THE 2IORXIXG OREGOXIAJf. FRIDAY, MARCH ' 1, 1918. " a WALTER EVANS HOT If! RAGE FOR JUDGE Friends Solicit District Attor ney to Become Candidate for Judge Morrow's Place. ' WANEY IS RECOMMENDED Certain Democrats of Ore iron Said to He I'rglng Appointment of II. M Ksterly, National Committor man, a V. S. Attorney. r!trlet Attorney "Walter It. Evan nas been asked several times In' the last two weeks to bffomfl a candidate for Circuit Judge against Robert G Morrow, of Department No. Mr. Evans .aid yesterday, however, it wu Improbable he would try for the Judge ship, although be confessed a place oa the circuit bench offered considerable attraction to him. Beside, be has tnr.e years yet to serve as District .Attorney. Ms term of office not ex pinna until January. 1921. "l am not Inclined seriously to con ider the suggestion of my friends that I become a candidate for Circuit Judas st this time." said Mr. Evan Tester CUT. "Under certain conditions nilaht b willing to nut. the race fnr this office, but I stlfl have nearly three years to serve as District Attor ney and am entirely satisfied where I am. Arthur C. Dayton. District Judge, has let It becomo generally known that be will oppose Judge Morrow for re election. Neither Judge Dayton nor Judas Morrow, however, haa an- couaccd his candidacy to date. e trotted States Senator Chamberlain bxs recommended to Attorney-Genera Gregory the appointment of Bert E. Hmijt as I'nited States Attorney for Oregon. This was dona Just before fenator Chamberlain last week under went an operation for appendicitis. In the meantime Postmaster Myers and a fesr other close friends of the late Sen ator Lans aro striving- to block the appointment of llaney, say friends of iho latter. Those who would keep the Job. from llaney are boosting L M. Ks terly. Ixunocratio National committee man, for the appointment. e e Ralph E. Williams. Republican Na tional committeeman for Oregon, who recently returned from a meeting of the. National committee at St. Louis, will announce his candidacy for re election soma time next week. E. X. Cusick. State Senator from IJnn County, was In the city yesterday tn the Interest of his candidacy for the Republican nomination of State Treas ure r. Mr. Castck Is pledged to an eco nomical and businesslike administration of the state government, as a member of the State Board. If elected, and promises to assist In putting Oregon's rural credit law Into effective opera tlon. e e . Mark W. Peterson, who will ask for a second term as Constable, will be op Posed in the Republican primaries for the nomination by L. E. Beach, a vet eran of the Spanish-American War. see Political g-osslp Is to the effect tha Will H. Daly. ex-City Commissioner, mho has been considered a probable candidate for County Commissioner, may yield to the wishes of friends and seek the Republican nomination for (sheriff acaiast T. M. Hurlburt. lncum bent of the office, who will seek elec tlon for the third term. see W. W. Hall, real estate man and ex County Clerk of Marion County, ex pecta next week to announce his can dldacy for County Clerk against th Incumbent of that office. Joseph W. Beverldge. Mr. Hall already Is plan nlng a vigorous campaign. . . William A. Carter, a lawyer with of. flees In the Northwestern Bank build log and a former member of the Ore gon legislature. Is seriously consider Ing becoming a candidate for Circuit Judge to succeed Judge Gantenbetn Mr. Carter waa candidate for the Re publican nomination for Governor fou years ago. m m m "Adams Withdraws- was the headline In a Portland paper announcing the retirement of John T. Adams, of Iowa, aa a candidate for Republican National committeeman. Ever since City Treas urer William Adama haa been busy ex plaining to those of his friends who read only the headlines In the news papers that thla particular headline did not refer to him or his candidacy for State Treasurer. Mr. Adama saya he Is still In the race without the slightest Idea of quitting. e e Another Senatorial possibility from Multnomah County is W. W. Banks, lawyer and president of the Multnomah Club. Mr. Banks Is nursing an ambl tlon to go to the Oregon Senate and assist In making laws. WENATCHEE HOTEL BURNS Interior of Cashmere and Furnish Ings Entirely Destroyed. WENATCHEE. Wash- Feb. St. Spe- rlal.) Flro early thla morning broke out in the Interior of. the Cashmere Hotel. It originated under the dining room floor and spread between tthe walls to the attic, ruining the entire Interior of the building with Its fur tshlngs. The property, worth 120.000 and artly Insured, belonged to Steve Bailey, of Seattle, and waa run by hla nephew. The hotel waa built in 10, and at that time waa the finest hotel between Seattle and Spokane. BAKER