THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OBEOON, THUBSDAY, MAT 14, 1914. PAGE Tr?n The All Wool Suit That Was , Made Just For You la easy to find in our large and com- plete assortment of up-to-d ate Men'i Clothing. The rea son that it will look as though it was made for youis that our clothing is so splendidly tail ored, especially about the collar and shoulders. If you appreciate a p er f e c t fitting, handsomely styled and highly qual ified suit at a price well within your means, come in for I If j: I f f MM . and shoulders. If I mim itiedsuitataprice l ' , well, within your V Z&m&jr s . means, come in for vMf Wmf ' a "try on" of any Mi , HBof our smart spring ' styles. . I ; I For Well Dressed Men-Shoes Jy j1 that Look Well, Wear Well J j Vj I and Feel comfortable. AH J y J J I moderately priced. - V'W " ' I M. S. HUGHES TO DELIVER Schedule of Exercises for Commenea - meet Days at Willamette Dal. . yersity Is Out FULTON WILL DELIVEB LAW COLLEGE ORATION Diplomas will lie Presented at First Methodist Church on Friday, June 13. . Although the arrangements for the different Willamette University com mencement exerciser are far from be ing completed, they have been worked The Markets 4 MM 23e; firsts, 23e. .Lggs fcxtras, zi're.; firsts, zdc; se lect pullets, 21 Vic Cheese Oregon twins and triplets and Young America, 16c; new Cali fornia flats, 12(jl3y!c; Young Amer ica, lolftla'ic; eastern, 18()20c. Oronges, per box New navels, $1 1.50; tangerines, 75c$1.23; Valencies, fancy, $2(ji2.50. Slackness ofs demnnd for wheat has caused a slump in prices, and club was quoted yesterday at 88 eents and even below that. The barley and oat mar kets are quiet, with prices tending downward. Butter was given a 2 cent lift this morning, which is due in a measure to the large amount of cream used in the ice cream business. Cheese prices will, it is expected, be again reduced shortly and a 15-cent price is looked for. The strawberry market is overstocked. Four hundred crates of Oregons were received at Portland yesterday, -nd this means 'there will be no more from California. There's little doing In hops, but- the sale of the McKay lot at St. Paul, to Harris, at 15 cents was reported yester day. A few inquiries for new crop con tracts at 15 cents are being made. SEATTLE MARKETS. LOCAL WHOLESALE MARKETS. Hay, timothy .....$15.00 Clover, per ion $10(5)11 Oats and vetch $13.50 Wheat, per bushel :...90c Bran, per ton . $27.00 Shorts, per ton $29.00 Oats, per bushel 32c Chittim bark, per lb ii,(S5e Cheat, per ton $13.00 Potatoes, per cwt 4050c Ontons, sack $3.25 Butter and Eggs. Butterfat, per lb., f.o.b. Salem 23c Creamery butter, per lb. 25c Eggs le Poultry. Hens, per lb. -12jc Roosters, per lb... 8c steers. Steers Cows, per cwt Hogs, fat, per lb. Stock hogs, per lb. i-wes, per lb. 7(S8c 5fS6c 78c ...6'..7c 5c Spring lambs, per lb 6c Veal, according to quality ..ll12Vjc Felts. Dry, per lb. . 8c Baited country pelts, eacn........ooc(a ti La nil) pelts, each ...2oc ft Skin ot Beauty is a'Joy Foreva D 8. T. FELIX COCRAUD'S ORIENTAL CREAM OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIES 3 ' S J 2 Remote Tan, Flnpla i ne aeiecuon, ' ha Etoca tLe tat of N ypirm. uia Is to birmieM wi Ustlttcbeiurtl 1 pnir!7 tuftd Accept oo eoauUF frit of iiUili-n nsunc. T L. A Sftyrt laid to iiil; of the halt ten ( ptlett: At ym wlU them t rteoBBieci W Ssra m A rH (V. Umal hirmf. of all thft Seattle, Wash., Hay 14. Eggs Se lect ranch24c; Chinese, 18c. iiutter Washington creamery, firsts, cubes, 26c; do brick:., 27c; city cream ery, bricks, 27c; California, 24c; Ore gon, 24c. Cheese Oregon triplets, 15Vj16e; limburger, 17c; Young American, 20 21c; local cream, bricks, 19c; Wiscon sin twins,' 19c; Wisconsin triplets, .19 20c; California, 16c; Washington twins and triplets, 17e. Onions' Green, per doz, 25(a30e; Australian, 5H-c; Texas Bermudas, per 50 pounds, $2.25. Potatoes Local, $14(r?16; Yakima gems, $24; California, new, 4c per lb. SAN FEANCISCO MAEKETS. San Francisco, May 14. Wheat Club, $1.62V1 per crl;' Northern blue stem, $1.70(S1.72V-;; Turkey red, $1.65 H)1.70; red Russian, $1.62' .; forty-fold $'l.02U1.65. Barley, per