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In the stables of the Paris Omnibus Company the grain loft is immediately over the stables, and to protect the oats from the effluvium from the stables the floor of the loft was covered with a thick layer of asphalt. In five different conflagrations this floor arrested the course of the flames until help could be procured.

A wooden floor covered with asphalt was also perfectly protected against a fire which was lighted on the asphalt; for though this substance gives off a volatile material which is inflammable and burns, the mass of lime and coke which remains is sufficient to protect the wood against the flames.

Intelligence in Young Creatures.

CONCERNING Herbert Spencer's ideas on this subject Mr. Spalding remarks: "Mr. Spencer has made the unqualified statement that a chick, immediately after it comes out of the egg, not only balances itself and runs about, but picks up fragments of food, thus showing us that it can adjust its muscular movements in a way appropriate for grasping an object in a position that is accurately perceived." The fact is, that on emerging from the shell, the chick can no more do anything of all this than can the new-born child run about and gather blackberries. But between the two there is this great difference, that whereas the chick can pick about perfectly in less than twenty-four hours, the child is not similarly master of its movements in as many months. Our present point is, that it can be shown by experiments that the performances of the chick a day old, which involve the perceptions of distance and direction by the eye and the ear, and of many other qualities of external things, are not in any degree the result of its individual experiences.

Mr. Spalding then passes to the discussion of Professor Bain's account of the growth of voluntary power, in which that gentleman says: "The infant is unable to masticate; a morsel put into its mouth at first usually tumbles out. But if there occur spontaneous movements of the tongue, mouth or jaw, giving birth to a strong relish, these movements are sustained and begin to be associated with the sensations, so that after a time there grows up a firm connection." But, says Mr. Spalding, "we must remember that when the child is born it has no occasion for the power of masticating solid food; the ability to suck, which involves an equally complex series of muscular adjustments, is what it requires, and this it has by instinct ;— bearing all this in mind, the question is, why may not the innate ability to masticate be developed by the time it is required quite as spontaneously as the teeth required in the operation?"

Alcohol in the System.

DUPRE adds his testimony in support of the opinion that alcohol is consumed in the body. The results of two series of experiments showed, 1st, that the amount of alcohol eliminated per day does not increase with the

continuance of the alcohol diet, therefore all the alcohol consumed daily must of necessity be disposed of daily, and as it certainly is not eliminated within that time it must be destroyed in the system. 2d, the elimination of alcohol following the taking of a dose or doses thereof is completed 24 hours after the last dose is taken. 3d, the total amount of alcohol eliminated is only a minute fraction of that consumed.

Western Coal Measures.

As the result of an examination of the upper coal measures west of the Alleghanies, Prof. J. J. Stevenson deduces the following conclusions:

1st. The Great Bituminous Trough west of the Alleghanies does not owe its basin-shape primarily to the Apalachian revolution.

2d. The coal measures of this basin were not united to those of Indiana and Illinois at any time posterior to the lower coal-measure epoch, and probably were always distinct.

3d. The upper coal-measures originally extended as far west as the Muskingum River in Ohio.

4th. Throughout the upper coal-measure epoch the general condition was one of subsidence interrupted by longer or shorter intervals of repose. During subsidence the Pittsburgh marsh crept up the shore, and at each of the longer intervals of repose pushed out seaward upon the advancing land, thus giving rise to the suc cessive coal-beds of the upper coal measures.

5th. The Pittsburgh marsh had its origin in the east.

Refining Sugar.

IN an article on the use of animal charcoal in sugar refining, Mr. Divis states that it is a mistake to sup pose that the revivification of the charcoal is aided by the conversion into carbonate of lime of the lime that has been separated. On adding hydrochloric acid to the carbonate, the small masses of charcoal are quickly covered with a layer of carbonic acid derived from the carbonate of lime: whereas, if the lime is allowed to remain in the caustic state it dissolves in the acid without effervescence, and the removal of the impurity 'takes place more quickly and thoroughly. satisfied himself that the lime is in the caustic state, Mr. Divis goes on to propose the use of sal ammoniac as a means for the revivification of the charcoal.

Economy in Illumination.

Having

MR. OFFERT states that in bats-wing burners, though the size of the flame diminishes with the amount of gas consumed, it is not in equal ratio. The light of a large flame, for example, may be equivalent to fifteen candles, while that of two small ones together will be only seven or eight candles, though they burn the same amount of gas as the large flame. This is caused by the complete combustion of the gas in the blue zone of the flame, which gives little or no light in either case and has more favorable circumstances for its occurrence relatively to the size of the flame in the small than in the large flame.

