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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1909)
11 BUSY DAY SPENT ON RIFLE RANGE Drills and Target Practice Take Up Every Minute of Camping Troops. BENSON TO VIEW GUARD Drss Parade Will Bo Given in Honor of Oregon's Governor, Who Will Visit Clackamas Station on Thursday. An active programme of Instruction in military work, lnrludin a little of every thing from camp routine to target prac tice and dress-parade, was carried out by the Third Oregon Infantry and Reg ulars at the Clackamas Station cunp yes terday. The camp began its work at 5:30 o"clock In the morning and ttiere was no cessation of activities until dark. Company. battalion and regimental drills In close and extended order,, and target practice occupied the forenoon. Camp routine and a dress-parade and re view were the chief features of the aft ernoon's work The first battalion, under Major May, spent a busy day on the rifle range, firing over the marksman's course, JfK. 300 and 500 yards. Today the drills will be altogether in extended order formations and .ttiere will also be minor problems in company out post, advance guard and rear guard move ments. It Is the plan gradually to get the command into shape for the field maneuvers that are to conclude the week. Saturday was settled upon by the camp commander, Colonel" McDonell. yesterday the day for the principal maneuver in which blank ammunition will be used and conditions of actual hostilities will be simulated so far as is possible. Troops to Clash Saturday. Early Saturday morning all the troops In camp, National Guard and Regular Army, will leave In heavy marching order, divided Into two forces, which will oper ate against each other until noon Sun day. The opposing commands will be in structed. In a general way, as fo the ob jects to be accomplished, and it will be left to the commanding officers to work out their own salvation. Strict secrecy will be observed as to the nature of the movements. Equipped with shelter tents and field rations, the two opposing commands will leave camp and proceed eastward several miles from Clackamas along different routes. At dark the troops will bivouac but both will doubtless mave during the early hours of the morning In an effort to gain an advantage. The movement will afford excellent instruction in ad vance guard and outpost duties and will test the endurance and efficiency of thoe engaged under conditions required bv warfare. Target pracfice by the machine gun platoon from Vancouver Barracks, under lieutenant Davis. United States Army, ! aRt"r t today. The platoon will be attached to Major Baker's bat talion and will accompany that command 22. . J?'. V?" klrmts advance from 600 yards to the target butts. In thla way It win be determined Just what the ef anrrteK?.V,rm,11 be of National un 2.,. f n.' .suPPrtel by a machine gun detachment In an advance on a line oi trenches. Benson Will Visit Camp. r27tr.n?Z commander-in- V? th Oron National Guard, will pay his official visit to camp Thursday afternoon .Ha will be tendered dres parade and review. A band concert will in .T6" bY. th Thlrd Rlmnr b!" l5.l.S!.-T,"ln,r- Thu"y "i also do visitors day and a large number of peo- FameM mvP?,rtland- Oregon City and WH Jamette alley points are looked for i .dJ'es-PaJrl nd review was given ho"or ' Adjutant-General Finser chief of staff. The regimental band was taken out from Portland for the occasion The troops appeared to splendid advanl tage on parade, demonstrating-that they drflled n !tL.f'eC?,7e,y anS field work A mn,al mvnents as in night A iJf d "ert was given last i, 'ar number of visitors were In camp during the afternoon, fulljT train and remaining unfll the 10 o'clock" ""leers and organizations now "owl: CnVM at th Camp aro -Officera Who Are in Charge. Major "John """."V" b-n. i-auanon -ntiartrrmasters Second T l. ."ll'.Jre'r TraU"r' C' Hotel's Company K. Portland First lieutenant R iZ T"n: f coJd "'"tenant. F " E " sever" wU?rm-., ?,.?..'