THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. 0HE0ON. TT'ESDAY, MARCH IS, 1917. rrVE 4 t NEW TODAY - CXASSinED ADVXETTSDJa BATES BaU per word New Today: Each insertion, per word le Ob tA (6 insertion!) per word. ...5c Oaenonth (26 insertions) per work 17c T Capital Journal will not b n pwuible for more than on insertion for error in Classified Advertisement. Ileal jour advertisement the first da; t appears and notify us immediately Minimum charge, lSe. BATE YOU phone 7. WOOD SAWING I Call tf FOB BENT SIGNS For sals at Cap ital Journal office. tf WILL SELL S3 head 3 and old mules. Dwigbt Misner. 4 year tf GET PRICES On farm tale bills at The Journal office. GET PRICES On farm tale bills at The Journal office. JONES' NURSERY State and 24th tf MEN WANTED TO WORK -Free rent 2V2Z N. Broadway. 317 FOR SALE OR TRADE 4 West Salem. Phone 944J. lots in 3-17 GIRL WISHES Light Phone 2.0.1.1 i. housework. 3-13 FOR SALE Five room house, $!i.50. Address 119 care Journal. price 12 14 LOST Watch fob and locket with let ter L on it. Leave with Journal. 3-14 HEMSTITCHING Boom 10, Nack bldg. E. A. Adsit't, McCor 4-5 HIGHEST Market price paid beans. Phone 175, Mr. Cooper. for tf GARDENS PLOWED At right es. C. E. Mills. Phone 837. pric 43 HABSY J. Window cleaner. Phone 1391 3-24 TBESP ASS Notices nal office. for sale at Jour- tf SIX CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS $5.00. Dr. May. Phone 572. tf FOR SALE CHEAP Light grocery and confectionary. J. M. Ryan North Cottage St., Sulom. 3-14 ,'l"T RATES In Taxi service within 14 blocks of O. E. depot. 15c or 2 for 25c. Independent Auto Service. Phone G3. 3-19 CHOICE Laying Buff Orpington eggs for hatching. 354 Columbia street. 3-14 DRY FIR. AND ASH Oars will be on west Trade. I'hone 2501J2. Fred K. Wells! ' .. 3-19 FOR RENT Small house and several lots suitable for garden, rent cheap. Phone Carey V. Martin, 419. 3-35 FOB RENT Small house, lot and some fruit, $2 per month. Phone Carey F. Martin, 419. 3-15 WANTED Young man to board and room, $4.50 per week. 581 Nt Church. Phono 1064R. 3-14 BABY CHICKS S. C. White Leghorn, $9 per 100. E- .1. Miller, Route 2, Turner, Or. 3-12 15 MONTH -Female Boston Bull pup for sale $15, a bargain. 'I care Jour nal. 3-15 FOR SALE Eggs for hatching, Sicil ian Buttercup strain, $1.00 per set ting. Phoue I00F23. 3-15 LOST Monday on N. Capitol St. grey raincoat and umbrella. Finder please return to Capital Journal. 3-13 FOB RENT Rooming house, close in. partly furnished. Address H care Journal office. 3-14 FOR SALE 9 ewes and 9 lambs. C. E. Bower, Salem Heights, Hansen ave. 3-14 WANTED To buy, first class shape, phone 2123J". coal heater in After Tuesday 3-13 "WANTED To contract string beans for canning purposes. Apply Oregon Packing Co. Phone 226. 3-14 FOR BENT Three or four room furn ished apartment, modern. 325 S. 14th St. 3-13 2SICE 3 room -furnished apartments housekeeping. 491 N. Cottage. 2203 FOB BENT 2 office rooms, one furn ished sleeping room. Hubbard bldg. W. H. Norris, receiver. tf WANTED To bny old oak timber for logs. Phone or write E. A. Way, Sa lem, Ore." tf GET YOUB Trespass notices, new npply of eloth ones at Capital Jour aaL tf THE BEST EQUIPPED Place in Sa lem for cabinet work, furniture made remodeled, repaired and upholstered. H. W. Beinhard, 265 Chemeketa St., opposite Y. M. C. A. 3-24 LM.HUM YickSoTong CABEOF CHINESE MEDICINES AND TEA COMPANY Has medicine which will cure Any known Disease Open Sundays from 10:00 a. m. nntil 8:00 p. m, 153 South High Street Salem, Oregon Phone 283 1 . FOB SALE Baled grain hay and etca ay. Uecrge SwegUj. ti 1IOME CANNED Phone 1S72M. FRUIT For Mile. 3 13 FOB SALEBlack Belgian 6 years old weight about 1700- 7 miles south ol Silrerton. Rosa Amstutz. tf WANTED Horse suitable for driving, weight about 1000 lbs. chunky bmlt, 6 to 10 years old. Phone 2498J. tf PAPER HANGING Paintinz. tinting etc. Phone 101S. Chas. M. Weaver. 8 13 FOB RENT Nicely furnished house keeping rooms reasonable. 855 N. Comt. 4-1 FOR BENT Small old style dwelling, cnoap rent. I'hone Carey Martin 419. 3-1; FOR BENT 1 room dwelling in bus iness district, suitable for shoe shop, etc- I'hone Carey Jr. Martin, 419. 