CO 1 -K" .17 iff!'.: '! ll 1- 0 ?. VOL. VII. THE DALLES, OREGON; THURSDAY; MARCH 15, 1894. NO. 73. r i i r n i a ft i i - .j.-4 n i 1 i n . . i i A SENATOR CONVERT JoYial Joe Blacilmrn. tMentucMan, Is Now -a Christian. . THROUGH EVANGELIST MOODY The Pollard-Breckinridge Case Still Occupies Attention Foreign and' Domestic News. JOVIAL JOE BLACKBURN. Converted by Moody, the Evangelist, Be Will Lead a New Life. Washington, March 14. Every United States senator found in bis mail yesterday a little package of religious tracts encircled by a rubber band and bearii- .on its face the words, "Compli ' ments of J. SI C. Blackburn." This was the popular Kentucky senator's de vice for announcing to bis associates . that he had abandoned forever bis old life and entered upon a new and untried existence, as' the result of the convict ing eloquence of Evangelist Moody, who has been holding revival meetings . in Washington . for a month. Vp-v early in the course of the Moody n.eciings the Kentuckian began to exhibit remarka ble interest. He- became a regular at tendant, eat on the platform night after night within a few feet of Moody, and it was noticed that the two had fiequent conversations together. Then . Mr. Blackburn began to invite some of bis friends to the meetings and everybody understood that be was very much im pressed, but the idea that jovial "Joe" Blackburn, who had for bis whole life led the gay existence .which is peculiarly adapted to the Kentucky 'temperament, should- really become converted by Moody's teachings and enter the work of evangelization'himself even in a small way, never entered anybody's head. The grave and aggressive senators, from the aged Morrill down to the youthful Dubois, are wondering which of them is to be influenced by Joe Blackburn's change of heart ' and how far the elo quent and big-hearted Kentuckian's new enthusiasm will carry him. THE BRECRINBID6K CASE. Sister Cecilia Testifies in the Pollard ,. Breckinridge Case. Washington, March 13. During the morning there were no ladies in the court where the Pollard case is on, not even Misa Pollard appearing. Her at torneys have not yet decided whether the plaintiff will be placed on the stand to testify, as she is in such a nervous state they fear she would ' not be able to stand the ordeal. The reading of depo sitions occupied the court until the noon adjournment. . The first witness in the afternoon was Sister Cecilia, a Sister of Charity of Cincinnati. She said that in 1884 she had the sister in charge of the oonvent at Norwood, O. "Do you recall that in 1884 there was a person there by the name of Bar goyne7" asked Mr. (Carlisle. ' i , "I do not." '::7'';:;j;?i:v r "Do you remember a female patient GOOD Food -. -Digestion -Complexion are all intimately connected -practically, inseparable. Though the fact is often ignored, it is nevertheless true that a good complex ion is an impossibility with out good digestion, which in turn depends on good food. . t . ,, ' .... There is no more common cause of Indigestion than lard. Letthe-bright house keeper use- :.;- :. . tiOHTOL ,. Th New Vegetable Shortening ; and substitute for ard, and 2 her cheeks, with those of 1 her family,'- -will" be - far 2 more likely to be " Like a 2 rose in the snow.' Cottolene is clean, deli, cate, healthful and popu lar .Try it for yourself. , , Send three cents tn stamps to N. K. Fairbank & Co.. Chicago, lor - h&odsome Cottolene Cook Book. containing six nundrea recipes, prepared by nine eminent auriior- ities On cooking. ' . flade only by N. K. Fairbank & Co., ST. LOUIS and CHICAGO, NEW VOflK, BOSTON. iiilliilliiiWIiillliliWi!! who was visited by a. female doctor from Cincinnati?" ": ' "There was one who was visited twice by Dr. Mary Street." ' The four 'volumes of Irving, which bad figured mysteriously in the case, were placed before the sister and she said : . . ' "I was presented with a. set of books like those by a lady who had been, a pa tient in the asylum in August, 1885, but I cannot say whether these are the iden tical ones." She eaid she bad left the books at Norwalk. The lawyer tried to prove they were given her by Miss Pollard, but she could not remember who gave the books. - She was next asked regard ing the contents of a letter