L P Fishet VOLUME VI. ALBANY, OREGON, DECEMBER 20, 1873. NO. 30. Koffce Kalknlll mil hl Country. We have long been familiar with the sable republic of Liberia, its rapid progress, and constitutional government, existing in the midst of savage tribes ; nor is Dahomey, with its fierce black king, quite un known beyond the confines of his kingdom ; but it was reserved to the present quarrel between Eng land and the Ashantees to give European and American fame to that dark potentate, Koffee Kal kalli. Hitherto, but vague rumor has given out that Ashantee was a bellicose ad rather formidable, but irretriveably savage nation; what its boundaries and extent are, even yet an enigma; it is only known that it lies between benight ed Dahomey on one side and more than semi-civilized Liberia on the other, while south of it is the fa mous West-African Gold Coast Just where Coomassie, the Ashan tee capital, stands, is only matter for conjecture ; but that Coomassie is much more than a mere strag gang collection ot rude huts, as most African capitals are, is ren dered well nigh certain by a French traveler, who ail venturously peiie trated thither a few years ago. lie describes Coomassie as a large and really good-looking city, with reg ular streets and squares, and dwell ings which, though rude compared with Russell Square, or the Ruede Rivoli, wear the aspect of comfort, and even, occasionally, of luxury. The royal place of Koffce is a rather imposing edifice, with window and door frames lined with quite a thick lining of solid gold. Gold, indeed, is one of the most ordinary orna ments of the swarthy monarch and his courtiers. The axe and um brella handles are often solid gold; and golden nuggets are the fashion able trinket woru around the necks of the Ashantee lords and ladies. The suspicion entertained by the English and the Dutch, both of whom have had settlements on the coast, that there are extensive gold rames in the interior, is seemingly confirmed by the tale of ihe rash sojourner in Coomassie; he tells ot thousands ot slaves employed in the river on which the capital stands, collecting the gold ; and his stories of the nuggets he saw are most tan talizing. Ashantee is further descrihed as a hilly and well-watered country, with vast forests and wild sugar cane fields, and a wealth of produc tion in tobacco, corn, rice, gums, dy?s, and aromatic plants ; but it also contains an awe-inspiring vari ety of wild beasts, among theiu ele phants and tigers and lions and leopards, not to speak of the hip popotami and the alligators. More over, the climate of this part of Africa, especially near the coast, is most destructive of European life, being a strange combination of un healthy moisture and excessive heat. The .thermometer varies during the year something like eighty degrees. The regions about the coast are, be sides, very swampy, and full of miasmatic influence. The climate of Ashantee itself is said to be some what less fatal, though in the rainy season, just now approaching, the whole region is dangerous to those accustomed to the temperate cli mates north of the equator. It is a palpable proof that the Ashantees are far from being the the utterly savage creatures which they have long been supposed to be, that their general-in-chief has adopted a sys tem of warfare against the invading English of great shrewdness. Me Ihm systematically avoided a direct conflict, and has marched his army among the western tribes, with the triple object of forcing them into an alliance with King Koffee, ac quiring a good base of supplies, aud delaying the war until the rainy season arrives to deplete the En glish ranks by sickness and death The quarrel between the English and the Ashantees is not a very in telligible one: the English have long held a portion ot the' Gold toast other sections ot which were pos sessed by the Danes and the Dutch J he latter have now also been ac quired by the English, whose settle ments, defended by Cane-Coast Castle and other forts, stretch along the shores between Liberia and Da homey. JNorthwara ot these pos sessions are the peaceful and sub missive tribes ot the Fantees, As sins, and Ahantas, which are "pro tected" by the Jiritish Government: and beyond them, to the north, are the undefined dominions of Koffee Kalkalli. The immediate cause of the war vas a series of fierce in cursions of Kins; Koffee against the Fantees, whom he drove to Cape Coast, aud whose villages he burn ed, but the remote cause is alleged to be the resentment felt by this potentate at not having acoes to the sea-coast, and at being deprived ot the annual stipend which used to be granted to him by the Dutch. Whatever the grounds ot the quar rel, it is certain that the English cabinet has entered upon a deter mined war, ai.d intend to conquer and thoroughly punish the obstrep erous Koffee. Thus they have an other Abyssinia on their hands, an other Theodoras to demolish. . Nor is the struggle likely to be a very easy one, nor are the costs of it cap able of easy reckoning. When Sir Robert Napier set out for Magdala, it waseslimated that the war would cost England four millions sterling tor it ; she has actually had to pay nine. 1 he Ashantee war is calcu latcd at two millions; it is not un likely to cost five, Koffee lias been making it is suspected, important alliances with many interior tribes; that lie and lus generals are