THE MORNING OREGOXIAX, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1920 V COX IS STRONG MAN. S MEREDITH Secretary of Agriculture Ar rives in Portland. OTHER VIEWS WITHHELD Visitor Apparently More Interested In Department Affairs Than in Politics. Another man who was prominent enough to be mentioned as presi dential material at the late demo cratic convention, has arrived in Portland, and that is Edwin L. Mere dith, secretary of agriculture, who arrived last night, accompanied by bis wife and secretary. Mr. Meredith did not appear to take his disappointment, if disappointment it was, very seriously. Apparently he was more interested in the work of his department than in politics. Al though he will stay in Portland only one day, ho said that he intended making a trip up the Columbia high-i way if poHSible, to pee the forest re serve at Eagle creek. Commenting on the Cox nomination at San Francisco, Meredith said: "Cox is a strong man and his record shows him to be a good executive. I don't know the governor personally, but from his record as an executive, in a small way, I would say that he would make good, now that he has the possibility of a bigger job on his hands." Mr. Meredith III With Cold. Attempts to get an expression of his opinion on other subjects more near his heart were futile, as his physical condition was such that friends hurried him to his hotel im mediately. He had been, suffering from a severe cold all the way up from San Francisco, according to his secretary, and physicians advised him to proceed immediately to his hotel where medical treatment could be given him. Mr. Meredith admitted that he had not enjoyed the trip north on account of his cold, but was opti mistic about feeling better for his appearances and entertainment today. Secretary Meredith will address a meeting of all the heads of the vari ous bureaus of the department of ag riculture which are represented here at 10:45 this morning at the office of Georee Cecil. United States district forest supervisor. Thirty heads of the various departments will be pres ent. The forest service is the largest division of the secretary's department represented in Portland. Others are the weather bureau, the biological survey and the bureaus of entomol ogy, markets and pathology. Mat ters pertaining to departmental work will be discussed. ' Committee to Mrft Secretary. A special reception committee will meet the secretary at the Multnomah hotel at 11:30 this morning, and will escort him to the Chamber of Com merce luncheon at noon, where he will be the principal speaker on the programme. In the afternoon an automobile party will take Secretary and Mrs. Meredith over the Columbia highway as far as the forest reserve at Eagle creek. Governor Olcott will make a spe , cial trip up from Salem to meet Sec ' retary Meredith and will be on the reception committte at the Multno mah this morning. President W. J. Kerr of the Oregon Agricultural col lege and Senator Chamberlain are also members of the reception com mittee. Other members of the committee, of which E. E. Faville is the general chairman, are: Simon Benson, Charles V. Bersr. W. P. Strandborg, Dr. C. J. Smith, Nathan Strauss. C. C. Chap man, Julius L. Meier, Edward New begin. E. X. Strong, J. L. Wright, W. E. Wilson. John S. Beall, D. 1.. Car penter, C. E. Spence, George Quayle, W. H. Crawford and Edward N. Wein baum. Secretary Meredith is scheduled to leave today at 5:30 P. M., going di- . rectly back to Washington. D. C. CITY TO PROBE DEATHS TWO CHILDREN" DIE WITHIN" SIX DAYS OF EACH OTHER Investigation May Reach to Source of Portland's Milk Supply if Cause Is Ascertained. As the results of the deaths of George and Marie Keller, infant son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Keller, of 316 East Seventy-sixth street north, within six days of each other, coupled with the fact that their deaths were ascribed to acidosis in th.e official death certificates, the city health office, under the direction of Dr. George Parrish, is investigat- ' ing the case in the belief that some other malady may have been respon sible for the double demise. According to Dr. Parrish, the city health officer, acidosis is not a cause of death, being merely a condition which attends the actual death of a person. The double funeral was beld yesterday afternoon from