IBB DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY, MAY 4. 1914. page itve Spring Clothing for Men QUALITY, STYLE AND REASONABLE PRICES all c&rabine to make our Men's Clothing extremely popular. , Once a customer always a customer is what we have uppermost in mind when we sell you a Suit. . ! Satisfaction is Guaranteed With Every All-Wool Suit We Sell We sell Suits and Overcoats that bear inspection and stand the test of wear. Suits and Overcoats that have stamped in every inch of their appearance the fact that they' ARE THE LATEST and of the best and MOST DESIRABLE ALL WOOL FABRICS. Suits from $10.00 to $30.00. See Our Great $15.00 Special SPECIAL ATTENTION WOMEN'S SUITS MADE TO ORDER WITHOUT ANY EXTRA CHARGE, ANY STYLE YOU DESIRE. Skirt as wide or narrow as you please. Your measure to be taken in our Suit department. Women's Ready-to-Wear Garments All at Greatly Reduced Prices Nifty Suits has been the general remark about our Suit display. Our Suits have been compared with those shown in all the Pacific coast large cities and it has been stated several times that our's were equally as smart as those shown ,in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Portland. We now of fer them at Greatly Reduced Prices Lack of room necessitates that every Suit, Coat, Dress, be out of our department at the close of each season. THINK OF GETTING AN ALL WOOL SUMMER LINED SUIT FOR ONLY $8.00. SUITS FROM $18.00 TO $50.00. CROPS ROT IN FELDS F( Frank Terries Bays Ecal Advancement Only Follows Good Roads. COMPARES OREGON LANES WITH THOSE IN EUROPE Sam Hill Says That Honey Properly Spent on Good Koadf Returns 00 Per Cent Men's Shoes You need a new pair to go with that Spring Suit and we can fit you out with as nobby a Shoe as you have seen in many a day. Comfort and durability, as well as fine appearance, are charac teristics of these Shoes. PRICES REASONABLE. tmmmmmmmmsmmsmsmswmsmmmsmmamsmsmmammm DEMONSTRATOR OF McCALL PATTERNS HERE FRIDAY, MAY 8. Free Free 500 McCall Doll Patterns To be given away. A dress pattern FREE for her doll to every little girl that comes to our Pattern Department on MAY 8TH. ill GOVERNOR WEST AND STATE TREASURER KAY WILL TAKE PART IN EXERCISES. University of Oregon, Eugene, May 4, Arrangements for the seventh an nual junior week-end, beginning Wed nesday, May 6, are rapidly being com pleted, and specially invited guest from all over the state will be arriv ing shortly. Graduate Munnprv Tlenn If Vl.n 'who is in general charge of tho week- ona arrangemeuts, piedicta tnat the number of visitors this year will totnl 1,000, The. inter-scholastic track meet, to bo held on Saturday, Muy 9, will itself bring 2"0 track 'athletes, repre irnting practically every high school in Oregon. From tho schools in eastern Oregon, tho expenses of the men taking first or second place in any event, will be paid by the student body of the uni versity; thoso in the western section will be permitted to semi four repre sentatives each with all expenses paid. Tho woek-end program that has been arranged is as follows: Wednesday, May 6. Baseball University of Oregon vs. University of Washington. Thursday, May 7. 1:30 Formal opening parade. 3:45 Baseball University of Ore gon vs. University of Washington. 8:00 p. m. Stato intorscholastie de bating championship Oregon (ilv high school vs. Pendleton high school. Friday, May 8. Morning University day work by university men. Noon Picnic luncheon on campus bv university women for all members of tho university nnd their guests. Formal groundbreaking oxcrcise for addition to library building. Ad dresses by Oovernor West, State Treas urer Kay and lion. S. II. Friendly. 2:30 p. in. Annual inter-collegiate track meet, Oregon Agricultural college vs. University of Oregou. H:30 p. m. Annual senior class plav, "Tho Prof and oih," Eugene the ater. Saturday, May 9. 8:30 Mcoting of all intor-seholaslic track men nt men's gymnasium. 0:110 Preliminaries for interscholas tic meet, Kincaid field. 