skilled warriors, they have already betray ed; the English know nothing either of the numbers of his army, the manner of their equipment, or of the topographical features of the country they are about to invade; they do know that the resistance of Ashantee armies is not the' onlv danger they have to face, but wild beasts also, and a most treacherous climate ; and before they reach the promised Eldorado of the river Harra, and the capital, with its sus pected golden stores, they must probably endure a long, weary, and uncertain campaign, in which they can scarcely hope to do more than temporarily put an end to Ashantee excursions cnastward. Don't Do It. Never box your children's cars. Medical men un qualifiedly condemn the practice, .Many a child lias been made deaf I 1 1 1 !l .1 Dy iiavuig us ears uoxeu, ana own ers, from the same cause, have been afflicted for years, and sometimes for life, with painful diseases of the auditory organs. The passage of the ear is closed on its inner side by a thin membrane, especially adapted to tie influenced by every impulse of the air, and with noth ing but the air to support it inter nally. Any sudden or forcible com pression of the air in front of this membrane is likely to injure it. Such a shock is almost sure to dis tend the membrane unnaturally, and sometimes it breaks it, espec ially when from previous disease the membrane has been weakened. Such a shock naturally injures the nerve of hearing. Sftu Francisco has been allowed five additional letter carriers. The Dtfflerence. When a woman has a hen to drive into a coop she takes hold of her hoops with both hands, and shakes them quietly toward the de linquent, and says, " Shew! there." The hen takes one look at the ob ject, to convince herself that it's a woman, and then stalks majestical ly into the coop in perfect disgust of the sex. A man don't do that way. He goes out of doors, and says, "It's singular that nobody in this house can drive a hen but myself;" and, picking up a stick of wood, hurls it at the offending biped, and observes " Get in there, you thief!" The hen immediately loses her reason, and dashes to the opposite end of the yard. The man straightway dashes after her. She comes back again with her head down, her wings out, and followed by an assortment of stove-wood, fruit-cans and coal-clinkers, with a much-pnffing and very-mad man in the rear. Then she skims up on the stoop and under the barn, and over a fence or two, and around the house, and back again into the coop, all the while talking as only an excited hen can talk, and all the while followed by things 'conveni ent for handling, and by a man whose coat is on the saw-buck, and whose hat is on the ground, and whose perspiration and profanity appear to have no limit. By this time the other hens have come out to take a hand in the debate, and help dodge the missiles and then the man says every hen on the place shall be sold in the morning, and puts on bis things and goes dowu street ; aud the woman dons her hoops and has every one of those hens housed and contented in two minutes, and the only sound heard on the premises is the ham mering by the oldest boy as he mends the broken pickets. Saluting the American flag. A short time since a most ridicu lous affair happened in the harbor ot Kio Janeiro. An ice ship from boston entered the bay, command ed by a Capt. Green, in the South American trade, b ort Santa Cruz, not recognizing his house hag, hail ed him, and ordered him to 'heave to." But the worthy skipper didn't speak Portugese, and the simple statement of the name ot his vessel, which he hurled at the fort, was not at all satisfactory ; so a blank shot was fired as a mild suggestion tor him to stop. Rut the C aptain called tor his revolver, and, point ing it skyward, tired six suc cessive shots. I hen a solid shot from the fort skipped across her how, and another, better aimed, passed through his fore-sail. The fort and two shore batteries opened tire npon him. and several ot his light spars were cut away. But he held on his way rejoicing, load ing and firing his revolver. lie finally reached quarantine, and came to anchor just as his flying jib boom went by the board. He was then so near the other shipping that they dare fire ou him no longer, and the police boat, the custom bouse boat, and the health boat, all boarded him together with the Captain ot the fort, who, with mora vigor than politeness, wanted to kuow " Why he didn't heave!" " Heave to ! ' ejaculated the as tonished skipper, " was that what you wanted? Good Lord! I thought you was salutin' the Amer ican flag!" "Diable!" shouted the officers in chorus, and set the case dowu as additional evidence of the lunacy which they regarded as a necessary ingredient of the American charac ter. The Virginias has been mlasuud, and sailed For a nerthen perk Aflhirn In tirceeet While one's ears are filled With the din of the French Assembly, and one's eye are blinded by the flame and smoke that commingle into a lurid pall above unhappy Spain, it is not likely that far-away Greece should attract much of the attention of the Btndent ot trans Atlantic politics. But in that de generate although once famous land of the past, there is going on a quiet revolutionary movement which may yet restore some of its faded glory, aud glint the banner of modern Greece with something of the splendor which radiated from