9 TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND. MARCH 31. 1913. CAMPAIGN RECALLS ATTACK OH LINCOLN Between Crusades Against Taft and "Honest Abe." PRESIDENT PROVES WORTH I one 1.11 of Notable Achievements Miows Nation's Chirr Executive stand Without Peer In the Pat Fortj-flve Years. PORTLAND. March 30. (To the Edl lor. In the pending- crusade aaralnst President Taft there Is a rtmrkbl parallel with that acalnst Lincoln In 1. Then Salmon P. Chase wished to run. but John C. Fremont, the candi date In nsi. nominated aa an Independent Uepubllcan. Cvcn then they were- demanding- a di rect vote by the people for President, but they violently declared for only on term Instead of three. Fremont In hla latter of acceptance charged the IJn- roln administration with "Incapacity and Infidelity to the principle It was pledged to maintain." and It was vehe mently asserted Lincoln could not be re-elected. The call which preceded the antU Lincoln convention declared the Na tional Republican convention was 'rest lns; wholly on patronage" and the "f'omeroy circular." which was an ante cedent statement of principles, con demned Lincoln for "his manifest ten dency toward compromises and tempo rary expedients of policy." How much all of tills sounds like the present cru sade ag-alnvt Taft. f.raat'e Defeat Predicted. In JS: a much creator defection ap peared acalnst the renomlnatlon of general Orant. It Included the -reatBt Republican newspapers and such arrest l.epuhllcans as lavld Iavls. Charles Kran.ts Adams, faaslu M. 'lay. Wen dell Phillip and I'liarles sumner. and scores of others of equal rank. lie-publican-defeat was everywhere pre iN ted. Horace Oreely. the foremost Ite- publican Journalist of his time, wu nominated as an Independent Republi can, and Indorsed by the National Iem ocratlc Conventltn. It Is Interestina; to compare all of these (treat men with the seven Oovernors whose fight aaalnst Taft has been heralded as "a reat uprising of the people." Their -tales polled less than one-fifth of the xotes that were cast for Taft In 1S. nnd there are nearly SO Governora and hundreds of e-Uovernors In the Union. The entire Itst belled down, with a doien plnchots anil Jlmmle tSarfields thrown In for a-ood measure, would not make a single Wendell Phillips or Hor ce Oreeley or Charles Sumner or Sal mon P. Chase. They ware Just as vio lent In denouncing; Lincoln and Orant as are their pigmy Imitators In abus ing Taft. Iteaabtleaaa et Ley I. Thou who are today the noisiest In criticising the Administration are th ortee who. In season, and out of season, have exerted all their powers to make It a failure. Instead of giving It the loyal co-operation It had the right to , expect. Roosevelt and his so-called progress ive allies lent their aid to defeat Cana dian reciprocity and the arbitration treaties.- The success of these two r.teasure would have meant more of real value to the American people than all that Rooseveit accomplished In his two terms. The duello, as a relic of barbarism, has no defenders, but the taxpayers of the Nation are to continue bmlillRit battleships and keeping a standing armv ready to march down to the field of battle to settle the quar rels of the politicians, and determine the right anil the wrong of all ques tions by shooting bullet holes Into the fellows on the other side. That the majestic dignity of the Na tional Snate may be vindicated we have decided to arbitrate only where we ran sav what and how to arbitrate. This simply means that arbitration la rn Iridescent dream and that as an issue It is dead for all time. vYaeafarewers el 4'easlsfeet. The lst National Republican Conven tion declared for a downward revision of the tariff, a matter that Teddy" overlooked for nearly eight years. Ca nadian reciprocity was an advance step along that line, and along the whole 'anadlan line ther are horrified at Taft for slgnlnr a bill that did not suffi ciently revise downward. The wheatgrowers of North Pakota. raring nothlnjr for the brea.dea.tera of the rest of the Nation, are as rrssy for revision and progression aa the steel interests of Birmingham and the sugar growers of Louisiana, until the matter comes home to them, when It develops that all of their progressive patriotism is bound up In "the pent-up I'tlra" of their own pockets. What is a stand patter, and what Is a progressive, and whet is tariff revision? The roar agtinat Taft la no more ra tional than that against IJnroln and irant. No President has been truer to his campaign pledges and no greater or better President lias occupied the White House ainre the day of Lincoln. The roar we hear is simply our reg ular quadrennial political racket. Aa Webster said. "There are persons that constantly clamor." but their violent at tacks are Intermittent. This la the open season for the born kicker and the man with the chronic grouch, where