PAQE FIVE 1 ?7 1 WOMEN'S SUITS BELOW COST. Women's and Misses Coats $3.75 and Up. All at reduced prices. ! Bed Spreads I $1.50 Bed Spreads.. $1.29 t $1.75 Bed Spreads., $1.49 J $1.00 Dress Shirts . : For Men black and 'white stripes, Now 79c. Sale Commences 9 a. m. v. Saturday Special 5 5 & X $2.50 Bed Spreads.. $1.99 X $3.00 Bed Spreads.. $2.25 I- : X $4.00 Mercerized Middy $2.50 Work Pants $2.10 , THE DAILY PATTTAIi JOURNAL, SALEM, OEEGOM, FRIDAY, MAY 8, 191. Children's . Dresses 4 65c dresses 56c 75c Dresses 68c $1.00 Dresses 89c $1.25 Dresses 99c $1.50 Dresses $1.29 X Dresses, now $3.00 $2.00 Work Pants $1.65 X i - 50c Silk Boot Hosiery i White, Tan and Black, Shoes Shoesvalues from $3.00 to $5.00 (not the latest) Now 95c per pair. t Now 38c Pair. $1.75 Dresses $1.49 $2.25 Dresses $1.99 I $3.00 Dresses $2.49 Women's Dresses .Women's Dresses, all above $15.00, in silk and wool, now 20 Less. 75c Union Suits 49c 50c Union Suits 35c Women's fine ribbed cot ton Union Suits with short sleeves and wide Empire trimmed Pants. Also high neck, Ions; sleeves and ankle pants or tight knee. 75c Union Suits ... 49c 50c Union Suits 35c Women's 25c Vests and Pants 19c each. Of fine ribbed cotton, all styles, 19ceach. Saturday Only The Markets Poultry. Hens, per lb U-s The barley crop is promising to be the banner one for the coast. The California crop is estimated at from 750,000 to 800,000" tons and some place it even higher. The yield for the t oast is placed- at the lowest estimate at a million tons. Conditions - were never better, and in consequence the prices are shading off slightly. Wheat has no changes either in crop estimates or prices. There is a strong demand for strawberries, and while the supply is large the quality of much of it is poor. California berries are still arriv ing plentifully, but their day is about over the far superior berry of Oregon gradually increasing and next week it will bo in quantity to supply all de mands. The prune market is shading off in prices as, crop shortage is found to be exaggerated. There is a short crop, but it will bo better than the first reports intimated. Cheese prices are lower, and stock is accumulating. Sugar has an upward tendency and another 10 cent advance is due. Vege tables are in good supply notwithstand ing a strong demand for them and a busy market. The Department of Agriculture at Washington, predicts the greatest wheat crop ever grown in the United States. Estimates given out arc none below 630,000,000 bushels. Roosters, per lb ........... Steers. Steers, '. Cows, per ewt Hogs, fat, per Stock hogs, per lb Ewes, . per lb. Spring lambs, per lb 8.5 77 .'..6fic - 7(&8c ,.. ...6'ilD7o r.Si ..- 6c Veal, according to quality 1111 Pelts. Dry, per lb 8e Salted country pelts, each 05c$l Lamb pelts, eaoh, .......23i PORTLAND MARKETS. Portlaud, Or., May 8. Today's mar ketsWheatClub, 90c; bluestem, 94c. Oats No. 1, white feed, $22.30; gray, $22. Barley Brewing, $21; feed, $20. Hogs Best live, $8.60. Prime steers, ifi; fancy cows, $7; best calves, $0; spring lambs, $7 7.30; yearling lambs, $6.50. Butter City creamery, 23c. Eggs Selected candled local, extras, 20i.fij21c. Hens, 1516c; Iroilers, 23(a27e; geese, 12c. Wool 1014 clip, Willamette vallev, If E Harry O. McCain, of Topeka, Kansas, a Willamette U Graduate, at the Head, WILL SPEAK IN EVEET TOWN IN ENTIEE STATE Kansas will have one tiitn ot Uie cn-, i-on,.. eastern Oregon. 