3-lj FOB SALE CHEAP 6 room house, lot 100x150, Fairmount and Rural aves. Phoae 591J. 3-13 WANTED Two men to cut fir, ash and maplo wood. O. O. McClellan, Route 8, phone 54F13. 3-14 FOR RENT Furnished house keeping room on first floor. 694 H. Com'l. Phone 2454W. 3-lti SALE House, two lots, cheap; good garden, fruit, well, near school. Ad dress Owner, Capital Journal. 3-13 HEMSTITCHING Nu Bone Corset Parlors. A. E. Lyons, Phone 1032. 3-19 FOR SALE--One good top buggy and harness. One nearly new runabout ouggy and harness, your choice $30. Phone 1242M. 3-13 WANTED Fresh cows or heavy springers. Phone 2381M, address 406 N. 24th St., Salem, Or, V. B. Sox ton. 3 14 FOB SALE My beautiful five acre tract close in,buildings all new, dan dy place for chickens. 372 care Jour nal. 3-13 FOB BENT Old house and good lot. Will rent to person who will repair house and renovate premises in pay ment for rent. I'hone Carey F. Mar tin, 419. 3-15 FOB SALE Barred Plymouth Bock eggs, 75 cents for 15 eggs. 2720 Cher ry Ave., also a one horse plow nearly new. 3-13 SECOND HAND MENS CLOTHING bicycles, jewelry, musical instru ments, tools', guns, etc., bought, sold and traded. Capital Exchange 337 Court St. Phone 493. HEAD QUABTERS- For auto and track bodies, auto upholstering and repair ing. H. W. Kemhard, 208 Cnemeketa, opposite Y. M. C. A. 3-24 WANTED Man to grub two acres, mostly young standing oak, will pay $20 per acre and $12.50 to-make 1000 rails. F. A. Doerfler, Silverton, Or. 3-13 WANTED Old False teeth, Don't matter if broken. I pay $1.00 to $5.00 per set. Mail to L. Mazer, 2007 S. Fifth street, Philadelphia, Pa. Will send eash by return mail. 3-24 35 HEAD OF COWS and heifers. All to be fresh within 6 weeks. For sale at reasonable price. J. T. McLaugh lin, route 1, Salem, 3-4 of mile from Zena. 3-14 POTATOES WANTED Don't forget we are always in the market for po tatoes in small lots or car lots at the highest cash price. Phone 717, Man gis Bros. tf FOR RENT Furnished house on pav ed Street, barn, fruit and garden, $15.00 per month; 7 room house pav ed street, 2 lots, $12.00 per month. Money to loan. 1 van G. Martin, Ma sonic Temple. 3-15 FOR BENT Cash Pacific Highway burn. Immediate rent, 20 acres on just cast of Wood possession. Best of soil, good potato land. No buildings, plenty houses and barns for rent in town. Address, D. J. Koupal, Eu gene, Or. 3-13 The filibuster is a good servant but a bad master, as one might say, Vet, a good servant who could, and who on occasion would and dirt, beeome a oad master would get fired mighty quick. INVESTMENT Eight-room house, barn, bath, toilet, lights, fire place, wood shed, house plastered; corner lot 50x105, both streets paved, and paid up, on the corner of one of the best streets in Salem; rents for $14 per month. Price $2,000. H. A. JOHNSON & CO. TRY JOURNAL WANT ADS STEAMSHIP COMPANY VIS WEE SOU Sinking of Steamer Dae To Fault of Others Five. Other Opinions Two Marion tounty eases were hand ed down ny the Oregon supreme court this morning. In the ease of T. Rosen wald, as T. Ronenwald k Company, appellant, against the Oregon City transportation company, tespondent, appealed from Marion county, au action for damages to hops sunk in the Willamette rivler when the steamboat Oregona was sunk in a collision with the United States government dredge "M'hanipoeg," De cember 2, 1913, Judge Burnett af firmed the decision of the lower court. The opinion states that on December 20, 1913, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant as a common carrier a cer tain number of bales of hops for trans portation to Portland but that during the. voyage the ship sank and the hops were namagea. me defense set up that the plaintiff signed a contract which excepted the "dangers of navi gation, fire, leakage, rats, etc." The defense also set up that the fault of the sinking was not duo to the care less ness of the company but the gov ernment employes operating the dredge They assert the hops came to their damage through the neglect and care lessness of the dredge engineers, who caused the position of the dredge to be changed. The decision of the lower court was sustained. The other Marion county case was that brought by Britt A spin wall, respondent, against John