every personal grievance, every local prejudice and every vaulting ambition is being capitalized. The Adullamltes "every one that Is In distress or In debt or discontented" have all left their ravea and are run ning loose on the range. We are ap proaching the end of another 29-year period, when complaint Is universal and the whote Nation la due to throw a fit. PreelaVat 1'alveraal eat. The sovereign remedy for all I'ls la to kick the President. No preceding campaign, however, baa developed a more determined mania for obscuring the real Issues by clamor, subterfuge, distortion, suppression and misrepre sentation. A fair sample was the Tin- hot-Controller Bay conspiracy. There I. as never hern a more shameful epi sode In American politics. It was rot ten from Its Inception In "the Dirk In pick forgery" down to Ms end In the refusal of the Democratic committee of Investigation t- continue tta work, when It was certain that such continu ance would vindicate the Administra tion. There may be hundred of thousands of honest and patriotic men swept off their feet by clamor of this kind, but who are the managers and moving spirits of the antl-Taft campaign? Aa usual then.- are village statesmen In plenty denouncing the Payne-Aldrich bill, who couldn't tell a tariff schedule from a table of logarithms, but the chief sponsors for the crusade against Taft are discredited trust magnates and disgruntled politicians with a personal grievance.. Originally for . LFolletle until his Philadelphia attack on the press abso lutely eliminated blm as a dangerous candidate, they then flocked to the standard of "the great explainer." Their headquarters are now In the Munsey building. Washington, owned by "Muck rake" Al'insey. the head of tho magaxlne trust. His magaxinee -are two-thirds advertising, and one-third conduit for hired, sensational political refuse. The Taft administration urged higher postage ratea for magaxlnes to relieve the taxpayers of the Nation and pre vent postal deficits. Why is il unity against Taft? Who Real Baekera Are. The chief financial backer of the antl Taft conspiracy is George W. Perkins, partner of plerpont Morgan, chairman of the finance committee of the har vester trust, stockholder In the steel trust, that absorbed the Tennessee Coal Iron Company, and the man who In lu contributed to the Roosevelt cam paign fund from the New York Life Insurance Company. Why is he against Taft? In Ohio tt Is Jlmmie Garfield, who waa refused reappointment as Secretary of the Interior, and Dan R. Hanna, of the prosecuted steel trust and hla lieutenant. Chairman Brown, said to be "the highest-priced lobbyist" In the state. Why are they against Taft? In Illinois the leaders are Charles R. Crane, whose appointment as Minister to China was recalled, and Medill Mc Cormlck. of the prosecuted harvester trust. Why are they against Taft? In New Yo.-k the managers were W. L. Ward, "the Westchester boss." and Gifford Plnchot, who was removed as chief forester for overriding the law and assuming that he was the whole Interior Department, and "Boss" Teddy himself. Why are they against Taft? In Indiana It was chairman Lee. who was refused the appointment of I'nlted States Marshal. Why Is he against Taft? Ormsby McHarg Is another. Three years ago he was In Oregon urging Statement No. 1 legislators to violate their pledge. Why is he against Taft? When the President was In Oregon three years ago you couldn't pry Ald rich'a man. Jonathan Bourne, away from him with a crowbar. Later he wanted his man appointed United States Marshal to strengthen Ms Sen atorial machine, but President Taft refused to remove E. B. Col well, be cause he was vouched for by Judges Bean and Wolverton. and all of the officers of the I'nlted States district, ss a capable and competent official. Why Is Bourne against Tart? These are samples of the men who are worried about Taft "politicians." and are abusing the poor old "steam roller" that waa so ably engineered years ago bv the distinguished author of the 1260.000 letter to "My Dear Har-riman." Both Itch for Spoils." Now there ia a great spitting of cot ton and profanity about a political game of bunco that was worked on La Toilette. The whole thing Is noth ing but a political Kilkenny cat fight. Both of them have an abnormal itching for the spoils of office and both have been working from ambush, nursing. . coddling and promoting, "a great spontaneous uprising of the peo ple." an "uprising" that is absorbing dally several thousand dollars of the trust money of McCormlck and Perkins and Dan It. Hanna. It doea beat thunder how much work and money It takea to keep these "up risings" alive. Oregon ia being specially warned that Taft "politicians" are about to put an everlasting kibosh on "the Oregon system." And who is to save tis. from the contemplated outrage? Jonathan Bourne and the ambitious