Free Tickets to the Big Opening Baseball Game WitH Each Purchase of $1 or Over in Otir Men's and Boys' Clothing t.d Furnishings Department Demonstrations of the Famous Royal Worcester and Bon Ton Corsets by Mrs. Beldon. Expert Corsetiere Direct From the Factory-Second ipor t fiTlhie Greater Qlds, Wortmaim tore Co intiiin&ttiin- of Ouar OrMiEial A.nnuial T OI3LET (GO By far the largest stocK of Toilet Goods, Drug' Sundries, Patent Medi cines, Rubber Goods, Etc., in all Portland. PRICES GUARANTEED LTO RF THR VERY LOWEST. Qualities tbe best the market affords. fjp? Demonstrations and Free Samples at Booths on tbe Main Floor Great Sale 200,000 Cakes High. Grade Toilet Soaps We announce the return engagement of Linda Ross Wade, fashion authority of National fame, who will renew her course of lectures in our Auditorium this w e e K. Watch the papers for date of irst lecture. DEJtMXUKE ! SOAP n JOc Kiderflowcr Toilet Soap, only 7 15c Pears' unscented soap, the cake 12? 10c Sylvian Rose Soap at, the cake 8 Today ushers in the great Toilet Soap event. The lar gest and most complete stock in all the great North west is here for your choos ing. Hundreds of varieties not mentioned also on sale. 10c Palmolive High Class Soap, the cake, special 6 10c Jap Rose, a transparent glycerine soap, the cake 7 2oc Packer's Healing Tar Soa?, special at, the cake 14C 20c Certified Complexion Soap on special sale at only 12? 10c Trellis Violet Toilet Soap, specially priced at, cake 5 15c Cornell's Benzoin Cosmetic at, special, the cake 8 35c Savon Violet Imported on special sale at only 23 loc Medicated Carbolic Soap, specially priced at, cake 8 10c Sterns' Bouquet Bath Soap, on special sale, cake 7 10c Wild Rose Glycerine Soap, for this sale at only 7 10c Savon Heliotrope De Lorme, specially priced at 7 15c Sterns' Dermacure, Medicated Soap, on sale at 8 10c Olive Castile Gergana Olio on sale at, the cake 6 25c Soap Lake Medicated Skin Soap, the cake .only 12 15c Maxine Elliott, Buttermilk Violet, the cake at 10 25c "Woodbury's Facial Soap at the special price of 14 35c L. T. Pivers Savon Duvet Velours priced at only 23 25c Ed Pinaud Lilas Vegetal only 15? 15c Supertar Shampoo at, the cake 10 10c California Medicated Soap only 7J Great Sale of Wm. Rogers Silverware for Table Use Rogers' Sugar Spoons, special, each 18 Rogers' Butter Knives, special, ea, 20 Rogers Berry Spoons, special, ea. 67 Cold Meat Forks, special at, each 42$ Rogers' Cream Ladles, special, ea. 3Sd Rogers' Gravy Ladles, special, each 49 Teaspoons, set of 6 for special price 63 Dessert Spoons, set of 6 for only $1.10 Table Spoons, set of 6 for only $1.25 Dinner Forks, set of 6 for only $1.25 Soup Spoons, set of 6 for only $1.25 Individual Salad Forks, set only $1.58 Butter Spreaders, set of 6 for $1.43 "Baby" Week Sale of Infants' Apparel Dressed Dolls Free With Each Purchase 4 SlC Groceries Sa623i- LS G. STOLTZ APPLE BUTTER, REGULAR 60c JAR ONLY 30c Strictly pure and clean, made in Salem, Oregon, of the best selected apples. Regular 50c jarQlf during this sale at, the jar-'-' CHOICE BACON 2Qc SUGAR-CURED HAMS 15c I5o BEANS AT ONLY 11c CAN Very choice, 'stringless, for ta ble use ; pure food Very choice Bacon, same grade as is being sold in nearly all stores at 35c a pound, only it is a tri- tJCt fie heavier; special, the lb."' The best and sweetest Sugar-Cured Hams, in all Bizes from 8 pounds to 16 pounds in weight; of- 1 C fered at, special, the pound $1.00 POPPY BRAND JELLY 75c PUT UP IN TEN-POUND PAILS On sale in the basement underprice store, the Poppy brand Jelly, pure and clean, in ten-lb. pails. 7C Regular $1 grade, special at 25c SARDINES, THE CAN, 19c The famous Radiosa brand Bone less Sardines, favorite sell- 1 Q era at 25c, special, the can C Picnic SHoxilder Hams 12'c the lb Jnst dandy for sandwiches. You can hardly tell them from best hams. 15c PUMPKIN, TIN, ONLY 11c Very fine New York canned Pump kin, the best on the mar- 11 ket ; regular 15c tin at only POPULAR PEANUT BUTTER ON SALE AT 11c TO 33c A JAB Our sales on Beardsley's Peanut Butter are increasing by leaps and bounds; it's pure; offered at only, jar, 11c, 17c and- BOHEMIAN BUTTER 6Qc . CLOVER. LEAF BUTTER. 