S. Dunlavy, appellant, appeal from decision of the court under Judge Galloway, contro versy concerning a strip of land 18.42 chains long and 16 links wide at one end and 18 1-2 links at the other end. According to the statement of the case, the plaintiff and the defendant bought certain tracts of laud from M. L. Jones and wife that a difficulty arose later concerning a line fence. The question at issue concerns " whether or not" by mutual mistake the laud in controversy was omitted from the deed to the respondent." Careful reading of the record, says the opinion of Justice Harris, con vinces that there was no mistake and that Aspinwall received what he agrcd to purchase. The decree of the lower court is reversed and the suit dismissed without costs to either party. Justices McRride, Benson, and Burnett concur. Tho other decisions were as follows: John Wilson Estate Co., respondent, against Dammeier Investment com pany, ct al., appellants, appeal from Multnomah county, Judge McGinn; ac tion on a promissory note; affirmed by Justice Benson. Theodore Hagenbcrger, respondent, against town of Milwaukie,-and Sam uel Riley, fire marshal, appellants, ap peal from Clackamas county, Judge Campbell; suit to remove cloud from title; affirmed by Judge Burnett. William C. Gregan, respondent, against the Northwestern National In surance . company of Milwaukee, Wis., appellant, appeal Multnomah county, Judge Belt; suit to reform policy of fire insurance; affirmed by Justice McCammant. Metropolitan! Investment and Im provement Co., appellant, against. M. E. Schonweiller and T. M. Hurlburt, respondents, appeal suit to enjoin sale of lot on execution; reversed by Justice McCamant. CITY NEWS A fireman in the navy is paid $40 a month and all found. This looked good to George F. King, who same from Al bany and enlisted at the local recruiting otiice. o The Pilgrims' club of the First Con gregational church will hold its monthly meeting this evening at 6:15 o'clock. After the dinner to be served by the ladies of the church an address will be given by Justice Wallace MacCammant of the supreme court on "The George Rodgers Clark Expedition." Miss Opal George, a graduate of the Salem high school of the 1917 mid-year class, was last evening elected by the school board secretary to Principal J. C. Nelson of the high school. She succeeds Miss Ethel Brunk, who was married a few days ago. A lecture on American life and scen erv will ha riven at the Commercial club Saturday evening of this week by Dr. Williamson. A special invitation has been extended to the faculty of Willamette university. The lecture is free and the public is invited. While in tho city Dr. Williamson will also lec ture at tho university. o The meeting this evening, of the Busl ness Men's league at tho Commercial club promises to be of more interest than the average monthly meeting. There is considerable dissatisfaction on the bridge proposition and also as to what is being done whereby teams can get across the river and several mem bers of the league are billed to express some candid opinions. Along witii the announcement of so many things being scarce this spring comes the startling news that garden seeds are not so plentiful as in the years gone by. In fact, seed for those good old garden standby's such as cab bage, rutabaga and carrots are scarce, as the big American seed houses im ported them from Holland and Denmark and these countries have now forbidden their export. Turnip seeds, beets, ear rots and cauliflower seeds are included in those that are scarce this year. But there is some satisfaction in the fact that seed is plentiful for beans, peas, lettuce and radishes as these are home grown and the supply does not depend ION IRON IRKS 11 CROSS MBA! Owing to Strike Work at Oak land To Be Sent to San Francisco Oakland, Cal., March 13. Govern ment ship contracts aggregating more than $12,000,000, which were to have been filed at the East Bay plant of the Union Iron Works on Oakland es tuary, within the uext two years, have been transferred to the San Francisco plant of the same concern on account of the unsettled labor conditions, ac cording to announcement made by the corporation today. The transfer affects