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About Oregon Republican. (Dallas, Or.) 1870-1872 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1871)
f 8ftu .0rg9oncp!ttUit n n. " ' " 1 '"ii... DALLAS, SATURDAY, DEC. 30. Shirk in One of the most common, and at the same time most dangerous habits that persons are liable to acquire, is the 'habit of shirking. When ouce acquired, it ii almost impossible to break it. The student who shirks from the task of study, shuffles from his recitation, and is always behind in his studies. The The mechanic who shirks from his labor, both of mind and body, which is absolutely essential to keep htm fully up in his trade, has no ono to blame if he fall in the rear of one who has the nerve to labor and wait. So with all other trades and professions. The man rho lacks the pluck to say " No" when tempted to do any wrong thing, but shirks the responsibility by a half-way yielding, throws himself into the meshes of the Evil Ono as effectually as he who acquiesces without any reluc tance. The business man who knows that it would be to his advautage to advertise, but shirks from it because of the little expense connected with it, feels the effects of that negligence as effectually as the man j who wilfully neglects the advantages derived there from without making any excuse. No sympathy should be allotted to the shirk" in any manner, but the bold, brave man who sees his duty, and see ing, dares to do it, despite all opposi fjorj, is worthy of all commendation. A POWER VllL TCMPliilANCE LECTUHE. Occasionally a paper not published directly in the cauo of temperance, gives facts and figures which constitute a powerful argument in favor of that cause. In an issue of the San Fran cisco Bulletin appeared the following, which brings directly before us for consideration this great question as a fruitful source of expenditure, without any adequate remuneration : "The consumption of liquors in the United States for the last year, as re ported from the National Bureau of Statistics wai, of win.-key sixty rail lion gallons ; imported spirits, two and a half millions; imported gin, ten millions seven huudred thousand; and of ale, beer and porter, six an l a half millions of barrels. The quantity of native wines, brandies, etc., is not given, but the value is estimated at $3,500,000. For these liquors it is estimated that the drinkers paid, io round numbers, $600,000,000. This estimate only includes the "straight" liquors, chat is, those of the manufac ture or importation of which regular return for taxation was made. To it fhould b added the product ot illicit etills, and the liquors that were man ufactured by dilution and adulteration, though the processes whereby strych' nine and other " poisons" arc added to give flavor" to the water. Probably, to put this as equal to one eixth of the amount duly reported would not be too large an estimate, and it doubtless sold at the same rate, which would make the annual expenditure for liquors of all sorts, $700,000,000, or over eighteen dollars ahead for the entire population The same amount annually applied in payment of the National Debt would in a little over four ysars extinguish it ; or expended for educational purposes, would provide ample facilities for giv ing first-class schooling to every child in the country. What good came of the swallowing of these liquors, suffici ent in volume to have floated a good sized craft, it would require very close figuring to show, and a very few figures would doubtless suffice for the state ment. How much evil would be no less difficult to compute, but the result would be a powerful temperance argu ment To those having a turn ifor speculation of the kind, these statistics furnish almost inexhaustablc material, hewing upon such topics as wasted wages, poverty, ruined health and pros pects, degradation and crime." i PI!" 'J,, LL "9 Tax on National Bank Shares. -A dispatch from Madison, Wiscon sin, December 8th, says : "In an action brought by represent tatives of two National Banks in this State, a year or more ago, involving the validity of the State law for -the taxa tion of shares of National Banks for the years 1865jind 1800, which wa3 de cided by the Supreme Court of Wis consin agrainst the plaintiffs, and by them carried to the Supreme Court of the United States, the decision of the State Court has been affirmed by Chief Justice Chase, all of the Justices con curring in the decision. The amount involved in these cases is f between fifty and seventy-five thonsand dollars, pay ment of which will reduce the tax to a corresponding years. amount for ensuing TI ITON ON DIVOHCE. Theodore Tilton writes to the .Chi cago Journal a letter, in which he ex presses himself very freely on the ques tion of divorce and marriage We condense a few extracts, to show the doctrine which ho and his co workers are taking such pains to disseminate. Not that we endorso them; far from