"The Delft" WE GUARANTEE OUR JNleed a Shirt ? If yon do, vre invite yonr attention to O Our Special Sale ilJiSllii 3 I 111 V pfl II i 111 3 illlllll J tlllllllll $ 4 O The Dalles Daily Ghronicie. TUESDAY. - - JULY 6. 1897 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observations and Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. Mies Lizzie Aiken and John Connors were married at Spokane, Wash., July 4th. The city council met last night, but there being no quorum, adjourned until Wednesday night. The United Brethren have a large tent stretched on the lot next to the Academy Park, and have been holding meetings for the past week. County court met Monday, but there was little business to be transacted, everybody apparently being engaged in celebrating the nation's birthday. Southard, the Chicago tailor, has opened a business place at 116 Second street. Those who like good goods and neat fitting garments will make no mis take by calling on him. Mr. Hazel, at the Umatilla House bowling alley, made a start for a record this morning, but unfortunately fell down. He made six strikes, and fol lowed it with two goose eggs. Yesterday a very pretty canary bird came to Dr. Eshelman's residence on Tenth and Union street. It is evidently a pet canary, and the owner can have it by calling upon Mrs. Eshelmant Our soldier boys, who were in Port land yesterday adding to the attractive ness of the parade, came home on the 1 o'clock train this morning, somewhat Bunburned from their week's outing. The members of C company of Pendle ton didn't know they were serenading the editor Saturday night but that did not alter the fact that they. were ar tists in their line, or make their music any lees enjoyable. ! By existing arrangements with the publishers of the Weekly Oregonian, we are enabled to club that excellent paper with the Twice-a-Week Chronicle at the low rate of $2.25 per year. Now is the time to send in your names. Our citizens jwho were in Portland yesterday report trt'e parade as being un usually good. As is customary on cele bration days, it rained. However, the clouds disappeared and gave the parade a chance, the rain coming down as soon as it was over. Lieutenant Marsh' of Wasco is in the city today, stopping on his way home from Portland. The company went home last night. We just want to add in this connection that at the review at Hood River Lieutenant Marsh looked like a major-general. As a sample of American snobbery, it is stated ' that since the withdrawal of Mr. and Mrs. Grover Cleveland from the First Presbyterian church in Washing ton there has been a remarkable de crease in the attendance. It is sus pected that in all communities the peo ple who go to church to look at each Fancy Bosom Shirts. Our regular $1.25 line for $1.00 Negligee Shirts. Oar regular $1.00 Laundered for $ .75 Onr regular 1.25 Laundered tor 1.00 , Our regular 1.50 Laundered for 1.25 Our regular 1.75 Laundered for 1.50 With or without Collar. Our regular $1.00 Unlaundered for $ .75 Our regular 1.25 Unlaundered for 1.00 Our regular 1.50 Unlaundered for 1.25 Our regular 1.75 Unlaundered for 1.50 Oar regular 2.00 Unlaundered for 1.75 Our regular 2.50 Unlaundered for 2.00 With Collar. Pongee Shirts. Our regular $3.00 line for. $2.50 5ee Display purpistyii (Joods Uir;dou. PEASE O other are largeiy in excess of those who go to bear the sermon and engage in worship. George Horning and George Smith of Benton county, sold 350 head of sheep to Brown Bros. Thursday. The pur chasers will ship a number to market, but it is their intention to turn the most of the sheep on the range and hold them until fall, hoping that prices will be better. The British bark Glenlee, now at As toria, has aboard of her a Japanese ap prentice. He is the only one aboard of a foreign vessel and is the son of a surgeon-general of the Japanese army, who is one of the richest men of that country. The young Japanese is a bright young man who has a peculiar sense of disci pline and wants to learn. The Yakima Hopgrowers' Association met last week, and decided that 75 cents a box or of a cent a pound be the es tablished rate for picking, and a com mittee of three, consisting of Messrs. Lesh, Scudder and Jason Carpenter, was appointed 10 obtain reduced transporta tion rates from all points for pickers. The association also decided to meet regularly hereafter on the second and fonrtb Saturdays of the month. The firemen give an excursion io Multnomah falls Sunday next. The