The New York Herald Newspaper, February 21, 1867, Page 10

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- 16 NEW YORK HERALD, THUMSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1807.—TRIP “HPLOSIO”, Om THE MIBMSTP Renee reat Mace the te tee Sai oer Sc have largely Qeycioped Himba, ‘them more to E558 c ft di i q " direct sea etiacetiy more active any other thelr cour 4 ‘and to dmg their body along than to raise ‘haar ale shen win eae of owen of api, ind of agile the oie 7 by saiowing, sine Loss © f the Steamer David detains cotivered. st the.Cooper | ‘hit’’®. se lovel of the soll mong’ those, reriles | ether aquatie birds there ares large mussber of uli all r) ¥ " indicated Profemor Agassiz last evening * gone group which 18 more aquatic than the other. great rivers, . ae 2 po ge gee hich 12 he Mina, he their Tnatitute the fourth of the series of his highly entertabs 1 do a byt ey Bette ae om Oy tnd tiny canst | are faauiy ¢ we a ole tan, emer and. the Mouther vopother tn Hanae White. jeotares under the auspices of the | 7° ang eros ioe naar aoe representative in any other ‘the chief commerce ef the oJ wasnt psa prea seeYiy sy og “Lenarine changes befone, tay ,pasume the cherie | eeasea “Motwing le more Deaahifeh than these temseans [past of the weriae vlch ‘seraraiists call odoelate— Xo sarivar by contaaal eather trae “ -p eeulboad very inclement weather the large om toads mals, ‘herons or of red ibimea, the ‘ef their reaches the ocean. je me Oe tr pc eh Siieanaetooneen they = ecighe on the shores the foodion 3 front and they have | Our ee aera titan 1) a SSENGERS MISSING, | rar ortho Institue wae well filled. The subject of Da} Nit Moog In that fair from the rT or running along ‘water. |) x) are, woth, | tories of the Buatea or the num- ES} N-FIVE PA ER! * | tecture was ‘The Land Animals of South Amprica” lars, which have, in With the snakes an Bereuimes the $f the tnine Bh oo Aeninly atvaned and grinding teeth of ne rang: | oe ae dp =, ed Professor Agassiz was introduced by Dr, Grigzom, ava | trites, a body covered with soales, and which | vegetation the 8 Boor upon which ith 294 she armndiions 9 - ‘fa Africa and in Asia, while on other jay Ogee wherein the young are developed without exhibiting BSE bee mar men, Se ce be nese fi ‘will find: their way to market by the great spoke as follows:— those extensive changea which occar in the transforma- ‘than apond bestrewn with i} q ‘Billed and Blineteem | anus 1x Gurrne:—This in wot the place ‘fora | tions of the frogs and toada. When the egg of a toad or | of p miceria. “regia, wiih 8. ‘ire “Amenies thay Not only are | takes. iafostig set Oe Ree Aairty Persons qulcay, sod yet kenmage eat Cig tetnge withos ny. | frog,'e heusind, te poeiartans Gs Doty from chown in | REEL Wor ana insee: Reds at erent ities pers of thems |-Ooes, ad ‘to South ont ounded. words that maa to whom tira city resem) je adul what wi — 2 % w »” Now Tork hes aes the last honors 1-day, jag sen form which is more like a fish than like @ | time so covered with netaahager ” us i ‘existed tn former Wamerkable Se mi | me ‘promote i %& ke. Profesor "Alexander Bache, — the supervatendent | frog or atond, It bas a comparatively long tall, It hag | and te they literally obscure the lig ‘eppear colossal dimensions. rege rrnent ff Fad pag of ea of those mea no libel Ws ha aba a pair ‘or saver pair of loud ta the atmoepbere Thave seen en one occasion fg Rg any aapegs Pacific: Queen ttaett, alveedy trevetoed aoe at wi Ils on the two sides head. en in cours — eee tens ea ant bate » _ bones a Mrnerane, Fed. 20, 1567. | No wan so dear to hin friends be was a masvof whom the | of time it develops rudimental logs, the gilts ace reduced, | Eze ree eee eae eee ee © See aaicambenh t sloth by the struc fo epg, Pe rg te vast and Ee ‘oe-deetonche of this: morning says:--tThe stewmboat | country can well baproad. | He bes soymey orn’ | assumea the lorseat ioe parent bnwiog iow itvexternal | thebirds walking over hem, Whon the birds tose ‘to | ture of the fingers, bus which was an animal about the | 4s to-day the Gres dara of oe Baron a net David White, whwoh loft New Orleans on Thursday night | iso) wich hed been laid out befare him a work which | gills, having assumed and thus “growing into | theait it was absolutely imporsible to.a¢e the. sty, The tae of the hare, ° The rica i another, tebe of peer ny ene le Yor Louisville, with throe hundred passengers, and ve | has made scleute as representa! and carried om in | the ect Me Bigg Od Pari, |e ones aee cea Mrertl Coastal Bo lle ang degra | Eatope ‘and Asa at Nem York ie samoue proaoc of ie and Louisville, ox- | America wherever sciguce is 4) & J ‘Now all. those | the - wad deing ® sort of transition ‘That continent was casentially inhab- e0e thippiog fom e paren te Pa ace adrediae Colum. | etasb warvey of the United Sates is the roast perfect | dropping off pat by being resolved. Now all, those ie gallina: ‘by gigantic sloths, ant eaters and armadilloes dur- Ports of the ‘Atlant; and the products of the coast survey tiat has been carsied on anywhere, and it | reptiles whicl undergone these trausformations or | In @ country where there is listle dry iand the Uh i of Europe and the ‘and ingenaity of v ction. Bache had th yh ‘of the lowest order, while those | ceous birds, wi are 20 of our