55c A 15c CAN OF SQUASH AT 11c The brand that everybody likes. Good for pies. The butter that makes the busy man look forward to bis home meals. Bohemian, made of pure pasteurized .cream; 2-lb.Cf-, square, offered special for 25c Mushrooms 19c Glover Leaf will be on sale in the basement. It's as good as any or dinary creamery butter which sells at top market price; special CC price, two-pound square at $1.50 MINCE MEAT, ONLY 75c PUT UP IN FIVE-POUND PAILS Atmore 's Mince Jleat has no equal. It is put up and handled under the most sanitary conditions. It's pure. A five-pound pail, worth 7C $1, offered special at only The best "Hotel" Mushrooms, in stems and pieces. Simply delicious with a steak. Always a pure- 1 Q food luxury; regular 25c cans, special, only SALE orSATE- 15c MINCE MEAT, AT ONLY 10c Pure Mince Meat in bulk, the kind for the good old-fashioned mince pies. Regular 15o value, on 1 t special sale at, the pound TY MATCHES 5c A PACKAGE 50c THE GROSS Pure Kettle Rendered Lard, 3 lb. Pail, today only 40c Pure"Kettle Rendered Lard, 5 lb. Pail, today only 65c Pure Kettle Rendered Lard, 10 lb. Pail, today at $1.27 A THREE DAYS' SALE AND DEMONSTRATION OP CELE BRATED M0N0P0LE GOODS Tomatoes, special, doz., $1.40 Corn, special, at, dozen, $1.40 Dimple Peas, at, dozen, SI. 65 Monopole Peaches, doz., $2.75 Monopole Pineap's, doz.$2.75 Stringless Beans, dozen, $1.65 25c Worceshire 2Qc Holbrook's Imp'td Worcestershire Sauce, for steaks, chops, soups and flavoring foods of manv20c kinds when cooking; regular 25c bottles, at '' 30 DRY WHOLE MILK, ALWAYS PURE, SALE AT 25c, 45c A CAN ORANGES ON SALE AT 25c, 30c The best California Oranges, the famous Rose brand, from Red lands; sweet, seedless; offered at special price, doz., 25 and 30 Lard Substitute, Govt. Inspected 3 lb. Pail at 35c Lard Substitute Govt. Inspected 5 lb. Pail at 55c Lard Substitute, Govt. Inspected 10 lb. Pail at $1.05 Ripe Olives. 25c can; Special today at only 20c 20c Choice TillamooK Cheese, for today at only 17c 20cjar Pimento Cheese, for today at only, each, 15c Ripe Olives. 45c can; Special today at only 33C Wagner Folding Go-Carts, $6.5Q Vals., Special $4.85 Splendid Lightweight Go-Carts, $3.75 Values $2.95 MOTHER SAVES TOT Bothel, Wash., Business Sec tion Swept by Fire. 000; Oddfellows' UalL $400; E. E. Lyttla. drut atora. 16000: Georc Pw ion, mercantile atore, $4000; Bothell FentineU printing- plant. 16000; J. J. Smith, brick building; and meat mar ket. $10,000. LOSS MAY REACH $75,000 Taro Women Ht Narrow Escapes, One Betnff Hurled Into Barnln Brands With Babe 6 bo la Car rying In Arm From Hon. SEATTLE. VT(u. April IS. (Spe-, del) The buaineaa section of Bothell. a town of 1100 persons situated at the head of Lake tVaehlns-ton. II miles north of Seattle, was swept by firs to day with a loss of ITS.000. partly cov ered by fZS.000 Insurance. The fire started In a bakeehop In the basement of Oddfellows' Hall and de stroyed 1 buildings before It was un der control. Dynamite was used to stop the ppread ot the flames, the home of William Johnson and the tailor shop of Fred Schratx being blown op for this purpose. Mrs. Carl Winters, who lived oa the second floor of the building- In which the fire started, had a narrow escape. Tbe entire bulldtnic was ablate when her husband awakened her. Mr. Win ters was aaaUtlnK other members of the family to escape when Mrs. Win ters seized their 1-year-old child and ran to the porch at the rear af the building. The supports had been burned under this and when sirs. Winters rushed onto It the porch gave Wsy and threw her Into the firs. She tree severely burned before she was rescued. Mrs. E. E. Lytt'.e. who was 111 at her home, was taken out on a stretcher after the house burst Into flames. The principal buildings destroyed were: Bothell State -Bank. f 5000; Bothell Hardware efc Furniture Company, til.