Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, June 09, 1915, Page 3, Image 3

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    3
PORTLAND PLEASED
BY BRYAN'S GOING
BRYAN WILL TAKE
STUMP FOR PEACE
COUNSELLOR OF STATE DEPARTMENT, WHOSE SIGNATURE
WILL BE AFFIXED TO NOTE TO GERMANY.
A Wonderful Assortment of Sport Hats From 50c, 75c, $1.00 to $5.00
Little Wonder
Records 10c
New selections, including Lit
tle Grey House in tho West:
I'm on My Way to Dublin Bay;
Hee-Haw Fox Trot; On the 5:15;
Beverly Hunt; Meadowbrook
Fox Trot: When I Dream of Old
Erin; Some Baby; Don't Take
My Darling Boy Away and
many other titles. Basement
Mail and Telephone Orders Filled by Expert Shoppers
)
O.
Citizens From Various Walks
of Life Express Approval
of Resignation.
Resignation 'Thought to Indi
cate Split in Democracy
and Certain Defeat.
Merchandise
Merit Only"
Home Phone A 6691
Pacific Phone Marshall 5000
June White and Clearance Sales
We are very busy. The main reason a reason that carries more weight with women than anything
else could positively mean ECONOMY singles out this June White and Clearance Sale as the one event
for Portland women to take advantage of. Not only Merchandise of Merit not only variety not only
style but REAL ECONOMY, that cannot be equaled, is the dominant factor and magnet that is draw
ing unparalleled response day after day. ,
ACT LATE, IN VIEW OF FEW
ISSUE IS SQUARELY DRAWN
Others Regard Policies as Academic,
Conflictlns, and Lay Depres
sion to Commoner; Senator
Lane Expresses Sorrow.
Candidacy of Secretary for Presi
dency Against Wilson Created"
Automatically Whether or Not
He Intended It.
4
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Little sorrow was expressed in Port
land yesterday at the resignation of
William Jennings Bryan as Secretary
of State, except Insofar as comlngf at
this time it might have an effect on
the delicate situation between the
United States and Germany.
toon after the first news of Mr.
Bryan's resignation was received, a
reporter made it his business inform
ally to interview persons on the streets
to ascertain their feelings about it.
Not a single person was found who
seemed to feel anything but relief at
the passing of Mr. Bryan from Presi
dent Wilson's Cabinet.
Here are some of the sentiments
expressed by passersby on the princi
pal corners, quoted word for word:
"Well, we'll have better times now,
sure."
"The fifth wheel is gone from the
Cabinet and. we can get down to bus
iness now."
"New Best of Year."
"This is the best news .we've have
for a year."
"Mr. Bryan is a good talker, and
now he can go back to the Chautauqua
platform for a living."
"How did he stick there so long?"
"I'm a Wilson man, you bet, but this
fellow .Bryan will never get a vote
-of mine."
"Too badhe didn't do It a year ago,
before this war broke out."
"Say. he's done more to kill confi
dence in this country and to make us
feel hard times than any amount of
tariff legislation."
"This is good news, and I think
the whole country will be glad."
There were many others of the same
tenor, but those quoted faithfully rep
resent them all.
Following are statements by well
known Republicans, Democrats and
Progressives on Mr. Bryan's resigna
tion: Act Honorable, Says Chamberlain.
United States Senator Chamberlain,
Democrat I know only what the news
paper dispatches have said, and from
the published correspondence between
President Wilson and Mr. Bryan. It
Is unfortunate for the country that
they should have differed. Mr. Bryan
and Mr. Wilson want to accomplish
the same thing, but have different
ways of going about it. When he
could not support the President's
views, I think Mr. Bryan took the only
honorable course in resigning.. I do
not think there is any serious breach
between them. President . Wilson
started out on a definite policy in his
dealings with Germany and I do not see
how he could have changed his course.
He. too. did the honorable thing.