eight subma rines to cost $50,000 each; six torpedo boats to cost $1,000,000 each and sev eral smaller craft. The decision of the Cnion Iron Works directorate is de clared to be final and the direct re sult of the imiortance of the navy con tracts and turbulent conditions which made their possible fulfillment a mat ter of speculation. This decision follows the walkout of nearly 2500 skilled and unskilled la borers at the 1'nion Iron Works shops last week and the strike of six hundred unskilled laborers at the Moore and Scott plant. Many of the skilled la borers who have quit their employ ments have oeen compelled to do so through a scarcity of unskilled helpers who took- part in the general walkout. In the meantime efforts are being mado by city health and public safety Coinmisioner F. F. Jackson to bring about a settlement. He held a confer ence with representatives of the labor organizations and expects there . will be a meeting this afternoon of repre sentatives of tho labor unions and the Union iron Works and of the Moore and Scott yard. Commissioner! Jackson said today that he believes the trouble will be set tled, temporarily at least and that the men will go back to work pending fin al adjustment of the dispute- Three Games Straight Taken by the Printers Although the Printers took three games straight from the Salem Alleys last night in the city bowling league contest, Calvin of the Salem Alleys won high frame with 200 points and Doolittlo of the Printers high average with 190 points. Tonight the Woodmen of the World engage with the Salem Alleys. The following is the tabulated score: Salem Alleys (1) (2) (3) To. Av. Smith 182 128 141 45.1 150 Absentee 154 .154 154 402 -154 Newberry .... 149 152 149 450 150 absentee 354 354 154, 462 354 Calvin 188 343 200 531 177 Totals 827 731 798 2356 Printers (1) (2) (3) To. Av. Vail 150 392 390 5.18. 379 Pilkenton .... 166 137 154 457 152 Hill 145 162 168 475 158 Froeland 193 378 172 543 J83 Doolittlo 193 393 183 569 190 Totals S53 862 867 2582 Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Druggists refund money if PAZO OINT MENT fails to cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. First ap plication gives relief. 50c. on foreign markets. There is not enough sugar beet seed in tho country to sup ply the market. i, , o Patrons of rural route Nos. 1 and 2 in Polk county, or at least a part of them, missed their mail yesterday as there was no ferry running and there was no means ty which the carriers could get their teams across the river. Until there is some river service, the two carriers will be obliged to drive to Wheatland to cross and this will hardly give them time to serve their entire routes. This condition will hold good until next, week .as there seems to be little prospect of the ferry running foi several days. o Captain White, adjutant general of the Oregon National Guard, who was in command of Troop A on the Mexican border, is in Salem this afternoon to confer with the citizens relating to methods to be pursued in securing enough recruits out of the 800 to 1,000 eligible young men of military age in Salem to fill up the ranks of Company M and so save that organization for the Capital City. Plans were discussed at the meeting held this afternoon with representative citizens present. Among those who were present at the meeting were Major Abrams, C. L. Dick, Bev. James Elvin, Sergeant Paul Wallace, State Treasuier Kay, Captain James Boy Neer, Lieutenant Allen, Theodore w, w. x. ssiaiey ana -Manager Aicuan ids of the Commercial club. Raymond Robins at First Methodist The people of Salem will be accord ed an unparalleled privilege tomorrow evening at 7:30 when Raymond Robins winds up his three days' series of meet ings at Willamette by an address in the First Methodist church. The previous meetings have been held in Waller hall chapel and have been open with few exceptions to stu dents only. The open meeting tomor row night was planned in order to give 1 i. Mlit-i -a Gall Stones, Cancer and Ulcers of the Stomach and Intestines, Auto-Intoxication, Yellow Jaundice, Appendicitis and other fatal ailments result from Stom ach Trouble. Thousands of Stomach Sufferers owe their complete