- FIFTY THOUSAND LOAVES! Portland' Great Bakery Forges Ahd Celebrates IU Growth With a "Souvenir Day" on Thursday. Leas than six years ago the Royal Bakery waa launched la Portland. Its first night's hake consisting of exactly 00 loaves of bread. From this start, the business has been developed, until now three full quarter blocks, two downtown branches, twenty tOOO-loaf capacity de livery wsgona. M horses and more than 100 employees are necessary to fulfill the requirements In supplying the city with "Table Queen Bread." Its routes extend from the heart of the business district to the extreme edge of every outlying suburb, and In consequence the output has grown constantly until the bakery has now attained a capacity of (0.000 loaves dally, and will bake and eell that number of loaves on Thursday of this week. $10,000 Worth of w Machinery. Ten thousand dollars' worth of new machinery has Just been Installed, and because of the Improvements It affords, a bigger, better, whiter, sweeter and more nutritious loaf than ever before la now offered. The msnag-ement of this great bakery, feeling proud of the attainments of their Institution, have, la their enthus iasm, decided to came a "Souvenir Day for the boys and glrla. as a fitting mark of appreciation for the part the chil dren have played In helping to popu larise the Royal In Portland, and have designated Thursday of this week for that occaalon. On that date they will give with every loaf of bread purchased a choice of a drawing book for the girls, or a color oops for the boys. The sttentlon of the reading publlo has been claimed already on page ( of this paper. Careful study of the advertise ment which appears there Is worth while, as It will waken one to a realisa tion of both tbe Increase In Portland's population since 1904 and of the wonder ful development of bread baking by the Royal since that year. Births, la proportion te the amber of mrrt4. ere about T pr c-nt hisher In country d'etiicte thsn In lrs ir TROOPS TO MARCH Men at Vancouver Ordered Out for Practice. MANEUVERS BEGIN TODAY Fisher to Be First Base of Opera Uons Conditions as Nearly -as Possible to Warfare to Be Simulated. VANCOUVER BARRACKS. Wash, April 16. (Special.) The soldiers and officers will be kept busy the re mainder of the Spring and Summer with marches Into the surrounding country. In accordance with an order issued by the War Department at Wash ington. Every few days from a few squads to a full regiment will be sent Into tbe country, each march lasting from three days to two weeks. The men will carry full field kits, weigh ing SO pounds, and be escorted by the supply wagons. The first of a series of maneuvers will begin tomorrow morning, when Companies E, In command of Lieuten ant Frank Jewett. and T. In command of Captain Charles E. Tayman, will start out for a three-days march toward Fisher, where a camp site for two companies was picked out today by Lieutenant Arthur D. Budd. who was sent ahead to reconnolter. Camp will be made there tomorrow and this will bs the base ot operations for three days. The time will be spent in maneuvers, drills and marching and forced marching under conditions as much as possible like real warfare: When E and F companies return. O and H companies will take the field, golnv In another dlrecticn. Different companies will bo sent out each period until each organization has had ths required practice In the field. PERSONALJIENTION. C R. Hibbard, of LaGrande, Is at the Oregon. . A. K. Carlson, of. Lewlston. was among the arrivals at the Portland yesterday. Joseph Goldberg, of Boise, was at ths Portland yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Haney, of Winni peg, are at the Perkins. Charles Wesely, of Solo, was regis tered at the Perkins yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. W. C Yoran, of Eugene, were at the Bowers yesterday. H. D. Sheldon, of Eugene, was reg istered yesterday at the Oregon. Oscar Johnson, a Salem merchant, ac companied by his wife, is at the Per kins. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Johnson, of Se attle, registered at the Bowers yes terday. C. W. Henderson and H. H. Hender son, of Olympla, are registered at the Cornelius. Max Wardell, president of the Seattle Council, was registered at the Oregon yesterday. Dr. George a Wright of McMlnnville. was In this city yesterday, registering at the Imperial. C C. MoGowan. a salmon packer, was registered at the imperial yesterday from Warrendale. D. W. Campbell, in the employ of the Harriman system, was registered at the Imperial yesterday from Seattle, W. E. Carpenter, superintendent for the Wells-Fargo Company at Seattle, was registered at the Imperial yester day. G. B. Johnson, auditor for the Astoria At Columbia River Railroad, was regis tered at the Imperial yesterday from Astoria. W. D. Keir, representing Porter Brothers, railroad contractors at The Dalles, was registered yesterday at the Bowers. L Burpee, who is directing the work on the CelUo