it; but that our readers may bo con vinced, fiom the writer's own pen, of the justness of the charges which have been mai against him 'that he was teaching a dangerous and pernicious doctrine, which will, if followed out, lead to a system of legal concubinage. His language is clear, forcible and to the point : " My opinion is this, namely, that there should be as little legislation against divorce as there is against mar riageas little legal restraiut laid upon the one as upon the other- as littlo in terference by the politicians at Spring field or Albany with the ono as with the other. In other words, I would blot out our forty different State codes of divorce, and leave marriage existing on the statute book as a civil contract which, indeed, it now pretends to be, but is not and, as such, mako it obeisant only to that ordinary theory of civil contracts whose prime feature is disso lubility by mutual consent. The only necessity to report to any legal tribunal would theu be in the case of one party desiring to bind, and the other to be unbound; in which instance the contract would be adjudicated like any other contract on its merits, and according to equity and right All questions growing out of the rights of property and the maintenance of children would continue to atand as they do now on an independent logal basis of their own ; except that, as our present laws are too prone to give the property and children to the father rather than to the mother, they should be amended in the suffering wife's behalf." DrsmiACKtjtiL Crusade. A dis patch from Columbus, Ohio, December 7th, says: u The war of the races still continues in portion of this country. In Perry Township it is stated that parents have instructed their gonf?Q offspring to club and stone all colored children who at tempted to enter the public sohool houscs. In Jack-on Township the School Board has closed the school houses, ostensibly to avoid uxo spread of small pox, but, ii is charged, really to tiro out the patience of the colored people. In Norwich Township colored children are allowed to take seats in the school-room, but the teachers in Home schools waste no time in thtir in--struction, by order of the School Board." Ocean Telfshaphs. A Bill has been introduced in Congress for the formation of two Ocean Telegraph Cos., one for a telegraph from the Western Coast of the United States to China and Japan, the other from the Atlantic Coast to Europe, by way of the Ber mudas and Azores. The stock of the Atlantic Company is fixed at $12,000 000, ; that of the Paciflo Company at 88,000,000. A Communist Revelation. In a letter from the London corres pondent of the Cincinnati Commercial, we fiud this statement, which, perhaps, gome German reader will be able to verify : ' "There are beginning to be ugly whispers against the good faith of the Premier of the International himself, Dr. Karl Marx, partly based upon his having married a German Countess, lie is a man of ability, and has had a long and various history in connection with European politics A radical in London tells mo that there is, in a biography of the poet Heine, published in America, a curious passage, not to be found in European books, about Heine, in which Marx played a part. It wrs discovered, I believe, in 1848, when the Republic came into power, that Heme, who had passed the most of his time at Paris, had sold his pen to the previous French Government, and had written against his own coun try. When Heine was called to an account for this, it is said that Marx who was Heine's friend, advised the poet to take the audacious line and say that he had taken the subsidy to aid the distressed Germans in France. But Heine, always impecunious, and not very philanthropic, was at least no hypocrite, and ho said that he had accepted the money to write as he did, as a man who is nearly frozen accepts the first cloak he can get. I cannot vouch for the truth of this story. The Portland papers give full ac counts of a Christmas festival at the Insane Asylum, and report everything about the Asylum in good condition, and conducted in excellent stylo. FROZEN TO DEATH. The Kansas City Times of December 19th says : . : f ".While the region adjacent to Kan sas City is enjoying fine Indian-Summer weather, the people of Colorado, Western Kansas and Nebraska are suffering untold horrors from deep suows and biting cold winds. Every day reports are received of more hor rors from the plains west of Omaha, of trains buried in snow, roads blocked up, families frozen to death, stock perishing, and as yet not half is told. Gentlemen who came on the Kansas City, Saint Joseph and Council Bluffs ltoad yesterday, inform us that on Sunday last a terrible affair occurred in Saline County, Nebraska. A party of immigrants, with their families, were passing through the county west ward, when the cold constantly in creasing, they concluded to camp and light a fire. They were on a piece of high