C. N. McArthur, Representative In
Congress. Republican Mr. Bryan has
displayed ' neither Jlgnity nor ability j
as Secretary of State, and the people
of the United States are to be con
gratulated upon his resignation.
Senator Lane Is Sorry.
United States Senator Lane, Demo
crat I don't know what effect this
will have. I wish I did know. I am
sorry it has happened. Mr. Bryan has
been the foremost peace advocate in
this country. He believes there are
better ways of adjusting international
difficulties than by punching another
nation on the nose, so to speak,
even if it is necessary to "sleep on
it" and wait awhile to find a peace
ful way out. I believe he is right
President AVilson is also a strong be
liever in peace and except in this one
instance their views as to the best
methods of promoting peace have been
in accord. Both are men of strong
convictions. When Mr. Bryan found
he could not support the President's
views, he did right to resign so the
President might have a Cabinet thor
oughly In accord with him. Mr. Bryan
did right.
C. W. Fulton. ex-United States Sen
ator. Republican I am of the im
pression that Mr. Bryan has been look
ing for a chance to get out easily,
and that he picked this as the spectac
ular moment for stepping down. I
think he has felt for some time that
he has not done himself credit and
was anxious for a good chance to re
sign. He is a man with a strong
sense of the dramatic, and he has taken
advantage of the dramatic moment. I
don't think this will kill him political
ly he is already dead.
Failure Thought Realised.
Milton A. Miller. United States Col
lector of Internal Revenue It's simply
the result of an honest difference, no
doubt, as to our foreign -policy In a
particular case. I don't think Mr.
sryan-s resignation will have any po
litical effect. He and Mr. Wilson have,
no doubt, quit friends and will remain
friends hereafter. They both are
strong intellectual men and men of
irons convictions. I think Mr. Bryan
will be a political factor as long as
he lives.
C. B. Moorea, Republican I haven't
any admiration for Mr. Bryan except
mm na is a man of high character,
and an effective orator and cam
paigner. But when you've said that,
you have said all. I don't think states
manship Is In his line. Personally, I
am very sorry to hear there Is con
tention in the Cabinet in this crisis,
because it seems to me important that
the Cabinet should be united in support
of President Wilson. While I don't be
lieve In many of President Wilson's
policies, i Delieve that in this case he
should have the active support of
everyone.
T. B. Neuhausen, Progressive Mr.
Bryan has been going down for the
past year in the estimation of the
American people. They were inclined
to treat him as President Wilson has
treated him the more the President
has ignored him in handling important
diplomatic affairs, the more the peo
ple have ignored him. I was not at
all surprised at news of Mr. Bryan's
resignation.
Onn Trap Catches Him.
Mr. Bryan has caused many treaties
to be signed with foreign powers
asreeing to submit controversies to ar
bitration and had submitted such a
treaty to Germany. Germany had ex
pressed approval before the war broke
out. but the war prevented the rati
fication of the treaty. In the recent
German reply, Mr. Bryan's arbitration
proposal was cleverly turned back on
him by the proposal that points in the
present controversery be arbitrated. It
nailed Mr. Bryan to the mast. He had
to insist on arbitration in the Cabinet
because he himself had first proposed
to Germany to arbitrate disputes. I
think Mr. Bryan was caught in his
own trap.
That downstat man who wrote his will
m a timetable certainly bad it In for the
ejcecutora.
LANSING WILL ACT
State Department Counsel Be
comes Acting Secretary.
CABINET SHIFT UNLIKELY
Temporary Successor to Mr. Bryan
Is Authority on' International
Law and Experience Dates
Back More Than 20 Years.
WASHINGTON. June 8. Robert
Lansing, successor to John Baasett
Moore as counsellor of 'the State' De
partment, becomes Secretary of State
ad interim, . when Secretary Bryan's
resignation takes effect. He is a son-in-law
of John W. Foster, Secretary of
State under President Harrison. He
has been an international lawyer for
many years.