ctl Choice feed, $!03i (1.05; fair to number one, $lrtI1.02V.. Potatoes per ctl Oregon Barbanks, 75c$l; Washington .stock, 6070c; sweets, $2.25; Delta, t069c; new, per pound, l'i(l2li. Onions, per ctl Oregon, $1(S4.25; per1 crate Bermuda, 22.50; Austral ian, $4(54.23; per box, new crop, 40S) 60e. Butter Extras, 24c; prime firsts, FOBTLAND MARKETS. Portland. May 14. Wheat, club 88c; bluestem 92c. Oats, number one white feed $22; gray $21.50. Barley, brewing $21; feed $20. Hogs, best live $S.25(J'$S.35. Iime steers $7.0O(ft$7.75; fancy cows 6.50( $0.75. Best calves $8.50; spring lambs $7; yearling lambs $5. - Butter, city creamery 25c. Eggs, selected candled local extras 21efe22c. Hens nominal broilers 25c; geese 12c; turkeys 22c. Wool, 1914 clip Willamette Valley 17c(520c; eastern Oregon lHjC(a lDAc. Hops, choice HYseCwWe, FALL KILLS CAXIFOENIAN. Xcw York, May 14. Howard Jaoott, Ri Californian, either fell or jumped to his death from the seventh floor of his hotel here today. He' had been con nected for ten years with the Shubert theatrical interests gs manager here. Jaoott, according to friends had been suffering recently from neurasthenia and had frequently threatened to end bis life. His father is a resident of Oakland, California. A small Journal want ad will accom plish most anything for you. 4H EL GLO-STOVO At Half Price $2.50 May 11 to 16 only Hot Point Week GET ONE AT Lockwood's s&!IiLIS,J out to a sufficient extent to be fairly well settled upon. The first commencement exercises will be held by the college of law on the evening of May 29. Honorable Charles W. Fulton will deliver the commencement address. The commencement exercises for the college of theology nd the eollege of liberal arts have not yet been fully arranged. Those paits of the program which have been tentatively agreed up on are given. The baccalaureate sermon beforo the graduating class of the eollege of the ology will be delivered by Dean Kim ball on Sunday, June 7. I Youngson Delivers Address. The commencement address and pre sentation of diplomas will take place at the First Methodist chureh on the evening of Friday, Juno 12. Dr. W. W. Youngson, pastor of the Boso City Park Methodist church, will deliver the commencement address. The commencement of the college of music will probably be held in connec tion with that of the collego of liberal arts, according to tentative plans. On Nundoy morning, June 14, Presi dent Homan will preach the commence ment sermon in the First Methodist church, before the senior class of the rVllor,., r. T iVtavfll trim V.U..CU l i"",IU1 ........ Sunday afternoon will occur the fare well meeting of the Christian associa tions. The meeting will bo held in the university chapel and will probably bo led by the president of the university. In the evening the farewell sermon to the Christian associations will be de livered in the First Methodist church. The speaker for the evening has not been definitely chosen as yet. Breakfast Leads Off. Monday of commencement week will open with a "Senior breakfast." Tho breakfast will be . very original, but also, quite dignjficd, only wearers of rne cans ana irowns iwine nresent. ! After breakfast will come a morning ! baseball game. The team who will in i vade tho campus on that date has not been definitely selected, but the man ager has negotiations under way. Ia the afternoon1 "The Girls'. Wil lamette club" will hold exercises both in the chapel and at the grave of Jason Lee, in memory of the founder of our university. In the evening will occur tne jnter-society oratorical contest. Tuesday will be class day proper. The morning will open with a soccer game and probably a class skit or play. Following the opening numbers a pic torial history of the class will be pre sented. This is planned as one of the most elaborate numbers of the prog ram. Eat Last Meal. At noon the annual senior lunch will take place, all members of tho student body sitting down together fhr the last meal that this particular Willam ette family will take together. In the afternoon will come the stunts by the three other collego classes. Tho intense rivalry between each of the