FOR WAR BUDGET Committee to Bo Named to Take Chart of All Drives. BAKER. Or.. Feb. 28. (Special.) Mayor Palmer, chairman of the coun- I of defense of Baker County, has called a meeting to be held at the Com mercial Club for tomorrow evening for he purpose of organising a central ar budget committee. It la proposed to select a committee o take charge of all drives for war unda and to estlmste a budget and hen make one or two drives a year to raise the whole amount. INQUIRY TO BE HELD Naval Tug Lost With 29 Men Declared Unseaworthy. REPORT ROUSES DANIELS Secretary of Navy Orders That Off! clal Investigation of Disaster Off Coast of Maryland Be Conducted. gating 38, have been landed at Swan sea. Mllford and Pembroke. None of the others has been heard from. Th missing include about seven female nurses. WASHINGTON. Feb. 28. Investiga tlon by a naval board of the sinking of the naval tug Cherokee with a loss of 29 lives was ordered today by Secre tary Daniels. The Secretary said he had called the attention of the board particularly to published reports that the Navy had been warned that the Cherokee was unseaworthy. Secretary Daniels disclosed that the Cherokee, when she foundered on Feb ruary SC. was en route to the Washing ton. D. C. Navy-yard to load guns and supplies for transportation to a South ern port. The missing officer or me Chero kee are: Lieutenant (Junior grade) E. D. Newell. U. 8. N. R. F.. the commanding officer. Naval Reserve force: Ensign E. Gehrlng. New York City. Ensign D. B. Baxley Jersey City, N. J. Boatswain Joseph F. JIcGoIdrlck, Perth Amboy. N. J. Quartermaster Herbert alartln .Bid- die. Philadelphia. Quartermaster Rldolph Frank Elbers, Brooklyn. N. T. Regular Navy: Chief Boatswain's Mate John Lennon, New York. PHILADELPHIA. Feb. 28. Bear-Ad- mlral Tappan. commandant of the Phil adelphia Navy-yard, has begun an in vestlgatlon Into the sinking of the na val tug Cherokee on orders from Wash Ington. Twenty-nine members of the crew. Including Junior Lieutenant Ed ward N. Newell, the commander of the vessel, were lost when it foundered off the Maryland coast. Lieutenant Newell s wife snd Mrs. Elvira Martin, wife of A. A. Martin, a second-class petty officer, who was res- rued from the sea after the disaster, declared here' today that their hus bands had repeatedly informed them the Cherokee was unseaworthy. "Many a time my husband told me the Cherokee wasn't safe," said Mrs. Newell. "He protested over and over again of the danger to hla crew to the navy-yard here and In New York. He said the boat wasn't fit to go up and down the Delaware River." Mrs. Martin gave out a letter from her husband, written yesterday, in hlch he reminded her of a prediction hac the Cherokee would go to the bot tom. "Remember, I told you she would Ink." Martin wrote. LONDON', Feb. 28. The British hos pital ship Glenart Castle had 182 per- ons on board, it Is said unofficially. hen she went down Tuesday In the Hri.tol rhunnH. Three psrtle., sirc-re- HEARST LIE IS EXPOSED Britain Still Bars Publisher's Pa pers and Service From Country TORONTO, Ont., Feb. 28. (By Ca nadian Press.) "There is no truth in the report that the ban has been lifted on the Hearst publications or the In ternatlonal News Service," said ColO' nel Chambers, chief press censor for Canada, in reply to a question on this point. "I am aware of the fact that a report of this kind has been circulated, but there is not a word of truth in It. The regulations are still being rigidly enforced, both in Great Britain and in Canada. The International News Service on February la sent out the following: dis paten: "WASHINGTON. Feb. 15. The Inter national News Service today was of ficially restored to the mails and cable privileges on all lines controlled by ureat urltain, its colonies and its al lies." CROP 50 PER CENT LARGER Baker County Agricultural Agent Slakes Survey of 1918 Wheat. BAKER. Or.. Feb. 28. (Special.) According to a survey of the wheat acreage in Baker County compiled by County Agricultural Agent Henry Tweed tonight, this county has SO per cent more wheat under cultivation in 1918 than it had last year. Mr. Tweed, who returned this even ing from a trip over the county with W. B. Oldham, grain expert, from the Government experiment station at Cor vallis. says that 80 per cent of the farmers in Baker County have or ganized for the purpose of eradicating grain diseases, and that the cleanest crop of wheat ever produced here should be shipped out this year. PRISONER'S RELEASE ASKED Friends Circulation Petition in Be half of Aberdeen Realty Dealer. ABERDEEN. Wash.. Feb. 28. (Spe cial.) A petition aiming to secure the release of Curtis Friedlander, Aberdeen realty dealer, held at Tacoma by Fed eral authorities oh