Avhich he never -chan'-. ges, he may be seen A'enturing forth in a tempest. "Who is that strange creature? The bystanders v.'ill tell you that he is " the San Francisco "Gutter-snipe;" avIio, be sides the garbage-gathering Celes tials and the uncouth Digger In dian, is the only one the city can boast of. "What he has been is shrouded in remote mystery. It is thought by some that lie is a cun ning, miserly old monomaniac, who hoards away his gold. Others sup pose that he Avas once a millionaire and that lie lost everything in Avild speculations at Frazicr river, Avhile still others assert that he Avas re duced to poverty through the treachery of a friend, and that he now abstains from man's society and his monopolies in fulfilment of a vow. "What is the real truth con cerning his past history aud the causes Avhichled him into his pres ent strange course of life, Avill prob ably forever remain unknown. Attempt to folloAV him, and after going the rounds of many blocks and curious crooked alleys, you will bring up at the place of start ing, but little Aviser for your curios ity. Apparently Aoid of reason, this strange creature exhibits an instinctive trait, strong in some of the lower animals, by universally returning to the starting point. In his transit along the gutters he seeks only for his food, which consists of such Avaste culinary preparations as he can collect from the general rubbish. If he sees a piece of an apple or a rusty cracker iioanng sevcrward, he pounces upon the prize as a halcyon Avould oive for herring. He holds no con Averse Avith his iioAv-man. and the nearest an- "1 . T . proach to sociability apparent in him is a certain predilection Avhich lie has for Avatching the movements and flight of house-flies. He takes his chances in his daily food-fishing journey, and has no regular thing to depend on. If he is successful in finding a morsel, all is Avell; if not, it seemingly makes no differ ence, for his imperturbable equa nimity is never disturbed. He will not eat a regular meal or touch food that is offered him; and noth ing but food will he take from out the gutters. This strange and unique creature has shuffled along our. pavements day after day for nine years, his read name unknown. If a question is asked him he gives the speaker a hasty half vacant, half inquisitive look, but pauses not an instant. Place yourself immediately in his path a dozen times, and like a per sistent bug he Avill turn out and continue his peregrinations. Not even is his place of abode knoAvn. Those Avho have attempted to trace him to his lodgings generally lose sight of him in the sand hills near the mission. "When lie made his first appearance he was more civ ilized, and inhabited a brush hut in what Avasthcn a wild spot onTay lor,betAveen California and Sacra mento streets. Now he is thought to burrow in the sand, or to sleep in the cemeteries that border the western portion of the city. The Ncav England Homestead says: "The man avIio has ten acres in cranberries, Avell ditched and Avatered and in good order, has a fortune Avhich Avould require a very round sum to represent as his cap ital, for his annual income, under ordinary circumstances would re quire the capital of a small bank in order to yield such an amount of interest. There are still such lands to be had. The expense of prepar ing them Avill be more than met by the first full crop, and after that the yield is usually more than one hundred per cent on the iiiA'est meut. A I) isg ust ed 13 o y. "Mam- ma : said a precious little ooy, Vvdio, against his will, Avas made to rock the cradle of his baby brother: "if the Lord has any more babies to give aAva don't voutake 'em." aBBHtMBeaomsr TJic IVIId Horse of tiie Plains. From the Willamette Farmer. Our readers Avill no doubt peruse with interest the folIoAving sketch of the horse in his primitive state, from a correspondent avIio has trav eled through the uninhabited parts of Texas and the adjacent territo ries : " The day before Ave came in" aucav of the Rocky Mountains,"" I saw, in the greatest perfection, that impressive and, to me, almost sub lime spectacle, an immense droe of wild horses, for a long time ho vering round our path across the prairie. I had often seen great numbers of them before, mixed av it I i o t h e r a h i m al s,a ppa re n 1 1 y q u i e t ami grazing like the rest. Here there" Avcre thousands, unmixed unemployed ; their motions, if such a comparison might be alloAved,as darting and as Avild as those of humming-birds on the flowers. The tremendous snort Avith Avhich the front columns of the phalanx made known their approach to us seemed to be their Avild and ener getic Avay of expressing their pity and disdain for the servile lot of our horses, of which they appeared to betaking a, survey. TheyAvere of all colors, mixed, spotted, and diversified Avjth every hue, from t tie brightest Avhite to clear ami shining black; of every form and structure, from the long and slen der race to those of firmer limbs and heavier mould ; and of all ages, from the curveting colt to the range of the patriarchal steeds, drawn up in a line, and holding up thcirhigh heads for a survey of us in the rear. Sometimes they curved their necks, and made no more progress than just enough to keep pace Avith our advance. Then there was a kind of slow - and Avalking minuet, in Avhich they performed A arious evo lutions Avith the precisions of the figures of a country-dance. Then a rapid movement shifted the front to the rear. But still, in till their evolutions aud movements like the flight of sea foAvls, their lines were CD regular and free from all indica tions of confusion. At times a spontaneous and sudden moA'ement towards us almost inspired the ap prehension of a united attack upon us. After a moment's advance-, a short and retrograde movement seemed to tcsify their proud esti mate of their Avild independence. The infinite variety of their rapid movements, their tamperings, man euvers Avcre of such a Avild and al most terrific character, that it re quired but a moderate stretch of fancy to suppose them the genii of these grassy plains. At one period, they Avere formed, for an immense