received by her from Miss Pollard, and the court ad journed during an argument over the admissibility of the evidence. Judge Bradley this morning decided he had no Jurisdiction in the face slap ping incident, as it occurred outside the court-room. He said he had beard some of the counsel were armed, and cautioned them against violating the law. Washington March 14. The testi mony of Sister Cecilia was resumed in the Pollard-Breckinridge case today. The question at issue was the competency of the witness in the identification of Miss Pollard as the woman who had been treated in the asylum at Cincinnati. The court ruled out various questions to bring out, this , point, and the plaintiff took exception. ' Sister Cecilia testified two or three ladies in' that retreat veiled their faces when they thought there was danger of being recognized by visitors. The name of Burgoyne, supposed to be that under which' Miss Pollard was in the asylum, war unfamiliar to ber. Cross-examination was brief and unimportant- A deposition of Kate Terry Kane, of Cincinnati, a physician, re membered Miss Pollard in a house in which Mrs. Kane and Mrs. 'Dr. Buch anan practiced; as a patient of Dr. Buchanan under the name of Louise Wilson, she identified Miss Pollard posi tively. Miss Pollard had a miscarriage. Mrs. Kane asked her why she did not marry the author of her misfortune. Miss Pollard replied she could not ; ' he had ruined ber, and she loathed, him and would not marry him. ' " '' Died Prom a Severe Keating. Santa Rosa, Cal., March 14. John Bachman, a feeble old man, nearly 70 years of age,- died at his home near Healdsburg last night, from the effects of injuries received at. the bands of James Petray, March 1st. Bach man's farm joins Petray's father's farm. Pe tray 's stock, had been bothering Bach man sometime, and Bachman shut them up and sent for the poundmas.ter. Petray and his 'son James went after the stock and got into a quarrel with Bachman. Bachman called young Pe tray ' a liar, and Petray, who is oyer six feet in height, and only : twenty-five years old, knocked him down a .number. of times. Mrs. Bachman tried to help her husband, but was held by Petray's father. Blood spurted from Bachman'e mouth and 'ears, and iu a few days he bad. to take his bed. As soon as Petray found out the precarious condition of his victim he fled, and officers are scour ing the country for him. ' A rains t the House of Lords. London, March 14.-When the house of commons met today, Chancellor Har- court abunced that the government nad dec a to move the rejection of the amended address- in reply to the queen's speech, looking to the abolition of the house of lords, when it is put. from the chair, ' and substitute . another short address in reply. -'It was a proceeding for which the eover nment held them selves entirely responsible. They could nofc-fesent to the sovereign a document for which they were not .prepared to accept' the entire responsibility. The avowed object of the amendment was a definite form of resistance to the lords, The government fully 'accepted Glad stone's declaration onThe subject. He had stated yesterday that the govern ment proposed to oppose Balfour's doc trine that the commons was to be sub ject to the control of the . lords. Joined the Salvation Army. New Yobk, March 13. As a result of the addresses to pupils of Vassar col lege by Mrs. Ballington Booth, head of 'the Salvation Army forces in America, and Adjutant Edith Marshall, 15 young women students have been enrolled as members of the Salvation Army Aiixili ary League. . Dr. G. H. Kendricks, of the executive staff of the college, has joined the league, .and' others are ex pected to : join. The new members of the league are the daughters of wealthy aristocratic families of New York, Brook lyn, Washington, and other cities. NEWS NOTES.. Chairman Wilson is better but is suffer ing from despondency, the result of .his enfeebled condition. Returns from . the annual town elec tions in New Hampshire show unequaled republican gains. . Towns democratic for years have gone republican. An Italian druggist in New York "city named Trlori committed suicide by tak ing poison because of the disgrace ' felt over the arrest of his son for abducting a young girl. - The