12S19U,a. tire crop, or about 133,000,000, which) lions Choice, l-t(Vi 17c. ia 45,000,000 bushels more than last ( " . year, and Oklahoma will turn out 30,. rRAVfiTRan markets 000,000 or a 7,000,0() more .than in j oSAN, rBANCISOO MARKETS 1913. The Oregon crop is estimated; pn Francisco, May 8. Wheat, club St. 15.200.000 bushels and Washington l-65i Northern bluestem l.io&$1.80; Washington and California to be In cluded In Itinerary of Able Speakers. Harry G. McCain, extension secre tary of the Temperance Society of tho Methodist church, with headquarters at Topeka, Kansas, has been in tho city for several days preparing for the whirlwind prohibition campaign that is going to be carried on in the next few months throughout the states of Ore-1 gon, Washington and Cnlitorma for tho purpose of making those states "dry" territory. Mr. McCain, who is an old Willamette University student, gradu ated from Northwestern University last year and has since taken up the active work of campaigning for prohi bition. Either he or Dr. Clarence True Wilson, general secretary, will be on the coast during the summer. Their headquarters on the Pacific coast is in the Couch building, Portland. 33,000,000. LOCAL WHOLESALE MARKET. Hay, Timothy .$15.0C Clover, per ton - - $1011 Oats and vetch .... Wheat. Tier bushol Bran, per ton ,. ."uil9c; loung Shorts, per ton - j.uu , tancy 19c. Oats, per bushel - -32 j Potatoes, per ctl., Oregon Burbanks Chittim Bark, per lb 41,i5c, 85e(l$l; Washington stock 60c(70c; Cheat. Der ton $13.00 California delta stock whites 50c(S From the Portland headquarters the Turkey Bed $1.65(51.70; Red Russian ' mpwn lor tne tnree Etales will be 1.62: Forty Fold 1.65(5.$1.67(.. conducted. The society has authorized Barlev. choice- feed 1.6l(tt$1.02y.. tlie Purc2a8e a campaign automobile . - 1 . . . i. . ' TOhW'h ni l onnlun tha in.aban Butter, extras 23 Vie: prime firsts 23c; firsts 23c. Et?2S. extras 23c: firsts 22c; select - $13 ; pullets 21c. . 90c i Cheese. Oreeon twins 16c: do triolets America li'c; storage Potatoea, per cwt Onions 4050c ; $3.25 sack! Butter and Eggs. Butterfat, per lb., f. o. b. Salem....23c ; Creamery butter, per lb. 25c j Etrtrn - 17c1 new potatoes per to so into the towns and villages where there is no railroad communication. Every logging camp on the Pacific coast, ev ery small town, every precinct, in fact every nook and crannie where there is a possible voter, will be canvassed by the prohibition forces in this campaign. In all these places campaign literature will be distributed. ' Mr. McCain brought with him when BIQ EATERS GET Take a Glass of Salts Before Breakfast If Tour Back Hurts or Bladder Is Troubling You. No man or woman who eats meat re gularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get slug gish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, head aches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizzi ness, sleeplessness and urinary disprdcrs come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you full a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi ment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop sating meat and get about four ounces of .Tad Salts -from any pharmacy; tako a table spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kid neys will act fine. This famous salts is made from tho acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithin, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neu tralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should tako now and then to keep tho kidneys clean and nctive and -tho blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications. NICODEMUS KILLS WRONG MAN BY MISTAKE he came from the east half a million HHt Mt EL GLO-STO VO iac; sweets .ou; r.,l 1 l.f7 "H'.n Onions, per ctl., Oregon ?-i((i4.o. ... .i.v.,,.!! mo emu Oranges per box, new navels fancy Ipaign on the coast. Prominent business $2a2.40; do choice l(a$1.50; tanger- men from Topeka and other Kansas ines 75(o.