VOLUME XIII. ALBANY, OREGON, DECEMBER 17, 1880. NO. 12. 14 au Bwuti CTUaap, quick rli.bl. 3Si PITCHEirSCASTOmAIsnot Kwreotic Children prow fat upon. Mothers like, and Physi cian recommend CASTORIA. It regulates the Bowels, cures Wind. Colic, allays Feverishnew and destroys Worms. BE METER'S CATARRH Cm. Cmtltatlaul Anti-fl.to for Ma taniU autlaAy, try Abarptlo Other rmdiea but . l-aliarrs Catank, this ouu at uj tagre kafora. Caaamptiaa Mti im. AlTnTiy Furniture House. JAMES DANNALS, Manufacturer and Dealer in FURNITURE, Jrootn Snlta; Walnut, Arti and Maple Parlor nnti4 ; tmem iiocKers, My UDaira aud Iounges a specialty. SiprinG MattresseS, xciiin Centre Tables. ....... Pillar Extension, etc. i v A splendid lc cf; V.'hi.t.m aud UardwooJ Cbm 01 Hi; kut U. "Wiatacts, Bookcases. SideTso&rds; In fact, I Intend to keep a flrnt claw Furniture HousE. I am thankful for past patronage, and resident, of thla city and vicinity to Corner of Second and Ferry streets. AUUXT, it-KnSl) OBEUOX. gre&za . Qaady. pactcry. O-W. OSBORN, trmt street, opposite Mcllwaln's AlBAST, OKEGO. Maae&cturer aad dealer In all kinds of C'cara t'' Candles 1 i Kep tor sato ' Frcacfa and American . '' V C AX DIES, JaTTS," " TOX3ACO, - . - CIGARS, -eS30, tJbo., arnica will bo aoM at prices to anU the times. Iartte and balls supplied with candies, nuts, te.. atrcaaowl rale. - --"- To u are rcapeutf tJiy Invited to Rive ir.es can. C. W. OSBORN. r Mot, !9, ISSO-bSvU - - ALBANY --' -Albany, Oregon;' Crbi sscond Term Will open on Wednesday-, Sept I st,I8SO. rr Tjartiemlars concerning the courses of Vady sm'J tli frloe of tnttVin. apply to fO f Oreatettanea to money. V 4ji nod a person In overv l take 1 sitjoertntiona for toe larsrat. cti-sp-' and et Jtiiairtl Aunlly !lia)M in Jlwt worki. Anyone mn bfovme n mfjT'wfni ntmt. &is f!:ant works of art air-i frr ! sn'isii-lbers. "t priisp so low thnt almost ercrybiy snlv aoritws. xtuentn nnrtii akihs 140 sn'mertr twjrs 10 a Dy. A la.lv nr tftiOTn nmkinK ovr t&iA cior pro-li In t hv.' Al! wlio tip? trtite n.aHe iwtony 6t. V" lvoie all trll'Pe to lite lwitv-s. rr nuiv rwe 4ime. Y turm i not be sw ay from over n4(rliu ion can at lias wellaotliT r nll r!irekn. vi ttrvii iwe. fck-t?n i "stwwiveOntn I . If youtni itmnta'iK rK i your '., at once. It kwik ci, l.iu m ir- ness. Sftw wliei ej3.n.-ci gpH. tf make t y. A'i-ltfjw tJesoHrtr ffii.tn.jt uo.. j .ri'Jifta, Utlnc. n a wh In your oa-t, ptt. s.otitflt i)J ' nk. tia )r, it jou a ant a 1 "i'ni vh-i-u iwriKiris of either it,, - t-ifni Tny ! Im- time ihey wrc-ic i -' t-i4ra U U. iULt-fTr Co ' ,?. i .rv:f . r-lS ' TVo wm To Draw or Woe to Draw. "To tlra w. or not to draw, that's the ques tion : Whether 'tis safer In the player to take -.;.. The awful risk of skinning for s straight. Or.standiug Paf.to raise 'em all the limit. Aud thus, by Diluting, get it. to uraw, to skin : Not more and by that skin to ret s full Or two. pair, or tlie fatest, bouncing kings That luck is heir to ; 'lis a coiisumatinn Devoutly to be wished. To draw, to skin. To skin ! perchance to bust aye, there's the rub. For in that draw of three, wliat cards may coin). When we hare shuffled offth uncertain pack. Must give us pause. There's the' reaper Which makes calamity of a bohtall fltt-h. For who would bear the overwhelming blind. , . The pek it, straddle, f lie wait an.Cj edgr The insolence ot Pat hands, and he Itrta That patient merit ot the bluffer takes. When lie himself might be much better off By simply passing. Who would trays up bold, -And go out on a small progressive raise. But llJit the dread of something after call. Tiie undiscovered ace-full, to who-e strengtii Such hands must bow-puzzle the will And make ns rattier keep the chips we liave ' Than be carious about bands we know not ot. Thus bluffing does make coward of us all. Ana tuns the n:itive hue ot a ronr-neart flush Is sicklied with some dark and cussed club; . And spcaulatnrs in a jack-pot's wealth. With this regard, tlieir interest tuin away. And lose the right to open." Two IHptsnali Ins large, square, old-fashioned bouse such as our fathers uesd to build when solidity was more sought after tlian util ity lived Philip Manson and his sister Bathe r. Philip had reached the mature age ot 40, and Esther was close to him. Still, each had pursued s solitary patbway through life, seeking no companionship save that of the other till there vras reason to believe that they would continue to follow the same course till in the full ness of time they were eatliered into the' family tomb the receptacle of many gen e ration ot the Manson family. There was more reason to think so, since they" took care to commend an unmarried life, not only by example, but by precept. Xo," said Philip, when assailed on tlii sut'ij.; by . a inatt h-mukiig iaily marrying may On vt ry jkvI rorm'n? ;ieo pi. hiit i '.n.d not Iwar nave my h-uhit. b:okm i-i ujoi. Hip.'i my v::.; ii-u cm ed ; -v-t;!rvv- f.