prairio— machinery f ‘bis, Ark., two hundred and twenty-five miles south of ere ete ibs werk abe neat advansed resulta winch have scales and-of which the young ts developed | ihe prairie hen, the grouse and the ke-and which if | much cartier period, the mammalis of tie old ne | eee ee er kt eee oun cop: bat ta = Iherally’ temnian || "BPasience an€ applying thet om praction! parroome; snd | inthe, S86, 2hOgs. Seer gre oer eae ine tints [-aive Gene eCrlite lean chat bo-masamin tome fecha |.tneos TRE senate tie con ‘The continental scope of Mr. Hatch’s report is 20 ‘ make prac le cai re pute Ra Deertseed ber! crew were blown. ota in eesesreac Stas edvanced ‘gropraphy in coe then as Other reptiles, and among them we have | valley of the Amazon; but there are birds known under South Amenca asd ‘obich really are an inferior stamp | slight merit; but he has also investigated with no less “ ich are ag it were interme- i hat it is anywhere else, And then | fewer that are aquatic, -For instance, among the saa- | the name of curasseus, wh: sSerteent aes, ite eae Mae baie. | Rae ngs ee searauen een” ee | A ee ae a ge ea ed a otod i councils of the nation. | inhabit the waters; most of them ar y nas nt empl ceo Nee ‘out from the service of | the lizards there are very few which jnbabit the warers; | characteristic structure of the on which dis- “the courtryand from the undertaking which has anational | most of them are terrestrial; and among the turtles wo gall “ ‘This. much I felt 1 should be allowed snany) have Sbpak.ge many that fanebte, te soateny et the en upon scientific subjects in honor | waters, as one that ith land, characteristio To tcc cal ont mae was so dear mee py eer isa connie rere jae by meter wens Yue ek Bouth sate nee eee, of mocwes, oh ‘ the terresirial animals uth | tain bigher yer atandin, roportion parroquets which are seen forvst te agg aS 1 stated in my last Iecture, you { nature they are confined more to the water, or to the | ceeds all possible description, Not only are the species one hundred feet in the air, together with fragments of fhe boat, The scene is described as heartrending. The “Clothes were blown off of some of the officers, Captain Dean Kinney was buried one hundred feet in the alr and Manded m the river, much brursed and scalded. ‘The clerk of the boat reports a loss of sixty-five pas- ‘pengers, many of whose names are unknown, #8 the f the animal population is concerned, just as in each con- a en into the interior of | very numerous, but the number of viduals of each | tinent we may establich a standard between the different ly improving those facilities which: ‘Books are lost, awe slrondy percelved, eet a ee tnee ine of | aniatin’ At the ackasie Of a. Bigh weaol |’ ppaslen.se-yery latge, and Yeu’ may She pemmetimen Sots animals as thoy ocoupy « higher or lower condition in | sich advantages will be offered alike to producer and. Tet ther twe-complete: wrecks: :d Pan SE Ae BOE | | STR we re eee ecined setmetial axr-|| int in thelr respective clase, . iahabis, extend | 6f ‘ag dense’ as the tlooks of our crows or the | accordance with the place in which they live. This fact as will retain their trade within the United: Saues senpents 5c + Pest ey faion | maim whother marine gr duviatie. pam ino one an- swe ‘continants “ahd, the, atari af the land. | Socks of guise mhich pase over oar heeds ot he ime of ‘when we efamine their santo ct romts, sour ioreaticn | which, asticcal’ saatiaens aad: toe opis of foarerale is | restr wero blown down with the hall. \The sieamer Silas | hardly a tare group of the animal Kitt entatives: | sions that we find terrestrial animals of a superior order. | The noise made by these fo intolerable. and ex. | growth, and thelr close relation to one another; ao taxt | andthe growth of our national revenue will be protected Bolen picked up the survivors, and the steamers Emerald | not marine, fresh water afd terrae eof differen: | On the smmaiicr islands of the Pacific, whea they wero | c6-ds all possible description. When you have socks of idea of transformation seems pertectly natural. ‘That | by such means of intercourse as cheapen the err ner Garek Dronght them bere. (gptain Kin- | 9nd the alinilins haecometimes very clese. Bot there | first visited by the white race, only tonda were found and | these parrots in your neighborhood it is imposs’bie to go | you may nee the relution that each bears to eacti I will | of life to the consumer, while they increase the price Pau! tol be are relations among them which deserve especial atten- | some kinds of mi: but none of the larger animals, not | on talking with your ee ie loud are they, and | proceed to show you bow great the resemblance is during | paid to the producer,”” tion; antl that I may the better bring out these relations, | even deer; not frightened. ney in here badly scalded, and there is little I pe of his *o a herbivorous large animal, and | so close will they come without The | certain periods of the growth of these animais in the The large amountof profit, now more than pooene,. + Beooy i th f the carnivorous kind; none of the animals of | variety of the kinds of parrots which exist in the Ama- T will proceed to show you that all vertebres, which has accrued to the treasury of the State pete aa fs a partial Tist of the killed :— Perzoit