prairie, and several miles from any house, but some three miles from them was a piece of timber. After unhitching their teams the men started for this timber, to procure fuel. Not returning for several hours, the women left their children and started to hunt them. This is all that is known, savo that next day the bodies of seven teen persons who had perished from the intense cold were found. The children who were left in the wagons were the only surrivors of the party who had started to procure homes in the West. i Gladstone sajrs that during the last eighteen years the publio debt of Eng land has been reduced $1GO,000,000. Since the close of our civil wir, 18G5, the United States havo paid over 500,000,000 of their debt, and re duced thcannuil inter est $38,000,000 How Artificial Diamonds Are Made. Artificial diamonds arc made of a peculiar glass called strass. Thy glass has a property of refracting light in the same way as the diamond, and its manufacture has been carried to such perfection that an ordinary ob server cannot distinguish gems made of it from real diamonds. Alter a few years, these diamonds tend to crystahze, so that in tea years they become urbid and loiie all their lustre. These sto ics, however can always ba distinguished by a practical lapidary by various tests, such as hardness and peculiarities iu cutting. Diamonds are also imitated by a system called blockage, in which a very thin slab of diamond is cemented to some stone such as quartz or white topaz. Other rest etonoo, ouch us zircon ant! topaz, when they are'colorcd, or 'only slightly colored, arc passed off as dia monds. It is generally supposed that diamonds are white, but! they are of all colors. False diamond arc made al most entirely in Parisi Alaska and California diamonds are' only quartz or rock quartz. How to See Under Water. A correspondent of the Scientific Ameri can writes . " I once had Occasi m to examine the bottom of, a mill pond for which I constructed a float out of inch plank, sufficient to I buoy me up ; through the center of this float I cut a hole, and placed a blanket over it, when I was enabled to clearly discover objects on the bottom, and several lost tools were discoverd and picked up I am satisfied that, where water is suffi ciently clear, this " Iter plan cou'd be successfully used for searching for lost bodies and articles, j I would suggest that this experiment be tried on the sea, for I am satisfied that with a craft liketho Great Eastern, where an obser vatory could be placed at the bottom, with sufficient darkness, by the aid of glasses we could caze down into the depths of the sea, the same as we can survey the starry heavens at midnight. Another American in Japanese Service. And now another Ameri can has been called into the service of the Japanese! Government. This time it is General George B. Williams, of Indiana, who has been 'engaged by Mr. Moir, the Japanese Minister, to go to that country for, the purpose, of Or ganizing an Internal Ilevenuo system there similar to our own. General Williams is now Second Deputy Com missioner of Internal Revenue, and has also had experience as Assessor. Collector and Supervisor of Internal Revenue, having been employed in these separate offices for an aggregate of five or six years. The engagement is for three years at a largo salary. General Williams will sail from San Francisco for ( Japan on the first of January next.? Banks were first established by the Lombard Jews in Italy. Tho name is derived from f' banco" bench benches being erected in the market-places for the exchange of money. The first pub lio bank was at Venice, 1550. The bank ot England was established in 1693. In 1600 its notes were 20 per eeut. discount. u If whom1 the gods love die young," and if "the wicked shall not five out naif their! days." now arc old men clasied? - State Clems. Gleanings from State Exchange. . The Senator is raised and repaired, and again making her regular trips.; the Guard gives tho population of Eugene at 1,200. ) . The City Council of Corvallis has passed an oridnanco prohibiting gam bling. The fare from Portland to Corvallis by the river boats is $11 50. The new M. E. Church edifice at Jefferson was dedicated last Sunday. On Yaquina Bay one day last week two men killed three bears and one deer. The snow from the last storm reach ed a depth of only three inches at the Dalles. Float ico has been running in the lower Columbia the last few days, suf ficient to hinder navigation. ttev. Milton Kelly, living near Port land, had his barn burned on Monday uight. Loss about 10,000. Mr. Put Smith has gone East for tho purpose of purchasing some fast horses and fine sheep for Oregon. Reports of cold weather como from all parts of the State. Wednesday morning the thermometer in Portland showed the mercury to be four degrees above zero. Julius Cardwell, alias "Chalk Line," was severely stabbed by James Weaver at Oakland, during an affray cn Friday