Mr. Mickey? Mr. Fills, the recalled Councilman from the Tenth Ward? Jerry Rusk, candidate of the standpat ters for the Speakership of the last House? Colonel Hefer. who failed to ouat Colonel Dave Dunne from the Col lectorshlp of Internal Revenue? Our friend, the perennial Dr. Coe. and our other old friend. Colonel Ike Bingham? Who are the politicians, and what Is a politician? There are many worse men than these, but In what respect are they better or even as good ex emplara of clean politics as Ben Sell ing. W. B. Ayer, Mayor Rushlight, A. M. Smith. Dr. A. C. Smith. Dan Malar key. W. F. Woodward and John F. Logan all members of the Taft com mittee. A aether Waa tieae Wreag. Another "good man gone wrong," Is Senator Mulkey not a politician, but a near politician who Is quoted as saying: "I regard President Taft as re actionary. His course on the tariff waa disappointing." The Senator has certalny been misquoted, for he knows, as we all do. that a President who aat nearly eight years in the Whlee House without once raising his voice In favor of revision of the tariff, la reactionary; that La Follette. In advocating a non partisan tariff board and then trying to discredit It by Joining the Demo crats In a lot of log-rolling popgun tariff bills, is worse than a standpat ter, and that the real progressive Is the man who called a special session for tariff revision, and secured the best action that waa possible from a recalcitrant Congress. At the eleventh hour the coy and re luctant Roosevelt appears and offers to save the country. It is one of the most pathetic examples of self-abnegation on record. Warning Is given In advance that any criticism of him will be resented as an "attack." but criti cism of Theodore Roosevelt Is no longer Use majeste. So long as his vitriolic tongue continues to wag he must concede the demand of the "male factors" and "weaklings." the "molly coddles" and "ananlasea." the "nin compoops." "falsifiers." "undesirables," "nature fakirs." and "Judicial Jack aases" that he be Judged by the same standards aa other men. Let us not deceive ourselves with polite and diplomatic phrases. It Is for us to discuss before the. primaries what the Democratic party la certsln to discuss after them. Beth Weal Bryee'e Tbaader. Roosevelt and LaFollette have done goon work In preaching civic virtue, political purity and elevated political standards, but neither of them bas ad vanced any conspicuous reform that Bryan did not advocate years before them. They are not more safe or progressive or well-balanced than Bryan, and the political Ideals of none of the three are higher than those of President Taft. Fifty per cent, of the Roosevelt reputation Is based wholly on his spectacular methods. He has a habit of assuming the proprietorship of every thing that has ever happened. He picks up the universally accepted platitudes of all the ages, and comes marching down the pike, claiming the credit of their origin In such a dramatic and dogmatic way. as thoroughly to hypnotise his enthusiastic worshippers. Ha is a living Illustration of how well it pays to advertise. No depart ment store in the country has anything on Teddy. Whenever he says or does anything the leader of the orchestra waves the big stick, and the fact that something has happened Is announced to a watting world, through the med ium of the megaphone, the glare of the red Are, and the tumult of cym bals, the torn tome and the big bass drum, while his worshippers all over the country ecstatically make the sign of the -cross. Reeeevett'a Greatest Service. The greatest service he ever ren dered the country waa In pushing Taft to the front, and to Taft he owes. In greater degree than to any other man, the success of his administration. To day he is telling us of many things Taft should have done that he him self forgot to do. although Bryan had called his attention to them years ago. To Roosevelt alone belongs the eiclu- i Inexpensive Bedroom Furnishings Arc you interested in Bedroom Furnishings? Here is a suggestion: Choose a pretty Afton, Brussels or Cretonne Rug (we have scores of them) ; cover the walls with a soft stripe paper, or tint, with a little brush or stencil decoration; use English Chintz or Cretonne at the windows, and a suit of our low-priced Bedroom Furniture. You can buy it in Maple, Circassian Walnut, Mahogany or Oak, according to your preference or the color scheme of your room. V One such room is shown in ou window this week, and we urge you to see it. The Furniture is Birdseye Maple. The Dresser sells for $28.00, the Chest of Drawers for $25,00, the Dressing Table for $18.00, and the Bed for $20.00. .: This is Furniture, not junk. If you buy it you will be proud of it. It is well made and well finished. The design is simple, but handsome. It will make a far prettier and more tasteful bedroom than will fussy furniture at