mo to show 700 in Wee ev trat I may chow | rent chic cand eo bish in’ the, sodle of mammalin, | son istery large: Handyeds of spesieg ane found tn her fish, reptiles, and not exclading man, have | New York from the main artery of trade between the ‘grad sition from ene nd monkeys are only found on the larger continents, | South America, and most of them are of ote and the same origin—all arise from the eggs. In the | East and West, tho Erie canal, over and above all the cost thespre rbiy ennai oan in the mint Rustealls; which is the smallest of the continents, has | gonera which bave mm feathers, While in other | infancy of the egs—when it is forming—it requriee the Croan and have been supported by arguments appa- | nota single monkey. Jt is only in Africa, in Asia, in | parts of the world we parrots of a white color, of | highest power of the microscope to detect it, The egg, uly unanswerable, The type of vertebrates embraces | America, that these bighest of all the msmmalia are to | grey and of black tinte, those of South America are | until it grows large, appears tobe a dot, after which it at least four classes, and each of the classes are to be | be found; and in those continents only within the warm | mainly of. the green type. With these - | appears like a bag containing fluid; and as it obtains | already permite the passage of a ingaished one from the other by the various modes | regions, and nowhere In the temperate or cold zone. | ing to the same family, we find the aes an- | greater dimensions it contains condensed mat- | to pass through the locka It isan unwise economy oma ~ . to which a given plan of structure is carried | And that is true of the roptiles and of mammatia | other family exclusively American, ‘There is no ter. These present indications of condensation, | which would delay the completion of such a work; and’ i. wae rumen have to divide the vertebrates | is equally true of the birde, The lowest birds are the | sentative of that type of bird anywhem-else in the | (Iliustrating on chart.) That would be a perfect | the expense of all that remains to be done would be re- Snto a stil larger Humber of classes, but those which aro | aquiye birds, the web-footed birds; and we find them | world. Neither in Africa, nor in tropical Asia is there a | egg. ‘The egg of a raobit or of a dog, when com. | paid ina few years frou the surplus revenue of the: how univereally recognized will suitice for my purpose, | everywhere, in the ocean, im the fresh waters, but hardly | single representative of the family of the humming | plete in its form, is so small that the human eye cannot | canal, taking the average of many past years.as the The fishes are the lowest; next come reptiles, above | any of ten) on land, ‘The wood-duck isperhapsthe only | birds, though they are represented by similar | sco it; but with the microscope it presents a large scope, | basis’ of the calculation. With enlarged locks boats of a birds and mammatia, at the head of which stands | one of tha family, the habits of which are ina measure | forms in tropical birds of the old world, | which is identical with the young egz of a hen when | large size propelled by steam could come down from. man.” Now it is not our own eonceit wbich juistifies the | terrestrial. ‘Then we have next in position those birds | There is s type of humming birds, with slender ard | forming. The egg of the bear does not differ, nor that | Lake Erie or Ontario, profitably carrying freight ab bait ashvitie. Weitvam Baie wick, “focopd stork, of Nashville, A McKnight, of Louisville Jebu Davia, clerk, of Neshville. a hehe mate, of Nasbville. ee eeeer Hew Albany. lew 4 — striker, of Paducah. Mr. Browster, of Polk county, Tenn, William Lil y Mr. anohally of a ol Captain Morrison, of jucah. ike Danie! Cariton, of Tennessee. of creation. | to which the marshes are the preferable home,.and of | compressed bill, with very small feet and very small | of the reptile, from that of the fish, the principat differ- | the present prices. Nor can we afford too far “aie ei, of New Madrid, Mo. Saae eee ae cn aepmmonintvom.anes| theme; wading ‘wets, ccoanace natin eu aRiomoN: toes, one of which is closely soldered to the other, | ence being in’ the size and substance, one having a shell | the rivalry of Canada, backed up by British capital and’ 1, Brown, of lows. mesationsn ‘of man’s structure, of mat’s anatomy, of | tion, a bigher postion than the aquatic Birds, Then while their wings move with extreme rapidity and pre- | for protection That which constitutes the egg is the | the misrepresentations put forward by Western forward~ Mr. Eiimee, of re f nis faculties, of tbe copitutution of ‘his | have those terrestrml birds which come nearest to the | sent a striking contrast to the motion of other birds, | yelk. ‘The principle is not the shell or the white of the | ers to conceal their own exorbitant charges for Y Butler Mills, of Kentucky sect tne prestion of Ins body, be @aerves that posi- | waders, but which ‘wn over the ground end are. not | which soar, as it were, in ying, the wings of the hum- | egg, but the yolk, which grows until it nally becomes | Our natural advantages will be of litte ose. if | wer ‘William Forns, of Kentucky. eon ot ae study bie relations ® other living be- | adapted to perching on