- ri.v i,,tr'-t'Uii of a wit . ::. ' .'' ; 'lvi"oy a:d-by.: yo vt'ii wi 'i lite lr'U y! ' :t v :i 4ii-r. t- tlMlI at present-" Xu." said Philip, cuiiclnsiveiy, I have a sUter who is devoted to me. and whilst ho lives I shall need no other' As for Miss Esther, she often declared that stie would never make, a slave ot her self tor any man living. It otli.-r women were too!ih eiiiugh to give up their inde pendence, and jne themselves to a man, for no other eartldy purpose than to burden therastftve with cares and toils from inorn Ingtiil night, she had no objection, iter brotjier and she had always lived together pcacab!y and happily, and she did not thin nld not make any vlian ge for the Of course, it whose opinions was insinuated by thns difTeretl tiile!y from Miss Estiier's tliat in adopting this opinion site was only making a virtue of necessity, and that it was best to be conteuted with one's lot, provided there was no cliatice of im proving it. But Esther did not iiear tliese remarks and so was not disturbed by them. She continued to live in the old house with her brother.) Tliey kept no domestic, since Esther raiher plumed herselton her house keeping qualities, and there was really but little to do. So, as tier brother was usually absent during tlas day, she- w.-is tett for the most part to the comp-tiiionship of ber own thoughts unless some neighbor clianc ed to call in a thing, by tiie way, ol rather tare occurrence, since most of the, neigh bor had large families of their own, which necessarily confined tliem at home. Eai ly one afternoon just after -Est tier Maiiaon had completed her task of clear big away tiie dinner dishes, and storing them away iu tiie cupboard after a thorough washing, she was startled by s rap at the door. Somewhat surprised by s caller at this unusual hour stie answered the summons. She was a little appreliensive that itTjvas a neighbor who bad of late proved very troublesome from Iter habit ot borrowing articles, and owing, It Is to be presumed, to a habitual forgettulness, neglecting to return tliem. 'I hope,"hs mused, thst If it Is Mrs Bailey, slie will be wanting to borrow something that I have not got." Slie opened the door ; but no Mrs. Bat. ley presented herself to ber expectant gase a gentleman of 45, carefully, nay elegant ly dressed, stood before her. : - "I beg your pardon for Intruding ma dame," said he, as he noticed .Esther's look of surprise ; "but can you direct me to tiie house of tiie late Mr. Well fleet f I have lieard It was for sale, and front the descripton I have heard of it, judge it will suit tne. ' lt U the next, bouse ti the left. ; sir. ni -fcw w:d Rtlur, who haxl time, while tiie etitk'niait wns sjeaklng. to examine his PIira;;t'e. which Uid not foil to impress .Is ISswrabJy.- ' k'fhanh you for fine Information. I trisff yqu wiil pardon tne for the trouble I have occasioned you," replied tt geo- tlpfnan, hovli'Se VJTot the hst t-roubie in tiie world," re plied T;s:ter, s ffttje fluttered by a defer accustom ed. t Two days after Esther beard that Mr. Well fleet's estate had been purchased by a stranger named Blgelow. Slie at ones conjectured, and rightly that this was -the same with her visitor. A tew days elapsed, and Esther Hanson received snotber visit form the gentlemau. "I have s favor - to ask of you. Miss Manson," lie began (it seems that be had ascertained her name). "I am aware that our slight acquaintance will hardly justify it. but 1 trust tints will remove this objec tion. You must know," he added, smit ing, "tluit I am s bachelor, dependent In many respect upon my housekeeper, who, tbough s good womas In her way. I am afraid is not reliable In matters of taste. As my furniture baa arrived, but 'lot not yet been arranged. I would esteem it s great service if you would give tne yonr opinion in some little matters respecting It proper disposition.. My carHage is at tiie door ready to carry you over." "But," said Esther, a little hesitating ly. "I do not claim to have much taste. 