last. The injuries were thought to be fatal. The editor of the Roseburg Plain healer has been presented with a beet which measured thirty-fonr inches in circumference. lie has nho received somo of the largest onions ever seen. At Canyon City, Grant County, a fire company has been organized and water works constructed, at a cost of 35,000. The town has been rebuilt, and looks. better than ever before. A donation party at the Dalles vis ited the Rev. Thomas Coudou last week, had a good time, and left sub stantial things worth two hundred and fifty doiiars. The S'atettnan h doubtless right in the opinion that under the litigant law the people of Oregon are annually swindled out of more money than it is charged that May "absorbed." Ore ganian. Tho Enterprise is informed that the Willamette Transportation Company have signified no intention of repaying the damage done to' freight by the sinking of the Senator, and states that the P. T. Co. always paid such damage wttbcmt lely. The whole number of scholars in attendance at the Methodist Sunday School at Salem during the year was 4,384. At tho Christian Sunday School, 3,400. At the Catholic Sun day School the weekly attendance is about CO, and the wholo attendance for the year 3,000. The Baker County Democrat says : W. II. Thompson, Esq., of Eagle Creek, recently sold twenty acres of mining ground to the Ah Tyc Co. for 0,000. About sixteen of the Ce lestials are now engaged rocking, and they make fair . wages, even iu cold weather. ' Little Elk. Ths settlers on this little river dscrvc great credit for their iudustry and perseverance. They have a road leaving the Yaquina wagon road in Bio igett's Valley, and inter secting the fiamo ten miles this side of Elk City, thus saving a distance of six miles from Co ;allis to littlo Elk. These peoplo need a bridge across the river to enable them to cross in the winter season. Gazelle. A Scallawag named Simeon Lowell lived at Bucna Vista and worked in the pottery business, lie had a family, and a wife who is much respected by all who know her. lie left not long since, having borrowed all ho could from everybody who would lend him a dollar. Ho disappeared at night, and was lately heard from at Salt Lake, where he writes back to some one abusing his wife. She is washing to support herself and children, and has the sympathy of all. The Statesman has the following paragraph, which is understood to refer to a " retired artist in Indian vouch ers:" What man is there in Oregon who will hesitate to believe that if May had held office and got rich twelve or fifteen years ago, and not been found out, but had saved up and bought horses, and lands, and sheep, and cat tle, and factory stock, and have con' trived to be a Democrat, ho could to day have been a member in full stand ing in the Salem ring ? Tho Eugene Guard says that a few days ago, as the stage from the South was coming down a hill about ten miles this side of Roseburg, the brako broke, and the stage running on the horses, the driver jumped off his box and left them to shift for themselves. There wero several passengers in the coach, one of whom jumped out and was so badly injured that he had to be left. The horses ran about half a milo, when they brought up on " both sides of a tree." At latest accounts one of the horses had not been found, REAL ESTATE. If. II. TYSOIV, t REAL ESTATE & HENRI AGENT, KEPUIICAi, OFFICE. Dallas, Oregon. Special attention giren to Sale or Purchase of Real Estate, Collection of Claims, Ac. Agent Union Mutual Life Insurance Co. For Sale. FflEN ACRES OF LAND, with good House I and Barn, all fenced and under good Im proveinent, situated in tbe Town of Dallas, Folk County, an extraordinary opportunity. TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY SIX Acres of Land one Mile North of Eola, Polk County, good House, good Double Earn, and other Bnildings. All under fence, with Cue Orchard, and in high frtaU of cultivation. A HOUSE AND LOT IN CENTRAL j Salem, near the two Central School Houses. The House contains Eight Rooms, all Plastered, with Hard Finish, Darn, Wood House, and all conveniences to make it desirable. A FINE MILL SITE IN SOUTH SALEM, on Willamette Slough. A block of Six Lots, enclosed with Board Fence, good House, Barn, Ac. A OOOD STOCK FARM, CONTAINING J 480 Acres, good House, two Barns, Orchard, Ac, tituated on Upper Salt Creek, 7 miles from Dallas. 4 FARM CONTAINING 250 ACRES, 100 J acres under fence, 60 acres under the plow ; good House, Barn, and fine Orchard, situated 1J miles west of Dallas. rpHREE HUNDRED AND SIXTY ACRES JL of land, 200 acres under fence, 25 acres cultivated, .ood log barn, with lumber for house, good orchard, living water near all the year round. 