. SfVa'Sie. end lieutenant, o. H. Sehumake "" company H. Portland First lieutenant L. Selch"OCk: "'COn'1 ""-tenant. RlcnaJd Company -. Portland Captain. Loren A Som: "rat lieutenant. D. K. Bowman l-omyany I, WooUburn Captain" F W fc-ttlemeisr; first lieutenant. Eugene sioih ber-er: second lieutenant. Qrover C ToVd . Company o. Oregon Cltv Captain v a LHn;.U:.n"t lieutenant, w. R Lolu. . ond lieutenant. Hidy. 1 ' Beo Company B. Portland Captain, w . w Wlson: seond lieutenant. Clyde Spoon'er fompany Pendleton Captain o2n P Smyth; first lieutenant, U. D Drkke ond lieutenant. Hanson. Diake. sec- Company F. Portland Captain L- F crouch: first lieutenant. B. L Beard r ond lieutenant. Williams eara. sec- Company D. The Dalles Captain T -R HuntinRton; first lieutenant Baty ompany M. Salem Captain Carl Ahrams: first lieutenant. Max Gerhiar ond lieutenant, Coburn cermar, sec- Amhulance Company. Portland Captain H.ndB.rshMo',trnu,: "r,t "tenant. HP REAL NEED OF WORLD Ethical Sermon Based Upon An other Recent Sermon. PORTLAND July 12. (To the EdI tor.) I read in ti, . . m'-'J". .,.Cle."n'"'r the option 'Sal- ... . aamiring interest. I ;.Ut ,h.elleve the ground taken .... o regards the enact- - .. ufvi. .iifj stage is cor- r''" ,Wh"'Jfhe entire article makes ""'. me assertion which ends it enlisted particularly my in terest and .nnntlnn Often when reading the editorials 1..K.9 wr wnicn The n..rrnr (u n a . l.iv. . . ' " " "J-.- " tviut? repute, i nave thought "all this ought you to have done and yet not have left the other undone." I am far from desiring to "give a sop to emotions," but would echo the crying need mentioned, via. the need of the world for a religion that is vital, that will In very truth make new crea tures of us. . "Marvel ye that I have said ye must be born again?" is by no means obso lete in meaning and effect. The need of the world 1b made up of the need of individuals. With an eye single to his own sal vation, each should understand that in no other way than by dying in the flesa and being born again in the spirit, can he become this new creature; then with a sincerity in which "the eye of God can see no lack," he should take hold of that promise, making it effectu al by becoming aa the little child with out fear and without condemnation. In so far as all shall come Into this Inheritance, to that extent shall the tide of existing misery be checked. Having admitted the lesson learned from "Salvation Nell." let The Oregoa lan hasten the "conversion of thou sands" by declaring that through hav ing paid the price which is just and reasonable, viz. the presenting of .the body a living sacrifice, "lo, old things have passed away and all things have become new." MARGARET K. THOMAS. MORE DAYLIGHT WANTED COUNCILMAN BAKER ASKED TO INTRODUCE ORDINANCE. Scheme of Turning Clocks Ahead One Hour Not Favored by Man Whose Business Is at Night. A "daylight" ordinance by a man whose business is conducted under eover of darkness may be the next thing in Portland. Councilman Baker, theatrical manager, promises Just this sort of combination. While he will not declare himself definitely, he has prom ised to Investigate the proposition dur ing some of his daylight hours, and he may take a notion to assist the Nation al Daylight Association of Cincinnati In its efforts to secure a universal shoving ahead of the standard time five months In the year. The object of the effort of this or ganization, as stated in a communica tion received yesterday by Mr. Baker, Is to secure more daylight for the peo ple. Their proposal Is "that from and after 2 o'clock on the morning of the first day of May In each year, until 3 o'clock on the morning of the first day of October in each year, the standard time shall be one hour in advance of the standard time now in use. "This, It is stated, is to be accomplished "by ad vancing the hands of the clock one hour on May 1 and moving them back one hour October 1." Great things are claimed for human ity by the enthusiastic people back of the movement, among them being bet ter health and more enjoyment for all. They allege that It Is of more Impor tance than the tariff revision proposi tion or the digging of the Panama Canal, ana urge Mr. Baker to do his utmost to have an ordinance passed In Portland to advance the time, as stated. I have not had time as yet to In vestigate this matter sufficiently to say -whether I will take any stock In it," said Mr. Baker last night. "You see I am opposed to dayllgnt on gen eral principles. Being in a business where darkness is required, I natural ly feel a lltle backward about advo cating more daylight. What would happen to my business if we should do away altogether with darkness? It Is a weighty subject, and I can't be quot ed too seriously or definitely until I have given mare thought to the sub ject." ..