$1.23. " cities are to be brought here to Bpeak - the interests of the '" dry" cam- Among them are E. H. Ander- At Half Price $2.50 May 11 to 16 only Hot Point Week HAVE ONE EESEEVED AT paign, ! son, general agent of the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, a brother of Bishop Anderson of the T j Methodist church, and Judge Manford ccuuuuover, or uarner., jtvansas, a prom inent Democrat of the state. T Among other things, the society is I to guarante the traveling expenses of tne 700 Aletnouist ministers in this territory who will especially, prepare and do campaign work in their own i counties. The active campaign is now T ion and engagements for speakers are I ! being'made. - - I ext week. Mr.. McCain will be in Humboldt county, California, for a ; twM-day tour speaking from the auto- moiine. men ne will drop to Los An geles for several meetings which are already advertised. While the remote villages and towns will be reached by automobile, the big cities will be can vassed precinct by precinet. UPTON SINCLAIR PREPARES TO GO TO STRIKE DISTRICT 216 North Commercial St LockwoocPs New York, May 6. Upton Sinclair was preparing today to go to Colorado to work in the interacts of the striking coal miners there. The picketing of the Rockefeller officer by men and women wearing mourning for the strik en who have been killed wi contin ued here. Denver, Colo., May 8. J. ('. Bulger, the soldier of fortune,, who shpt L. F. Nicodemug Wednesday night, following a quarrel the former had had with Hugh Clark in the lobby of Nicodemus'. hotel, the Savoy, factd a murder charge today. Nicodemos died last night and the district attorney was preparing the in formation on which Bulger will bo turned over by the city police to the county authorities t-j be tried for his life. The police were convinced that the prisoner, muddled by drink, killed Nicodemus by mistake for Clark. Doctors Edward Lazcll and G. L. Monson examined Bulger, and it was believed he would plead insanity. "1 am inexpressibly sorry," he said when told Nicodemus .was dead. "He was a good friend of mine." ' SPECIAL TRAIN RUSHES . .. DOCTORS TO BEDSIDE .-..VHV- TTi . ! m m m Jm-W. .M. w-. V . mm U" j m i 7 Rachnel Marshall's new play, "Tho Traffic," which for the post several months has boon attracting crowded audiences to tho Howard Theatre, Chicago, will bo presented at tho Clrand Opera House tomorrow night. No play that has been given on the American Btngo in tho last ten years li us caused tho comment and discussion -aroused by Miss Marshall's daring and dramatic, revelation of the conditions attending tho whito slave traffic. In "The Traffic" Miss Marshall disguises nothing, dodges nothing, distorts nothing, spores neither the futile sensibilities of tho "well-wishers" of charity, correction and social uplift; nor tho nanty-nico cxdudveness of tho well-meaning theorists. " She is daring, in fact, almost brutally so, in everything she si't.-i for in "Tim Traffic," and her phy haa prov ed to be one of a serious purpose a drama sufficiently bold to arouse enough public interest to further an in vestigation, which has already been started into tho damning commerce in girls. There is satisfaction in cooking when you use It removes dozens of worries from the mind of the cook. This is the way an excellent cook prepares .CORN FRITTERS. Tak pint pf erpil corn (or a can of sweet corn whn rcn corn la out of season), three cans, two tobleepoonfula of milk, one tnble poonnil of melted Cotloleno, and one and a quarter tenspoens (level) of anlt. First beat the otisa well, adding the corn bv des-reea, also the milk and Cottolcnet thicken with enough flour to hold them together, first adding a teaspoonrul of baking powder to the Hour. Have ready a kettla of hot Cottolene and drop the com from a spoon Into It and ' fry to a light brown. These fritters are also good fried la Cottolen tha some as one would fry