1:30 Annual freshman burning, Kincaid field. uu-r-iinais, Inter-scholastic track That crops hftvo rotted in the fields for want of (rood roads by which to transport them to markets where good prices awaited, was one of the pointed and significant statements of Frank Terrace, good roads booster of King county, Wash., who made the principal address at the good roads meeting, held at the Urand opera house Satur day afternoon and evening. Mr. Ter race showed that the good roads qucs tion was an eminently practical one for the farmer, who is required to haul his produce to mnrkots or to points whore transportation' facilities are to be had. Real advancement, in his opinion, followed in the wake of the construction of' good roads, while pros perity was inoro dependent npou them than the farmer people were really aware of. It was when Mr. Terrnco took a trip to hurope and saw the broad, smooth highways that led through the country districts t unt he bocame a staunch sup. porter of good roads, and determined to do all he could to build highwavs in his own eountn'. He said ho bowed his head in shamo when ho thought of tho roads in Amorica in comparison with those of Europe. Governor Vest, who is a member of the Oregon state highway commission, j presided at the meetings. Otnor spenk jers besides Mr. Terraeo were Ham Hill, j of Marybill, Washington, and Samuel i Lancaster, of Portland, who has eliarge of the Multnomah county road work. I Mr. Lancaster's talk -doalt with his I personal experience in building good ' roads in a county in Tennessee ami the ! effect it had on tho prosperity of that part of the country. He showed how ! from ono of the poorest this county be came one of the wealthiest, j Sam Hill declared that tho construc tion of good roads was svnonvnious meet. with service, to ono's country and state. 8:00 Annual junior "prom " men's i "You have men here," he added, 'gymnasium. ' "who will turn your mud holes into! 8:00 "Stag smokeries smoker" goou nignways ir you bRck them up j lor all men not attonding "Prom." and givo them the oportiiiiity. They Tho committee in charge of the jun won't steal the money if they do, I lor "From" Saturday evoninir are ex- I iyu ii iiinitu main worn n out on uio ecwiig 10u couples at the dance, .roads in another fashion." ' Among the patrons' and patronesses At tho evening meeting Oovernor that have boen chosen arc! Oovernor ' West presented Frank Terrace with a and Mrs. Oswald West; Prof, and Mrs. j gold watch as a token of recognition John F. Bovnrd; Trof. and Mrs. K. e! of his work in boosting good toads b.vl('ou; Trof. and Mis. O. E. Stafford; j tho friends of permanent highways in : Prof, and Mrs. W. P. Boynton Mr. mis siucc. jar. iern.ee repuea ny say- jsnu .urs. Hugo liezdok, and Miss Ruth, green cap- inMltlltttttttlttn t 4ft ft tttf CnnlPB-nv L has an enlwted strength of The Markets 1 during the last 10 days. M LOCAL WHOLESALE MARKET. Hay, Timothy .$15.0f. Clover, per ton $1011 . Oats and vetch $13 "Wheat, per bushel' 90e Bran, per ton $27.00 Shorts. Der ton , JU.uu Oats, per bushel Chittim Bark, per lb Cheat, per ton Potatoes, per cwt .... Onions Batter and Eggs. Butterfat. tier lb., f. o. b. Salem....23c Creamery butter, per Eggs . .32 41i5c $13.00 4050c ..$3.25 sack lb. 25c 17 Poultry, Hens, per lb Boosters, per lb i Bteers. Steers . Cows, per cwt . Hogs, fat, per Stock hogs, per lb Ewes, per lb Spring Iambs, per lb .. Veal, according to 14-i 8.J 77ii 5e 7(ffi8c 6lb7e .. .a.5c GRASSHOPPER CONTROL BY THE HOPPER-DOZER 6c quality 1111& i Felts. Dry, per lb ....... Salted country pelts, each .. .C5c$l Lamb pelts, each . 25: NEWS ITEMS FROM "ascd by A. L. Hall, recently of Gol- FOLS COUNTY beat denuaie, wasn. The Woodmen lodge has suspended Dallas, Ore., May 4. Jenning lodge, A. F. & A. M., will dedicate itB new hall on, the evening of May 22. Invi tations will be sent to the grand lodge its meetings until next fall. This cus tom is followed every summer. Work of assessing the property of PolK county was completed this week E. officers and all Masonic lodges in the anj the field deputies have turned in v'illamette valley. Bishop U. F. Swcngle, who has been seriously ill in this city since the evangelical conference here the first woek in April, has recovered and left Friday for his home in Harrisburg, Pa. Mo9t of the veterans . of the Civil war residing in Dullas and vicinity have contemplated vacancies in other Polk county towns, will bo held at the court honse, Dallas, May 23. Miss Ruth Shaw and Ralph Hillary, well known young reople of Dallas, secured a marriage license here last Saturday and were married in Port land, where they wiil make their home. Tho -old soldiers of Dallas have com pleted arrangements for the observance of Memorial day. The New Bcott hotel has been pur- He most popular tea in tea drinking countries England's favorite for over 7U years their blanks to County Assessor F. Meyer. ' A. W. Bennett has purchased tho U. K. barbor shop from T. W. Harris. County Health Offieer F. B. Mc- Callon reports that there is not now a single ' case of contagions disease in Polk county. - Work was commenced on the Dallas hospital Tuesday morning. The new building is to be a frame one, two stories and a full basement. There will be