the chapel of J. P. Finley & Son. Every death In the city is reported to governmental authorities weekly, and the government refuses to accept acidosis as a death cause, just as it would refuse to accept chills as a cause, explained the city health of ficer. "We do not know whether or not there is anything behind the deaths of the two children." said Dr. Parrish last night. "However, we cannot ac cept the cause as given and a thor ough investigation will be made Sat urday by the health office." According to Dr. Parrish, the deaths of George and Marie Keller might have been due to Beveral ciluses, prin cipal among which would be diar rhoea. If the deaths were due to the last cause, said Dr. Parrish. investi gation of the case will proceed still further and may include a searching examination into the source of Port land's milk supply. The doctor who signed the death certificate and attended the children was Dr. Allan P. Noyes. ' AIR MAIL TRIAL ORDERED Seattle Sends Out First Pouch by Plane Tomorrow. SEATTLE, Wash., July 9. The first ' air mail delivery from Seattle will be made Sunday morning, when Rudolph A. Erlichman, a former army pilot, will carry a pouchpf first-class mail by airplane from Seattle to Yakima. Wash., postal authorities here an nounced today. Erlichman will leave Seattle between 6 and 7 o'clock in the morning and expects to arrive in Yakima in 2 hours and 15 minutes if winds are favorable. Erlichman flew from Yakima' to Seattle today, leaving at 5 o'clock this morning and arriving at 4 o'clock this afternoon. A stop of several hours was made at Cle Elum. Sunday's mail delivery will be in the nature of a trial flight and not the institution of regular service, it was announced. O'NEILL FUNERAL TODAY OLD-TIME MARINE ENGIAKJEIi TO BK BURIED. Services to Be Held From St. Mary's Cathedral With Interment at Mt. Calvary Cemetery. The funeral of Michael O'Neill, for many years a marine engineer on va rious boats operating out of Portland and who died Tuesday in San Fran- .Michael O'Neill, old-time rlne engineer, whose funeral will be held today. Cisco at the age of 76. will be held this morning at 9 o'clock from St. Mary's cathedral. Interment will be at Mount Calvary cemetery. Mr. O Neill was born in Ireland and rame to the United States in 1866. Three years later he came -to Oregon and first settled at Coos Bay. In 1871 he began his career as a steamboat man on the tug Merrimac operating on the Columbia river. Later he was connected with the Oregon Steam Navigation company. With Captain Thomas Callahan he operated the steamer Margory for a time. He moved to California in 1904 on account of ill health. He is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Nora Dranga of Portland and Mrs. James Gumbleton of Ballymacoda, Ireland, and a brother, James O'Neill of San Francisco. , lT.VERAIi IS HELD FOR V. S. EX-SURGEON" GENERAL. Thousands Stand With Bare Heads as Procession Passes Through London Streets. LONDON. July 9. Homage notable in the history of the ancient cathe dral was paid to the memory of 11a-jor-General William C. Gorgas in St. Paul's at noon today when the fu neral services for the ex-surgeon-general of the American army were held. With the American and British flags atop Alexandria hospital float ing at half mast and a battery of dis tant guns booming the 13-gun salute of a major-general, the long cortege began its slow march from the hos pital to the cathedral at 11 o'clock. The military escort was composed of the second grenadiers and its staff, mounted on black horses; three squadrons of the life guards, a bat talion of fhe Coldstream guards and a battalion of the Irish" guards. The flag-draped coffin was borne on a gun carriage with a- wreath of lilies the only floral decoration. Immediately at the head of the caisson was a solitary foot soldier, who led the riderless charger of Gen eral Gorgas. The crowds which lined the two-mile route of the funeral procession to the cathedral stood with bared heads as the column filed past. At the cathedral steps the casket was met by a distinguished party of pallbearers. The casket was borne by eight stalwart guards through the central aisle of the cathedral, where it was met by the clergy and choir, which led the way to the chancel. Mrs. Gorgas. leaning on the arm of Brigadier-General Noble, long one of Gen