1 tear shall prove no more reliable in that respect than yonr housekeeper . "I have but to look around tne," said Mr. Blgelow, politely, 'to be fully satis fied upon that point." "Esther's cheeks fluslied with pleasure at this compliment, and she mads prepara tions to comply with her new visitor's re quest. It was not without a little consciousness of the singularity of her position that Esther found herself riding by the side of a gentleman with wltom she had scarcely exchanged halt a dozen words In the course of her life. The distance, however, was but sliort, and she had little time for re flection, she found tiie chief part of the business accomplished. Tiie furniture, which, by the way, was new and hand some, had been arranged lu the rooms after a fashion, but Ktlier was able to point mit several changes for the better, with all of which Mr. Bigelow professed himself delighted ; he, moreover, asked her adviee in regard to banging several fine pictures that he hsd picked up In the course of his European travels. This was accorded with some hesitation. Mr. Bigelow would not be eatWfied with out showing his sew found acquant.ttce all over the house, from kltdu-n to -''; When all was completed lie ovcrpove.re! her with protestations of jra(itnlc f.ir h-r kirn erviov and landed Imr l her own door just five mluurc hrfrr? hir hro'h-r c.ime In. Esther was rath-r t;lai ol thl. as she was a little snspMou that her broth er would consider her adventure ratlier a Quixotic one. To avoid cosament. she did not even In form Philip ilat site had ever met Mr. Blgflow. fie took frequent opportunities to call fepon her. on some slight pretext or another, but it always chanced to be when her brother was absent. "I wonder," said Philisv carelessly as he sat by the fire one evening 'whether Mr. Bigelow will not be looking out for a wife before long " "l don't know," aid Esther, and In her embarrassment dropping half a dozen st i i cites from the stocking; she lie Id in ber hand. i 1 'Xtit that I approve of marriage at least in my ovu case." said Philip, not noticing this demonstration. but It may be different with Mr. Blgelow. He has no sister to superintend bis establishment. don't know, bowever. whetlier there is anybody likely to suit him In this village. Let me see there is Miss Prestou ; she might do." 'No. I don't think she would suit him at all." said Esther, with s spirit ; which considerably surprised ber brother. "Slie knows very little about housekeeping "Why. 1 thought you and Miss Preston were friends," said Philip, a little, ptuxled "Well, so we are." returned Estlier. iu tier usual tone : "but I 1 hardly think she would suit Mr. Bigelow." Perhaps not.' he rejoined, and so tiie conversation ended. From the conversation which ..we have recorded above, the reader will obtain some insight Into the character of Esther's feelings toward Mr. Bigelow. She would hardly confess It to herself ; but as a mat ter of fact, her ideas of marriage bad suf fered a material change within a brief period. Meanwhile the gentleman continued bis visits. Oftentimes he would ak to see the bed ot flowers, on which Esther rather prided herself, and sometimes he would petition tor seeds, being very fond of flowers, ss he said, and very anxious to Introduce them In his owq garden. On one ot these occasions Mr. Bigelow, after a little visible embarrassment, said, besi tatlngly : "I would like to ask your advice, Mls Esther, on a rather . delicate subject and one ol great importance to myself. There Is one thing wish to secure to make my establishment complete ; bnt I hardly know In what manner to ask for It." 1 "What Is It you refer to f" asked Esther unsuspiciously. 