While there Is much gossip already
as to President Wilson's probable se
lection for the secretaryship, it is the
President's plan to make no immediate
appointment. It would not be surpris
ing if he made no change in the pres
ent status of the Department's per
sonnel for two or three months.
Secretary Lane, of the Interior De
partment, has been mentioned fre
quently as a possible successor to Sec-,
retary Bryan, but the belief exists
that he will not be chosen on account
of his Canadian birth and the fact
that the President would find con
siderable difficulty in finding a man
to take over Mr. Lane's important
work on the Alaskan railway and
other projects of the Interior Depart
ment. It Is considered entirely probable
that the President will make no shift
in his Cabinet at all, but will choose
a new man to fill the vacancy. In
well-informed quarters it is considered
unlikely that he will retain Mr. Lans
ing as Secretary. To do so would re
quire search for another counsellor, a
post most difficult to fill.
Mr. Lansing has prepared memo
randa for practically all of the im
portant notes that have gone to bel
ligerent governments since the Euro
pean war began, and is looked on not
only as an. expert in internaional law.
but as a clear thinker and adviser.
For many years he has served- on
boundary commissions and arbitra
tion tribunals. He is a. comparatively
young man. well acquainted with all
the Government's . policies, and has
won the admiration of the President
and Mr. , Bryan by his loyalty to the
Secretary of State as his superior of
ficer. On many occasions Mr. Lansing
has submitted memoranda expressing
views differing from those of. Mr.
Bryan, but he has tactfully avoided
embarrassments.
Mr. Lansing has been counsel for the
Department of State since March 20.
1914. He is 61 years old and his home
is at Watertown, N. T. He is a native
of Albany, N. Y. He was graduated
from Amherst in 1886.
Being admitted to the bar In 1889, Mr.
Lansing was appointed associate coun
sel in 1S93 for the United States Gov
ernment in the Bering Sea arbitration.
He was counsel for the United States
Bering Sea Claims Commission from
1896 to 1897; solicitor for the United
States Alaskan boundary tribunal in
1903; counsel for the North Atlantic
Coast fisheries arbitration at The
Hague in 1909 and 1910; agent of tho
United States in the American-British
claims arbitration from 1912 to 1914.
Mr. Lansing is associate editor of the
American Journal of International Law,
and, with Gary M. Jones, is the author
of "Government, Its Origin, Growth and
Form in the United States." He is a
member of the American Association of
International Law, American Political
Science Association, National Geo
graphic Society, New '.York State Bar
Association, the Holland Society of
New York and several exclusive clubs.
WILSON DEPLORES SPLIT
DKEF FKEI.IXG SHOWN OVER RES.
IGNATIOIV OV BBVA!f,S .
Acceptance Accepted With Great Re
luctance and After Attempt to
Win Secretary Over.
"WASHINGTON, June 8. President
Wilson by his every word and act to
day showed his deep feeling over Sec
retary Bryan's decision to resign from
the Cabinet. He accepted the resigna
tion with greatest reluctance and only
after he had become firmly convinced
that he and the Secretary were unal
terably apart on the kind of note to
be sent to Germany.
Ever since last Friday, when he be
gan to feel that his views and those
of Mr. Bryan could not be reconciled
the President has made no secret of
his sorrow to his closest advisors. Since
Sunday he has seen Secretary Bryan
several times and has done his utmost
to win him over to. his point of view.
During a conference the two had at
the White House yesterday, however,
it became finally evident that Mr Bryan
would leave the Cabinet.
Mr. Bryan's resignation, it is known,
was discussed thoroughly at the Cabi
net meeting and final . efforts were
made to get him to reconsider his res
ignation. The President ' again spoke
his deep regret when Mr. Bryan told
him he could not remain in the official
family and other Cabinet members
joined in the expressions of their chief.
Immediately after the Cabinet meet
ing the President went to the White
House, taking Secretary Tumulty with
him. , He talked little on the way, but
several times referred to Mr. Bryan
and his high regard for him.