eral Gorgas' associates, followed the casket, which reposed on. a stand be neath the dome of the cathedral dur ing the simple and brief ceremonies. Dean Inge and sub-Deacon Bisley of St. Pauls, officiated. No eulogy was spoken. The hearse returned to the hospital, where the body of General Gorgas will lies awaiting transfer to South ampton and thence to New York on board an American army transport. WOMEN OPEN OFFICES Chicago to Be Headquarters of Re publican Voters. CHICAGO, July 9. Chicago will be headquarters for Republican women voters, Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton, vice-chairman of the executive com mittee of the Republican . national committee, announced today. The individual states will work out their own problems. Mrs. Upton said, while the policy of the committee here will be to deal only with na tional problems. DEATH CHARGE DISMISSED Accusation Against ' Millionaire Widower Is Dropped. WASHINGTON, July 9. Charges that Chester A. Snow, 76 years old, millionaire patent attorney, and two other persons conspired to bring about the death of Mrs. Addis Hub bard Snow, were dismissed today by Judge Harrison in federal police court. Mrs. Snow was the divorced wife of the attorney. i f " wh 1 t - f t t ma- CONGRESS PARTY FETED AT BEND Representatives to Visit North Unit-Project Today. NEWS CARRIED BY PIGEON Parly to Leave Madras Tomorrow 3Iorning in Special Car for Portland. BEND, Or., July 9. (Special.) At the end of their long auto trip half way from California to the Wash ington Tine, the vanguard of the con gressional appropriations committee arrived here tonight on the way to Portland, accompanied by a. welcom ing committee sent out yesterday morning to Crater lake by the Bend Commercial club. Members of the committee reaching Bend were Chair man James W. Good. Burton L. French of Idaho and John M. Evans of Mon tana. They were accompanied by Representative N. J. Sinnott of Ore gon: Arthur P. Davis, United States reclamation service director; L. B. Beadle, assistant director, and Percy A. Cupper, state engineer. John W. Eagan of New Jersey, Jo seph W. Byrns of Tennessee and Will iam It. Wood of Indiana left the main party on a fishing trip to Davis lake under the guidance of Forest Super visor N. G. Jacobson of the Deschutes national forest. ' Reservoir la Visited. State Engineer Percy A. Cupper and Reclamation Service Director Arthur P. Davis visited Benham falls on the way in, the site for the projected storage reservoir recommended by the co-operative survey of 1914, approved in the 1920 report of Professor W. O. Crosby, reclamation service geologist, which, if put through, will store 440,000 acre-feet of water. Representative Charles B. Timber lake of Colorado, "Farmer" Smith, Union Pacific agriculturist, and Dele gates Aya and Hethington of the Portland Chamber of Commerce were delayed by auto trouble. Stephen T. Mather, director of the national park service, and Vice President E. V. McCormick of the Southern Pacific, who were with the party at Crater lake yesterday, start ed for Ashland this morning, Mr. Mather Intending to join the repre sentatives, in Portland. Bend business men who accom panied the visiting officials were A. M. Pringle, E. J. Catlow, N. G. Jacob son. D. G. McPherson, Clyde M. Mc Kay. H. J. Overturf, J. B. Miner and R. W. Sawyer. Pigeon Carries IVevra. To a carrier pigeon trained by W. J. Sproat of the Deschutes national forest belongs the honor of bringing the first direct news of the doings of the solons received here since their departure from Klamath Falls last Wednesday. The bird was taken to Crater lake yesterday morning by Forest Super visor Jacobson, and released at the lake this morning. It carried in an aluminum tube attached to its leg an account of an informal meeting held at the lake last night, in the course of which Mr. Mather, Mr. Sin nott and Mr. McCormick urged the inclusion of adjoining natural beauty spots in the Crater Lake National park. On the trip to Bend the party saw the smoke from forest fires raging 25 miles from Crescent, and stopped at the Crescent ranger station at noon for a trout luncheon. In honor of the visitors, a ban quet was served at the Pilot Butte inn here tonight by the Bend Com mercial club, with a total attendance of 65. Each guest was reminded of the importance of bringing