trees, are not good at flying, such | ming bird making a sort of vibration rather than flying. | so full of substance that the naked eye perceives it; | permit them to remain dormant or unimproved while Wilbam Moore, of Kentucky. , it ie plain that if we exami their order of | as the gallinaceous birds, and the ostrich also is one of | Of that family South America is the home exclusively, | and at length it becomes a bulky mass our enterprising and persevering neighbors in Cansdn- Jerry Ball, steward, py th'the course of time fron the earliest geo- | them. When we come \o the perching birdg and the | and their number is daily increasing in the catalogues yolk, around whieh is formed the shell. In this egg of | are doing the best they can with sach facilities as they Wiliam Brown, Togical periods to the present day it is unmistakable | birds which fly with ease, we have again tomakeadif. | of natural history. While a few dozens of | fishes, reptiles and mammalia the young as developed | have. Dr. Brown, that from the beginning the comiig of man is an- | ference, Those which chmb—which climb along the | species were known in the beginning of the | in the same manner. The formation of the young begins Janes Ricks. nounced in the animal kingdom, ard that his appear- | stems of trees and are indifferent perching birds also | century, now the species are numbered by | in thisway: It begins on the surfare of the yolk, which CUBA. ‘ Samuel Johasee. face waa the clo of a plan which ww enunciated when | indiferontfyers sand Delow show Ia which the foot is | thousands, and it seems that they are so localized in | becomes indented the fesures growiog deeper atid more Joba Miller, porter. the first fishes were called into cxstence—-so closo is | go constituted as to facilitate their position on the limb | their distribution that every valley has its own kind, | numerous, until the whole surface becomes kneaded as “Thomas Taylor. the relation between these successi@ types which have | of a tree or branch—having fingers. Those which soar | while in an adjoining district you find an entirely differ- | it were and cut up into amail pieces, and these pieces cut OUR HAVANA CORRESPONDENCE. ‘Pearcy S inhabited the surface of our glob from the earliest | in the air with ease and ris highest im the étmoapb: ent species. Now you see at once that this innumerable | up again and again, In the reptile about one-half in- fh Coane oy Bee oe a nats od iy pons es | pry os coeeee ag seme aes) Rake ie pontine Sokend teen ee eas | Lome otanns Saaess egeteaan eset erane Poh 1,108 r i satisfy you, I ho} rey, to which natui ass " ing to the presence Morte Mven, ges a ete dee wad ine which we sbould | inghest. position in’ their clean, 80 118 enmmistakable | district haa nasurally ted to the Inference thet toeve anle | hac is tue basis ‘toes sekicn ane young ts developed, | Th0 news from the United States leaves many gloomy ie jassee, od the true position | that there is a certain relation between the standing of | mals wherever they go are modified according to | and the first step which takes place after the formation which Hit lib gent to claim } the plan of creation. | the animal and the element in which he lives, And it/| the circumstances under which they live. of the yolk is a depression in the surface, and the par- In the first place, the classes o fishes embraces only | seems natural to infer that these elements | explanation is perhaps as clear as that. these | ticles are reduced to the minimum dim ‘@ farrow uatic animals—animals in whid tbe different regions | may have something to do in forming this peculiar con- | animals should have been made in their various species | growing deeper and onan until a sort of rises. of the (Litustrating on chart.) impressions among us) here, Perhaps, in a tr gad clime, we are apt to be too apprehensive of danger; vat, be this as it may, we must confess that it is feared here i John hard) ‘ked ot—the head, the neck, | stitution, and that they way bave assumed those char- | from the beginning to suit the localities, But the inter- young of the ish, the young | that the political horizon in the North ie becoming ob- the booag and. the tail flow, as 5, were, one into a consequence ot ee So and At all } pretation a ra now seems e be tee | — oo bat, ear onan s of the nas the young of the | scured; it looks precarious to people of all nations asd: Jerry Cockrell. another yk tinous line. ere is not | events tl relation to which ve alluc @ wre | wsume & pecui character wherever they le from other, -Jebdn Hughes. that Me antes ar we whole fiure which distinguishes | or the considerations which is introduced when 1. is at- | ther type of birds which i exclusively South American | hay in slightly in color, creeds, and we only pray that it may yet go all right. Pe, contents or is ‘Tee following is & list of the wounded :— regions one from the other, ay gives that harmonious | tempted to show that animals are modiged by the influ- | is tne lotteau, another family of the climbing birds re- | one mark of difference bewween some of these animals The. Harriet Lane is getting repaired as fast as pos- Nash scalded, ponderant some Ger the other; which | ences under whiéh they live. {The lecturer here hesi- | markable ‘or the extraordinary dimensions of