f
VOL. 2
JACKSONVILLE, OREGON, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1870.
Praxiteles and Phryne.
Published Every Saturday Morning,
BY P. D. HULL,
Publisher & I* r o p r 1 o t, o r.
1
OFFICE-
—On Third St. Between California
and * C.
* .
«
r
TERMS:
Subscription, per annum, in advance
Six months............................................
.$4 00
$2 00
ADVERTISEMENTS,
In T he D emocratic N ews will be charged
the following rates
First insertion, (ten lines or less).................. $3
For each week thereafter................................... $1
A liberal deduction from the above rates will
made on quarterly and yearly advertisements.
at
00
00
be
JOB PRINTING.
Every variety of Job Work executed with neat
Bess and dispatch, at reasonable rates.
pnsintss QTaròg.
JACKSONVILLE LODGE No. 10
»
olds its
H
regular
meetings on
A thousand silent years ago
The starlight, faint and pale,
Was dawning on the sunset glow
Its soft and shadowy veil :
When from bis work the loulptor stayed
His hand and turned to one.
Who stood beside him, half in shade,
And sighing, said “ ’Tis done I”
“Phryne, thy human lips shall pale
Thy rounded limbs decay ;
Nor love nor prayers can aught avail
To bid thy beauty stay.”
“But there thy smile, for centuries.
On marble lips shall live ;
For art can grant what love denies
And fix the fugitive.”
“Sad thought! nor age nor death can fade
The youth of this cold bust,
When the quick hand and brain that inado
And thou and I are dust.”
When all our hopes and fears are dead,
And both our hearts are cold ;
When life is but a tune that’s played
And love a tale that’s told ;
This counterfeit of senseless stone,
That no sweet blush can warm,
The same enraptured look shall own
The sunie enchanting form.
every Saturday evening nt the Odd Fellows’
llail. Brothers in good standing are invited to And there, upon that silent face,
atte d.
SILAS J. DAY, N. G.
Shad unborn ages see
N. D. SHORT, R. Sec’y.
Perennial youth, unfading grace
P. F ehlky , )
I
S. J. D ay , > Trusted«.
Aud sealed serenity.
W m . R ay , j
Z nd strangers, when we sleep in peace
May 1st, 18C9.
t—f
Shall say, not quite unmoved,
JAMES II. NEIL,
“So smiled upon Praxiteles
The Phryne whom he loved.”
Attorney & Counsellor-at-Law.
>
(west side), between California
and Main.
Will practice in the Supreme and other Courts
uf this State.
Third Street,
i
I
In health no one ought to drink ice water,
Particular attention paid to the collection fur it has occasioned fatal inflammations of
of Claims against the Federal and State Govern 'he st much mid laiWels. und sometimes sud
ment*. the Entry of Lauds under the Pre emption
and Homestea i Laws, and to the Entry of Mineral len death. The temptation to drink it is
Lodes under the recent Act of Congress.
very great in summer. 'Io use it at nil with
any safety, the person should take but a sin
C. W. KAHLER,
gie swallow at a time ; take the glass from
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law, rhe lips for half a minute und then another
swallow, and so on. It will be found that in
JACKSONVILLE, OREGON,
this way it becomes disagreeable after a few
Will practice in the Supreme Court, District, and mouthfuls.
, e Courts of ’’is State.
Ou the other hand, ice itself may be taken
OFFICE—In building formerly occupied by 0. as freely as possible, not only without injury,
Jaeobs—opposite Court House sqnsre.
jilt with the most striking advantage in dan
DR. GEO. B. TOLMAN,
gerous rorms of disease. If broken in sizes
<»f a pea or bean, and swallowed as freely ns
(late Surgeon U. S. Army,)
practicable without much chewing or crush
Physician, Surgeon, and Accoucheur, ing between the teeth, it will often be effi
cient in checking various kinds of diarrhoea,
ILL PRACTICE IN JACKSON AND
adjacent counties, and attend promptly to and has cured violent cases of Asiatic chol
all calls en professional business.
era.