water to the land by a small wooden tank filled with water, placed before his place, and appropriately lettered, while as an additional touch, a" tiny trout from the Tumalo fish hatchery swam in each tank. Tomorrow morning, in autos fur nished by Bend, Redmond and Prine ville business men, the visitors will be taken on a tour of the Tumalo and central Oregon irrigation projects and will have luncheon at Prineville. From there they will go on to Madras, viewing the north unit project in Jefferson county, leaving the follow ing morning on their special car for Portland. PLANES NET 20 MILLION Sale of Xavy's Surplus Aircraft Is World's Second Largest. NEW TORK. July 9. The navy's surplus aircraft, valued at approxi mately $20,000,000 have been pur chased by the United Aircraft Engin eering corporation, officials of the company announced here today. This is said to be the second largest transaction of its kind in the world. The first was the purchase of $500, 000.000 of war" surplus aircraft from the British government by a British concern some two months ago. All navy aircraft and aircraft equipment that will be declared ob solete this year also have been con tracted for, it was stated. Saar Says Great Composer Will Be Westerner. . Distinguished Musician From East Is Ouest of ' Portlandera at Banquet. "I PREDICT that tha coming great music composer of this country. America, will have his cradle in the west. Look out for him. Good peo ple of the west, be leaders in music. Let others follow. But remember that money gifts from others, is not all in all. It accomplishes nothing. Real music creation and performance must come from within."' The speaker was Louis Victor Saar, the distinguished music authority from the east, and one of the big figures in the lists of the world's song composers, replying to a call for a speech at a banquet held in his honor by Portland ' musicians . last night at the Benson hotel. Mr. Saar was born in Alsace, France, and studied music un'der di rection of eminent masters, among them being Brahms. "I remember Brahms very well." continued Mr. Saar. "He was a little man physically, and when people called to pay their respects to him, he invariably sat. In Vienna Brahms was quite a favorite with children, and when he went out for a walk, which was frequently the case, chil dren followed him joyously and were rewarded . with candies, of which he had his pockets filled. "On many occasions Brahms was not dressed sufficiently. When a dep utation called to do him honor the men in the party, wore tall hats and fashionable clothes and Brahms re ceived them in his night clothes." Mr. Saar also told stories of his friends. Silotti and Seidel, and re marked that Seidel's best time for music inspiration was from 2 A. M. to 4 A. M. . The toastmaster was George Wil ber Reed, who in original poetry in troduced each speaker, including Mrs. Warren E. Thomas, Mrs. A. W. Clax op,t representing respectively the MacDowell and Monday Musical clubs; Frederick W. Goodrich, Luclen E. Becker and Dr. John Landsbury, dean of music at the University of Oregon. Piano solos were played by Ella Connell Jesse, and songs composed by Mr. Saar were sung by Mark Vincent Daniels, baritone. Mr. Daniels' ac companist being Mr. Saar. The lat ter also played one of hia recent com positions. There were more than 100 people present. 35 START CRUISE JULY 13 NAVAL RESERVISTS TO TRAIN" ON" . DESTROYER TALBOT. Second .Contingent Will Sail in August- Larger Vessels Are Promised for Later Groups. The first contingent of the local naval reserve is scheduled to begin a two -weeks' training cruise July 13, according to a telegram received here yesterday by- Lieutenant-Commander J. A. Beckwith. The telegram stated that the United States destroyer Talbot would arrive in Portland July 13 to take on board 35 enlisted men for the two weeks' cruise. The men selected have been ordered to report at the Portland naval recruiting station at 9 A. AL July 13. The second contingent will start on a cruise about August 1, according to Lieutenant-Commander Backwith. They will be taken care of on larger vessels than the first group. Paymaster De Martini will Join the U. S. S. Idaho today for a cruuse to Alaska. Dr. W. I. Northrup and sev eral other medical officers reported at Bremerton yesterday for assign ment to