it when Athens wan the intellectual queen of the world. Greece has attained its full independence, and, especially since the evacuation ot the Ionian Isles, stands in a posi tion to render that independence fruitful of national prosperity. The lung has larger power, perhaps, than the average constitutional sov ereign, but in his attempt to lift up his people he must act with a hrmess and enterprise, and a largeness of views, commensurate with his patriotic desire. Before he dreams of establishing a wise and progressive government, it is abso lutely necessary that many of the glaring evils under which Greece suffers should be done away with. And the chief of these is the system1 of brigandage which still flourishes in the waste interior. So long as the farmer, bringing his scanty pro duce to market, is forced to remu nerate the robber who stops him in a lonely ravine, so long will ag riculture languish. And if he es cape the brigand, there is still an other robber the tax-gatherer who is almost as remorseless. The whole system of rural taxation in Greece lacks common sense, and is consequently mijnst. But despite these drawbacks the country has made a decided move in the line of educational reform; and it is in raising the standard ot the popular intelligence that she must look principally for the desired improve ment. Heading and writing are, after all, the machinery of pow er, and the phrase, " the pen is mightier than the sword," is no sophism. It was her intellectual graces that raised Greece to such a dazzling height in the past, and her return to the neighborhood of her old importance cai only be ac complished by some such means. And now is her chance. The de cay of the Ottoman Empire already foreshadows the part that Greece may yet play in the drama of the East, if she is but truo to herself. But there are political adventurers to be- gotten rid of, and the line ot demarcation between church and State must be drawn clearly. As it is now, the ecclesiast hampers the statesman. When these things are done the sails ot Greece will be filled by a fair wind, and her course will be smooth, should, there be no interference on the part of Russia. But buoIi possible interference is too remote to be looked at now. A good housewife should not be a person of one idea, but should be familiar with tka flower garden as well as with the flour barrel', and, though her lesson should oo to les sen expense, odor ot a hue rose should not be less valued than the order ot her household. She will prefer a yard of shrubbery to a yard ot satin. If her husband is a skil ful tower of grain, she is equally skilful as a seiner of garments. He keeps his hoes bright by use; she keeps the host ot the whole family in order. i How can we get rich ? By lay ing aside the effort to become weal thy, and trying to be comfortable. TELEGRAPHIC. The Treasury Department is somewhat pressed for moriey, not only by the falling off of revenues, but by' the appropriation of five millions of dollars foi naval purpos es, and the payment of the twenty million loan of 1858. Secretary Richardson claims that it is better to obtain the necessary funds by taxation than by increasing the national debt. He suggests a higher tax on tea and coffee. Tlie House of Representatives has passed a bill authorizing the temporary increase of the Navy from 8,500 to 10,000 men. Flections for Assemblymen were held in parts of France on the 14th. Castelar and Salmeron have had a reconciliation. The English off the gold coast are suffering with fever. Prof. Proctor, the English As tronomer Royal, has opposed the award of the gold medal to Miss Mitchell, on the ground that, altho' she had undoubtedly discovered the comet, she bad neglected to send news of the discovery by the first mail. Professor I'roctor predicts a wonderful scientific future for Amer ica. A Tribune special says the Pres ident refuses to accept the resigna tion of Sickles, and he remains at Madrid. The Supreme Court has decided that States have the right to tax railroads. Increase of public debt during the month, five millions. Ou the 16th, in the House, Sar gent introduced a bill relative to the public lands in California, and fixing the uniform price at $1 25 per acre for mineral and agricultu ral lands. Page introduced a bill making it felony to contract for the employ ment of Coolies in this country. Nesmith introduced a bill to as certain the losses by Indian raids in Oregon, and to transfer the man agement ot Indian affairs to the War Department. In the Senate, Mitchell introduc ed a bill directing the Secretary of War to cause surveys to be made u determine the practicability aud cost of removing the Cascades and Dalles of the Columbia river. Or dered printed. A territlio storm in Sheffield, England, destroyed much property and many lives. General Howard is up before a House Committee, and waives tech nicalities, claiming to court the full est investigation. . The late storm in England proved disastrous all over the north. The Swiss Government has reim bursed Count Staempfi the expenses incurred by him as a member of the Geneva Court Arbitration. The Count declined any honoration in the form of a testimonial. The bill repealing the bankrupt act has passed the lower house of Congress. Wool m Wrifadelphia ou the 16th was stiff with an advancing ten. dency. California fine 85c, coarse, 20 to 30c per poiuJ.