-..' Mayor Simon expressed the idea that the proposition Is that of some "crank." He said he would not regard it very highly at first glance. There Is, he remarked, no law now against enjoy ing all the daylight one wishes while It lasts, and he is not particularly im pressed with the purpose of the new organization, which operates from Cin cinnati, where the subject had Its birth in America. In some foreign countries It has been triad with great success. It is said. CONSUL NUMAN0 ON TOUR Japanese Official to Inspect Indus- tries of Three States. Yasutaro Numano, Imperial Japanese Consul, located in Portland, starts today on a tour of Inspection through Eastern M0ST UNIQUE NEWSPAPER f42 , mm ,m if v JrV ,--w.-ja '4s&ej V . M. K, SATTERLEE'S PRINTIXQ ESTABLISHMENT AT ftuILCEXEJ. SEATTLE, Wash.. July 13. (Special.) The above is a picture of per haps the most unique newspaper office in the United States. Its owner . Is M. F. Satterlee, a pioneer newspaper man, who will publish the new paper, Megaphone, at Qullcene. A creek wjiich runs by one cor ner of the house furnishes power to run the press and a small dynamo for lighting purposes. From his stool, he can catch trout, and the woods back of him are filled with game. In his front yard is an or chard of about a half dozen trees from which he can pick fruit with out effort, and from his front door he has a scenic view of the Olym pics unsurpassed in the State of Washington. Oregon, Idaho and "Wyoming, the three Ftates over which his Jurisdiction extends. The object of his trip Is to study the general industrial conditions of the coun try. He expects to be gone about five weeks. After spending some time at La Grande, Pendleton. Union and Huntington, he will proceed to Boise, Idaho, where he will visit Governor Brady. At Nampa, Pay ette, Pocatello and' Idaho Falls he will make a close study of the sugar beet in dustry. In Wyoming he will pay par ticular attention to the mineral develop ments. Mr. Numano came to. Portland ten months ago from London; where he filled a position similar to the one that he Is filling here. Oregon Herbs (a tea) best remedy for klaney and bladder troubles. Nature's own preparation. SOc at all druggists. BATY IS TO BE KEPT Mayor Announces No Change in Detective Captain. BAILEY TO KEEP PLACE Simon Says Police Department Is Harmonious and Chief Cox Sees No Reaaon for Transfer" of Head of Sleuth Bureau. - Mayor Simon announced yesterday afternoon that the administration will continue Captain Baty as head of the detective bureau of the police depart ment. The decision was reached at a conference held between the Mayor and Chief Cox at the City Hall late In the day, after -which it was made public. Baty's request to be transferred to uni form duty will not be granted, as it is the desire of the Mayor and Chief that there be no changes in the force at this time. , "There Is no crime in the city and everything is working nicely in police circles," said Mayor Simon. "There is no reason for a change'in the force at this time, and none has even been con templated. Captain Baty will be re tained as chief of detectives, as Chief Cox wishes, and there seems no reason why he should be changed. The de partment Is In good condition. I am highly pleased with the manner In which Chief Cox is doing his work, and I believe the city will get good results from the conduct of the department under his guidance." There have been rumors from time to time to the effect that the Simon regime would transfer Captain Baty from detective duty to that of a patrol captain, and that Patrol Captain Bailey would be shifted to the command of the detective bureau. Monday morning Captain Baty expressed to Chief Cox a desire to be changed as stated, but this is now officially denied, and affairs will continue as they are. "I am satisfied to remain where I am if it is the wish of the administration," said Captain Baty last night, "but, as I told Chief Cox, it would not hurt my feelings a bit If he chose to make the change tht has been rumored for some time. I will say that the detective bureau is now harmonious, everything working in good shape and everyone seems satisfied. The old men who were