two wards and eight private rooms, capacity for 20 beds. It will have a large, light operating room and will be thoroughly modern in every way. James Alfred Hall and Mrs. James Dowtrey left here the first of the week for San Francisco to accept an en gagement on the Orphenm circuit. Thor will put on a military musical sketch. On Wednesday, May 13, the annual meeting of group 2 of the State Bank ers' association, comprising the coun ties of Marion, Linn, Benton, Polk and Lincoln, will bo held in this city. A midday banquet will be served by the local bankers to the visiting delegates. The state railroad commissioners were in Dallas Wednesday making an appraisement of the physical -valuation of the Dallas Water company, owned by IL V. Gates of Portland, for guid ance in deciding the ease of the city of Dallas vs. Gate for a reduction of water rate. This week Captain Conrad Stafria, Oregon national guard, received com plete equipment Sox M .additional man. Oregon Agricultural College, Corval lis, Ore., May 4. Grasshoppers feed normally on the native grasses. Where forage crops are planted, the hoppers readily adapt themselves to the new food. If an abundance of young hop pers is observed in the spring, the fields and grasslands where they occur should be dragged with a hbppor-dozer. ! This hopper-dozer is a long, shallow galvanized or wooden trough, which is filled with crude oil and along the back foct high. When it is dragged through the field, the hoppers attempt to jump over it. They strike against the back stop and fall into the crude oil. riiirning over the grass lands before the hoppers get their wings is tome times practical. The poison bran mash is an effec tive poison for grasshoppers, and has been used successfully for their con trol in a great number of cases. Be sure to add the salt, since grasshop pers appear .especially fond of this ma terial. Broadcast tho mash over an infected field or sow in drill rows at right angles to their course of travel, as they enter the field. The poison bran is prepared as follows: Coarse bran, Id pounds; Paris green, pound; salt, 2 ounces; cheap syrup, 1 quart; warm water to make a coarse, crumbly mash. Do not get the mash sloppy. It should fall apart readily in the' hand after pressing together. If lead arse nate is used instead of Paris green, increase the amount one-half. The quantity given is sufficient to broad cast over one acre, or scattered in drill rows, will extend over a greater area. These directions ato furnished by A. L. Lovett, specialist in crop-pest in sects at the Oregon Agricultural Col lege. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Warranty Deeds. A I Coolidge & Co to E Wood, 4.13 acres near Silverton. $100. V Kohler to H Kohler and wifo, 10 acres Sec 4 T 0 8 K 1 W. $10. J Kohler to H Kohler and wife, 10 acres Sec 4 T 6 S fi 1 W. $1. P Eilian et ux to II Kohler et ux, 1 A Sec 3 and T 0 S R 1 W. $-.00. Salem Bank & Trust Co to II L Clark, L 8 B 3 Burlington Add Salem. $10. L Wood et ux, to C E Ross, .13 A near Silverton. $10. E'Kohler et ux to J Kohler, 10 A Sec 4 T 6 S R 1 W. $1. 'MATTY" WILL NOT BE TRADED TO ST. LOUIS SOCIALIST MEMBER LEAVES SCANDINAVIAN CABINET jing that tho movement was eloso to his heart and that he wanted all the farm ers to realise that their prosperity was closely connected with good roads. "In asking you to build good roads, tflul Mr. Hill at the evening meeting, after he had paid a tribute to the work of Governor West in using convicts on tho roads, "I am morcly asking you to do yourselves a favor and mnke an investment that will return fl'c hun dred fold." Mr. Hill elbscuVby stating that ho did not know of any capital city in tho union surpassing Salem in benuv. Views of good roads in all partB of the world wero shown and im pressed vividly and in a practical man ner tho beauty nnd usefulness of per manent highways. Thoro was a large Christianian, Norway,, May 4. A serins political crisis has boon precipi tated in Norway by tho resignation of J. C'astberg as minister of commerce i attendance at both meetings of peoplo and industry. Against the protest of the socialists in tho storthing, the radical cabinet, of Vtbich Custberg wnB a member, decided to prohibit organi zation or strikes bv government em ployes, like thoso in the postal, tele graph, telephone and railroad services, and to provide compulsory arbitration for all. other workers. The socialists say if this legislation pnsues they will declare a general strike. Cnstberg resigned. The situation is complicated with tho national defense issue. Premier Knit sen wants the army nnd navy greatly