recovery to Mayr's Wonderful Remedy. Un like any other for Stomach Ailments. For sale by J. C. Perry and druggists everywhere. mssm. WANT BOYS TRAINEO BUT 1H0UI GUNS Mothers Generally Opposed to Potting Muskets la , Boys' Hands How to keep a musket out of a high school boy's hands, and yet at the same time give him the physical ad vantages of military training is the problem that is facing not onlv the Salem school board, but many others ia the state. All agree that the youth as well as the maid should receive patriotic physical training and that tho young man should be given exercise similar to the West Point idea. All agree that the average youth is flat chested, stoop shouldered and. his walking is lacking in the virtue? attributed to a live man. And all directors here as well as elsewhere are agreed that some thing must be done to give that train ing. How to do it and keep out the military spirit is the question. W omen object to the word "military." If the youth would drill with a broom stick. the question would be easily solved. But the average youth has some real blood in bim and prefers a musket, while his mother is opposed to any thing of the kind. The high school boys are willing and sent a. committee of two last evening to attend the meeting of the school board to discuss, not military train- ng, but patriotic, physical exercise. Chairman A. A. Lee and Director Max O. Buven expressed themselves in favor of the physical patriotic train ing, camp instruction and other things tnc ooy scouts know but to make a soldier of the youth met with no favor. The mental training a boy gets in the way of quick thinking, willingness to accept discipline and comradeship all agreed was among the advantages of the proposed training. As two of the directors were absent, E. T. Barnes and H. O. White, no defi nite action was taken on tho proposal of the young men who met with the board to organize. At an early meet ing the board will take up the prob lem how to givc tho youth the ad vantages of the West Point physical training and at the same time keep out the military idea. The last legislature passed a law regarding military train ing in the public schools but failed to set aside any funds for the purchase of equipment. Rev, Harry Marshall Home From Bremerton The Bev. Harry E. Marshall is home from a successful series of evangelis tic meetings held at Bremerton telling of the patriotic feeling in that part of the world that would surprise the aver age citizen of- this community. With the Bremerton navy yard on almost a war footing, witn factories making thousands of shells for the navy and the thousands of naval cadets and en listed men from the navy coming and going, Mr. Marshall says the people just feel more uatriotic, than those in the interior. He reports Seattle as hav ing the greatest ship building boom ever known, with contracts already lef for $50,000,000 worth of ships. Mr. Marshall has just closed his third engagement at Bremerton. All the churches in the city joined in his services resulting in 110 converts dur ing the twelve days he was there. He will stay iu Salem until Friday evening when a series of meetings will begin at independence, holding forth there until April 3. From Independence Mr. Marshall will go to Bend, then to Grass Valley, Or., then to Portland and Marshlicld before the summer va cation. Before leaving Bremerton, ar rangements were made for a return engagement next fall. La Grande Woman Shot In Tong War La Grande, Or., March 13. One man was killed and a woman woundod in an outbreak of tong warfare here this afternoon. Billy Eng, president of the Chinese Young Men's Christian Asso ciation was chased down Adams av enue by a gunman flourishing a re volver, overtaken and murdered in front of the postoffice. Mrs. O. E. George was hit in the ankle by a stray bullet. The slayer escaped. An angry mob of white men is surrounding the Chinese quarter. The police are maintaining order with difficulty. Several shots were fired at Eng be fore he fell at the postoffice steps. Half a dozen people stood watching as the gunmen pressed the muzzle of his revplver agaiiM Eng's head and fired four times. The spectators still stood helpless as