reinstated by the Mayor and Executive Board are giving excellent satisfaction, as are also those who comprised the department before. I have, a good staff and they are working hard." AGNOSTICISM OR ROME Protestantism Must Disintegrate by the Working of Invariable Law, PORTLAND, July 13. (To the Editor.) July 4 last a few remarks on the general tendencies of the time In churches and re ligion by the writer were printed In the tol erant columns of The Oregonlan. Regard for space and the Immensity of the subject matter made connection and clearness diffi cult. A few closing remarks, reflecting only so far as he knows, the views of the under signed, are submitted. ' June 20 last The Oregonlan Bald: "The principle oi historical Interpretation applies to the Jewish and Christian scriptures the same as to other records; the fundamental principle of all criticism Is that every book or document Is to be interpreted by the conditions of the time that produced it; and so It is to be estimated or Judsred." But who Is to estimate or Judge? Is the work of the fathers of the church to be un done as the work of the fathers of the re public hap been undone with the oonse quences so forcibly set forth in your lead ing; editorial this morning? Let us look backward. The divinity of Jesus Is the central Idea of all Christian Instructions. The Catholic Church existed as an organ ized society having powers from her divine founder to teach all nations, before the scriptures aa a whole existed, and before there was question or dispute about any part of the scriptures. Some ten genera tions of Christians lived and died before that collection of aacred books called the Bible was universally known and received and the Christian writers of the first three centuries were unanimous tn accepting these books as Inspired. Beginning with the fourth century and up to the middle of the 16th century the principle of historical interpretation and the right of private Judgment In the interpretation of the scrlp- OFFICE IN UNITED STATES. . "vjevj-uiinu "ijip. f l-J V: .yWJ. ? : . tures had their long day In court. If ever a cause had a more patient hearing in the bitterness of unparalleled religious contro versy, scholarship bas not revealed It. In 1546 Rome spoke with its inherent authority and listed the canoniclty of scrip ture in the Council of Trent, . which books, taken together with the canon on revelation in the Vatican council of 1ST0, stipulate "no one relying on his own knowledge, shall presume to Interpret scripture,' in matters of faith and morals relating to the edifica tion of Christian doctrine, distorting the sacred scripture to his own senses contrary to that sense which Holy Mother Church who Is to Judge of the true sense and in terpretation of the Holy Scriptures hath held and doth hold; or even contrary to the unanimous consent of the fathers without janathema." - But as Mgr. Seton states, a deep and profound knowledge of the scripture Is encouraged by the church, nor are Catholic commentators of the Bible restricted to a servile repetition of such Interpretations as may already have been given; they may differ from the greatest and most orthodox of their predecessors, only they are not at liberty to attach to scripture a meaning in conflict with the unanimous consent of the fathers or a doctrinal decision of the church. ' "I would not believe the gospel unless on the authority or the church." said St. Augustine, the greatest of the doc tors; Catholics believe 1n the authority of the church, to whom infallibility was prom ised and given. - Tlfe solidarity of religion is completed or destroyed with equal fidelity by the work ings of Invariable and irresistible law. Amid the din of opposing creeds Intellectual protestantism longs . for a religion without theology and without authority, a religion, for example, defined by' Huxley, "Reverence and love for" the ethical ideal, and the de sire to realize that Ideal In life.',' The dead faiths warn us of any such dream. They bear witness to man's need of a rule of faith expounded by a church with divine authority to develop a capacity to know God and to serve him. The dead religions had no spiritual solidarity. Protestantism is crippled by its essential character, it has no real unity of thought, it will disintegrate by the workings of the same