charges of making unpatriotic remarks, was placed In cir culation today by a younger brother. If a large number of petitioners can be secured It will be forwarded to tha Federal Judge. The petition sets forth that none of the signers has heard Friedlander make unpatriotic remarks and that they know no reason why he should be interned. BURGLAR PUTS UP FIGHT Wife of Tacoma Carpenter Fright ened by "egro Under Bed. TACOMA. Wash., Feb. 28. (Special.) While his wife stood guard with a 38 caliber revolver, Theodore Bur- lough, a carpenter, engaged In a ter rific struggle with a giant negro, who r i i- ink!. The Third Liberty Loan Is Com ing Back It With Your Dollars. A FEW words with you about my $15 and $18 clothes. These clothes I offer you have not suf fered in quality on account of rising costs. My orders were placed long ago, at satis factory prices, therefore I can and do give you right now the old-time quality at no advance in price. So certain am I of the worth of these $15 and $18 clothes that I still maintain my offer of your money back if you're not satisfied with them in every particular. Men, here are scores of patterns; the range of sizes is complete, and there are models to please men of all tastes. If you want to spend less than $20 for clothes, you cannot do better than to buy these. h Shown on the Third Floor . : MofrisojiatR)HrtiO was discovered under the bed in the Burlough apartment early this morn- ng. After a noisy and violent fracas the negro crashed through a glass door panel and escaped. Awakened by a strong' wind blowing over her face, Mrs. Burlough found the window near her bed open.' She aroused her husband. Mr. Burlough closed the window and, finding the room ransacked, investigated to Bee if is valuables were missing. On ap- roaching the bed Mr. Burlough saw wo big eyes glaring at him under the bed. The struggle followed. Frank Williams, colored, was arrested later n the day and was identified by Bur lough as the burglar. Embezzler, Fugitive, Dead. BOSTON. Feb. 28. The death at Santa Fe, N. M., of Willard S. Allen, indicted here 15 years ago for embez zlement of $110,000 for mthe Preachers' Aid Society, a corporation formed to aid sick, infirm and aged members of the New England Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, was an nounced in a letter received here to day. Allen, who was treasurer of the Aid Society, disappeared in 1903 and although a country-wide search was made, he never was apprehended. Work on New Hotel Begun. CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma. Feb. 28. Ground was broken yesterday for the new $500,000 hotel to be built at Greene Park, Camp Lewis new amusement center. The first spadeful of dirt was turned over by A. O. Benson, of Seat tle and Portland, manager of the conn pany building the hotel. Murderer Gets Life Term. YORK, Neb., Feb. 28. Louis Wi Chobar was today sentenced to life) imprisonment for the murder of Albert Blender. Chobar's defense was the un-l written law. , Hlrsch Trial to Be Postponed. ATLANTA, Ga.. Feb. 28. Mrs. Mar garet Hirsch, indicted jointly with) J. W. Cook, who was convicted yes4 terday of attempted blackmail of Asal (i. Candler, millionaire Mayor of At- l&nta, will not be tried this week. Phone your want ad to The OregoJ ntan. Main 7070, A 6095. Kindly Try Some of 'These Recipes MANY WAYS TO USE CREAM OF BARLEY BAR LET BREAD. 4 cups whole wheat flour. 5 cups Cream of Barley. 1 cup water. .. 1 teaspoon salt. 1 cup milk. ' S tablespoon molasses. S rake yeast. Boll milk and water and cool; add mola.ses. salt and yeast mixed with a little cold water, attr tn flour and Cream of Karlcy which have been sifted together. Kned to a soft touch, adding more flour If neces sary. Cover and let rlne until the mixture Is double Its bulk. Kneed a second time, form Into leaves, place in well-greased pans and let rise a second time until dough has doubled Ita bulk. Bake In a hot oven from one-half to one hour, depending on aise of loaves. BARLEY JtlJH BREAD. 3 cups Cream of Barley. 2 cups cold water. Heat slowly, stirring until mush boils, cool it and add 2 level tea spoons salt, t teaspoons sugar, mixed with I compressed yeast cake. Stir and kneed Into mixture 3 cups wheat flour previously sifted. Put dough Into well -greased bread pans at once, set In warm place. When dou ble Its bulk bake one hour tn mod erate oven. BARLEY STOOX BREAD. cup salt pork cut In U-lnch cubes. 4 cups boiling water. 2 or t ears. 1 cup Cream of Barley. Cook salt pork In sauce pan until slightly brown, add water and when boiling sprinkle In Cream of Bar lev. tlrrlnc constantly. Cook In a dou ble boiler one hour, cool and add well-beaten eggs. Turn Into buttered dish and bake la a moderate oven hour. BARLEY MlFFINft I. 1 cup whole wheat flour. 