twice the price. We have plenty of other Bedroom Furniture still lower in price, but equally good in style and finish. See it before you buy. More New Cretonnes and Chintzes See our window display of beautiful new English Chintzes and Cretonnes. Wc are exclusive agents for the genuine Chintzes, and show a great variety of the newest and most charming patterns.. Prices range from 90c to $1.50 per yard. In imported Cretonnes for Bedroom, Dining-Room or, Living-Room, you will find many exclusive things not to be seen elsewhere, at prices from 50c to $1.50 per yard. The new things this season are prettier than ever before. FIFTH AND STARK J. G. MACK & CO. FIFTH AND STARK slve credit of jumping on the little toy Republic of Colombia, but the Panama Canal has been under the eye and control of Taft from its very Incep tion. One great achievement claimed for the Roosevelt administration is the in stitution of civil government In the Philippines. That work was wholly Tsft's. In the old days," on all his travels, he delighted to assure his auditors that everything was all right in Washington for he had left Taft "sitting on the lid." Twelve and eight years ago aa a candidate and four years ago. as engineer of the steam roller, he was mute about Presidential primaries and the activity of Southern officeholders. Today his . seal knows . no. . bounds, though he has nothing yet to say about the activity of Boss Lyon l .rounding up the officeholders of Texas for Roosevelt.'and he frantically denounces the primaries of North Dakota, In diana and New York, and every place else where he gets licked, as "a fraud" and "a farce." Taft, denounced as the candidate of the "big interests." In ihree years has done a work In prosecuting law breaklns trusts, which, when their number and sire Is considered, dis counts all the prosecutions of any three years of all preceding Presidents combined. This Is a brosd statement, but It Is based on the official records, and not on the doctored and distorted reports of the hired liars of the "Muckrake" Munsey contingent. Tafl'a Aeeompllshaieate nevlewed. The storm center of the. clamor against Taft has been the Payne Aldrlch bill. All legislation Is the re sult of compromise. The efficient ad ministrator Is never an extremist, but the man capable of getting the best possible results that Inharmonious con ditions will permit. Taft made an honest effort to secure tariff revision when he called a special session. The Payne-Aldrich bill resulted. He never pretended It was what he wanted He personally secured a 10 per cent cut in the cotton schedule, and. made a like attempt on wool. He got hides on . the free. Hat, and lower duty on lumber, coal. Iron ore and scrap Iron, and by urgent and persistent personal appeal secured In corporation of a provision for a cor poration tax. that gives Government access to corporation books, and the provision for a non-partisan tariff board, so long demanded by the pro gressives of all parties. . The inclusion of these Items made It, in spite of lis defects, the best tarlX bill ever passed. He signed the bill. Why? Because It was a step forward. It greatly Increased the public revenues. It provided for the corpor ation tax. It provided for a 'non-partisan tariff board, whose work should cripple the discreditable log-rolling tariff, methods of the pest. He at once appointed a tsriff board, all men of conceded capacity and high character, and urged a continuance of the work of revision. "Popaua" Bills Vetoed. Later he vetoed the log-rolling pop gun bills Intended ' to discredit the work of the board. Why did Taft sign the Payne-Aldrich bill? Because he hsd to deal with a large Republican contingent who wanted no revision, with a Democratic House of tariff reformers for politics only," and with a group of so-called Republican progressives, who were prancing around the halls of legislation like a band of bucking cayuses In a Pendleton round en. not knowing what they wanted, and anxious only to hamper Taft. and mo nopolise credit as the only truly good and honeat. and as the only properly accredited oracles of progressive leg islation. The only alternative was to sign the bill, or get no legislation. If he had been a cheap demagogue he would have yielded to the thoughtless and Ignor ant clamor of the passing hour, vetoed the bilk and then stepped out Into the spotlight puffed up like a pouter , pig eon, and asked the American people to look at him. He scorned to play the demagogue. He signed the bilk It was the act of a patriot, a statesman and an honest man. In 10 years, when the fires of personal and factional animosity have died away, no honest and well-informed man win question the wisdom of his act. Deeda Tell the Story. The work of Taft' in the last three yeara marks him as one of the great est constructive statesmen that ever occupied the White House. It