their bill, | (illustrated on chart). I have opened those of eggs with 6 Pelican onl: res. Ii ‘ke, iar Sr Loetevite, broted. Fiance for lutance, 10. mat the.nd not only above all | tated for some time, having apparehuly lost the vuread | the bil being about as long Au ‘appareniiy an hoary. as | Sivietref ecensticg thle fermeee sa alone tome Cap Roser pets Spt gh tng te remem ce De Hart, iy broised. Other parts, but in such a commaxing position it | of his discourse.) I have so much to say, that T try to | the body, though it is not so, as it would seem on ac- thet ee nS eee a re im the 7 . is is plain to any one who compees man with the other | find that which will interest you most in my Cpa count of its cellular structure. It is hollow internally, along the diameter, the becoming deeper Crees, 7 braised and scalded. beings liv! it to bim belongs the | and therefore I am perhaps more deliberate than J should or at least so cellular internally that its weight is eom- broader at one side, . That side which is broader ‘ ‘and 3 be, if 1 was not under that pressure. (Applavee.) The paretively but ite appearance is that of an im-,| and deeper is to be one day the head, and that side TOR AL. 6 tae animals of Brazil, now, which inhabit the mata land, are | tmense bill. birds are remarkable for the beauty '| which is ‘narrow is ote day to be the tail Terie Toutevine, thigh brokes: low in character as a whole. They do not stand eo high | of their color, though iustead of having those shining, | of "she young. Yet there is mo flegh, ‘no P, ‘those of other nts, and eo ee ‘which | reflected tints which present all the variations of ‘| skin or animal sui but almost a transparent sub- B, be ee a eeed, already been made by Butfoh, end which 1 jnstified | colors under different influences of light, as ia the case | stance. somewhat like jelly, with a certain’ whiteness & B. Trippiet, of Maeda. ised. ee ee ee with | with some birds, they bave patches of color, enina eset SRG Ie weed preliie, a saree as eae +a « “9 ‘John Brown, John Wea- ‘animals. of that continent, ‘we’ take the | moststri @ bund of yellow by a band | which makes manipu! exceedingly difficult, Im ees oom Mr. Jervia and Won. the with a. band blue. ar white. placed | order to examine the eggs 10 advantage they must be az 7 Sand ‘the ‘of the neck, the rest-of the body | opened under water, and. the water must be of SB oko 6 Teen tenet are ke or & white brenst with a very | the same temperature under which the eggs are Bans ot oe ang allies ccly' 9 Y f iat ; wall cicumecribed ring of beillant | growing.” They must ‘be, opened so that the paris Keown. @f ali the Sa ea ‘ard inferiority onthe side ofthe | tint, and the rest of a purplish color, Alt the | ex; shall fall in the water, then they may ‘eabert a ait American animals usi go through this.in | representatives of this family of toucans are re- be taken up and placed close under ihe, miscroscope for " cour Persons sepermely | every point of view. The the type-of | markable for this strange distribution of tints and | examination, when you will find that the whole of this Botier Euptecion at Milwavikjared. fact the attitude of the fish in tre | the ile, is unexcepti y. that of crocodile. | the proportionate dimensions of their billg Toucans, | young is a mass of tissue all of thé same appearance Milled und “Mirwivnns, Feb. 29, 1867. lives shows its low Now, America are small in com- | humming birds and parroquets form the ‘without any apparent difference yet in substance. Sup- i posi , the crocodiles of tic tion. The fish moves horizontally, and the head ie on ' ‘parison to those of Affica or of the Ganges, and in their | features of the flying tribes: of the class of birds in a level with ab the other paris of the yody. (The Pro- re they have a character of inferiority often. | these tropical resione. Of perching birde here dew the form of a fish on the canvas with What is peculiarly characteristic of the crocodjies is | are also fionumerable species, but they have such marvels rapidity as to elicit the warm applause | that their jaw are provided with powerful teeth which | no very special features. “q resemble, that an edifice of considerable dimensions was to put up, made of ome mass of clay, and that by a i Phoded teed The following are the names of the of the audesce.) You see in that.positien (po:nting to | jnt other i 7. (Iiustrat! m meas our amon| pes——lense HID, engineer, and his wife; Denis Short, | the Mostratbp) what ie characteristic of the lowest Bee interlocking, asin); por he lowe? iow ase '|-Gaemn thane ave po elegant singers: but there is rf ‘and there particles should. fall {nto hollows,” anon -@romem, and a Mrs. Jordan. The damage to the mili is | of vertebra. There is no part which has such a pre- ‘ao side of the teeth of the upper jaw, so that when | tribe of this family of pe x birds which constitute a | these hollows should accummulate fluids and in the ‘i eatimated st $20,000, i Pap noe hte the other as to command the whole of | the meuth is shut the two sots of jaws are brought very | characteristic feature of the contine: those + which | other parts fibres, and all should grow up by themselves, . " 1e Organwation, as is the case in the other vertebrates. | close togeeher, And this is the highest possible relation all the