A singular fact in connection with gas flames is, that the power of the light is the same whether the flame is tested edgewise or flatwise. The conclusion arrived at is, that the use of cylindrical glass chimneys with round jets (Argand) is on the whole the most economical.

Preserving Iron Ships.

PROFESSOR CALVERT says:-I have made many experiments with the view of discovering the cause of the preservative action which alkaline solutions exert on iron, but have failed. Knowing the destructive influence which sea-water has on iron, and the serious injury resulting from the action of bilge-water in iron ships, a series of experiments was made with sea-water to which was added such a quantity of caustic soda

Memoranda.

M. CHANTRAN finds, that when the eyes of crayfish are exsected during the first year, they are completely restored after a few castings of the shell and perfect vision is regained. In old crayfish, on the contrary, the restoration is incomplete and imperfect.

An instance is given in The American Artisan in which typhoid fever attacked one-half the families in a village that used milk from a certain dairy. On making an investigation, it was found that the cows drank water from an old underground tank of wood which was decayed, and water from which doubtless found its way into the milk-cans in other ways than through the udders of the cows.

M. Gayon, as the results of experiments on the

or potash or their carbonates, that, after the salts putrefaction of eggs, finds, 1st, that shaking the eggs has

of lime and magnesia were decomposed, there still remained in the solutions 1 to 5 per cent. of alkalies or the alkaline carbonates, and when, iron blades were introduced into such liquids, they gave the same results as when iron had been dipped into an alkaline solution of Manchester water. I would propose, in conclusion, that a certain quantity of soda-ash should be introduced from time to time into the bilge-water of iron ships, as by so doing a great saving would be effected, since it would prevent the rapid destruction of such ships.

little or no appearance of effect on the act of putrefaction; 2d, that putrefaction is attended with the formation of vibrios; and, 3d, that the germs of these organisms are in all probability derived from the oviduct of the bird.

Experiments by MM. Estor and Saint-Pierre show that when glucose is injected into the blood-vessels it is consumed, its disappearance being attended by a consumption of oxygen and proportional production of carbonic acid.

THE world is wide awake to-day,
The laziest drones are bustling,
The brook slips by, the wind is gay,
And every leaf is rustling;

This shady bank, 'neath Beech and Oak,

With lance-like grasses bristles,

And you and I, two idle folk,

Sit making willow whistles.

Oh, heavenly sunshine of the May,

Succeeding winter hoary,
What shade can shut its light away,

What gloom resist its glory!
Down through our leafy canopy

Dart myriad golden missiles, And gild the brook, the bank, the tree,

And e'en the willow whistles.

ETCHINGS.

WILLOW WHISTLES.

Such wealth of leaf! such worlds of green!
Such balm, no words can utter !
And all the birds that e'er were seen,
Have gathered here to flutter:
They pertly perch, with heads awry

Upon the swaying thistles,

And evidently wonder why

We're making willow whistles.

How dare you, comrade, trifle so,
In these grand forest temples,
And laugh, and beat your sappy bough,
And set me bad examples !
Such songs of praises here arise,

As ne'er were found in Missals,
And we should hearken, were we wise,
Instead of making whistles.

They say the world's a vale of tears,
And man is born to trouble,—
The words sound idly in my ears

Beside the brooklet's bubble;
Friends change, I hear, and hopes grow pale,
The fairest project fizzles,-

I'm glad there's no such word as fail
In making willow whistles.

The brook shows back two heads of brown, Though one's a prettier color,

A Titian hue,-no need to frown,

I've said not which is duller; They'll be the same, both yours and mine, When time their brownness grizzles, And then, we'll laugh at Auld Lang Syne,' When we made willow whistles.

JAPANESE PICTURES OF AMERICAN LIFE.

Drawings and Explanations from a Japanese Book of Travels.

(This may or may not be the method of japanning the English language proposed by Mr. Mori. See SCRIBNER's for April, page 770

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I WAS never fully satisfied with my explorations of the Upper Yellowstone region in 1870. What I then saw, and the discoveries made by Dr. Hayden's Geological Corps in 1871, begot in me the desire again to visit that Wonderland, with a view more fully to examine the surroundings of those particular localities which had so greatly excited the curiosity of the public. Our distress at the loss of a comrade,* and the little time we had for extended observation and careful description of what we saw, convinced me that the half had not been seen or told of the freaks of nature in this secluded wilderness. One of the most remarkable as well as valuable discoveries-the Mammoth Hot Springs at

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| Gardiner River-was reserved to be the grandest trophy of Dr. Hayden's Expedition. It was with the hope, therefore, that I might more fully comprehend what I had seen, and aid somewhat in the discovery of other wonders, that I concluded to avail myself of an invitation from Dr. Hayden to join his U. S. Geological Survey in July last, and accompany it in its visit to the National Park.