the murderer started away, returned and calmly snapped the trigger several times at Eng to make sure nil his cartridges were used. Then ho ran across the street and disappeared in a Chinese shop. the Salem public an opportunity to hear one of America's really great men of the hour. He has come to Willamette on his international college tour in which to date he has visited 63 colleges of our country, state and denominational, the great universities and the small col leges. All concur in the opinion that Robins is foremost among the nation men of power. His simple, clear-cut presentation of our democracy's social iSnd political problems, his bold challenge to meet the facts as the exist in human society, have given him an epoch-making grip on the life of the student body of Wil lamette university. Why the Journal Is popular It prints the world' news to day while it's news. Notice to the Public We bt seen red larg contracts for SCBAP IEON, WASTE PAPER AND HIDES. W therefore wish to call your attention to the fact and that it has placed us in a position to pay more for IRON, PAPER, and HIDES, Una any. dealer or buyer. What hrvfe you In ur line. We will handle any amount from 100 lbs. to lot) Tons. See us before you sell or CALL 70S. WESTERN JUNK CO. Salem'f Leading 'Wholesale Junk Dealers. SALEM SHVEBTON INDEPENDENCE LOS ANGELES FIRE Li Fire Starting This Morning In Down Town District Still Burning Los Angeles, Cal., March 13. The biggest downtown fire Los Angeles has had in years, which began in the base ineut of the Wilson building early to day, was still burning early this after noon, threatening the buildings on the west side of Broadway between Fourth and Fifth streets and spreading back to Hill street. The Broadway department store was for a time endangered. The Oc cidental hotel, Boos Brothers cafeteria, Pin Ton Sweet shop and F. W, Wool worth company, were all menaced. ElovVn firemen have been injured or over ome by smoke and twenty wo men were rescued from the Occidental hotel by firemen and police. Frank J. Krichner, a fireman, was saved from drowning in several feet of water in the basement bv the brav ery of Lieutenant William Haguowood, who descended into the inferno to get him out. The fire was started by Noma Tom, a Japanese employed by the Weaver Jackson company, hair dealers, who was cleaning some wigs and hair goods with gasoline. Friction exploded the gasoline. Business was almost at a standstill in the downtown district al lmorning as the crowds stormed around the roped off areas for a view of the blaze. The loss is plaeedat $125,000. -: BILLINGSLY STORY IS CORROBORATED Others Fix Date August 29 Instead of 30 But This j Proves Mistake Seattle, Wash., Mar. 13. Federal prosecutors speeded up their work of corroborating various points in the amazing testimony given by Logan Billingslcy, king of bootleggers in Am erica's largest dry city, when the booze graft conspiracy trial of Mayor (till, Chief of Police Bockinham, ex-Sheriff gHodo and City Detecties Doom, Mc Lennan, Poolnian and Peyser was resum ed today. By a stipulation entered into late yes terday by the defense, tho government will not have to spend two weeks prov ing that the linuor ships involved in the case were of an interstate char acter. Attorneys for the defense started their woss-examination of Arthur R. Hatton, a bookkeeper for Logan Bil lingslcy this morning. Hatton had testified ho heard Logan quarreling with his brother Fred over money, iu tho Planters hotel here Aug ust 30, and that Logan said ho was "go ing down to sco the old man." That was tho day Logan Billingslcy cluims ho paid a $4,000 bribe to Mayor (till. Steve Allen, night clerk nt the Wash ington apartments wehor Logan Bil lingsley lives, and who followed Hut ton on the stand, told of calling the mayor's residence on tho telephone at 2 a. m., Christmas day for Billingslcy, and of hearing a man's voice answer the call. He said he had given records of that call and another to the county jail, to Mrs. Logan Billingslcy as purt of her mil. The first marked discrepancy in Log an Billingslcy 's story of how he bribed Mayor GUI with $4,000 August 30, was developed by a government witness shortly before, noon