'A wife," was the significant reply. Instantly a deep crimson flushed Earlier' cheeks. She did not trust herself to speak "BTeed I say that you are ths one whom of all others, I would seek to place iu, tha position ?' . "v ' Um took ber unresisting hand and kissed It with all the gallantry of a young lover. "B3t"riatwiH my brother say iu quirrn- Ksyitr, srhen she had fomid rofpa to sneak. '"Wisat ShoulJ he say ? ww cgi&Tpss, mrply." ence to which she had not been Yes, but he Is always rt-louHng the idea of marriage, and I couiia't venture to tell him." "No need of It. Let's run away to New York and get married. You know." be added gaily, "we are both young and romantic, and It would be quite In charac ter.' . . Esther at first objected, .but when she came to consider that In this way she would be relieved ot a great portion of the embarrassment wliich such a step would naturally bring with It, she contented, and that day week was appointed for the de parture. She required this time to make preparations. Meanwhile, It Esther had not -been as exclusively occupied with tier own affairs, she might have notice that a change Ital come over PhrHp. He was ' often absent evenings, aml.when at home was more silent and abstracted than his wont. - The former she readily- attributed to tiie cause which he assigned, namely, a pressure of biHtiiess. Tiie latter she did not observe, her mind being preoccupied. ' We, who are In the secret, may take the liberty of following him est one ot his business calls. It was at a neat cottage, tram whose front oor dangled an immense knocker, that Philip Manson knocked. Tiie door -was opened by the same Miss Preston, who seme month before, lie thought "might lo" for Mr. Blgelow, "Good evening. Maria," was his saluta tion as lie entered. After a brief conversa tion about the weather, the . crops, and otlier standard topics, which, however trivlxl they may seem., could hardly be disiensed with, he began tu show -signs of embarrassment, and finally ejaculated: "Maria Miss Preston I mean Maria, what are your opinions abotrt- marriage?" Why," said slie, "I hardly know. I don't think I have given mnch consider ation to the subject." Because," continued Phillip. "I find my opinions have suffered a great change on this point. There was a time when I thought it nn wise.' but, now. if I could get a good wife, such as yon, tor example. I should be, inclined to try It." i O Lor'. Mr, Manson." said Miss Pres- iwi, in some - pertnrnauon, "now you talk!" - .. . , , Five ml nfes afterward Miss Preston had aecepted tl-e proposal of ; Philip, aud the two were, ro all Intents ami purposes. etigitjre-1 , "Theoiilv thing I think of." said the gentleman, alter a brief pause, "it that my aisttr F!thep Is a ' deeded enemy to n'.irriijrt. and I lur-llv lnre to tell ber I am ulxHif to marry. If we could only get away and h:ive the ceremony berformed, it would be pleasanter." - "Suppose we go to New York," sugges ted the bride-elect. "A good idea. We'll go. When can you be ready?" "Xext Monday morning." So next Monday morning . was agreed upon. It so happened that Estlier was to start on Monday afternoon for the same purpose in view bnt of this coincidence neither party were aware. The reader will please go forward a week. By this time the respective parties have readied New York, been united in tle holy bonds of matrimony, ami are now legally hnaharat and wife. They were located at hotels situated on tiie same side of thh way. but were tar from being aware of tho propinquity. On the mort big succeeding the two marriages, for by a singular chance they happened on the same day, Mr. Bigelow and Esther started out for a walk down street.' It so hap pened that Hhillipan.1 hU wife were at the same moment walking up street. The natural consequence was that the' two parties met. "Good lieavens! my sister!" exclaimed Phillip. "Merciful goodness: my brother:" re turned Estlier. "Wh it brings you here arith Mi . Bige ow ?" '-Nay. iiow happens it that you are here with Miss Preston?" "Miss Preston Is now my wife!" , "And Mr.