Dalles band will furnish music for the occasion, and with tickets placed at $1, everybody will go. The money is to be used for the tournament in September. If you don't go, you want to buy a ticket anywa , for the money must be raised. An excursion from Portland is promised for the same day, and when The Dallas meets Portland at Multno mah, there will be hilarity galore. There was a lively runaway ,in the East End this morning. A four-horse team took a little trip of its own, start ing from in front of E. J. Collins & Co.'s and coming to a atop back of J. T. Peters place. The end of their run was a woodshed, where horses, wagon and everything else went crashing through the timbers. The only occupant of the shed was a hen, who was engaged in a laodible effort to hatch a brood of young chicks. The timbers went smashing around her, but she Btnck to her job re gardless of the ruin around her, and never stirred from her nest, even when the wreck was being collected. The Oregonian gives the following re cipe for losing a pound a day : A "man about town" who has been living on the fat of the land and doing nothing, found himself taking on too much adipose tis sue. Concluding there was no royal road to getting rid of this incumbrance, he Btruck out for the country, chopped brush ten hours a day, and every even ing bathed in the creek, and at the end of eighteen days found he bad reduced his weight eighteen pounds. He slept like a log, and was cured of snoring, and has come back to town feeling like a new man. To all wbo are oyerburned with fat he says, "Go thou and do likewise." It is safer, better and more effective than anti-fat or any other nostrum. Subscribe for Thb Chronicle. a. t 6 t o i t a for the balance of this week. & MAYS 4 THE MURDERED CHILD FOUND. It Was Bnrled Sear the Foot of Montgomery Gulch. At last the story of "Sandy" Soper's local crimes is complete, for which Dr. Kessler, of the East Side, is entitled to credit. When the murderer arrived in Mis souri, to answer for the murder of his former wife and two children there, about six years ago, he wrote to his heart-broken wife here, to the effect that when he deserted her, on the 16tb of last April, taking their 2-year-old child with him, he killed it, and buried the remains at the foot of Tillamook street. Search was made for the little body at the spot designated, but no corpse was found. Df. Kessler, who manifested, a measure of humane in terest in the case, for the purpose of re lieving Mrs. Soper's suspense, who vainly hoped that her child might yet be alive, wrote to Soper for a more defi nite location of the burial-place of the little body. On Friday he received a reply from the unnatural and unreliable murderer, bat the information was not measurably clearer than the first ob tained from him. However, the rest of that day, Dr. Kessler searched the foot of Montgomery gulch, without success. The search was resumed in the thick brush on Saturday, and at 3 o'clock in the afternoon he dis covered a small mound near the month of the gulch, from which he brought forth the murdered infant. It was cov ered by a comparatively thin layer of earth. The body was so badly decom posed that, at the time, the manner in which its life bad been taken could not be satisfactorily settled. However, it was identified as having been the Soper child by its raiment, which was the same it bad on when taken from home by the inhuman father on its death journey. The coroner soon thereafter took charge of the remains. This cruel blow to Mrs. Soper's never nagging hope that her cnild was not dead, has rendered the unhappy woman's illness very precarious. CHILD WAS BURIED ALIVE. At 9 :30 o'clock this morning an in' quest was held over the remains of the poor little body, that represented the work of either a diabolical murderer or that of an insane man. The inquest but added to the horror of the crime. The child had been buried alive! Dr. Kessler, in his evidence, showed conclusively that Soper attempted to strangle the little one, and as it relaxed into unconsciousness believed he had accomplished his horrible work. The murderer then proceeded to bury the body. A hollow grave was dug and the Btill unconscious infant placed in it. The child's cap was then drawn over its face and dirt and brush piled upon the body. Soper then left the scene. Hardly had he reached the top of the trail, according to Dr. Kessler, before the child revived, and working its baby hand free from the