OFFICE AND RESIDENCE,
A kind of cushion of powdered ice kept to
on 4th street, opposite the M. E. Church, Jack the entire scalp has allayed violent inflamma
sonville, Oregon.
tion of the brain, and arrested tearful convul
Jan. h,1870.
jan8-tf.
sions induced by too much blood there. Tn
croup, water as cold as ice can make it, ap
Dr. L. T. DAVIS,
plied freely to the throat, neck and chest,
je—On Fine street, with a sponge or cloth, very often affords an
almost miraculous relief; and if this be fol
. Opposite the Old
lowed by drinking copiously of the same ice-
A rkansas L ivery S table , cold element, the wetted part wiped dry, and
the child be wrapped well in bed clothes, it
id
1
* • -*r
will fall into a delightful and life-giving slum
Jacksonville, Oregon.
ber. AH inflammations, internal or external,
E. H. GREENMAN,
are promptly subdued bv the application of
Z>lxy>fliioiAxx dto Surgeon, ice or ice water, because it is converted into
OFFICE—At his residence on Fifth Street
steam and rapidly conveys away the extra
Jacksonville, Oregon.
beat, aud also diminishes the quantity of
Will 7 .«tice in Jackson and adjacenteoun*
blood in the vessel of the part.
les, ar.d ai
-, o. .n !y to pro essional calls.
A piece of ice laid on the wrist will often
arrest
violent bleeding in the nose. To drink
DB. A. B. OVERBECK
an ice cold liquid at meals retards digestion,
WILL PRACTICE MEDICINE AND 8UR- chills the b dy, and has been known to induce
YV GERT, and will attend promptly to all ealls the most dangerous internal congestions.
on professional business. His office and residence
Refrigerators constructed to have the ice
•re at
above, are as philosophical as thev are health
The Overbeck Hospital,
ful, for the ice does not come in contact with
On Oregon Street, Jacksonville. Oregon.
l-tf
water or other contents, yet keeps them all
nearly
ice-cold. If ice is put in milk or on
JAMES
D. -.J FAY,
•
butter, and these are not used at the time,
they lose their freshness and become sour and
Attorney & Counsellor-at-Law, stale,
fur the essential nature of both is
changed,
when once frozen and then thawed,
OFFICE—In Court House, up stairs.
— Ohio Farmer.
W
:
»
Use of Ice
Will practice in the Supreme and other Courts
of this State.
\
An Eloquent Tribute.
We copy the following beautiful tribute to
Virginia and the South from the Baltimore
Episcopal Methodist:
“And yet, amidst all this desolation and
ruin, did the world ever see anything like
the uncomplaining dignity with which the
South has borne a vivisection that left it nt
the time but a ghastly semblance of life?
We confess that not all the magnificent valor
that won her thousand victories, not the fiery
on^et of Jackson’s Scotch Irish, nor the su
perb composure with which Lee directed the
advancing tide of battle, or Covered the slow
and sullen retreat, has ever so electrified or
melted our whole soul as the sublime forti
tude with which the South has borne the
most unspeakable woes.
“The Niobe of nations, there she stands,
Childless and crownless in her voiceless woe ;
An empty urn within her withered hands,
Whose empty du«t was scattereu long ago.
“Nor is this all. The Virginia thus treat
ed, the ‘lone of dead empires,’ is also the
mother of that Union from which she has
been kept out like a leper, and oulv admitted
now undtr the most tyrannical and exasuer-
ating conditions. The corner stone of this
grand constitution fabric was laid by the
hand of the giant who now stands at the
threshold of the temple, his hair shorn, his
eyes put out, and for the present making
sport lor the Phillistines. It is Virginia, that
proud old colony, which having no quarrel of
her owu with the King of England, yet took
up, from generous sympathy, the cause of
Massachusetts: Virginia, but for whose
Washington the revolutionary war would
have been a failure ; whose Jefferson wrote
the declaration of Independence , whose Pat
rick Henry roused the nations to arms with
his fiery eloquence ; whose Marshall was the
glory of American jurisprudence; whose
Madison, Monroe, Ilarrison and Taylor,
adorned the executive chair ; whose Winfield
Scott and Rough and Ready were the leading
military figures in the Mex-can war ; with
troops of her valorous sons in the war uf
1812; wlmse statesmen have illustrated the
councils of the Republic—this is the good old
common wealth which, for five long years has
been ground to the earth under the heel of
negro und military vassalage, and is now
only permuted to enter the edifice which she
made by her own hands, and immortalized
by her genius and virtue, from its foundation
to its piuuacle, as a captive and a slave.