Invariable and Irresistible law: its germs have entered our civil polity, representative government la no longer venerated. Interpreted and executed with the wisdom and teaching of the fath ers of the republic: the two great forces that conserve religion, morals and law are Judaism and Catholicism and the two least understood by persistent sectarian narrow ness. Judaism calmly meets the wild out bursts of the extremist safe with Israel. Its patriotism to country speaks through a learned rabbi, rr. Berkowltz: "The hotly contested social questions of our civilization are to be settled according to the ideas neither of the capitalist, the communist, the anarchist, nor the nihilist, but simply- and only according to the eternal laws of moral ity, of which Slnal Is the loftiest symbol." Men with capacity to see and think know what the authority of the Oathollc Church means In religion and government. De Tocquevllle in "Democracy In America" lays it down that men cannot do without dog matic belief, and In the chapter "Of the Progress of Roman Catholicism in the United States." concludes: "One of the ordinary weaknesses of the human intellect Is to seek to reconcile contrary principles, and to pur chase peace at the expense of logic. Thus there-have ever been and will ever be, men who. after having submitted some portion of their religious belief to the principles of authority, will seek to exempt several other parts of their faith from its influence, and to keep their minds floating at random be tween liberty and obedience. But I am in clined to believe that the number of these thinkers will be less in democratic than In other ages and that our posterity will tend more to a single divslon into two parts some relinquishing Christianity entirely, and others returning to the bosom of Rome." This single division Into two parts Is here; it is agnosticism or Rome JAMES HENNES8Y MURPHY. WOMAN DECLARED FRAUD Portland Warned Against Solicitor of Funds for Children. Superintenden Gardner, of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society, wishes to warn the public against a woman calling herself Mrs. Ida Hodes, who asks sub scriptions for a book devoted to chil dren, and further requests donations to be used for the benefit of destitute children In Portland. This woman says she represents the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society. Mr. Gard ner wishes the public to understand that he has no agents whatever in Portland asking subscriptions at this time, and if the society did put such agents into the field they would be pro vided with certificates written on the headed paper of the society and signed by the superintendent. Any person not having such certificates Is not author ized to represent this society in any manner, he says, and should be turned over to the police. 'Other institutions engaged In the work among children in the city also wish It understood that this woman does not represent them. When first heard, of the matter was reported to the Associated Charities, who started to investigate and suc ceeded In getting the woman on the phone. She informed the Associated Charities that she intended to leave town on the 4 o'clock train, but as late as the day before yesterday she was reported working In Irvington. PERSONALMENTION. General Manager O'Brien, of the Har rlman lines, is in Spokane. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Kahnweller, of Atlanta, Ga., are guests of Mrs. Levi White. At home Thursday. B. S. Josselyn, president of the Port land Railway, Light & Power Company, Is expected home today from a trip to Alaska. Mrs. H. Cleveland, with her daugh ters. Misses Dorothy and Hazel, re turned yesterday to Portland after a prolonged stay in the country. Rev. Hiram Foulkes, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church left last night for Cascadia, where he will spend his three weeks' Summer vacation. John M. Scott and R. B. Miller. Har riman passenger and freight officials, returned yesterday from a trip to Ri parla, Lewiston, Spokane and Hood River. Word has been received In Portland that Ossip Gabrilowltsch, the pianist who has been reported dying in New York, la Improving, following a surgi cal operation. United States District Attorney John McCourt, who has been ill for the past week. Is much improved and is expected to return to his office today. Mr. Mc Court was taken ill soon after his re turn from Pendleton a few days ago. A. W. Noyes, general traveling pass enger agent of the Chicago & North western, was In the city yesterday. He said the tourist travel was getting heavier every year and he believed Portland was an attraction as great as the fair. Russel E- Sewell, ex-Prosecuting At torney, left last night for California, where he will spend his vacation. Mr. Sewell Is a brother, of Dr. Edward C. Sewell, of San Francisco, with whom he will spend a large part of his time while In the Bear State. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Renouf and young child, Helen, accompanied by their Uncle, Captain George Wilson, United States Navy, with headquarters at Se attle,' were the guests last week of Mrs. F. L. Lash, at 392 East Stark Street. Mrs. Lash is Mr. Renouf's sister. Mr. Renouf is a member of a prominent wholesale publishing house at Montreal, Canada. President W. J. Kerr, of the Oregon Agricultural College, registered at Hotel Cornelius last night, upon his return from Denver, where he attended the convention of the National Educational Association. He Is now on his way to Seattle to at tend the educational congress being held there and today he will deliver the main address on "Equality of Opportunity in Education." . Rev. Thomas E. Sherman, S. J., Is resting at the' Portland house of that order on the Powell Valley road, near Creston. Owing to his exacting work Father Sherman was compelled to give up his lectures temporarily and take a rest. Besides his work as a missionary among non-Catholics he organized in Chicago the Catholic Truth Society, -whose object is to send out literature pertaining to Catholic doctrine. Marriage Ucensea. JOHNSON-TORSETH George J. Johnson. 23. cltv: Reus B. Torseth. 2J. city. HOWARD-TAYLOR William G. Howard, 27, city: Elizabeth W. Taylor. 25, city. KETTII-KOSKI Herman Kettll. 26. city; Annie KoFkl, 23. city. CENLEY-BUCHER Richard Denley, 23. Hillsdale Bucher, 21. city. NICHOLSON-TURNER Arthur M. Nich olson. 2T. city; Ada S. Turner, 20, city. POE-DEVEREAUX H. Elmer Poe 2S. city; Esther J. Devereaux. 23. city. Wedding and visiting cards, w. O. Smith A Co., Washington bldg., 4th and Wash. Cobs are sold by the yard. 15 Havana tobacco. Each cob is 4 inches long. Nine are placed in a bundle. Cobs are rough the package is inexpensive and the box is about the plainest that ever sat in a cigar window.. But Cobs aren't meant for looks you smoke them and when you have one good mouthful of the delicious, fra grant Havana you'll realize that you're getting 1 0 cents worth of pleas-. ure out of each of the nine. The millionaire gets his accustomed . flavor at the workingmaVs price -the workingman gets the millionaire's pleasure for his own pennies. The rough cigar with the smooth taste. ' FOR SALE EVERYWHERE MASON, EHRMAN WOMAN IS HAPPY Ex-Wife of Murderer Satisfied With Present Husband. SHE RUNS ROOMING-HOUSE Mrs. -John Kakounas, -Formerly Wife or Melville G. Bradley, Slayer of Patrolman Gittlngs, Talks About Her Life. "I wouldn't give the little finger of my husband, for all the other men in America." Such was the statement of Mrs. John Kakounas. Third street North, former wife of Melville G. Bradley, .slayer of Patrolman Gittlngs, December IS, 1907, who has remarried since her husband's flight from Justice following the killing. . " x Kakounas Is a Greek and owns a one third Interest in th Stockholm saloon, at. 81 Third street North, and a one-half Interest in the ramshackle rooming-house above, consisting of X rooms with two and three btds to the loom, which are rented out to transients, at 25 cents a bed. The former Mrs. Bradley is now mis tress of this rooming-house and at night takes her post at the head of the stair way to wait uron the shabby, almost destitute, clientele which fills it nightly. She says she is happy now for the first time in 15 years, dating from her mar riage to Bradley. By reason of the fact that sh was the central figure in the quarrels which led to the killing, Mrs. Kakounas has been more or leas In the limelight since it occurred and last night she expressed a deuive to be left alone and srlven- a rest. "It has been printed,'" she said, "that Gittlngs and 1 were Intimate. Why, there was nothir.t' more between that man and me