1 cup Cream of Barley. , ' teaspoon salt. 2 teaspoons baking powder. 1 rag. 1 cups sour milk. 'i teaspoon aoda. - tablespoons drippings or lard. Flft flour. Cream of Barlev, salt and baking powder. Dissolve soda In a little cold water and add to our milk. Combine flour mixture and add sour milk, add beaten erg and melted fat. Fake in muffia pans in a moderate oven. WHATIS C P v. rr CREAM BARLBV1 EAM M ' TK TP" BARLEY? Kindly Try Some 4of These Recipes MANY WAYS TO USE CREAM OF BARLEY BLUEBERRY MUFFIN. Prepare batter same as for barley muffins 1, using 2 tablespoons less of - milk and 1 tablespoon more of sugar. Drain Juice from canned blueberries until there is one-half cup of berries. Add to batter and bake same as ordinary muffins. Note Any canned fruit may be substituted for blueberries. FRIED BARLEY BALLS. 1 quart boiling water, cups Cream of Barley. j '2, small eggs. y 1 teaspoon salt. 1 tablespoon butter. Cook Cream of Barley in boiling salted water at least one hour in double boiler. Cool, add butter and well-beaten eggs. Form into balls 1 inches in diameter, roll in flour and fry in deep fat. Serve with syrup and butter. - BARLEY POXE. 1 cup hot boiled hominy grits. 2 cups milk. 3 tablespoons butter. 2 eggs. .f teaspoon salt. 1 cup Cream of Barley. 2 teaspoons baking powder. Add to cooked hominy grits the milk and butter. Cool and add salt. Cream of Barley and baking powder sifted together, then the well-beaten eggs. Pour into buttered dish and bake in a moderate oven 45 min utes. Cut in triangular pieces and serve in dish in which baked. BARLEY MIFM.V3 IL 1 cup sour milk. 1 teaspoon sugar. li teaspoon aoua. 1 egg. '.3 teaspoon salt. 2 tablespoons melted faL S'i cups barley flour. 2 teaspoons baking powder. Beat f. add sugar, salt and soda dissolved In a little cold water. Sift flour and baking powder together and combine with first mixture. Add the melted fat and beat well. Bake In well-greased muffin pans until thoroughly done, about one-half hour depending upon the size of the oiui fina. DATE Ml FKI.S. Prepare batter aa for barlev muf fins. Add cup of dates, seeded and cut in small pieces. Not Kalslns. currants, figs, nuts, apples or any other fresh berries may be substituted for dates and make most delicious muffins. REAM OF BARLEY is a distinctive and delicious cereal manufactured from premium barley grown in certain sections of the Northwest which are particularly favored by climatic conditions for the culture of a perfect grain. Cream of Barley contains all the nutritious elements of barley, centuries famous as the principal food of conquering nation's and sturdy people. Cream of Barley is made from pure pearl barley, granulated, refined and re-refined for your use. It is thoroughly sterilized by sufficient heat to give it a delicious toasted flavor, which adds greatly to its popularity and made it one of the principal selling breakfast cereals throughout America. This process removes nearly all the moisture, so that in Cream of Barley you buy almost solid nutrition. For this reason most housewives call it the cereal that "goes farther." Cream of Barley is the easiest digested of all cereals its nutritive content is very high it's delicious and economical and every package consumed saves just that amount of wheat for armies overseas. Order a package today. FOR SALE BY ALL GOOD GROCERS. BARLEY SCOXES. . Pcup whole wheat flour. 1 cup Cream of Barley, teaspoon salt. lit teaspoon soda. 2 tablespoons lard orbeef drippings 2 teaspoons baking powder. Sift flour. Cream of Barley, ealt and baking powder together and work in lard with tips ot fingers or two knives. Dissolve soda in a little cold water and add to sour milk. Combine flour mixture and sour milk to form a soft dough. Turn out on a well-floured board, kneed slightly, roll to half-Inch thickness; cut in diamond shapes and bake in a hot oven. BARLEY TAPIOCA PUDDING. , 5 tablespoons pearl tapioca. 4 cups scalded milk. 4 tablespoons Cream of Barley, cup molasses. 1 teaspoon salt. 2 tablespoons sugar. 2 tablespoons butter. 1 cup milk. Soak tapioca two hours in cold water to cover. Pour scalded milk over Cream of Barley and boil three minutes. Add tapioca, drain from water, add molasses, butter, salt and sugar; turn into buttered pudding dish and pour over remaining milk, but do not stir. Bake in a moderate oven two hours. BARLEY PUDDING. 5 cups milk. , - i cup Cream of Barley. 2 cup molasses. Jj teaspoon salt. 2 tablespoons sugar. 1 teaspoon ginger. Scald the milk, pour this over the Cream of Barley and cook in double boiler 20 minutes; add molasses, salt, sugar and ginger. Pour Into buttered pudding dish and bake two hours In a slow oven. Serve either hot or cold with cream.