house CQmmittee on election of president and vice-president has agreed to report next Wednesday a bill provid ing for the election of United States senators by direct vote of the people. The Russian thistle is radidly spread ing and now occupies 40,000 acres in ad jacent territory in .North and -South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa and Nebraska, with isolated bodies as far east as Madi son, Wis., and west to Denver. The chief agents of distribution are the wind, in flaxseed and in bedding of stock cars on the railroads. A Rate War.. San Francisco, March 14. The gen eral passenger agent of the Rock Island road has notified its Pacific coast agent that that road will make a fate of $10, beginning tomorrow, from Chicago to all Missouri river points, to meet the recent Gut of the Santa Fe Company. A local ticket-broker has made the announce ment that from today he will sell first- class tickets (not-scalped coupons) from San Francisco to Chicago for $28, over the Denver & Rio Grande and Chicago, Rock. Island & Pacific roads, which proves conclusively that some of ' the roads are willing to share profits with brokers, and it is 'confidently expected that the war. will be continued for some time to come. ' NEWS OF THE STATE. The president - has appointed R. S. Sheridan receiver of public, moneys at Roseburg, Or. -. The widow of Ferdinand Grass, who was murdered in Portland Monday night, is prostrated ' with grief, and she says she cannot understand 'bow any one' could have- had the heart to harm her husband, who was one of the most inoffensive and kindly-disposed men in the world.' - An observing Multnomah county offi cial informed a .Telegram reporter that the female portion of the throng of tax payers transact their business quicker, create more trouble and have more to say about loose . methods . than all the men combined. ; It usually takes a wo man four days to pay her taxes, but her visits are short as a rule and she wastes no time in waiting. .The first day she inquires the amount, has it jotted down on a piece of paper and departs. The second, day, she appears, settles the taxes and taxes a receipt. The third day she pays - another visit, to make sure the receipt is correct . and the amount paid has been credited, and the fourth day is devoted to asking every clerk in the vicinity if there is not an other taxpayer on the books bearing the same name. . The Ghost on Board of Ship. A ghost haunts a ship. The mate has a story of it every morning-. One night the captain watches the mate, sees him rise from his hammock and' -walk in his sleep into the 'cabin. . There he takes water in a" pipkin, scatters it about' and, still asleep, goes bjsk to roost. , Next morning the mate tells how he had awakened, seen the ghost, followed him into ' the other cabin and "besprinkled him with holy water. He was quite honest in his' statement; he had been somnam bulistic and remem bered (which seems unusual) the hallu cinations of his sleep walking. Proba bly more ghosts than we generally al low for are to be explained by somnam bulism. Blackwood's Magazine. O; W.O. Hardmaa, Sheriff of Tyrel Co., W. Va., appreciates a good thing and does not hesitate to sav so. He wan almost prostrated with a cold when he procured - a bottle of ChsCmberlain'fl Cough Remedy. He save: "It cave me prompt relief. - I Hud it to be an invalu able remedy tor coughs and colds." , For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug gists, ... . . .. -.'. ' . . Just Received. i - : , 'I j .' r. : i Case Outing Flannels, which, vre ofir at 61C Amoskeag Apron Checks , which we offer at. ...-.6Jc American Indigo Prints, which we offer at............ .5c A. M. WILLIAMS & CO. COMES DOWN IN A HURRY. A Canadian Snowstorm Causes Trouble Between Citizens and Corporation. In Ottawa a snowstorm comes -without heralding, says a writer in the Bos ton Transcript. You look out of the window and see light flakes falling, and that is all, till the next day's pa per announces that trains are from one to sixteen hours late. A -visit to the post office discovers the fact that thp mail is tied up for the day; cannot get in or t out. : Heavy snowfalls mean a problem for the new electrics. Electric sweepers, with prodigious brushes slanting on before, go' coursing' -down the main street in a fleecy cloud of il their .own making, startling the stead iest horses and halting an audience of gazing pedestrians all along- the line. But car tracks are thus cleared at the expense of convenience to shopkeepers. .Sleighs tilt along dangerously toward the tracks, and all ' near street ap proach to - stores is impossible. , , A pitched battle.