covers his efforts for International arbitration, and Canadian reciprocity, tho setting aside of forest, and coal and phosphate lands, and water-power sites, urging the leaning system, expediting work on the Panama Canal, abolition of useless navy yards, ending of corrupt practices In the Port of New York, annulment of Russian treaty, ending threat of Cuban revolution, wide extension of the merit system in the civil service, postal sav ings banks, corporation tax. non-partisan tariff board, demand for parcels post, refusal to sign log-rolling tariff bills, urging "employers' liability and workmen's compensation bill." Increas ing powers of Interstate Commerce Commission, creation of Bureau of Mines, submission of National Income tax amendment, demand for reforms in court procedure, economy in public ex penditures, extending work of free rural delivery, causing exhaustive In quiry into overissue of railroad secur ities, and such prosecutions- of law-" breaking trusts as have not been equaled in number and Importance bj any other administration In twice the same length of time. In all of th'ls work there has been no display of the big stick, no appeal to the galleries, and none of the swagger of the political swashbuckler. As Roosevelt himself has said of htm, "Not Lincoln himself is freer from the least taint of demagogy." Methods Aiwa a Open. Open In all his methods, serene, un tiring, but deliberate, in the face of the passing gusts of passion and polit ical hysteria, he is content to wait for his vindication on the sober, cool, non facttonal judgment of later and calmer days. As the man at the wheel, placed there becaure of experience and faithful service, seeing all the shoals and cur rents and counter-currents that con front the course of the ship. Tie bears the complaints of the passengers back In the cabin and down In the steerage, knowing all will end- when the landing Is finally made. Having plenty of the fighting spirit, he yet realizes that It Is the Judicial bal, ance which Is the sheet anchor of safe ty and of all real progress. Aa has been well said of him. "he has the ca pacity to see all sides, and all Inter ests, tho patience to examine all the evidence before acting and the Judicial poise to weigh carefully and discover justice." No man doubts his sincerity when he says, "I have tried to do in each case what seemed to me the wisest thing to do. regardless of Its effect on my fu ture." Ills declaration that "all the admin istration asks Is a square deal." Is an appeal to the manhood of the American electorate, a simple plea for an appli cation of the ordinary rules of fair play and common decency In the analysis and criticism of the work of the ad ministration. The longer the campaign progresses and the better the work of the admin istration is understood, the more heart- 11.. . V. An.A.i.lnan n.nnl. Mlnll. In ll.T n 1 1 1 iiiq r ii i'-i ...... . - r . . .. ....... . the saying- of Roosevelt, that "no man ' of better training, no man or more dauntless courage, of sounder sense, and of higher and finer character has ever come to the Presidency than Will iam Howard Taft." CHAS. B. MOORES. SEEKS LIFE MATE FAIt.MKirS DAl'GHTEH OR WID OW IS PREFERRED. Xortli Carolina Citizen Says He - Can't Ask. Former Sweetheart to Come Way Out West. Preferring Oregon to North Carolina, but unwilling to have a young woman break her home ties In that state and come-to Oregon to marry him. Robert Krtmonds, formerly from the MeCoy rtatflcld district of West Virginia, a man about 38 years old. Is seeking a wife among the young women within a radius of 60 miles of Portland "The girl in North Carolina would be willing to marry me If I would go back there, but I wouldn't live In North Carolina for anything," said Edmonds. "I want to stay In Oregon. But I couldn't expect- her to give up al) her ! " Vi It ' ( " - f-s'l ? -e fV It 11 S -rSaa. - 1 t fe. 'v-v;- . h 'fan, '-J f f- k" ' i Robert Kdmoada, Who Wants to Marry Oregon Woman asa Live on a Farm. STATE FOREST BILL SEEN Governor Receives Copy of Measure Introduced by Chamberlain SALEM. Or., March 30. (Special.) Governor West yesterday received copies of a bill which has been in troduced In the Senate by . Senator Chamberlain providing for the state to create a state forest through exchange of scattered scuool sections in Federal forests for a compact body of forest reserve lands. In substance, the bill makes the following provisions; Thst where any state or territory owns lands lying within the boundaries of a National forest, or where Its right of Indemnity selection In respect to school -sections within such boundaries has not been fully exercised,' said state or -territory -is hereby authorised, sub ject to the approval of the Secretary of Agriculture, to exchange such lands for -or make indemnity selections of other National forest lands of like