Boy, 14, Hescnes Sister, 18.
EST AC AD A, Or June 8. (Special.)
Miss Esther Pierson, of Eagle Creek,
18 years old, had a narrow escape from
drowning a few days ago, when she
fell from a foot log into a deep hole
in Eagle Creek. Her 14-year-old
brother, Edwin, leaped In and man
aged to hold her head above water in
the swift current until A. Freeman
could reach them.
NEW YORK EDITORS ARE GLAD
BRYAN RESIGNS FROM CABINET
WASHINGTON. June 8. (Special.)
An upheaval In the National Democrat
ic party and its policies will follow
the retirement of William Jennings
Bryan from the Cabinet and from all
official position.
His personal following is great
throughout the United States: was
great when he entered the Cabinet at
the beginning of President .Wilson's
Administration, and may be Increased,
as he has become the accredited leader
of the anti-war, or peace party, as well
as an accepted champion of the Pro
hibitionists. Peace Gospel to ' Be Preached.
He is to take the stump immediately
to spread- his peace gospel. This is
announced tonight by his friends. His
utterances will run counter to the
views of President Wilson and of other
Administration Democratic leaders,
and the effect of his speeches on the
country will be important, but to just
what extent they will influence the
voters must remain for some time a
matter of conjecture and speculation.
In his resignation, whether or not
he so desired, Mr. Bryan launches on
a campaign for the Democratic nomina
tion for the Presidency against Wood
row Wilson. In his justification of his
resignation in the face of a great
crisis confronting ''the country, Mr.
Bryan must either make excuses for
himself or condemn the course of
President Wilson. He takes the latter
course in his letter of resignation.
More than any one man in the coun
try, William Jennings Bryan is re
sponsible for the nomination of Wood
row Wilson by the Democratic party
In 1912. To turn the Baltimore con
vention to Woodrow Wilson he was
forced to denounce Champ Clark, who
held a majority vote in the conven
tion, and thereby surrendered a life
long friendship and a support on
which he bad relied always. His domi
nance of the party delegates in that
convention was proved complete in
the hour of his triumph at Baltimore.
Mr. Bryan did not forget to look
after the party organization and he
controlled in the election of members
of the- Democratic national committee
the supreme head of the national or
ganization. His friends were selected
for this body, and it is asserted to
day that of its entire membership
about 35, or more than two-thirds, are
his close personal and political friends.
Bryan Workers Dumfoundrd.
Democratic workers scattered
throughout the departments here in
reward for past service are dum
founded over the political pitfalls that
have been suddenly dug in their path
way. Members of the campaign com
mittee, which met here last week to
elect Fred Lynch, of Minnesota, chair
man In the place of A. Mitchell Palmer,
frankly fear the results of Mr. Bryan's
act today and his probable course dur
ing the coming months. They see a
spilt in the party which no bridge can
span and such a split spells defeat
in the next election, no matter how
great the personal popularity of the
President.
In the face of these conditions, the
Democratic politicians see in the Dem
ocratic par.ty a war and a peace party
with Irreconcilable policies and prin
ciples. President Wilson is to be the
leader of one of these parties Bryan
the leader of the other.
CUMMINS CHANGES VIEWS
Iowa - Senator Calls Bryan "Sur
prise Failure" In Diplomacy.
BUTTE, Mont., June 8. (Special.)
Senator Cummins, of Iowa, expressed
surprise tonight at the resignation of
Secretary Bryan, but said this actirfn
was not wholly unexpected, as Mr.
Bryan had proved the "surprise fail
ure" in diplomatic affairs and In the
shaping of this country's foreign
policies.
Senator Cummins declared his be
lief that there would be an extra ses
sion of Congress, called late in Sep
tember or early Jn October, relieve
the President of some of the respon
sibility now confronting him on ac
count of the European and Mexican
situations.