N ipigon .—A geugrupineal d-scovery, which
will rathei astonish the map publishers, has
been mude iu the country north of Lake Su
perior, by a party uuder Prol. Bell, whicu
bus recently beeu tngaged in the geciogical
survey of tbut region. Luke Nipigon, lying
only thirty miles north of Lake Superior, aud
hitherto considered too insignificant to find a
place in American atlases, is announced by
Prof. Bell to be larger, probably, than Luke
Ontario or Lane Erie. He had traversed
ubout 500 miles of ’ts coast line, when the
approach of waler compelled the party to re
turn to Canada. This lake discharges its wa
ters into Lake Superior by the Nipigon river,
a broud aud rapid stream, and is the seventh
io number, and probably the second in size,
of the chain of great lakes which form so
remarkable a feature in the geography of
North America. That the existence of this
inland sea should have remained unknown to
thia time is the more remarkable, considering
how near it lies to Luke Superior. As it re
eeives the waters of upward o1 a dozen con
siderable rivers, it is not improbable that the
system of lakes commencing with Lake On
tario may extend many miles further to the
north.
“Why do you call me birdie, my dear?”
inquired a wife of her husband. “Because,”
was the answer, “you are always associated
in my mind with a bill.”
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A n intelligent gentleman from Germany,
on bis first visit to an American church, hud
P eri Gratrv, lecturer uf the French Acad a contribution box with a hole in the top
emy, is the most alment minded man in passed to him, and whispered to the collector
France. The other day on his way to the “I don’t got mein bapers, and can’t vote.
lecture, he fanoied be had lost his watch and
S everal cases of small pox have been re«
took the very watch out of his pocket to see
Particular atteqtiop paid to the collection
of Claims against the Federal and State Govern
ment!, the Entry of Lande nrde the Pre-emption
and Homestead Laws, and to v e Entry of Mineral
if he had time to step back and get it.
Lodes under the recent Aot of Congress. 1 tf.
ported in San Francisco.
Sunset Cox on Corsets.
Th« Washington correspondent of the Cin
cinnati Times says Sam. Cox is one of the
cleverest men in the House, albeit he is a
Democrat. His sallied of wit, genuine hu
mor, are wont to set the House “in a roar.”
and on no subject is he more happy than on
the tariff. He has made some good speeches
in the committee ot the whole as well as the
House, while that subject was under general
debate. Here is the way that Cox protests
against the tax on corsets :
There is a bill before the House of repre
sentatives, reported by Messrs. Schenck,
Kelly, Blair, McCarthy, Hooper and May
nard, to impose a National tax on corsetsand
hoopskirts. Against this tax the free women
of America should promptly protest. Is there
to be nothing too sacred for the searching
hand tf the tax gatherer? Is there no limit
t® the reach of the Assessor ? The Com
mittee of the Ways and Means have already
levied a tax on stocking and garters, and
must the privacy of woman be further inva
ded ? if woman have one right which men are
bound to respect more than another, it is tbe
privacy of the bosom and of the surrounding
of their persons.
NO, 7
may find the revolver or the dagger. It only
requires a Murat to produce Charlotte Cor-
day, and the Schencks and Kelleys may read
that history with profit. Let the Women's
Conventions take action. Let them add to
the demand for the ballot the cry of, “Free
corsets ! free hoops !n and, until they gain
the latter, let the men who vote thie taX be
denied all knowledge ot female habiliments,
save what they get t om the clothes lines.
Neuralgia.
ir
The certain cure of neuralgia is found in
judicious eating and exercise ; and not only
so, a permanent cure cannot be effected in
any other way, while these are always effi
cient.
i
In neuralgia the blood is always too thick,
impure and in excess ; and as diet and exer
cise combine to remedv these conditions, some
rules in relation to them are desirable.
These will be adapted 4o sedentary persona,
to those who live indoor generally, as women,
students, book keepers, and the like.
It is ra'her better to eat tbrioe a day,
morning and night: that is, as soon after
sunrise as practicable, for breakfast; dinner
about one o’clock ; supper before sundown.
Eat nothing whatever between meals.
Did the committee who reported this bill
Breakfast, a single cup of coffee or tee;
know what they were doing? Did General
Schenck intend to direct the Commissioner
of custom and bis deputies to thrust a hand
into every gentle bosom and gather a tax
theie from ? Did he not know that this was a
reversal of all the tux law of mankind in
every age and in every clime.
some cold bread and butter, with a dish of
berries or stewed fruit in summer time, and
nothing else ; in winter ; meat, fish, poultry,
or, in their stead, a couple of soft-boiled eggs.
Supper should be made of cold bread and
butter, and a cup of warm drink, of some
kind, and nothing else.