classes insures that they will exert themselves to the limit in providing the entertainment for the afternoon. In tho evening, if the tentativo plans are carried out, will occur the most spectacular event of commencement week. Tho entire campus will be bril liantly lighted and a series of novel stunts will bo presented on different portions of tho grounds, . Wednesday will be alumni day, be ing the date on which the seniors will cease to be connected with tho under graduate activities and will become a. part of the alumni. The commencement pxercises will be held in the First Methodist church at 10 o'clock, preceded by an academic procession which will form in Eaton hall and march to the church. The commencement address will be delivered by Dr. Mit. 8. Hughes, of Pasadena, Calif., a brother of Bishop Edwin Hughes. He is rated as one of the most masterful and powerful speakers on the coast and the class are congratulating themselves on being able to secure his services. In the afternoon will come the an nual alumni business meeting, and in the evening the alumni banquet will take place at the Hotel Marion. EATING RELIEVES STOMACH TROUBLE "Eat good foods and plenty of them. Dieting, in many cases, is almost crim inal, (let back to normal. To do so you must have the proper quantity of nourishment. You need it for brain and physical work. Probably there is nothing the matter with your stomach except acidity. That is merely an ab normal secretion of acid in the stom ach. Neutralize that acid and your stomach trouble will end at once. Neglect may mean ulcers of ' the stomach. Do not take patent med , icinea or pepsin tablets for dyspepsia. I Simply take a neutralizer of acid. De jeidedly the best neutralizer is bisurat ed magnesia. It is inexpensive and you lean get.it at any drug store. Take a teaspoonful in a quarter glass of wa ter .after eacb meal, lbe relief will be immediate." The late C. W. Post had a great business head, but one badly unbal anced. . SO AO BOND BOOSTEB MEETING HAS ANTI-BOND SENTIMENT Ma;leay, Or., May 13. The Boad meeting at Macleay was well attended, I about 250 being prevent and although it waa supposed to be a booster meet ing it was turned into au anti bond meeting. W. A.. Taylor of Macleay called the meeting to order and introduced Mr. Seymour Jones as the first speaker. Mr. Jones said in part- That the bonds represent only 2 per cent of the actual assessed valuation of Marion county, or really 1 per cent of the tine value and as such is a mere bagatelle. The bonds will draw 5 per tent interest and . he asserted no in dividual could get money at that nor no individual would Care to lend at that. He said it has beeu fahelv as serted that bankers will get half which is false on the face of it. He took considerable time explaining the bond issue and finally said that the bond issue only represented $2.00 on the $1,000, or a very slight encum brance and there is not a man who doesn't spend five times that amount and yet they say the tax is high. Ho said this scheme is the only feas ible way to get roads as the old way has proved a failure as a few built good roads under the old regime, alid others do nothing, so we have an irregular mass without system. The people of Macleay get a road auJjhoulJ be for mo nona issue ana ne can t under stand why any of them should oppose. He said some oppose bonds because the road does not pass their home but that is wt fair, as while thev may not 1 tl .i v i .l.. ' ri ucnifl us iimm ueneni us tot) man on the road still they will be benefited. He said Macleay had done practically nothing in the way of building roads nhd the people were traveling good rds tnu.t py some one else every time thev went to Salem. He said there never had been a per feet system of taxation derived and all could not be suited; tnnt all through life we must compromise arid every law is a compromise and as the county court had laid out plan of roads wo should accept it as tho best obtninuble and give in for common good. Ho said it had been falsely stated that the roads, if built, would be gone in inside tho two ty years. This is bo( true as there are many roads ex isting