vessels. Lieutenant-Commander Beckwith joins the U. S. S. Mississippi at Brem-. erton today. There are more than 4000 naval re serves, including ISO officers, in Ore gon, according to Mr. Beckwith, all of whom were recruited during the war. Men who live in rural com munities will be given their cruises in the fall after the harvest season Is over. SHOTS SCARE BURGLAR Man in Store at Bertha Station Flees, Leaving Auto. Two shots were fired from a shot gun early this 'morning at a burglar who broke into the Byrne & Hough store at Bertha station and obtained a small amount of cash. The burglar escaped, leaving an automobile be hind. W. J. Byrne, one of the owners of the store, heard the burglar inside, and called on Andrew Johnson, sec tion foreman for the Southern Pacific railroad, frfr help. Mr. Johnson fired two shots at the burglar, who by tnat time was in full flight. ine wnoie neighborhood was aroused by the shooting, and several persons called both the police and the sheriff. The sheriff seized the auto mobile, which is believed to be : stolen car. - The police automobile was damaged in a collision at Fourth and Morrison streets'on the way to Bertha. $22,151 ESTATE IS LEFT Late Governor Y ttliycombe's Will Is Filed for Probate. SALEM, Or., July 9. (Special.) 'the total value of the estate of th late Governor Withycombe is $22. iji.jj, according to a report filed in the probate court here today. Ad proximately $18,000 xt the estate in cludes real property, while the value of the personal property is placed f4.CSl.22. Mr. Withycombes indebt edness totaled $4334.15, while the cost or administration of the estate and expenses attendant to the. last illness aggregated $2293.77. the report declares the widow's life interest in the estate to be $2726.0 while the interest of each of the four children is $3199.31. Under the Jr.oon exemption clause neither Mrs. Withy- comoe nor tne children are subject 10 pay inneritance tax on the estate, MURPHY DEFEATS KELLY Onslaught Staretd in First Round and Lead Is Piled Up. SAN FRANCISCO, July 9. (Spe cial.) bpud Murphy defeated T Kelly at Dreamland rink tonight. He started in the first round and kept piling up .a lead until the final bell The only 'thing Kelly had was the ability to take it. There was no knockdown and Kelly was in no dan ger of a knockout, but was well whipped. ai uano won tne verdict over Buck Holy, thing and a hurt anyone. It was a pretty even draw would not have In the other bouts Johnny Suden burg slugged his way to a victory over Leo Matlock. Speedball Heyden beat Herb Brodie. Jack Wright beat Rex Morris. Al Doyle knocked Jimmy Roache down a couple of times in the first round and the bout was stopped Ad Kemy beat Kay Kainey. ANFUS IN CHINA REBEL U. S. Legation Informed of Party' Opposition to Administration. WASHINGTON, July 9. The Amer lean legation at Pekin advised th state department that the Anfu party in tnina, headed Dy Tuan Ghi-Jui, ex premier and minister of war, had rise against President Hsu Shih-Chan following the dismissal of Genera Hsu. The president was said to have drafted a mandate degrading General Tsao Kura, the military governor of Chihli, and dismissing General Wu Pei Fu after a courtmartial. A force under Tuan was reported to be ad vancing on Pao Ting Fu to attack Tsao Kun and Wu Pei Fu. Los Angeles Probe to Continue. LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 9. The federal grand jury here will resume Its investigation into alleged viola tions of the Lever act by merchants of San Diego andf Los Angeles next week, it was announced today by J. Robert O'Connor, United States dis trict attorney. The Marconi Wireless company pro poses to the British government to erect wireless stations rn England Egypt. India, East Africa, South Af rica, West Africa, Canada', West In dies, Straits Settlements and Aus tralia, thus linking the whole em- lre in one wireless chain. BREAK POLISH AT 3 POINTS Berisina River Is Crossed by Bolsheviki. WARSAW MAY BE. LEFT Removal .of Seat of Government Cndcr Consideration- Drive Aimed at Lithuania. BERLIN, July 9. A dispatch to the Vossische Zeitung from Tilsit said that after fighting the bolsheviki had broken through the Polish northern front and crossed the Beresina river at three points. The dispatch added that panic has broken out in Vilna, from which the Polish occupation