-in consequence rose one day between -tradesmen and car company; raged far and long, assisted by small boys. - Snow fiercely shoveled back on the track was removed as rapidly by. the 'giant sweeper, aided by lesser electric power roaring back and forth through the. battlefield.' Com promise followed, and then peaceful industry; gangs of men taking the dis puted snow away. Sidewalk plows quickly clear the way for foot passen gers after a storm. One is startled by meeting a -horse advancing smartly along the crowded sidewalk, scatter-' ing comers in all haste into street and' doorways, tugging past with plow and husbandman with a throng of people in the-f urrow in odd processional eifect. The wide white path is made as smooth as concrete, stretching away-unsullied in the less busy districts down straight, tree-bordered avenues, past tall, snow heaped stone gateposts and fantastical ly snowed-up fences and houses. The pretty picture stays day by day prac tically unaltered, for nature in Canada has no midwinter business in the way of altering her handiwork. - A Gentle Reminder.. A minister had traveled .some. dis tance to preach at a small town, and at the conclusion of the morning service waited for some one to invite him to dinner, but the-congregation gradually dispersed and' left him standing alone. Finally he stepped up to a . gentleman '- and said:' "Brother, will you go home to dinner with, me to-day?" "Where do you live?" asked the gentleman. .. "About . eighteen miles from here," was the unexpected reply. . "No, but you must dine with me," said ' the ' gentle man, ' with a flushed face; which invitation the clergyman gravely accepted. ... . . ( for Infants and Children. !HIK.TY yeara' observation of Castoria with the patronage of millions of persons, permit n to speak'of it without gneaaing It is nnqngstionahly the Pest remedy for Infanta ajid Children 1 the world has ever known. It is harmless. Children lihe it. It sriyes them health. ' It will says their- Uvea.' In it Mothers have mething which In ahsolntely safe and practically perfect as m fcfld's medicine. " ' - ; ' Castoria destroys Worms.' - - . .. '-o,. - Castoria allays Feverishness. j Castoria prevents vomiting Sonr Curd. ' - ' - -. - Castoria, enres Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic , - .Castoria, relieves Teething Tronbles. ... -. - - Castoria enres Constipation and natnlency. ' -' " ' Castoria neutralizes the effects of oarhonio acid gas or poisonous airy y Castoria does not contain morphine, opinm, or other narcotic property. Castoria- assimilates the food, regrJatwt tho stomach and towels, RivinSh'a'ihy and natnral sleep. . -.' ' ' '' Cpstoria is put rip in ran size potties QTiIy. It Is net sold, in hulk. Don't allow any one to sell yon Anything elne or! the plea, or promise that it is"jnt as good" and '1 will answer tnrriry pnrpose. ''-' See that yr-n rt O-A-S-T-O-R-I-A.' The'fae-sinine"; figaatnre f f ', i ios every" pnr. ' Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. SI .Hill vj ..-J I Highest of aU in" Leavening Power.-Iitest k Si. Gov't Rfeport - V I 1 V X A THE, CELEBRATED COLUMBIA BREWERY , : . r " AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop'r. V:;' v This well-known Brewery is now . turning out the beet iiwr and Portr- ertsfof the Cascades The latest -appliances for .the manufacturer of good health t'Jkr,') tytil'f"'. ?."t"lrtcrxt, anrTori'7 -tit firatrMslaw artfol wjll be placed oa VVhat?: V - Hand-Corded Corsets, Health Reform Waists, . Nursing Corsets, Misses' Waists, Children's Waists, Shoulder Braces and Hose Supporters made to order. Where ? At the Pacific Corset Company's Factory, north east of the Fair Grounds. It desired each garment will be fitted before being finished. " Call at the fac- .rTr-. T J ..mnr TP 3, j nrm ... nr n r I1 nnmnmmill ' , - , - r T, -.