"When Democrats assumed the reins
of Government, I thought," said Sena
tor Cummins, "that Bryan was the
strongest man in the Administration.
1 have since changed my views decidedly."
SUBMARINES GET 6 MORE
Three Norwegians Among Germany's
Latest Victims.
LONDON, June 8. German subma
rines have sunk six more vessels,
three of them being Norwegian steam
ers. One was a Belgian steamship
and the fifth a British trawler.
The Belgian steamship Menapier has
been sent to the bottom by a German
NEW YORK, June 9. (Special.)
New York newspapers comment
.today on the resignation of Sec
retary of State Bryan as follows: -
Sun In almost any other circum
stances the country would have re
joiced to hear that Mr. Bryan had
given up a place for which his fan
tastic unfitness has long been tiut too
apparent. He has chosen to make his
leaving as unpleasant as his staying.
Though Mr. Bryan's resignation
strengthens the Cabinet, it will be
long before Americans forgive the man
who sulked and ran away when honor
and patriotism should have kept him
at his po6t.
World Mr. Bryan's resignation
at this time and in these circum
stances Is a sorry service to his coun
try. In his letter to the President, the
Secretary of State declares that "to
remain a member of the Cabinet would
be as unfair to you as it would be to
the cause which is nearest my heart
namely the prevention of war."
War T moment PoaiMlble Result.
We cannot believe that this cause
is nearer to William J. Bryan's heart
than it its to Woodrow Wilson's heart:
but even if if it were Mr. Bryan has
done the one thing In his power most
likely to bring about war between the
United States and Germany. N-
Times Mr. Bryan has done well in re
signing. It is perhaps the wisest act of
his political career;. Differing irrecon
cilably with the President rn respect
to the form and substance of the reply
to Germany's note, Mr. Bryan finds
himself also in Irreconcilable differ
ence with the vast majority of his
countrymen. It was out of .the ques
tion that he should continue to be Sec
retary of State.
In forcing an issue with Mr. Bryan
and compelling the latter to offer his
resignation as Secretary of State,
President Wilson has performed a high
public service. He has sacrificed per
sonal comfort to patriotic duty.
Devotion to Ideals Credited.
To Mr. Bryan's credit it must be said
that his devotion to his personal ideals
overcame his eagerness to remain in
public office. If he meant to live up
to his professions a rupture between
him and the President over the Lu
sitanla correspondence was inevitable.
The trouble with Mr. Bryan is that
h' has failed to realize that there are
things worse than war. He would have
arbitrated the outlawry of the seas and
the wanton murder of American men,
women and children. It Is impossible
to arbitrate with a Captain Kidd or a
Jack the Ripper. It has been Mr.
Bryan's dream to serve through Presi
dent Wilson's Administration as Secre
tary of State without going to war
The important thing that will cause
a great feeling of relief, mingled, of
course, with a feeling of concern,
throughout-this country today is that
the President has stood up firmly,
strongly, courageously for those prin
ciples for which this Government has
always contended. The Nation is be
hind him like a wall.
DO YOU FEEL DEPRESSED?
The form of influenza commonly
called "the grip" is no respector of
persons. Rich and poor alike suffer
from it.
The duration of the acute stage of
the grip Is short, a few days at most.
Without complications it is never fatal.
What makes the grip so dreaded is the
miserable condition in which it leaves
its victims after the cold and fever
have run their course. Some medical
writers refer to this "after-effect" of
the grip as a form of neurasthenia.
Depression of spirits, headache, thin
blood, -deranged oigestion, over-sensi
tive nerves these are the usual after
effects of the grip, and they will con
tinue even for months and years until
the blood is built up and made rich and
red.
After an attack of the grip all the
vital powers of the body are at a low
ebb. Building up tho blood with Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills is the surest way
; to restore the weakened body. They
. have a special action on the nerves and
every sufferer from the lingering effects
of the grip should give them a trial.
Your own druggist sells them.