authorities had fled. LONDON, July 9. It is the inten tion of Poland to move her seat of government from Warsaw, according statements printed by the German press quoted in a wireless message rom Berlin today. The occupation of the town of Staro Konstan tt nof f, about 40 miles from he Galician border opposite Tarno- pol, by the bolshevik forces, was an nounced in Thursdays official com munique from Moscow, received by wireless today. It stated the town had been taken Wednesday after fierce fighting. In the direction of Sarny, on the' Koval railway, the soviet troops, the statement said, were continuing to advance. WARSAW, July 8. (By The Asso ciated , Press.) Russian bolshevik forces have broken through the Polish lines south of the Dvina river in a drive designed to overrun Lithuania and form a contact with East Prussia, said an official statement issued here today. The Poles were fighting desperately to check the advance along the northern front, against which the enemy is throwing crack divisions. In the south. General Budenny, with Rovno in his possession, was ad vancing in the direction of Lemberg, which is only 180 miles from War saw. COPENHAGEN. July 9. The Letts have gone to the assistance of the Poles around Dvinsk, according to the Kovno correspondent of the Ber lingske ' Tidende. The Poles request ed the Letts to take war material which the Poles were unable to move in their retreat. - WARSAW, July 9. The foreign of fice today announced that the Polish government had forwarded a note to the conference in Spa declaring that Poland is now, just as before and al ways, ready and willing to make a peace based upon the principle of self-determination of nations. PARIS, July 9. Dispatches from Teheran, Persia, today reported new landings of bolshevik troops at sev eral Persian, ports on the Caspian sea. The bolsheviki were reported also to have occupied the road running be tween Teheran and Taurus. TO FETE ELKS 10,000 "HELLO, BILLS," EX PECTED TO ATTEND SESSION". Elaborate Programme Arranged for Convention of August 19-2 1, . Including Big Parade. VANCOUVER. Wash.. July 9. (Spe cial.) When the ju.uuu h;iks come to Vancouver for the Washington state convention August 19. 20 and 21. they will find an elaborate programme ar ranged for them. The entertainment committee made a report today, and here are some of the stunts that will keep the Elks and their ladies busy from the time they arrive until they depart: Arrival, registration, opening ses sion of the state association, invoca tion, address of welcome by Mayor G. R. Percival, addresi on behalf of Vancouver lodge No. 823 by Arthur Pender, exalted ruler; response by State President Johnson, ritualistic contest at 8 P. M. between Centralia and Olympia, jazz band parade, of ficial opening of purple garden and dancing in the city park. Friday, August 20,. business session of state association, massed band concert. Elks' frolic on Columbia beach, ladies' walking contest; 8:30 P. M., ladies' reception in purple gar den, grand athletic contest and smok er. dancing in the purple garden and city park. Saturday, August 21, business ses sion and installation of newly elected officers, band contest in city park at 10; 11:30, concert by various bands 3 P. M., grand parade of all Wash ington and Oregon lodges; golf con test, Washington versus Oregon presentation of prizes by district dep uty; 5 P. M., grand automobile trip seeing Clarke county. HOOVER DEFENDS ACTION Trade Commission Investigates Separation, Concern's Royalties. SAN FRANCISCO. July 9. Defend ing his right to detail publicly thi process used by the Minerals Separa tion company, limited, as part of an investigation of the company s royalty accounts by the federal trade commis sion, Theodore J. Hoover, former gen eral manager of the company, and brother of Herbert C. Hoover, told the committee in a special hearing of the action here today tnat he made the disclosures in the public inter est." He testified that after leaving" the company he was retained in an ad visory capacity by the Miami Copper company of Florida The trade commission is investi gating specific charges that the sep aration company charged excessive royalties for the use of its mineral extraction process. JERSEY MEN DUE TODAY Democratic Special, Delayed South, to Arrive at 9:3 0. - GRANTS PASS, Or.. July 