- Bigelow is now my bus baud!" . " . - 'But thought you were opposed to matrimooj-," "And I supposed you were equally so." "My friends." Interposed Mr. Blgelow. "this Is a day of surprise bat I trust of such a nature that we shall all be made the happier thereby. My regret, Mr Manson. at robbing you of yonr house keeper Is quite dissipated by -the kuowl edge that you Inve so soon supplied her place." The sensation excited In the village by tiie return of the two brides with their respective husbands may be better im agined than described. It gives us pleas ure to state that neither Phillip nor Ms sister ever had occatttm to regret the double elopement. ' The commissioner of Internal revenue has received advices from Huutsville. Alabama, that illicit dbwIHors who were tntertcrml with by a U. S- deputy marshal slwt and Instantly killed dejiuty John: B Hardie. v Another deputy barely escaped, U. 8. Marslnvl Lns Is organteliig a good force to arrest the parties, of whom there are tour, named Cnlbralth (who fired the fatal shot). Lentous and two Corslco brothers. Cominisslofief Xlaum telegraphed Instructions that the most vlgornns meas ures be taken to bring to punishment these narihrs. Everv distillery innst be seized and ii!icU(U.stiiiers arrestpi." Ti Attorney General sent SiutUr lrisfrijpUons to th p, 8. rs$rj??l3 The Early Miaera Lire. aBsaaaaw "-"l-1 Tha followltig excellent but terse des cription or a miner's life In California, in early tlayt we take from the San Francisco Chronicle ot a late date. : -; - But we must not deceive ourselves as to uhe net savings of that "kind of labor. It hss lu disaduantages as well as Its advan tages; its heavy' dia wbace as well as Its Imposing figures of gross earnings. In those years California produced nothing bnt gold. We dought our flour and beans of Chile. Our potatoes' ot , ''Oregon our yams of the Island, our oranges aud limes of Mexico. Central America, arid Tahiti; our pork, bacon, hams, lard, butter, liquor cigars, tobacco, blandets, clothing, of Jfew York; oor mining' Implements of Boston; our boots and shoes. "aW hats ot Eastern manufactures; our sugar ami sirup of the Sooth; and even the grs.it bulk of our oews- papsrs came from New York, New Orleans Boston and St. Louis. - And for everything tiie consumed he was charged from three f t six tiroes as mnch as the ' same articles cost t lie laboring man now. ' Necessarily country that prodncetl nothing Itself but gold afforded but the roughest elements of house-keeping, and tliey all at a very high price. The average minet's bill ot fare was pickled pork, beans, rancid butter, at dollar a pound, bread of his own baking, such as a San Francisco worklncman of 1330 would feed to his pigs or chickens, but turn away from in disgust if It were placed before him to eat; potatoes and and onions often commanding half a dollar a pound. Tlte average miner's house was cos monfy an open log cabin, with a dirt floor; his household., furniture, a camp kettle, skillet, and frylng-psn, coffee-pot, three-legged srool. a bunk" filled wsth dirty blanket; some rusty knives, forks. spoons and half a dozen tin plates. He was compelled to cook his own meals, as well as do a full day's work on his claim; and if he failed to work steadily or made less gross wages than $5 a day he went hungry. He had to work in all sorts and all seasons of weather; in the summer and autumn, where the mercury kept at 140 degress In the sun trom 11 A. M. to 4 P. M.: Jit the winter, when the rain poured down upon hint like a deluge; ami always with feet wet and generally with wet clothes. Iu sickness be was neglected and seldom had the denefln of a physican bnt one In a hundred the nursing of a female attendant If hi "claim" gave out, or the water that enabled him to work it, he bad to "pull up stakes" and, on foot, over bill and mountain, the shy for bis canopy at iiignt and tho burning snn masting his brain by day, continue his "prospecting' till lie found another one. By this time all his saving, were exhausted and he had to begin again on the "bedrock" of pov erty. CMMMtrably Aatesuabesl. Brigadier-Oetteral Chalmers has reason to be a g'Mxl deal astonished at the row which the leading Democratic organ of Mississippi is kicking up about him, Thit is the third time he has elected himself to Congress by throwing - out or soul tig 08 Republican votes, yet there has never been any trouble about it before. He must wonder why It Is any worse to do it the third time than it was the first and second. His district has a sue Republican majority of 10,000, but tree counting has given him a Democratic majority, of fr.ira 4,000 to 5,- 000. What no democratic journal In Mis sissippi obecte.1 to In 187G and 1873 is hotly denounced by the Ylcksbnrg Herald in 1S80. The world does move. N. Y. Tri'6u. The greatness of this great country . Is not yet comprehended by