Write today to the Dr. Williams
Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.. for
the free book, "Building Up the Blood.
If you have stomach trouble ask for a
diet book also. '
A Windfall-Beautiful Silk Pongee Coats $13.95
Three New Model
Silk Petticoats
to wear with flare -skirts
Regular Price $5.00
$3.23
Silk Jersey top with messaline
silk flounce, or entirely of messa
line. They are made in the newest
full flaring circular flounce style,
trimmed with ruffles, of knife and
accordion pleating, in the new sec
tion tier style, as well as tailored,
tucked, gathered and ruffled effects.
All with fitted elastic tops and silk
under-ruffles. . Colors black, navy,
emerald, Copen, Belgian, Russian
green, light blue, pink, lavender,
white, maize and changeable effects.
Third Floor
A Maker's Samples Regularly $25 to $40
New midsummer styles
and not only the new styles,
but so many different models
that one may be sure of find
ing the style most becoming.
-Smart coats made of cool,
light-weight pongee, in a beau
tiful quality and finish, all-silk
lined and made in the ' latest
belted and flare effects in
fashions for every occasion.
Full-length pongee silk auto
. coats, indispensable for mo
toring. And in addition to the
pongee coats, you will find
noveIty cheviot, serge and co
vert coats, featuring all that
is newest and most . distinctive
for Summer wear. '
This is the lore est price at
which ne have ever sold coats
of this 1('md. Third Floor
I
MILLINERY CLEARANCE
Including Our Smartest
Mid-Summer Models
$2.50
Hats Sold Regularly to $15.00. qj- Hats Sold Regularly to $7.50.
Clearance ipJ.ZfO Clea ranee . . .
It will be a record sale, embracing as it does a collection of the newest, most up-to-date styles that will
be worn this Summer." Large, medium and small shapes, in models for every occasion in styles becom
ing to every type.
Real Milans Leghorns Panamas Hemps Hand Made Hats
Cleverly trimmed by our own millinery artists, in the widest diversity of styles now in greatest vogue. -
Come today there is a hat here for you. Second Floor
torpedo near the North Foreland. Out
of 23 persons on board, only six were
saved. The captain, his wife and his
daughter, the first mate and the pilot
and 12 members of the crew lost their
lives.,.
The survivors from the Menapier
were landed today at Margate. One
of them, badly Injured, was sent to a
hospital. The survivors say the vessel
sank within a few minutes of the time
the torpedo exploded.
The Menapier was of 1425- net tons
and was 281 feet long. She was built
in Sunderland in 1908 and owned in
Antwerp. The North Foreland is in
County Kent, in the North Sea.
The Norwegian vessels Trudvang and
Superb have been sunk by German
submarines.
The Trudvang was hailed by a Ger
man submarine soon after mid-day
yesterday when off St Ann's Head.
The captain was ordered to bring his
papers aboard the submarine, whose
commander gave the crew 20 minutes
to take to the boats.
The submarine then sent 12 shells
Into the Trudvang. The shooting
brought out a patrol boat from Milford
Haven, which picked up the skipper
and crew, numbering -13. from the
boats. During the operation, the sub
marine attempted vainly to torpedo
the patrol boat. The men from the
Trudvang were landed today at Milford
Haven.
The Trudvang was of 640 tons net
register, built in Bergen in 1897, was
224 feet long, 32 feet beam and 13
feet deep. The Superb was a bark of
1393 tons, built in Glasgow in 1S75.
She sailed from Buenos Aires March
10 for Queeustown.
Another Norwegian steamship to be
sunk is the Glittertind, of 376 tons net.
This vessel was built in 1913 and was
186 feet long.
The crew of the" Glittertind was
landed today in the Tyne. The vessel,
with a cargo of lumber, was on her
way from Sweden to Hartlepool when
she encountered a German submarine.
The Germans gave the crew 10 min
utes to take to the boats before firing
a torpedo.