depth, in front of us. A Avheel ex ecuted almost Avith the rapidity of thought presented them hovering on our flanks. Then again, the cloud of dust that enveloped their moA'cmonts cleared away, and pre sented them in our rear. They evidently operated as a great an noyance to the horses and mules of our cavalcade. The frightened movements, the increased indica tions of fatigucjsufficiently evinced, Avith their frequent neighings, Avhat unpleasent neighbors they consid- i ered their Avild compatriots to be. So much did our horses appear to suffer from fatigue and terror, in consequence of their A'ivacity, that we Avere thinking of some way in Avhich to drive them, off, Avhen, of a sudden,a patient and laborious don key of the establishment, that ap peared to have regarded all their movements Avith philosophic indif ference, pricked up his long ears, j and gave a loud and most sonorous bray from his vocal shell. Instant ly this prodigous multitude, and there Ave re thousands of them, took Avhat the Spaniards called the "stampado." With a trampling like the noise of thunder, or still more like that of an earthquake, a nise that Avas absolutely appal ling, they took to their heels, and were all in a few moments itiA'isi ble, in the verdant depths of the plains, and Ave saAv them no more." - -O- 5- A good story comes from Rome. In preparation for the oecumenical Council the Pope or dered from his architect certain emboli shment, the plan of Avhich was brought for his inspection by that gentleman's little bo v. Charmed by the plan, the Pope opened a drawer full of gold, and said to the child: " Take a handful of coin as a reward for the beauty of your father's work." "Holy Father," replied the child, "take it out for me; your, hand is bigger than mine." Pius IX couldnot help smiling, and obeyed the child. Why is a colt like an egg? Because it ii not fit for iif.e untifit is broken. 1 Tlic Unseen. Rivers of the West From the S. F, Times. Since the first exploration of Fre mont and his coadjutors among tho peaks and canyons of the Rockv vuiuaiu system, me uooics ot travelers in that region teem Avith accounts of paradoxes that set tno ordinary courses of nninw ance. f the se there arc almost numberless different classes, but two or three will serve for illustra tion. Large rivers, they tell us, after flowing hundreds of miles, and receiving the.water of a large tributary system, suddenly disapr pear, vanish from sight, and give no clue to their exit. In somes cases the mouth of a stream seems to be at or iiear its middle, the cur- . rents rlovring both av ays till they meet and disappear. , Salt Lake, with' all the Avaters it receives, ncA'cr rises a single inch nor loses a " drop of water through any visible outlet. Again, the traA'cler, standing upon some of the immense masses of rock among the hills, fCcls a tre mendous quivering motion, as though some Titanic Kail way train thundered along "beneath the surraee. xnrougii lissures in tnu cliffs strange currents of an roar and whisper, and from far Avithin there comes the faint murmur as of a mighty or-an. From Fremont to Dixon, travelers have been con tent to rejveat the phrases of their Indian guides and call these phe nomena simply "trembling rock 'bloAvijig caves ft and " lost riv- ers." ii tiny nave uareo to theo rize, they have feared to write what they have dreamed. There is at last, hoAvevcr, a book in the press which boldly faces the mystery. The Avriter is 3(r. ( ieorgo Catih,vho for many years dwelt among tho Indians of the West, and Avhose portraits of otcd lied. Men form the principal record by which that race will be remem bered. Mr. Catlin boldly announces his theory that under the entire Moun-' tain chain, from Alaska to the Car ibbean Sea, there flows a vast sub terranean river, Avhose tributaries burrow beneath all the principal and divergent ranges, and derive their Avaters from the- constant' melting of the ice and siioav of tho mountain slopes, raid from the flow of the " lost rivers" of the plains. The "trembling rocks" are the roof of some subterranean cataract, Avhose spray rising through the fis sures gives us the "steaming caves" of the Rocky Mountain story. Among the mountains of Oregon the traveler finds a lake shores are a sheer wall of Avhose granite e foot ever scaled its perpendieular face, no human hand ever touched its silent Avaters. Like a huge Avell it sinks away into the earth like the guarded door of a realm Avhiclt human discovery can never pene trate. May not this be a window looking down upon the' submoii tagne Amazon Avhich the Indian painter has attempted to describe, a single peep-hole down to the si lent river Avhich Hoavs thence under a thousand miles of mountain rock, to mingle at last Avith the Avaters of the tropic gulf? Two. Avell known facts r-ec-m to point strongly toward the truth of Mr. Catlin's theory. A glance at any map Avill show that the river system of the Kocky Mountain country is entirely inadequate to carry off tho Avater Avhich the snow and rain of that district would cre ate. Secondly, the level of the Carribbean sea, at the point Avhere Mr. Catlin's theoretical river would naturally pour out its submarine efflux, is noticeable higher than the open sea outsid e. Whatever other facts may sus tain or dispute thisncAV hrpoth.esis'i t mi A it is certain to open the ay ay to a much more minute and intelligent iiwestigation of the subject th?m it has ever before received. The study of the submontagne river system and the Aztec monuments of Mexico and California, should make that corner of the Republic, the chosen haunt of science and discovery for a century to ...come, -o -G- The poisonous effects of color ed socks have attracked attention in Paris, and Dr. Tardieu has giv en the question scientific investiga tion. He found that the violet color is produced by aniline, and the red by eofaline The batten is one of the most violent of irritat ing poisons. Bv means . of hypa derrnic injections he introduced under the skin of dogs, rabbity and frogs very minute portions coraline. The results were. ,th.a.t the animals died in from two to four days. ; J3 o 0O 0 0 o o o o O O 0 tr- ) O G i