eggs, . Any practical housewife will at once appreciate the wholesomeness and economy of this pure cooking fat Remember always to use one-third less Cottolene than you would of butter or lard. Order Cottolene today from your grocer. Also send to us for ou FREE Cook Book, HOME HELPS, writ ten by Mrs. Helen Armstrong, Mrs. Lincoln and other cooking authorities. UEEK FAIRRANKccWanyI CHICAGO li 'Vi " Nil 11 1 1 1 i i . tiili'i'! ' -vi ill11 if I "..nl II, A M i& ft i Vw'i 1 11; I' " M i J U 1 KB V-T 0 IT r !i:lilllliiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinilli!llll:'ll liii II l J X . . ti't"' (' i I : il i-" ii liiu.' 'i. I K.... int.. '''i: !"- J I l! i i: 5.1 Ill i II'" ' J U 1 'I , iPJ T. T nZ?m '....".. Jill . I tij s-.'it -:. , j "WiffiH-jt.n Recipe Department By BETSY WADB. ' Hot Cakos li.j cups milk; 1 eg?; j teaspoon salt; 1 tablespoon sugar; cups sifted flour; 2 teaspoons Cres- ocnt Baking Towder. Whmi bakeil : serve immediately with Mapleiiio syrup. i ; jj ) Reno, Jfev., May &. A special train, chartered by George ' Wingfielj, the multi-mUlionarVe mining man, carrying Dr. E. C. Fleishman nd Dr. i'raneis B. Wakefield, arrived here from Han Francisco at 8:15 a. m. today. The physician were- rushed in an automo bile to the Vingfield home, where Mrs. Wingfield is reported in a serious con dition, following the birth Sunday night of a eon. Mrs. Winirtield formerly was Miss Maude M unlock of San Francisco, j MOUNTAINS TO THE THIRD AND FOUBTH GENERATION Iluttrated lecture by Prof. C. F. Stafford. Public Library Auditorium Tonight, 8 o'C'lotk, , Free. Talk of depression is largely politi Whole, Wheat Biscuit 2 cups whole wheat flour; pinch salt; 1 teaspoon Crescent Baking powder; 2 tablespoons butter; 1 egg; about 1 cup milk. Hi ft together flour, salt and baking powder; rub in the butter and mix to a light dough with the egg and milk, toll out on a floured board, cut into bis"uit, and bake about fifteen minutes in a hot oven, Graham Muffins 1 cups graham flour; 1 tablespoon brown sugar; 1 tea spoon salt; 2 teaspoons Crescent Bak ing Powder: 1 ens: 1 tdnt milk, bift together graham floi-r, sugar, salt and powder; add beaten egg and milk; mix into batter like pound cake. Uako in muffin pans, well greased, two-thirds full. Bake fifteen minutes. Cinnamon Buns ! pint flour; 1 tablespoon salt; 1 heaping teaspoon Crescent Baking Powder; 2 tablespoons butter. baking powder. Ku'o in butter and wet with enough milk to make soft douh. ; Koll out one half -inch thick, spread with soft butter, si.gar aud powdered cinnamon. Koll like jelly roll, cut in inch thick slices, plnee close together on greased pan and bnko in moderate! OVill, , ' Waffles 1 cups flour; 1-3 teaspoon salt; 1 teaspoon s.igar; 2 teaspoons Crescent liaking Powder; 1-3 cup but ter. Add throe eggj, whites and yolks : beaten separately, and sufficient milk to mcko n thin batter. Cook in hot greased waiflo-irons. ' Never Fail Biscuits 1 quart flour; 1 teaspoon Hilt; 2 heaping teaspoons Crescent Unking Powder; 1 tablospoon i rhortening. Mix flour, salt pd baking : powder together well, then mix in the ! rhortening and enough sweet milk to make, a soft dough. Koll out ligntly ona inch thick. Hake in a moderately heated oven. Can be baked at ones Fads to Remember That "CRESCENT" leavens under the sam. conditions as any Bak ing Powder, but let your baking stand five or ten minutes after mixing and you get Extra Fine Results Orescent Mf?. Co., Seattle, Wn. GET IT FROM YOUR GROCER 25c per lb. AS Sift together flou', sugar, salt and; or let stand several hours. Kentucky Cream Drop Biscuits l'i cups flour; V tea.' poo n salt; 1 cup. rwect or sour cream; 1 heaping tea spoon Crescent Baking Powder. Drop on buttered pan and bake in a moder ate oven. t MMMHMt