strengthened. Not I'lily tho socialists, but a large proportion of the other pro pressive elements oppose him. who arc interested in tho advancement of good roads throughout tho stuto of Oregon, Emperor Francis Joseph Coughs. Vienna, May 4. It was officially bulletined today that Emperor Francis Joseph hnd had a severe fit of cough ing, but that his general condition was satisfactory. It was generally believed however that his illness wag alarming ly prolonged. Gnppy. Tho first spadeful of sod for the new $100,000 administration building tit is to be erected on tho campus during the cpming summer, 'will be turned by Hon. S. II. Friendly, member of tho university -of regents, on uni versity day of the coining junior week end. Tho ground-breaking exercises will occur at 11:30 a. in. Friday. After Mr. Friendly has tinned over the first spadeful of earth, everyone present will bo given nn opportunity to do like wise. According to the arrangements that hnvo been made by tho committee in chnrgo of the exercises, A stand will be built nonr tho library to accommo date the spectators. Tho ground-breaking exercises in clude addresses by Governor Oswnld Ve.it, 'State Treasurer Thomns B. Kay, lion. S. H. Friendly, Dean John Strau'b, John Veatch, president of the Univer sity of Oregon Alumni association, and Vernon T. Motschenbachcr, president of tho student bodv. A woman 's matrimonial experience seldom causes her to advise her daugh ter to marry a man patterned after her father. , McCLURE'S MILE RUN IS NOT RECOGNIZED New York, May 4, Reports that Christy Mathewson was to be traded to St. Louis Cardinals and succeed Miller Huggins H the clubs manager were flatly denied here today by John B. Foster, an official of the New York Giants. The report were that Ivy Wingo and Lee Magoe were to be traded to New York for Mathewson. DIED. Stump At the family home at 660 East Davis street, Portland, on May 3, 1914, A. M. Stump, who was a form er resident of Salem and has many friends in this city. The May "White Sales" May is set aside by many stores as thp month for their Spring white sales. The merchandise offered in these events is of a kind and character that appeals to every woman. The opportunity these sales offer to replenish her wardrode is one she does not want to overlook. By reading the advertising in The Journal, wise women keep posted on what the different stores are doing. It saves time and very often money to "shop around" through the newspapers befbre making the tour of the stores themselves; " - The milo run record of 4 minutes and 20 seconds made by Walter McClure of the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club track and field team in tho dual meet between the "winged M" and the University of Oregon athletes on Sat urday, April 25, will be thrown into j the discatrds. According to a letter received by George Bcrtz, chairman of the Pacific Northwest Association record commit-, tee, the course was 8 feet short. No groat amount of care was taken when the course was laid out before tho meet and after the event was run, it wots found that the course was 8 feet sby of the full distance. Unless the course was re-measured before Floyd Paine established the time of 9 minutes 39 3-5 seconds for the two-mile run this record will also be thrown into the discards. Military Day O. A. C. MAY 8th, 1914 LOW ROUND TRIP FARES To Corvallis Va the i to r'su N S EtV I OGOENftSHASTAl I I t ROUTES I I OREGON FROSH WIN. Oregon Agricultural College, Corval-1 lis, Or., May 3. The University of( Oregon freshmen took revenge on the. O. A. O. "rocks" yesterday afternoon for the beating the former gave them , in baseball in the morning by coming out on top. in the track meet on the local campus this afternoon, by a score of 78'i to 52'. ' The meet was replete with thrills,' the two mile run and the .javelin throw being very spectacular. Fair weather j and a good track made the meet A success. .. W say just as mean things abont others as they do about us, but, of course, that is altogether different. 'The Exposition Line 1913. For the above occasion tickets will be "old May 7th nnd 8th from all points on tho Southern Pacific Main Line and Branches between Portland and Eugene; also from points on the, C. & E. Yaquiua to Detroit; also from points on the P. E. & E. Eugene to Corvallis. Final return limit May 11, 1914. ' SEE THE STUDENTS DRILL! Individual Drill . Platoon Drill Company Drill ' Brigade Drill Regimental Drill Full particulars, with train chelule, etc., from any 8. P., C. & E. or ; P. B, & E. Agent. .. ... ,,...1 J..UL John M. Scott, Gen' I Passenger Agt, Portland, (he.