weight of dirt and debris holding it down, tore away the Enameled Ware Mixed Blue and White out side and White inside. "The Delft" is the latest ware out in cooking utensils. Prices are about the same as granite ware, and a great deal cheaper than the aluminum war., and prettier than either of them. Call and see the goods at MAIER& BENTON'S 167 Second Street. cap in an effort to gain breath. Its baby strength was, however, insufficient to raise the load pressing the poor little body down. That the child struggled. is shown in the contorted position of the limbs as the child lay in- its rude grave. The verdict of the coroner's jury was death by strangulation and suffocation, charging Soper with the murder. Tele gram. THE GILMORE BAND. The Dalles Geta Avtj With the Honors and Lemonade. One of the most attractive features of the great Fourth of July celebration at Portland was our Dalles Indians, twenty four of whom went down on the Regula tor yesterday morning. Their chief was Bill Gil more, mayor of Grand Dalles. Through the kindness of ex-sheriff, Tom Ward, who kindly loaned him bis In dian masquerade suit, Bill was enam el led in the highest style of the art, be' ing a genuine incarnadine mostly red. They carried a banner, displaying the colors of the Regulator line, and, of course, bad the best of the display They were taken in small boats to the Monterey and Monaduock and serenaded the crews of those big war vessels. It is said they were treated to lemonade and cider, but that Bill was heard to re mark in the purest Indian dialect that the lush was thin." At the same time the reception committee refused to pene trate his disguise, and save his life with an offer of something more substantial. It is said that these noble savages struck up those two weird Indian chants, "We Won't Go Home 'Till Morning" and the "Cruisken Lawn," which they sang to the queen's taste after they got tuned up. Indian Bill and his company are ex pected home this evening. Yakima's fame is spreading. The other day a youth of Seattle, bubbling over with patriotism, while crazed with liquor, created a great scare in that usu ally quiet city. With a long knife in his belt and a gun in each hand, which he held aloft, ever and anon, pulling the triggers, be rushed into the street, and with a terrible warwhoop and scream shouted between breaths: "I'm the wild man from Yakima." He was caged by the police. LOST. Yesterday, in this city, a silver match- safe. Please return to this office. FOR SALE. For the next sixty days I will offer for sale my place in Thompson's addition, containing twenty acres, seventeen of which Is a frnit bearing orchard, con sisting of choice fruits ; a house of six rooms, hard finish ; barns and outbuild ings, two horses and harness, two wagons and one cart, and a cow. Terms $3,500 cash ; balance to suit purchaser, For particulars address C. . Bayard, my agent, or call at my - place of busi ness. jn28-tf Chas. Fbazikb. Anti-Rust Tinware Not to Rust, and we will Replace Free of Charge Any piece that does. This is the cheapest and best Tinware to buy. Sold only by S We Carry .a fuirime of Builders' and Heavy Hardware, Lime and Cement, Farm Machinery, Bain "Wagons, Champion Mowers and Reapers, Blacksmiths' Coal and Iron, Barb Wire, Etc. JOS. Phone 25. Fire Jacobson Book & Music Co. Flags, Rockets, Torpedoes, Roman Candles, Bombs and Fire-crackers. Large Assortment. Prices the lowest. Mail orders promptly attended to. New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. Wasco Warehouse Company Headquarters for Seed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Feed Grain of an kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds. Headquarters for Bran. Shorts, 3frEuwAdH, Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Fendle- Xjy "R1lrTlT This Flour is manufactured expressly for family LULL . J- XJ 14. i. . u8e . every sack is guaranteed to give satisfaction. W Bell onr onoda lower than anv honse in the trade, and if you don't think so . call and get our prices and be convinced. Highest Prices Paid for GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Again in business at the old stand. I would be pleased to see all my former patrons. Fee delivery to any part of town. NEW SPRING GOODS NEW SPRING GOODS JUST ARRIVED JUST ARRIVED C. F. MAYS & CROWE. T. PETERS & CO Works. - Wheat, Barley and Oats. Successor to Chrisman & Corson. " FULL LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. STEPHENS,