Dinner the same as breakfast, adding one
We know that iron has long since entered
the soul ol Kelly, and that he uevutes his en vegetable and some fruit, raw or stewed, at
ergies to steel, but had the man a mother? a dessert, and nothing else. A different
Had he ever a sweetheart ? Aud did be know kind of vegetable may be taken every day for
tbut he was placing a tax around tbe fronts of variety, the kind of meat may be changed at
human life? Did any member of that com each meal.
The object in the specification above made
mittee—not raised on a bottle—willingly pro
pose to collect this ad valorem tax in districts is to discourage variety at meals, because it it
rendered dear to human memory since Eve this which tempts all to eat too much. Per
nursed her first born, or Vinnie Ream shaped sons at times have felt at the table that they
the bust of Helen ? Had Mr. Hooper no re had eaten enough ; but on seeing a very in
collection of early days, when it was bliss to viting dish unexpectedly brought in, a good
rest his head upon a heart all foundly his meal baa been eaten _of this last variety.
own? And could he, recollecting this, pro The general and hurtful error io that too
pose to permit the tax gatherer to extort rev great a variety is spread on our tables, not
enue from the hallowed spot ? Let him ask only occasioning trouble of preparation and
himself wl at would have been his feeling« great loss, but also a positive injury in tbe
had he discovered his darling in tears and temptation of the appetite. Tbe reader may
found that her distress was becaose she had try it upon himself on any two days. A din
not paid her “corset-tax.”
ner of one vegetable, one kind of meat and
Are there no men in Congress who will lift bread ; at dinner the next day, let a great
their voices in favor of untaxed corsets and variety be presented ; he will eat double tbe
untaxed hoops? Will General Farnsworth be amount at this repast, with thio remarkable
silent while thia outrage is perpetrating, and difference; an hour after the first meal, he
vote to tax the vestments that inclose the will be entirely comfortable, will feel as if he.
shrine of beauty, purity and love? Will the had eaten quite enough ; an hour alter tbe
stalwart hero from Massachusetts (Mr. But latter, there will be decided discomfort, a full
ler) vote this tax and thereafter look any wo ness. a feeling as if some kind of relief was
inan straight in the face? Will he. who has desirable, and in too many oases a resort to
identified woman’s vocation with Jomini’s the decanter, with a vain hope of a riddanoeh
art of war, wear thia outrage on his sleeve in some way. It cannot be denied that the
for “daws to peck at?” Will Mungen not first step toward intemperate habits has been
point out to the Democratic Party the duty of taken in using liquors to remove the unpleas
repudiating a tax so atrocious ? Will the gen ant consequences of over-eating. A very
tleman from Onondaga (Mr. McCarthy), in great aid toward overcoming a habit of too
hia zeal to protect salt, impose this tax on the hearty eating will bo found io sitting down
great dairies of nature? Will the great cham to a table with only three varieties of food.—
pions of American labor and production vote | Dr. Hall.
............ •
.
for this bill to encircle with specific and ad
A G ood N ame . —Always be more solio-
valorem taxes the infant manufactories of the
itious to preserve your innocence than concern
land ?
It will not do to say that tbe House is not ed to prove it. It will never do to seek a
awart that corsets and hoops are of universal good name as a primary object. Like trying
use. Members know that the Treasury De to be graceful, the effort to be popular will
partment can furnish all needed information make you oontemptible. Take care of youf
spirit and conduct, and your reputation will •
on this subject.
that you are
The women of America have no represen take care of itself. The utmost
,
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nr-
tation, and they have a right to projection called to do. as tbe guardian of your reputa
against this unprecedented taxation. They tion, is to remove aspersions. Let not your
have submitted to be taxed upon their shoe» good be evil spoken of, and follow tbe highest -
and slippers, their hosiery, their dreeses, examples in mild and explioit^elf-vindicatioo.
their shawls, their hats, and feathers, and No reputation can be permanent which does
every bit of lace and ribbon ; but there is a not spring from principle, and be who would A
maintain a good character should be mainly
limit to even female submission. Around the
soFcitous to maintain a character void of of
sanctity of their corsets they will draw a line.
fence toward God and toward man.
Shall their be a tax placed upon those emo
tions and throbbing* which have been the de
A young man in Ohio recently opened a
light of men in all ages? The tax should be clothing 8 to re and was sent to jail for R.
resisted, and tyrant man be taught that the Reason—tbe clothing store belonged to an
hand which seeks revenue in that quarter other man.