quantity and value; the same to be se lected In reasonably compact bodies, which lands shall thereon be excluded from the National forests for the ben-eflt-of said state or territory. "Provided, that in fixing the value of state school sections offered in ex change the Secretary of Agriculture shall take Into consideration the value of such lands to the state by reason of their being available and salable for script or base, for Indemnity selec . Big reduction. Alblna Fuel Co. Pee our ad on page 1J, section 1. ' relatives and come clear out here, so 1 am looking for a wife in the state I have chosen for my home." Mr. Edmonds said that he had re ceived several proposals from widows and farmers' daughters, but that all of them are elderly women. "I don't want to marry a woman 10 or 15 years older than I am," he said, "and I wouldn't do it if she had the best farm in the Willamette Valley. I am not a fortune-hunter and don't care to marry & woman and have her turn her property over to me. What Humphreys' Seventy-Seven Breaks up Grip and To knock a Cold on the head,take "Seventy-seven" at the first feeling of lassitude ; before you begin to sneeze and shiver; it's the first few doses that count; don't wait till your bones begin to ache, till the cough and sore throat, set in; keep "Seventy seven" handy, in your pocket, on the dresser, always within reach and you will not have a serious Cold. It pays to keep "Seventy-seven" handy. All dealers sell. 25c, or mailed. Humphreys' Homeo. Medicine Co., Cor. William and Aan. streets, tsw York. I want to get is a respectable farmer's daughter or widow less than 30 years old. who will be willing to go onto a farm with me and help me make a place for myself in. the world. "I want to get away from the city and I want to marry a woman who will be contented with the life of the farm and not get to pining for the bright lights and amusements of the city. When I find the right one, she will not regret having met me." Mr. Edmonds says that he has ac quired none of the tj'pically masculine "bad habits" and is willing to call up any number of witnesses to vouch for his steady, good character. In order to avoid the disappointments of hasty proposals from elderly women, he Is anxious that those who correspond with him send their photographs and ages in their first letter to him. Ed monds lives at 287 First street and has been working In this city for about five years. SHEEP HAS FIVE LAMBS Quintet All Alive and "Frisky" on . Rock Creek Range. GOLDENDALE. Wash., March 30. (Special.) Al Harden, a well-known Klickitat sheepman, has a ewe in his flock that is the mother of a quintet of lambs. The little fellows are all alive, basking In the sunshine and frisking over the hills of Mr. Harden's lambing range on Rock Creek. According to sheepmen who have been In the business for 25 years, this is the first Instance of record in Klick itat of a ewe giving birth to Ave lambs. Triplets are not an infrequent occur rence and several instances are re called of ewes being the mother of four lambs. The nne Spring weather and recent showers have made lambing condltlonn ideal for the big flock owners in Klick itat, and sheepmen are looking forward to a record-breaking Increase. Andy Bunnell, who lambs his sheep early on the south slope of The Dalles Moun tain, reports 1000 lambs from 800 ewes and expects to mark an increase of 115 per cent from his entire band. Homesites Sell Well. Since the suburban sub-division known as Lunalllo was put on the market a few days ago by the Securities Development Company, there has been considerable activity In the district. About a. dozen homesites have been sold. The sites are one-quarter of an acre in size. The tract will be improved with streets and sidewalks and cleared of all underbrush and stumps. A water system also will be installed. The prop erty lies about two blocks from Multno mah Station, on the Oregon Electric line. Lot Angeles Resident Buvs Here. Mrs. L. A. Thompson, of Los Angeles, yesterday purchased the residence of 15. W. Hendricks, at 633 Terrace road, Portland Heights. The price was $25, 000. the sale being negotiated by the Goldsmith Agency. The Hendricks house is of Colonial architecture, built three or four years ago, and is consld. ered one of the handsome homes of that section of the city. aaaaaanSC A REAL "WONDER" INSTRUMENT ' Wonderful in that it brings the world's best music direct into your home. Wonderful in that such an instrument can be bought for so little as $15 a Genuine VICTOR-VICTR0L A Come in and see it and hear it we'll gladly play any music you wish to hear. Other styles of Victor-Victrolas, $2o to $200. Terms to suit. Morrison Street at Seventh The Is DIFFERENT from all other automobiles" ir YOU KNOW THE DO". FERENC& TOXX WILL BUT A CADILLAC" Covey Motor Car Company WASHINGTON AND TWENTT-ITRST 5TS. PORTLAND. O. t