ri How mugit a ctiange we Heed make bere in onder to | between the«wo sets of the jaws. Now, ‘croco- stones, beams of a) as +, il rs CES give at orce this being an entirely different relation! In { diles of the O10 World—those of Africa and Asin—have and ev else, apd that grow REBEL IN RENTUCKY. the first place this caudal appendage may be prolonged | this pecuhar form sf dentition. The crocodiles of south om ee you ‘would take similar to that, SOP AAPA APA LPADP Dy into a single clongation at the backbone and we have at | America, on the contfary, have all the teeth of the lower which takes place im the egg the animal is formed, ‘SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE HERALD. once the characteristic form of the tail of all reptiles and | jaw so titting on the upper jaw that when the two jaws Gnd all rismg from eggs of character. ieee of all the animals which have cauda! appen Then | are brought together all the tagth of the upper jaw pass So it appears as if that manner Prominent Unionists of Boyle County Ordered | 4¢4in we nced only impart some different outline to the | by the teeth of the lower jaw, and the teeth forthe | from any is that one 7 to Leave on Penalty of Death. neck and t aseign to the head a preponderance over the | of the upper jaw fit on we of the of | kind of of egg, and Fravgvorr, Ky., Feb. 20, 1867. Test of the body, and if in addition to that contraction | teeth of the lower jaw, so the there i much since the that out of (J es > nm You raise it slightly, you see at ouce that the whole re- | lose of power, so that there is much lése intimate rela- | tint, which give them a very ele; These | the another any /ffhe'fedels in Boyle county have recently sent letters | lation is changed, and from that time we have the first | tion between these in that respect, And ifvowexamine | are the largest of the birds of prey in the lower part of | more re has ever Bpeeds. Fry, Captain Goodiac, a relative of | aspiration in the animal kingdom to a higher and higher | the relation of the limbs, you find again the character | South America, while in the higher mountainous regions | been know: as Soa \F. Bell, Wollitigton Harlan, and the officers of the | %°’@lopment, and this condition transforins into higher | of inferiority. The limbs and the fingers aro free. ‘They | the condor is found, which is the of the birds of | is the pian and the i e va * and higher classes. When the being is unfolded then | touch distinct, the one from the otber, in Proportion as y. known on earth. in the countries of | thing which I cannot conceive otherwise than through Wreedmen's Burean, to leave the county under penalty te ange gd ra ve beeen wo Ee trie = ag gg =< F vy os Look at the toads, for Eouth America, which are to the south of the | the intervention of a superior mind, to General bi 1@ €] of reptiles, But in class of repliies we | instance, in whicl 6 ers are entirely free wi the Amazon—in the pam 1e re. ; SF datty,..Aimmmioation peteese Dea toee wads || eval cose tend, a mmape alieatation, oe ee nel al pon ng en % mt be ed Doeabe ance aaatioe te theron for provection of Union men against these rebel regula- tora, General Fry is the officer who is popularly believed to ‘Rave, killed Zollicoffer at Mills Springs, in January, 1862, @né Wellington Harlan recruited the first company of ‘Union troops raised on Kentucky soil during the war. ‘Neither Gf them ‘ts an extreme radicals politically, and ‘their me robable offence is their record during the war. have web fe and in to the west of Buenos Ayres and also ticed among the fishes. Let one step further be gained, | proportion as they grow Ge we lotr iy Be the ba A Radi Xf are found which resemble t! and the organs of respiration be more extensive, and, | fingers become free,. All the embryo crocodiles are wob- | African ostrich in every except size, bei in consequence of this greater intensity of breathing, | fvoted. Even those of the Old World are web-footed in about one half the size of Afnean ‘onrich and the bl waxes warm. m the Jowest class ef verte- | the egg, but as they grow larger this web vanishes and ing further in having three toes instead of two, brates, the body of which moves horzonually in their | the fingers become iree. The South American croco- | South America bas its peculiar ires in the mat element, which is water, the respiratory organs | diles retain their web through life, and in some of them | birds as well as in the family ot reptiles and of whieh are gilis, we ascend to a class of reptiles in | already it is even disparagingly Jarge in comparison to | fishes, but the great variety of carnivorous birds which the respiratory organs are now serial, receiving | the sizeof their fingers; vo that, taking the highest | eharacterize the old preponderance of immediately atmospheric air, and from the towest kind among them to compare with the highest in the other | sions as compat that of of sane, oo eee eee Leow Boe a poe bes Rely tly once that the char- | in the large iy, mear the , about midway | acter feriority ison the side of America, back between the tail and the head. The 7 “4 edd ARGC RRRC ° OUR INLAND COMMERCE, Report of Mr. Israel T. Hatch. Mr, Israel T. Hatch, in pursuance of a resolution of Congress requesting information as to the subject of his report, briefly