today, J. H- Davis, proprietor of the Hotel Washington Annex, confirmed Billings ley's statement that the latter got a largo roll of currency from him about noon the latter part of August but said it was the 29th instead of the 30th as Logan had testified. Astorian: The spring cottage build ing season has opened at Gearbart with the promise of more than the usual ac tivity in that line. During the pnst week a $3,000 house was started on the north ocean front for an Astoria party. W. D. Walker i3 tho builder. Mrs. B. A. W. J. PATTERSON, M. D'V. GRADUATE VETEEINAKIAN, LICENSED TO INSPECT STOCK. UP-T O - D A T E METHODS, MEDICINE AND OPERATING TABLE. Phones: Office, 278; Res. 1961. 420 S. Commercial .p o;r any DISTURBANCE of the functions of the stomach or bowels HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters It is a good Spring tonic High School Notes The juniors defeated the sophomores 20 to 13 in tho first of the interclass games in the gym last night. The game was hard fought from start to finish but the juniors led by a small margin from the beginning. Carson and Buren of the junior team were largely responsible tor the del cat of the sophomores. Their close guard ing kept tho sophomore forwards from getting many baskets. The lineup is as follows: Juniors Boise, Brooks, Rowland, (arson and Burcn. Sophomores White, Gregg, llulscv, Latham and Gill. Tonight tho seniors will play tho juniors for tho interclass championship. President Doney of Willamette ex-, tended a personul invitation to all sen ior boys to attend the lectures given by Raymond Bobins nt tho university chapel. Many of the boys acepted tho invitation and attended the lectnro Monday evening. To fill the vacancy left by the resig nation of Miss Brunk, tho high school stenographer, who was, married recent ly, Miss George twas elected by tho school board. -i. . To avoid the conflict in dates which has occurred so many times, the stu dent council passed a rule whereby nil persons in charge of future events will be required to put notice of the ditto of the event on file in Principal Nel son's oftico where they can be seen bv all persons contemplating future event In the past many worthy events have had a small attendance because of con flicting dates. This rule will do away with the conflicting of dates. Railroad Manager Does Not Expect Strike New York, March 13. Statements: made hero today by railway munngern indicated the ruilroads have prepared but little for a nation wide strike such as is threatened to start next Satur day. Only a few men who are carried us extras all the time are immediately available. No plans have been made, it. was stated, for filling the places of the men with strikebreakers. An optimistic feeling was express ed by the managers, however. They de clare neither owners nor men could aford to have n strike called at this time. Unofficially, four reasons were given for this feeling. That tho railways could not, under any cireumstuuees, afford to see their lines tied up at the present time. The men could not afford the loss of work with wages for railway work ers at their present stage and with tin; test of tho Adumson law scaling a. decision The public would not stand for 1ho situation. Pressure would be so great, it was declared, that the men would have to return to their work. And lust, that the president would end the strike, should one be called, by exercising his right to take over tho roads as a matter of national prepared ness. Stewart, of Portlund, has awarded to Stokes & Zcller the contract for a cot tage near Cottage avenue, east of tho golf course. The contract culls for its completion before April 1. Several others are planning to build during March to insure completion in advance of the summer season. MOTHER GRAY'S POWDERS BENEFIT MANY CHILDREN Thortftandiuf mother have found Mother (Juty'i Sweet Powder! au excellent remedy for children com plaining of he&riache, co)dftfeveriBhm'M,Btom ach troubles aud bowel irregularities from winch Children suffer during these day, These powdi-ra arc easy and pleasant to take and excellent results ar accomplished by their nee. Vttdbifmothtrtjvr ') yfar 6oid by 'DruggUu everywhere, w ctm. TRY JOURNAL WANT IDS