our people. Take the State of Texas for instance. It has an area or 274,353 square miles, ex ceeding the entire German Empire by 62, 000 square miles of land. .There is room there for twice as many people as the whole United States now contains,and they could raise on that ground five times as much cotton as Is now raised in 'the whole Smith, and three times as much wheat as Is raised by tiie whole Notth I Ths'future of Texas is brilliant beyond conception, and It is a type of the country of which it Is but a small fraction. - Judge Chamberlain of New Britain. Conn., tells a good story of a little nephew of his, who, one night not long ago was saying his prayers during a thunder-storm, Just before he had concluded he asked his mother to step from the, room, ss he had something private to pray for, and his motlier listening outside the door, heard these words : "Oh, Lord ! please don't let It lightning any more" aud ju t then there came a heavy , clap of ' thunder "nor thunder either, for that's a darned sight worse." A practical book by Mr. John Oldcastle, on "Journals and Journalism, with a Guide for Literary Beginners," Is published in London. The anthor says the "unrivaled position of the English press Is due fully ss much to Its anonymity as to its freedom In comparing the difficulties tliat besets the editor of a datly paper with the anxie ties of a Prime Minister, be says : . "Even a monthly journal will not be successfully conducted by a litterateur, however bril liant, unless with bis . litenuy ability be combines a faculty for business, a power to endure drudgery, and a variety ot . per sonal qualities not often met with in any one man." The expense of carrying the mails In the states which gave tlieir eloctorial votes to Hancock was $4,500,000 In excess of the posal receipts during tbe Ifrst, fiscal year, ' Good' Older. We trust our prohibitionist friends will pardon us for saying that good cider I nn excellent drink, and it U a pity there is not great deal more of It 'made than there is. If onr farmers knew1 ; how to make good cider the bearing year of .. apples, L like the present, would be bailed with thanksgiving iuctead of bewailing, and ' the apple crop would proye one of the most profitable that can be raised. ' For really good cider there would be a great and steady demand ; at remunerative prices. But the plain truth is very tew people know anything about good cider. -Their idea of cider Is formed from sickish fluid that comes out ! of the ordinary mill and which quickly tarns to vinegar h When sweet -It ls-:Inlpld in ; taste and actively .cathartic la efRfCtjM many a boy Mao liasrttel his fill through straw can testify. : Whan "hard": it vfs more deadly than forty rod whisky,- and It is only to be excused , Jor being when acet ous fermentation has transformed it into vinegar ; and then it has . had work to make Its way against the cheap chemical vinegars. Anil, the process of making good cider a beverage tlmt, drawn from the cask Is better than most of the claret see in this country and lufinately superior to the vinfordinaire of Europe, while pot. tied it need fear no comparison with the champagne ot. commerce is very simple. Cleanliness and care are tie main things. The apples should be sound and ripe ; but if they are mellow all the better, and the juice should not be pressed out until cool weather no matter how late so frost can be avoided. Put the cider m a new liquor barrel and place it In a cool, dry cellar, where it should be allowed to work tors week, more or less, r according to the temperature, keeping the barrel full, ' so that Impurities that arise to tbe surface halt work nut through, the lunghole. Then carefully draw, ofif the cider into clean, sweet barrels, being careful ; not to distneb tbe sediment at the bottom. In three or four weeks. . according to the temerature of the cellar, carefully draw U off again. In a ; few , days bung up the harrcR and you liave cider tliat will keep sweet and good for a year at least. When an extra nice article., is , desired the ckler may be racked off again in February, or March, or it may be leached through sand. This Is all that is required to make good cider, yet most apple raisers find it so difficult that they never made a good barrel of cider In their lives-; The