today built years ago and these roads will If kept up. Ho said if Marion county grows on at the same rate of gain it lias made that in. five years we can issue more bonds and still be proportionately no morp in debt than she will he when these bonds are issued. lie referred to fhe sentiment against raddling debt onto the coming gener ation and said that the assets would be so great that the debt would amount to nothing and as it conld not be more than 1 per cent of actual valuation he would gladly take any obligation on those terms. He said in closing that only one man can have his own way absolutely and he must be on a desert island nd he would try continually to get away to mingle with his kind, so we had best all try to yield for common good. He offered to answer questions and there followed a volley of questions and it is only just to ray he answered ably and well so far as he had knowl edge, and when at one time some one ashamed t rise asserted he was getting paid for what he said, he became angry and retorted in a way that squelched the party and yet was careful what he said so as not1 to offend ladies, that all present were convinced that hn at least is working for the bonds gratis. There was considerable talk about what would be done with present good roads along the routes to be improved and no one could answer. It was asserted that it cost $15,000 per mile to build the fair ground road, and it is only macadam at that. Some one asked is some of this fund would not have to go for extra clerk hire and extra specials and thus cut down tho amount available to build ronds. Ho did not know. The benef was expressed time ajid again that the ronds can't be built at the figures stated if they have to tear up present roads to lay new ones. They asked the cot of macadam rond eight feet wide mid ho said ho didn't know, but believed tho roads could be built inside the estimate as the county court had said they could. Some of the questioners re-sorted to personalities and cutely turned remaiTis and there was much applause to the lat ter that it was hard to get all thuit was said. Some one faid the asylum road cost $1,500 and it is good enough so why spend all the money on a few ronds. He replied that the county court had made tho estimate and apportioned the money and so it must he right. , There was quite a demonstration 'ask ing for Mrs. Waldo so she arose auiii applause and was introduced by the chairman. She assertrd she has made 100 road ; talks and all of thorn gratis ami while this road through Macleay goes " one mile through the Waldo farm she is! opposed to it because the building of it necessitates incurring a debt and she is opposed to debt on principal, it least avoidable debt. She said Mr. Jones tried to make it t . I- 1 4- t n v. : ,iv ppvir Jl. in UKiirr lu ue in ui-ui hiki n have a few good roads than be free from ; 8 debt and have roads that can be trav-, eled. We should pay as we go as we can only afford what we can pay for. She called attention to the French families and said they are prosperous because theyhave good markets and have a financial standing clear of on-; cumbrances and a ready market for all : produce grown' and can afford fine1 roads. We her$ in Marion county have only seven people to the square mile and : thero they have 4d0' people to square mile, so we had best go slow and watch our sister counties and see how they j come out beforo Macleay road district j ha voted to buy a rock crusher for its own use if the bonds fail and will fix : its own roads and pav for tlym as built. ' " One is led to believe, sh said, that ! a,fter this election in tho event that the bonds pass that the county court is to be connected by wireless with the, heaveDly forces and will thus get divine i inspiration how to handle funds from! tho great promises made as to its future j acts, but it is enly human of the com-i monest kind as it is placed in power; through the wire of politics. The county court has full power in i C22SZ52na3SZI2X;2SZZZSSSSZZZSZZZ",""r"3 Keep your eyes open. We are preparing for a I Clothing &FurnishingSale with prices so low that it will pay every man in Salem and