canal project, was reg istered at the Cornelius yesterday from The Dalles. Helmus W. Thompson, a prominent attorney and ex-County Judge of Lane County, was registered at the Imperial yesterday from Eugene. John L. Rand, a prominent Eastern Oregon attorney and ex-Senator from Baker County, was registered at the Portland yesterday from Baker. George A. Bain, who will officiate as auctioneer at a livestock sale In Portland this week, Is registered at the Cornelius from Lexington, Ky. CHICAGO, April 1. (Special.) Ar rivals at the La Salle are C. A. Morden, Edgar B. Piper and Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Devers. DAVITT MEMORIAL IS SET Hibernians and Irish League Will Have Joint Exercises. The memorial exercises under the Joint auspices of the Ancient Order of Hibernians and United Irish League of this city at Woodmen of the World Hall, Eleventh and Alder streets, next Sun day evening, promises to be notable. Rev. P. Gibney, the oldest Catholic priest in point of service In the Northwest, who accompanied Davltt from San Fran clsoo to Portland 30 years ago, as well as Dan O'Callaghan of Tacoma, Davltfs lifelong friend, will have seats on the platform. Wallace McCamant will speak on "Mi chael Davltt, Patriot and Statesman." and D. Soils Cohen on "Michael Davltt, the Friend of Humanity." Bert O. Carl, nine years leading baritone of the Bur gomaster Company, will sign "0"Don nell Aboo" and "The Wearing, of the Green"; Mrs. R. A. Sullivan will sing "Connemara," Mlas Mae Breslin, "The Boys of Wexford" and Frank Hennessy, "Casey." Michael Davltt was born March 25, 1846, was a newsboy, typesetter, editor, special writer, a member of Parliament for several Irish constituencies and one of the best beloved men of his day on both sides of the Atlantic. While In prison during political disturbances in 1883 he wrote "Leaves of a Diary." In which he advised and elaborated a sys tem of home rule government for Ire land, which in all essentials Is about to be granted Ireland today. L. Shanahan, J. Hennessy Murphy, P. E. Sullivan, E. H. Deery, John Smith, P. W. Lillis and John Farrell represent the organizations presenting the memorial. GAN'T FIND ANY COMFORT There's no rest sad but little pesos for any person whoso kidneys are out of order. Not only does backache keep up Its dull throb, day and night but there are sharp twinges, cricks and stitches of darting pain, achy Joints, and sore, stiff muscles. The kidneys are likely to get con gested and Inflamed following a chill, a cold, grippe, fever, the continued use of strong drink, or from overwork, a fall or some injury to the back. TJrlo acid troubles rheumatism, neuralgia, nervousness, sciatica, gout weak eyes, headache, eta, follow rapid ly when the weakened kidneys fall to filter the blood free from uric poisons. Sediment thick and cloudy, or gritty as sand, appears In the urine, and passages axe too frequent too scanty, or painful. There Is danger of dropsy, Brlght's disease, gravel, stone la the kidneys and diabetes. To sure any of the above-described tils, yon must get right at the cause. Ton must get the kidneys Into good order by using a good kidney remedy. Backache, Rheumatic Joints and Uric Acid Troubles Follow Sick Kidneys TveryPcure Tern A Story "Tcforrf ijef a minute's peace' and there Is none better than Doan'a Kidney .fills, a remedy that Is for ths kidneys only, and la oomposed of sim ple, yet effective vegetable ingredients. It cures and heals sick kidneys, regu lates the bladder and urine, and drives poisonous uric acid out of the systsm. There are many kidney medicines put up as imitations of Doan's, some with similar names. Don't be deoelved. These are new and untried, while Doan'a have been curing kidney and bladder ills for 75 years, and all over the civilized world. PORTLAND PROOF A. W. Hawkins, 570 Union Ave, Port land, Oregon, says: "I had a bad oase o- kidney and bladder trouble that al most prevented me from working. My kldneya were disordered and my back waa so painful that I could hardly stoop. Nothing helped me until I took Doan's Kidney Pills. Since using them, I have been in much better health and consequently I have no hesitation In giving this statement" V DOAN'S KIDNEY PILL jrflrfthBTlcj IrtYosrKldjs Sold Iry all dealers. Pries So cents. Foms-Hiusoiw Cft. Buffalo. N.Y.. Proprietor. PtteltaMfeB I