sketches the trade of the United States az th EF i Ly af Ba, ORGAN. blic whe SCHERUISS "WAND! wonderful effects which are we [ F t body | the other families of reptiles we observe the same; for | tribe and in the old world, may, in & mearut be raised above the ground; instance, in the preponde: snake these America show acain that KENTUCKY POLITICS. Wimky leave the watet ar may continue to move in the | and poleoneus soaks soe sce polmanows snakes, die o as ‘be "America, ts tatertor ¢0 | Provable Nomination ef the Rebel General | Ther have whe fori of fagera, Tawa tie) Dade Gey | tot op ttn ee neegrmeet And Cg show you thet, tie | Preston for Governor—The State Convene | and we rise to the clase of birds. Here toe circulation | jo South ‘Atnerica than in those ot ot parts of the Couto as aly in Rout Ameria but North Aeron ten at Pranktert, dsc. of the blood is doubled; that 1s, part of the blood aris. | world: One of the terrestrial snakes, howover, acquires that of North America bi 4 Frawnvont, Feb. 20, 1067, ing from the heart goes immediately to the body and Very reinarkable dimensions. te the boa coaitrictor— Wreath .2 the ©) Bold a caucus to attempt te ramifies in all ite parta, while another part goes to the the largest of alt the reptiles of that family — world of ‘tae + : Yespiratory and is brought in contact with the | sions it, Of the largest specimens, ext fiona ne eal | Convention ow Friday. It inex. | at ) 80 that there is an extensive rejuvena- teen, Sgpicen fest sud more, Specimens of rT) an South | wilt claim too many offices, and there ie a | tion of the biood in that contect which stimulates itfor | have beeu very rare, but yet, nowadays, when these America, fs contiooat at a much between ibe rebels and the ite functions, and in consequence of that activity of tir- | animals bave been hunted down to so great an extent, | earlier of the . North ‘weplit conserve- 1 culation and that intensit ot Yroathing the temperature are rarely epecinens of that dimensions to be | America has ben, So Coppa ene tive Unionists and their running separate tickets, the | of the body is raised ve that of the surrounding | found. However, let me say, as I'touch upon this sub- pyr homey mag Co Mountaing It was Bermer with William C. Preston, formerly Minister to boy Ler rag A wees Felation | ject, that though ¢ommon, the poisonous snakes haunt | @ continent Europe assumed those features Gielen edt recently a reds! general, for Governor. If no tiles ad fiahee—are called cold-blooded anima aot don't aBord any wore dager te wetter ate tee Kmeriey "snd 10" ager seo (@tvision ex-Governor Helm, a stay-at-bome | that the vemperature is necessarily much colder than codliaey eaben wo’ ps0 or tae rates Cane tee fact we the this jnent resamb- vebe! the war anda fighting one since the war ‘bas of the warm-blooded animals, but it changes with ‘we have in various parts of the country. And accidents ling those of an older age, older world, and thas ‘will probably be the joint nominee. the tem of the surrounding medium. A | occurring from these animals are ‘as rare there as they | they are inferior in their bull to those which we find on turtle in midsummer whee exposed to the sun | are here with us, ‘and no doubt at no time will the fre- | the older continent Asin and of Africa, Tedieals bold their Siate Convention on the 26th | will have its own Taised to | quency of these secidents be an impediment to the ex- | In my neat leotu monkeys and man, fend will pi}e full ticket in the field Probably | @ghty-five degrees and and if it sinks | tension of the settlement, Among the aquatic reptiles | and nman or mammalia of which Sx hur Carlee below th renga spell at the animal | we bave a family ‘hich Me very numerous in Brasil the monkey avo an opporto- $e Lagisienare bas sdjourned over until the tart con- | temperaiure ate hed 4 is Ie the cha- | there is’ such e variely, tbat’ 'the “forests” "are | ticle atthe eid wornd Tare ta: nee eT ate ant pevpes sa. The bill tocreate « conventional : ghee J nak ain teasers = with their notes; and the sounds that they | But let us take a myth ren ek mga | . prs in the to-day, ng)—a ‘becomes | emit are s0 varied that they imitate the voice of other these remarks. the old continent we have the ele? iaterest defeated Senate haracteristic of the bird. it the birds have many fea- | animals to the extent of tly producing a strange the rhinoceros, the us and the giraffe, “ ty % overflowing with delegates to the Steve | tures in common with the reptiles, They lay eggs. In Gelusion—some of then aro tore like otbers are Wend are ser shone? and in Asia, There end they are being billeted upon the eit). | ™any other reepects the structure of the birds and rep- | crying like cbildren, and frequent Jour Sileatien a are n0 representatives of these families in South Amer. be tiles is 80 close that at some steps of their growth it = | sympathies may be tiirasted by 2 tone SEaeaie fea, The carniverous animais—the Hone and the oma There will be a large crowd present hardly possible to distinguish one from the other; still, | distress you could you not satisfy yourself, ‘soon are st home? In Asia and Africa, : es otet ciameercee as th the diflerences are brought out more for- that it comes from a cluster of frogs and not from are Ted lions, 80 called, in