9. (Spe cial.) The New Jersey democratic special, delayed for two days" in the yosemite valley by an accident, will arrive in Portland tmorrow morning at 9:30. The Jersey delegates, repre senting one of the three states that failed to ratify the 18th amendment, are led by James R. Nugent, demo cratic boss, who. with Moore of Ohio. Murphy of New York and Brennan of Illinois, is credited with having ma- REDS LINES M STARTS TODAY neuvered the nomination of Cox in the democratic convention. Others on the special are Mayor Frederick W. Donnelly of Trenton; Mayor Frank J. Van Root of Paterson and Dr. Charles r . Kraemer oi Newark. SHRINERS GET GLAD HAND "Pote" Garretson Lauds Alaskan Cities for Hospitality. TACOMA.t Wash.. July 9. (Spe cial.) Praising the hospitality of the Alaskan cities they visited, Ellis Lewis' Garretson, imperial potentate of North American Shiners, and other members of the imperial divan returned home today. Mr. Garretson was accompanied north by 150 mem bers of Afifi temple of this city. The Shriners carried two great keys, one At Last, Relief From Rheumatism Now la aa Excellent Time to Uet Rid of Its TorCurn. Victims of rheumatism should take advantage- of the warm season which is so favorable to the proper treat ment for this painful ailment. Rheumatism is more than a mere local disorder confined to the locality of the painful parts. It cannot be rubbed away, because it is a deep seated disease that has its source in the blood supply. The tiny pain demons, the millions of little disease germs that cause the disease, must ' ; ; ".:::T:'-;V.;: ...:.vVSv;W - X ffx i JULIAN IN ."AN ADVENTURESS" Positively the Biggest Comedy Picture Ever Presented in Portland Also Paramount Trio Popular Soifi "Outlaws of the Deep" William J, Detective Fl;na Story RIVOLI ALWAYS CONCERT ORCHESTRA under MISCHA GUTERSON SPECIAL SUNDAY CONCERT 12:30 Noon Tomorrow Danse Macabre ............................ Sain t-Saens Son? of the Soul J. Breil Prelude ......S. Rachmaninoff The Swan Saint-Saens Paramount Trio . ....................... .Popular Song3 WEEK-DAY CONCERTS Danse Macabre .Saint-Saen3 Paramount Trio. presented by Wrangell. and the other by Juneau, during the imperial visit to the northland. The Shriners said that their recep tion in Alaska was splendid, every body throwing open their doors to the party from the states. The Fourth of July was celebrated at Petersburg. A spectacular demon stration greeted the visitors, and ad dresses were made by Mayor George L. Baker of Portland and Mr. Gar retson. DANIELS VISITS SEATTLE Secretary and Admiral Rodman Arrive Aboard New Mexico. SEATTLE, Wash., July 9. Josepjhus Daniels, secretary of the navy, and Admiral Rodman, commander of the Pacific fleet, arrived in Seattle at 1 be reached and eliminated from the blood before real relief can be had. S. S. S. has been successfully used for rheumatism for more than EO years. It is the most thorough and reliable blood remedy because it searches out and eliminates all dis ease germs which infest the blood. Go to your drug store and get a bottle of S. S. S. today, and begin to take a rational, sensible treatment for rheumatism that will show re sults. For free expert medical ad or tree expert medical ad- garding your own case, write o chief medical adviser, 603 laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Adv. vice reg fully t Swift Lab Afternoons. .25 Evenings ... .3o (Incl. War Tax) International Weekly The I iiiml w of All the World NOW P. M aboard the flagship New Mexico. With John Barton Payne, secretary of the lnter'or, they will participate this afternoon in the dedication of Seattle's new flying field at Sand Point. Tomorrow the officials are scheduled to sail for Alaska on an inspection trip. VICTIMS RESCUED Kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles are most dangerous be cause of their insidious attacks. Heed the first warning they rive that they need attention by taking G0LDMEDAL Th world's standard remedy for these disorders, will often ward off these dis eases and strengthen tha body against further attacks. Three sizes, all druggists. Look for tha buds Gold Medal on Try boa and accapt no imitation PARKER'S MA1K iSALAIVl r -J'-a Removes Dandruff -StopsUairt'alliD;J rv?-'? f BeaGlrF. Hair 1 f.'-xvrlr5 oc ud i.oo at )ru?-ist. n?rZ niiChem. wts. zar. w.t. v