The submarine towed the ship's
boats for 30 minutes until a trawler
hove In sight.
The trawler Pentland has been sunk
in the North Sea by shell fire from a
German submarine. The crew was
saved.
The crew of 11 men of the French
barkentine La Liberte have been land
ed at Milford. The vessel was shelled
and sunk by a German submarine in
the channel after the crew had been
ordered to get away from her.
WILL IS CURB TO WEDDJNG
Husband Will Lose Hair $5000 Es
tate if Ho Marries Again.
If the husband of Mrs. Wilhelmine
Baumann marries a second time, he will
get only half of the $5000 estate that
she left when she died on May 4. If
he remains single during the rest of
his life, he can enjoy the entire estate.
Mrs. Baumann made this provision
when she drew up her will 18 years
ago. At that time she was 44 years
old. She owned 160 acres in Tillamook
County, 160 acres in Cowlitz County.
Washington, and a number of lots in
Portland. The will says that if the
husband remarries, he shall receive
only half the estate and the other half
shall be divided among Mrs. Baumann's
four children.
CI
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earance
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Read carefully, this partial
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' 31Ott Oak Stelnbach & Dreher ;!7.-.00 .-..OO IK.HO K.IIO
740UH Walnut Armstrong 4UO.O0 !."..(n) JK.no
S1S54 Mahogany Kroeaer , 375.00 JN5.0O 15.IMI 7.00
55493 .Mahogany I'rimatone, IMnyer (fr.0.00 Si)..0 25.UO 10.OII
47 Mahogany Collard & Col lard 3LT,.IM S7.M 7.0(1 r..Oi
H4al Mahogany I'lnchrr I Inrir aize) 4-'5.00 2KT..OO 25.HI S.OO
64S!Mt Oak 1 nlveraal 1'larer 7.U.04 4K.t.llo X7tM l.OO
KAXUZ link Writer Player T.50.I10 IKIS.OO JO.IIO
l-"7;i oak wuiard ar.o.oo ::in.oo i.-..im 7.m
6I5KI Mahogany Kurmeinter ' 275.KO H.M 10.00 5.0
2T,n.s Walnut Jacob Doll 75.00 J0O.O0 lO.no S.IH
85.'l Oak I niverxnl Player 750.Ott 45.(W 50.011 15.00
Mahogany Krrll Auto Uraad Player SMMMIO 4:5.H 5.0l 12.O0
r..tl.'so ir. Walnut Kranlrh V Barn Grand N.-.o.oo .-.!.-.. (M 75.00 l"..o
737 Maamanjr Krilff :!. IIO I ;.-,. M 15.IIO 5.00
MaboKany 4'hiukrrlnie Broa ... r.oit.oo :tiir,.l 25.UO lo.oo
S3K13 Walnut Cable Vrlaon 375.00 275.00 25.00 10.00
740!7 Mahogany Arnixtrong 4O0.OO 205.00 25.00 S.OO
51151 Mahogany Draper Brow. Player 75O.00 435.00 35.0O JO.OO
11035. Mahogany Prrxcott Grand tiOO.IMi :i;.'.oo 25.00 15.00
1I4H.M Mahotvany fiaylor.l 375.0O JK5.0D lo.oo i.oo
r.or.at Mahogany Cambridge 350.00 l.oo lO.CHI 7.00
U254S tebonlzed llmrrson T 400.00 150.0U IO.OO 5.UO
There is no fudging on this list. Every number in the ad corresponds with the number on the
Piano. Every Piano advertised .in this list is now on our floors and can be seen. In the past many
firms have advertised bargains in Pianos that they did not have and never have had.
Out-of-town buyers can safely buy by mail. We will send description of instrument and terms for
out-of-town delivery.
Now is the time to buy your Piano or Player Piano. Never were prices so low and terms so easy.
GRAVES MUSIC CO., 151 Fourth Street
Store Open Wednesday and Saturday Evenings.