then there is between you and me," and (-he looked Intently as was possible out of her weak brown eyes with their weary, drooping lids, at her interviewer, rhile an expression that might be called slyness gathered about them, gradually changing into that of a person who himself thinks you belleva he is telling an untruth. Mrs. Kakounas has at one time been a pretty woman. The contour of her Makes Flesh and Blood 2 For those recovering from the waste of disease, for those whose systems are run down, who crave an agree able, nourishing tonic to give relish to their meals and perfect rest on retiring, there is nothing to equal Combining the nutritive and diges tive elements of pure, rich barley malt with the tonic effects of choic est hops, it creates the desire for more solid foods, furnishing the power for their digestion, and makes the thin stout. mire L7o It Brrng Pahrt CstMiMiwUiliibiisuiuiui Order a Dozen from Your Local Onagri mm u hiiiuin hi. i "ti.m i p iw iitiss ' Pi m sMllll.WllWl.l.lnwn.W.MH,Wa,JtaVM & CO., Distributors, Portland, face might in early womanhood have appeared piquant, accentuated by a vivacious manner. Her hair is raven Iblack, though now there an stubby curls around the forehead, evidences of the curling iron. A complexion which might at one time have appeared pink and smooth. Is now red and diseased. "I have had a lot of trouble," she con tinued. "I can't say anything against 'Med' (meaning her former husband), and I hope I won't be called to the witness-stand at the trial. I can't forgot he is the father of my children. Both my father and mother have died since the killing occurred from grief and 1 have been driven almost to madness." (Here she pressed her hand against her forehead and was silent. "When were you divorced?" she was asked. "I can't Just remember exactly, but about ten months ago I think. I find it hard to remember now." She was also at a loss to remember how long she and Kakounas had been married, but thought about seven months. - Mrs. Kakounas says that soon after the killing she went to Iowa and worked s a cook in a restaurant. There she secured a divorce and returned here to marry her present husband. Nothing has been heard from Detec tive Coleman, who went to Idaho Falls. Idaho, to bring Bradley here. Bradley haa been under arrest since last Satur day and announced his intention of right ing extradition. Coleman is said to have ways of persuasion in such matters and his silence is interpreted, at police head quarters as a lgn that the prisoner has agreed to return without the formality There's a Genuine Pianola Piano at Eilers Piano House Now for $450 Fri No matter how old or how new your regular piano is, we'll now accept it in part payment for a genuine Pianola Piano, an instrument that never is idle, one that every member of the family can play. With the exception of last month and another month in 1907, more Pianola. Tl n T1 n2 TiavA Kpavi c nl rl rinvfnr fViA fife -a-n Vr.4.Ann J r "i. .Tnlw th vvui wiwiim aaj, we re goyig to make July twice uuu h vubio o a icaouu., Never again will Portland witness a showing of Pianola extensive and varied as now. V- Never heretofore, not even in New York, has it hcj show such a tremendous number of the very latest P;V eacn ana every style manufactured and in the v?r costly woods and finishes used If ever you expect to own a about it, at Eilers Piano House, retail dept., at Park (Eighth) and Washington streets. cents for a yard of Seattle, Spokane. of extradition. In that event he wiE probably reach here today. THE BEGINXER. A Hint to the Younc; Man or Womaa Just Starting; Out. The young man or woman just start ing out in life must keep their eyee and ears open and never let an oppor tunity for advancement slip by. While you may have a very good po sition, did it ever occur to you that there are better ones? Just make it a duty to read the help wanted columns of The Oregonlan each morning and you can rest easy that you are keeping in close touch with all openinBTP. RHEUMATISM Call for Free Uricsol Booklet on Treatment and Diet, at Woodard, Clarke & Co.', Portland, or write to Uricsol Chemical Co., Los An geles, Cal. $15 a Month Will Buy One ia ii.u bvu uuaiiicas uiys Vi wig uj.obvi.jr ui jji-ici s x laiio j3oii.se- bigger than any previous month. nonth. jr only in highest gra Pianola Piano