America, | WBSOUR LEGISLATURE. oibly. ‘But what constitutes the most prominent external | in distress, (Laughter and appieuse.) ‘The family of | but they are inferior in size and@-strength and {inferior in —— difference between the reptiles and the birds is the differ. tartles is very numerous, and some very | structure to those carniverous snimais which inhabit Repert of the Judiciary Committee Receme | ence between the four extremitied The anterior limbs representatives are in South America, and in yo 4 the old world. But let os take more in detail those Hepenchment of dwdwes Moody | ‘rial locomotion, aud the porertr Mabe are oven | Teer of a acargen The lagen turtles known Seo ontteal worta tx oatn Losorton 1s pernapeeved mee a e ond St. Loum, Feb, 20, 1867, | into a pair of legs for torremrial locomotion, while in the | kinds. The loggertoad teen fun ee oe emer ease ° ey Of the other of which i. ‘a reptiles we ‘never have this disparity between | thero are fresh water turtles of the Aimston chek tad od contisenta Ta the bros pisce, envoy the scmeay ee Sdapeen from Jeterven City viates thet MriJowett, | io anterior and posterior limbe; and then | tothe dimensions at cre three ‘feet m ‘or American mammalia—if not quadrupede if she is ‘Brome the Jadiciary Commitice, to whicn was referred | the body is uniformly covered with feathers, | three to four feet—and form one of the Geliious Sreotilent we have on the ocean whales and of be x ordering an inquiry as to certain opinions | Recently an animal has found, the structure of | articles of food of thatcountry and in such a. porpoises. In zil we find a eertain number of f ota pr rr) which ws half way reptile and half way bird, of which I | they constitute one of the resources of ‘Ae Sopcistion, dat they are of a small kind, kinds which ; alleged 06 have been expremed by Judge Moody, of the | Shan have Something more to say in my last lecture, | furnishing them, not only with meat, but als with ano. aboteabvensusbete tn the exteasrdinane canes of 4 ‘HE "146 Clout Court, and bie acts in Now, the Dighest of all the class is that of mammalia. ther article $m} ‘as.an object of diet. They | dentation. The pachico, or ie of the loweet | We generally cali them quadrupede, because most of | manufactured from hese tortlee’ eee aaa the of Geas of mammalian. Tt" spondersten i the 4 them bave four lege—two pairs of limbs and of the uni- | amount of which are gathered for ‘that object is CX K Xs ‘and is even found ip our South. form, type of legs. But among dem there are some | almost incr Thowe fresh water turties, when the Cen fegeneesters in Sommpe bey in Fiona we have mas Tem, however, which he tuly one pai’ thereare tage | Souyrbeton nsw fatee ar me ae Gg Fe Oe Biases “Brorcn Bsr which bave ono pair of legs aud one pait of ‘sms, suck ta inna, aontared open ity 3 and Wo 10 tivo feaot iu tho Orinoco nea Te ioe ro as man, while there are others which have four arme, | tunity to go on land, when 0 witer bas sebetdea te tm Tetscan animal which may be compared tine bot t ‘wil co Ua such as monkeys, So that this denomination of qi minimum, Then they march from the water, go on land but it is as if it were a hi oo re pede ie generally called by modern naturalists iy te at & few hundred yards from the water ‘ine, then the tusks and without havin ealy « pal vention nu whoie Bame of marmalia—all the representatives of that class | borrow thetr bills, and there depoalt nate ‘and re- | of short paddies, the tail of which ie long and slight, and abject those Ser Park so, " paving thie remarkable structural feature, thet | turn to the water, having 90 offced the marks they have | somewhat constructed like the tall of ie bearer 10g aS . A Fag fave & cowie cis made wile laying them that to the unaccustomed it a8 an car to raise ite body to the sui bBo ant ab. i" are nursed by milk in thelr infaaey and hence Tame | But tho Tedlans are'so ebiies:e"posttios of the terest tsummalla proper "We hive nese. ie Prodigious mass Blowout wen, semetongy he bah" hn sn | Se ca, pans ly Says | Sys Sec ea hoses espa" a tan sends above the othere And now, if we look at hoes underneath, they immediately detect the Alt to be compared to the bet of ‘antl rye G Wor ri a Magee 5 Telations im which these classes stand to the sur- where the Pee Pe and uncovering 4n Asia and These are not on the Amert- West Fi ‘ A rounding clementa, it ie remarkable that all the orate Say Septem And, equine have not a sagie wid Ge ee sentatives Dall; ‘VU Inslead: obe ether kind or that street, abd all druggies.” a ape Oe ae Frag of ‘asa, othe ontary, there are ohne tae ok On whe pour vind See yh $e oy water, ‘and in the ‘Murray yor ind € *, Fish, ‘out of the war epopie Swe Linde” sha va Wetaow fork. One oun erie pai | cata one ‘which ig still found in the foreat of us- QpFYICIAL DRAWINGS OF THE \RorcA. state on the Girt" ind the ball family repre- Orestes SPENCE ran ae comics nae bo mer spiny Aen variny of ah sg eae Bee Sek w e iy J . Sie Ndvoxsye' Amenea ‘har’ two * spacen” yu ; tiie tually, not ‘one to corveepond chan isesreot Nk Wy 64 9,8, "5 om 0 : oharactenstic ‘Asin and Barope also have Welt fe Clnan’ frometerce nd camel. andnatend of thay Bouth Amer. 2,9, 3108, 1,8 OO, 8, a, oy > x0 ORE BN fp te fi

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