vicinity to take advantage of it Attention tj Every article must go, by order ot the administrator. Watch papers Sale Will Start Next Tuesday WANTED 25 Salesmen S Wrappers 2 Cashier? n M U n u M M M U tl II 13 M U II M li li n M U li n M n ti. n M II ti n li u ii N II li M II N n N n u ii El n u this matter and no one can force it to change any plan it may decide on, audi tho voters will havo no sav Whatever how money will he spent. She referred to paving conditions in Portland wheio slip has owned a lot 34 years and hwi paid tor seven perma nent pavements in that time and litis received no direct benefit either in im proved rent or increnso In v lluo but has hail to foot cacn bill. fhe concluded her remnrks with a good story. The chairman introduced Mr. J. Alberts of Salem and Lis remnrks wore a summary of what both Mr. Jones and Mrs. Waldo had said and he na a banker admitted that tho money market was fulling somewhat. He asserted there was a demnnd for all staple articles in Halom at aJl timet and especially when the country roads are bail. He tried to allay tho unrest mani fested about what kind of roads are to be mailo by saying that they will be the best obtainable for the money and that tho host engineers available had figured out plans for roads so wo must leave the real building to them. He asserted that the theory that war rants would be issued instead of bonds was wrong as no olio would want to take them because from an investor's standpoint they are undesirable. Ho said Liberty road was a good road but autbs tore it up, and that no road without concrete foundation would stand. In answer to questions regarding ' rtnitiii rreerst ne said tne citv of pbIoiii was victimized in tho .State and Coip mercial streets' paving. Mr. Taylor opened the meeting to all present and asked for a full discission of the question. Mr. McKinnoy, of' near Rumsville, was introduced as the best macadam rond builder in Oregon. Ho stated lie has been .surprised bv uprising that road bonds have cimse't and he is put in a peculiar position in thnt ho is a good roads booster for years is- forced to oppo.te thin bond 'issue on principal. Ho wns iu favor of bonds for a long time and only changed his views after rolling ni:i thinking (,ho matter over carefully ami is now convinced thero is something , behind the affair thnt is not right. One reason he gavo for opposing tho bonds wns becBiiso of the way the roads nro ce'octed and tho funds apportioned. Tho ro.-Ud from Turner to Jefferson is 12 miles and it gets 140.000 while from Turner to Utayton is only 9 miles with one milo of completed road adroitly rtnrtn, leaving 8 miles, aad it gets irCV'OO. so thnt that on the face of it Is unfair. Then the Macleay road is 12 miles long and it gets $-13,000, while tho IJratum road with over three miles finished ia only 8 miles, rjid ti gets $4.1,000, another case of unfairness. Then tho road from Aurora to Halem, finished is only 8 miles, and it gets .-Hl0.noo, or 410,000 per mile, so thnt to his mind the whole scheme is to force the country of Marion to buihl the Pacific highway through it. Miss Kathorine Pooler was intro duced and stated tho good road sho is After Is a good board ono to the ocuuty treasurer's office. Whnnt crop in tho Pacific northwest 10,000,000 bushels moro than ever be fore. Orcgoninn docs not charge this: up to Wilton. Hello, Washington weather Where's our "snow?" mnnf l I ! ijiinniii ibIH'Vi in ifPMialniiamliiiiiiiaqgjff LADIES' LONG LADIES' LONG I 1 CHAMOISETTE j SILK LISLE, I GLOVES 38c GLOVES 50c 8 I LADIES' LONG 1 41-INCH VOILE I f SILK GLOVES I EMBROIDERY E i a 1 b pijjiiii:i; u il 75c AND $1.00 I fiacAYARn I ! MILLINERY 1 Best to interview this department big di3 play of trimmed hats, also shapes, flowers, rib bons and laces. The best goods at the lowest price. Hats for the girls. Hats for everyone. The best place to get your millinery wants supplied. WIDE H EMBROIDERY EMBROIDERY 9 BANDINGS AT 15c YARD I 8c AND 15c YD. ROSTEIN & GREENBAO&i 240 and 246 Commercial Street. kin p8pllmon5., Kr nle by mil 4nixits and Tmkj wknU Dft4 u lb Uoiiea Staiaa, Caiuaa ana uibi CBaiHOflllS. Pros, 37 M km ! nrt UTii