variolM.tJUstitltl,ef, that are recomend.ed to keep it from grow ing hard are a delusion and a snare. The cider will keep itself It made In cool weath er, of selected fruir, iu a cleanly way, and cleared of the lees by draining It off once or twjee from one cask to aitotlter. Spring field Union, : Am Ernsr I nertn a Feat. An engineering feat-of extraord-nary daring Is to be undertaken shortly In Italy The beautiful Baptistry ot Ravenna is in a tottering condition. The town was for merly on the seacoast, and Strabo mention -It as a port ot the Adriatic. But In the lapse of time tbe sands washed , down by the river Po have all silted up, and Raven na is now five miles from the . sea. The soli has accumulated to such a height around the building that It has to be en tered down a flight of stairs, and the fine mosaics upon tbe walls are being; surely ruined by the infllte ration of the external water. It seems to be considered that the only chance or its preservation- is , its re. moval, and the Italian engineers are now deliberating on the means ot carrying out this project. '; The Inside of the bnllding will he strutted from a central point j the windows will be bracketed, while beds : of wadding will be reared against the mosaics so that their surface si tall be absolutelr protected, . From the outside the wall wlI tie confined by Iron bands screwed up tight so that, between the pressure from within and the external resistance. It Is hoped the masonry will be kept from tbe - possibility of displacement. The whole structure will be sawn across at the foundation, and Uilrty-two gigantic cranes employed to lift the upper portion c ' Who is the, American citizen ? Thnt Is tlte question,. It Is a question that cannot be posnvcly answered, and the vagueness of the answer may yet: get us Into trouble jwith some European nation. THe United Htates Republic insists,. quite pugnaciously. that no Immigrants who have been natural ized lie re, and then returned on visit to the land of his birth, shall be sueject to Im pressment into the army, or to the exaction of any service; but, with absurd Inconsis tency, we have no enrollment of our ctti sens, so that it Is Impossible to know ex actly who is a citizen and who Is not. Our courts keep no adequate record, and,' if a naturalized citizen loses his naturalization papers, everything Is at sea. and ho is liable to be made to do military service In the country he has abandoned. To remedy this defect, Mr, Davenport, who has done so much to expose false naturalizations and to prevent Illegal voting, proposes a Burean In the State Departtnenl at Wasli Ington, "whore record shall be kept of ail naturalized citizens. , It is a good Idea. It Is necessary, If we would check the arrog ance of the German Empire. A good deal ot exuitemedt was recently protiuced in Paris, London and New York, by tiie marriage of the Marquis or Anglesey to the lion. Mrs. Wodehonse. and the sui cide, almost immediately following, of Mrs. "Wet, more, a lady well known In PaHs and New York society. There were vari ous romantic rumors tendSna to connect tha two events togetlipr, am ncrlsp.ps, a good foundation for the ; conviction t! &?? Mrs. Wetmore, who Is stated to have bera the former fiancee of Lord AfWleseY. waa Indirectly impelled to hei rash act b fe-su. mine wwerness ana disappointment. jura atl"-a.'"'."'- . :i -a" ' - . f. Wetmore was a very beautiful and accom plished woman, who ' was well known iu the West before she came to New York to reside, and her romantic fate is natural! the cause of mnch speculation.; It is di53. cult to ccttjectore justwhat ier relations j were to Lord Anglesey, except that thev Involved deep sorrow and wwtchedness. Thn noble lord, wlio has playerl souiienvi--able a part In this social romance, bears no en vis! repnta tloa among his own coun try men. though his wealth and rank give- " him an established. p!aoe,i front which no ' amount of rrsonnl depravity eat dethrone '" iiim, in a WHiotrT', wRlcp wotshfbs external . station. Tbe PageU have always borne ' bad a name for morality that It has passed ' Into a proven!. - "As wicked as a 'Paget, -and the present chief of the family la re- puteu one or the worst of , the race. Tiie,. founder of the ;Pa2et ?lanii!v. ? William Paget, a diplomatist under Henry VIIL, was made a