3 miles south-west of Simpson's Bridge, Big Luckiatnute. A FIRST-CLASS FARM, SITUATED AT Pleasant Hill, about two miles from Sher idan, in Polk County, containing 180 acres, all under fence, 200 acres in cultivation, good Burn, Orcbaid, and a comfortable farm House. For tale at the low price of fifteen dollars per acre. A GOOD BUSINESS LOCATION AT Buena Vista, Polk county. Warehouse with capacity of 40,000 battels ; trade already establibed with the interior, and connection with the Willamette Transportation Company. Good dwelling bouse, and everything ready lor occupation. A splendid tpening for business. For sale cheap. FOR REST. A D GOOD COMFORTABLE HOUSE AND larn, with plenty of fire-wood convenient. fcituate about two miles suulh-wettt of Dallas. For Particulars enquire of R. II. Tyson, Rki'I'bmcak OrriCB. Anollier Proclamation rBOM THS STOKE ! ANOTHER NEW DEPARTURE IS TIIE PRICK Or DRY GOODS, CLOTHING. MOOTS, SHOES, HATS, CAPS, &c. We are determined to offer the above-named goods at LOWER PRICES than any Store north of the Bay of San Francisco. We are also able and willing to pay more to the Farmers of Polk County for all kinds of Country Produce, either in CASH or Mer chandise, than any other Store1 in the State of Oregon. It is a well-known fact, and can be attested to by hundreds, that more solid honest value can bo obtained for a twenty dollar piece at the overland Store, than for thirty dollars elsewhere. Let this fact be remembered that twenty-five cents on every dollar can bo saved by tradnig at the OVERLAND. We are continually receiving goods by every steamer, and we defy competition, Salem, Nov. 25, 1871. 39-tf Forty Years' Experience have tested the virtues of Dr. Witar'$ Italian of Wild Cherry, and the result is that it is the best rem edy extant for pulmonary and lung diseases, enbracing a whole range from a slight cold to a ettled consumption. Were it not for its merits, it would long since bare "died, and mad no igu," 213mt. . NE W A D VER TI SEMEN TS. W, H. RU3ELL, DENTIST, Is now stopping in Dallas, and is ready to attend to all thnao requiring hi aipistance. Artificial Teeth of tho very finest and best kind. Satisfaction guaranteed, or no charges made. Now is the time to call on the Doctor. Office, opposite Kiucuid's Photographic Gal lery. 37-tf RE-OPEWIWC. AT THE OLD CORNER, H 0 L n A r J BLOCK, COMMEHCIAI, STK GET,' 8ALI2.U. J. B. & ITS. SI 1 s H, Having Re-opened in the 01 1 Stand a Com plete Assortment of GENERAL MERCHAN DIZE, arc ready to wait upon the Public, and offer their Stock at very low Prices. All kinds of Produce taVen in Exchange. We cannot bo undersold. Please give us a call. No trouble to show gooda. Everybody call. 37-tf J. B. i M. HIRSCn. C. W. IIOBART. i. W. HOBAKT. SADDLE, IIARIVJESS & COL. LA R SHOP!, North-East Corner of ' Main and Mill Streets. Dallas. GEORGE W. H0BART & CO. Will Manufacture and keep CONSTANTLY ON HAND a largo Assortment of SADDLERY, HARNESS, AND COLLARS, Consisting of all tbe HORSE EQUIPJIEIYTS Usually kept in a FIRST CLASS SADDLERY SHOP, All of which will be made ot TIIE REST MATERIAL. Also. CARRIAGE TRIMMINO ami IM PAIRING done to ordtr on the shortest notice. Call and examine our Work before cnrchaji-. ing elsewhere. 41-tf GEO. W. IIOBART A CO. This Space a: V FOR. J. W. GILBERT, Boot ami Slice Dealer, COMMERCIAL STREET, SALEM. 2S-tf Mothers, I've Fociml II! IOR YEARS I HAVE SEARCHED FOR a remedy that will CURE your children bv removing the CAUSE, and at last I can say "Eureka." TRY IT. CARtVSirJITIVE CORDIAL. This is a pleasant antacid, and in lanro doses laxative; in small doses, an astringent medi cine; exceedingly useful in all bowel affections, especially of children. It is a safe, certain and eCectual remedy for Cholic, Diarrhoea. Cholera Morbus, Summer Complaint, Griping Pain, Sour Stomach, Costiveness, Wind on tho Stomach, Crying and Fretting of Children. In Teething, thero is nothing that equals it. It softens tbe Gums, and renders Teething easy. it ,is no immune medicine, got up to sell. but a' really valuable preparation, havingbeen in nse for several years it recommends itself. Do not give your children tho "soothing- syrups, ' tor tliey stupily wunout doing any permanent good. Prepared by Or. W. WATERHO USE, MONMOUTH, OREGON. For Sale by Druggists. The trade supplied on reasonable terms. Hundreds of Testimo nials can be given if nccessnry. 13-tf UK. W. WATERnOUSE. LA CUEOLE ACADEMY, DALLAS, POLK COUNTY, OREGON. FACULTY. M. M OGLESBY, Principal, anp TEacnan or Mathematical a? Natural Scikscks. MISS E. A. WITT EN, Tkaciirr or Music. MISS A. E. SCUIUER, Tbachbr or tub Primary Department asp Fresch. tv, rir.t Tnrin of 1871.2 was commenced on tho second Monday (llth day) of Dec., 1S71. All students will bo atlowed the benefit of the endowmeut fund, amounting to about $200. TUITION : Primart Braxchrs, per Term $4 00 00 Intkrmepiatb - llinimir 6 8 00 Latin and French cacu a eir. Music, $12 per Term. , . . r),.fmi will be made from the time of enter ing to the close of each term, ot half term, as the ease may be. No deductions will be made axcent in eases of protracted sickness. JJy order l luo uoara ox xjustooa. v-w . -A