With a view to explore the country south of the Yellowstone, and especially in the immediate vicinity of Snake River, of which so many, almost fabulous, stories had been told, Dr. Hayden placed his assistant, Captain James Stevenson, in charge of a part of his company, with instructions to approach the Park from that direction, while he, with the other members of the expedition, should proceed over the route of the previous year

by way of Fort Ellis, up the Yellowstone
River. Both parties were to meet in the
Upper Geyser Basin of the Fire Hole River.
This southern route had peculiar charms for
me. It lay through a region practically un-
explored, which must in
a few
years be pene-
trated by railroads and filled with people. It
was now full of wild streams, vast lava beds,
desolate sand tracts, mountain lakes, and
long ranges of lofty mountains,―amid which
the Snake River, true to its name, pursued
its serpentine course to the Pacific, overlook-
ed for hundreds of miles by the lofty range of
Tetons, so long and widely known as the
great landmarks of this part of the continent.

is made available for transportation. Tents, cooking utensils, clothing, engineering instruments, photographic apparatus, everything that enters into the outfit of any expedition through an unexplored region, is fastened to it with ropes, and the cincho, to which is attached the lash-rope, thrown around the whole. It would astonish any one who beheld the process for the first time, to see what immense loads may be packed upon the backs of horses and mules, in a compass sufficiently small to avoid serious collision with rocks and trees along the bridle-paths and trails through the forests and fastnesses of the mountains.

By ten o'clock our animals were packed and awaiting the order to start. The mem

strong horse, and as we passed out of the sally-port of the fort and descended into the valley, our appearance, to an eastern eye, would have been picturesque enough.

The company under Captain Stevenson's command had been several days at Fort Hall, in the Territory of Idaho, making prep-bers of our party were each mounted on a aration for their departure, before I joined it. I arrived at Ross's Fork, a station on the stage road from Utah to Montana, on the morning of our national anniversary. An ambulance which had been sent from Fort Hall for my use was in waiting, and I left almost immediately upon my arrival for that post. Lest the present Fort Hall should be mistaken for the old fur-trader's post of the same name, built by Nathaniel Wyeth as long ago as 1832, it is proper here to state that it is a new government fort, erected within the past three years, some forty miles distant from the ruins of the ancient post whose name it bears. Mount Putnam, named after the commandant of the fort, lifts its snow-crown-pressive, and our thirst intolerable. We had

ed peak on the right to the height of 13,000 feet. Scarcely less conspicuous or majestic than the Tetons, apparently a member of the same range, it gives dignity and grandeur to the landscape whose features it overlooks.

All our preparations being completed, the morning of the twelfth day of July was designated by Capt. Stevenson for our departure. Captain Putnam, to whom we had been under repeated obligations during our stay at the fort, afforded us all possible assistance. The boys were roused early, and the work of packing commenced. Great skill is required to perform this labor well and adroitly. Our packers were adepts in the art, and it was marvelous to witness with what precision and celerity they threw, looped, and fastened the lash-rope around the body of a pack-mule, by what is known as the "diamond hitch." The pack-saddle, when firmly secured to the back of a mule, bears no small resemblance to the common saw-buck of the street wood-sawyer, the four horns corresponding to the four upright projections of the cross-pieces. Every part of it

We left Mr. Adams and Mr. Nicholson at Fort Hall; the former to follow us on the fifteenth and overtake us by hard riding,— the latter to take observations and determine the latitude and longitude of the Fort.

Moving on to Blackfoot Creek, a tributary of Snake River, we made an early camp.

Our train was in motion early the next morning, and we traveled leisurely over an arid and sandy plain, destitute of water. The heat towards mid-day became very op

neglected taking a supply of water in our canteens, and until we reached Sandy Creek, a tributary of the Blackfoot, none could be obtained. Our animals suffered greatly, and towards the close of the day's journey were with difficulty urged forward. A fine greyhound, which had been presented to Capt. Stevenson by Capt. Putnam, fell from thirst and exhaustion and died upon the trail; and another would have suffered a like fate had not his master dug a hole through the sand into the damp clay and half-buried him in it, while a comrade rode at full speed to Sandy Creek and returned with water to relieve the suffering animal. Just before we reached Sandy Creek a light rain came on, and we caught a few drops in our rubber ponchos, which greatly invigorated us. Our poor animals, too, seemed to gather new life as they felt the grateful moisture. I do not remember ever to have experienced the effects of thirst more than during this day's march. We made but fifteen miles advance, but the day was nearly spent when we went into camp.

Our camp at this place was in the midst of

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