Knight ofthe Garter in. 154ft by the r Protector Someset, and . created Lord Paget of Beaodeskrt In 1552. H , lived Into the reign of Elizabeth, and Cam, - den says of ' Mm, ' that 1 he retained tha Queen's affection and esteem, thoueh ha was a strict zealot of the Catholic Church, rno estates of the present Marquis He la three English counties and In Angleses, and are set down on the! Domesday Book ; ' atan annnal rental ct $110,533. The pres ent Marquis, who is iu nls forty-flth year, . lias been twice married. ills second wife died three years ago, leaving him one son. now a child of five years - old. : who wears , tbe courtesy title of Earl . of , Uxbridge, nis recently-made marclitones was born Miss Minnie King, of j Sandhills. Ga., en of the most brilliant,, beautiful and faclna tlng women ot her; day. wlio has for s numoer or years been one or tbe reigning, belles abroad. Her first husband was Hon. - Henry Wodebonse, brotlier of Lord Kla, bericy, who Is a member of the present Gladstone Cabinet, i Her husband died about a year after marriage, aud Mrs. Wodchouse then took up her resklenee is, . London, whence she reraoveil about a year ago to Paris. Mrs. Wodchouie's remark- . able beauty and grace made lier id object ot nnlversal beauty aud atlmenulou. Her present hnsband is the fourth wearer of the so magnificently by tlni gallantry, of Uie tsart orujebridge In the last daring chares. of the English horse at Waterloo. An. ber of tiie Paget family also recently married Into an Arnerican iamlly. - Cau. Arthur Paget, the cousin of the Marqnis. marrieil Miss Minnie . Stevens, of New York, two years ago. , j - . A Czar may beonly a common mau in Republlcaa parlance, but be Is capable ot having a very uncommon yacht, the. new sailing craft of tbe Emperor Aiaxauder Is, in many respects, the ' most remarkahS -vessel in tbe ; workl. ;It has jast f-ecu " lermcbcd near Glasgow,' and la a Coating palace. Its shape U vey peculiar, bein.r nearly two-thirds as broad as It Is lona. fbe principal dlmenstons are: Ler;!i, 260 feet; breadth, 150 feet; depth, ' m feet; capacity, 1 lC(K tonsi Tliis ttefnemotis width secures steadiness of motloii throu- a the water and room enough for the spadom - wrlors and bedrooms; required by tSie Imperial family and lea numerous retinae-. One would suppose (such a : craft to be made for comfort and luxury rather than, specl. but It has been , armed with an engine ot ten-tbousand-borse power; and I guaranteed to make fourteen : knots aq ' hour. There are twenty-three seperUe steam engines on board to save labor. Tiie hull Is divided int. eighty water-tight compartments, a view being had, evidently,, " to the possibility of encountering Nl!ii:ist torpedoes along the Imperial se-trapf;.. Tiie reception raloort Is forty feet shoT the level of the waters, and Is itself twciv feet high, and magnificently furatslie-1 ana opholstered. : In it sif fountain pldtyesv'J among beds of flowers. The whcla (Sioar atlon ot the saloon I modeled alter tl. apartment ot Louis XVI; at Fonta'sbleau -and the grand drawing-room Is eqBlppe4. In the Ctlraean-Tartar style.. ; Tbe euu-USa-pavensenU. statuary,) paintings, elsctr ia lighting and elaborate ero !;".. I sh me nU, res mind tiie visitor of" some ot the most elegant French palaces. - " A loan e fleeted at the close of Buchanan' Administration is abopt to mature. ft sv,Ss gests In tbe strongest possible manner Us financial capabilities of a party that cou!J not negotiate a 6-per-cnpt loan In & tiaa el peace without subraUUng to a discount rt IS per cent. Tha Republicans have, man aged things better, i Tbey are tsoti osly paying off an imc-ecse debt lasgiwed cn the Nation by a war "started by tl Bsau carts to perpetuate slavery, but they hare managed while so doing to. impsovs tLa credit of the United States to such: an ex.. tent tiMt Its 4-per-cent bonds are taken up eagerly and command a premium hi Mrs market. . .,: .' -. - . v Ex-Governor Tp'Lib, of Ccoi:eo:Knr, on mvo occasion several years w sereitatletl hy his futioar cUiwos ! f'-t night f a State elMison, atd ctlir;;r4t-. H ted upon his election ?s leutet,-:' t-' ernor. He resno)C -J a K?' 1 v he modestly sai.l th,' ed a better man.r later he fonno! o t t ? '-r- : . Ami .;-fi!:-S f. j : - J ' An Indian 5 -has $m rail f j Wliere there's V.'i i