r glSffi THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. a THE HTTSBUKG DISPATCH, SUNDAY, APKIL 8, 189a t J SECOND PART. PAGES 9 TO 24. THE SHIBBOLETH OF Djocucr. Grover Cleveland Rings the Changes on Tariff Reform As THE KEYNOTE OF '92. His Party Will Not Wander Off to Silver Doubt and Danger. ONE SUBJECT AT A TIME ENOUGH. Reciprocity Lamely Linps in the Direc tion He Thinks Right If Hypocrisy Is the Homage Vice Pays to Virtue, Beciprocity Is the Homage Prohibitory Protection Pays to Tariff Reform His Talk on Corruption and Bribery Tells How Brave He Was In Issuing His Free Trade Message De clared Principles on Which the Demo cratic Platform Eests Prejudices in a Campaign The Ex-President's First Speech in Ehode Island. Peotidexce, It. I., April 2. The fol lowing is the address of ex-President Cleve land delivered here this evening in the in terest of the Democratic ticket of Ehode Island: Mr Fellow Citizens I have found it impossible to decline the invitation you sent me to meet here 10-day the Democracy of Ehode Island. I have come to look in the faces of the men who have been given the place of honor in the advance of the vast army which moves toward the decisive battle field of next November. I have cot come to point the way to consolation in case of your defeat, but I have come to share the enthusiasm which presages victory. I have not come to condole with you upon the diffi culties which confront you, but to suggest that they will only add to the glory of your triumph. I have come to remind you that the intrenchments of spoils and patronage cannot avail against the valor and de termination of right; that Corruption and Bribery eannot smother and destroy the aroused conscience of our countrymen, and that splendid achievements await those who bravely, honestly and stubbornly fight in the people's cause. Let us not for a mo ment miss the inspiration of those words, The People's Cause." They signify the defense of every man, rich or poor, in every corner of onr land, who by virtue of simple American manhood lays claim to the prom ises -of our lree Government, and they mean the promotion of the welfare and hap piness of the humblest American citizen who confidingly invokes the protection of just and equal laws. The covenant ol our democratic faith, as I understand it, exacts constant effort in this cause, and its betrayal I conceive to be a crime against the creed of true democracy. The struggle in which you are engaged ar rests the attention of your party brethren in eery State, and they pause in their pre paration for the general engagement near at hand, in which all will be in the field and look toward Ehode Island with hope and trust. They read the legends on your banners and they hear your rallying cries, and know that your fight is in the people's caue. If you should be defeated there will be no discouragement in this vast waiting army; but you will earn their plaudits and cover yourselves with glory by winning success. The Shibboleth of True Democracy. Large and bright upon your banners are blazoned the words "tariff reform" the shibboleth of true Democracy, and the test of loyalty to the people's caue. Those who oppose tariff reform delude themse Ives if they suppose it rests wholly upon appeals 10 selfish considerations and the promise of advantage, right or wrong, or that our only hope of winning depends upon arousing animosity between different interests amone our people. While we do not propose that those whose welfare we champion shall be blind to the advantages accruing to them from our plan of tariff reform, and while we are determined that these advantages shall not be surrendered to the blandishments of greed and avarice we will claim nothing that has not underlying it moral sentiment and considerations of equity and good con science. Eecause our case rests upon such founda tions, sordidness and selfishness cannot de stroy it. The fight for justice and right is a clean and comforting one, and because the American people love justice and right, ours must be a winning fight. "The Government of the Union is a Gov ernment of the people; it emanates from them; its powers are granted by them, and arc to be exercised directly on them and for their benefit." Violating: tlio Governmental Compact. This is not the language of a political platform. It is a declaration of the highest court in tne land, whose mandates all must obey, and whose definitions all partisans must accept. Iu the light of this exposition of the duty the Government owes the peo ple, the Democratic party claims that when, through federal taxation, burdens are laid upon the daily life of the people not neces sary for the Government's economical ad-' ministration, and intended, whatever he the pretext, to enrich a few at the expense of the many, the Governmental compact is vi olated. A distinguished Justice of the Supreme Court, with no Democratic affiliations, but loved and respected, when living, by every American, and since his death universally lamented, has characterized such a proceed ing as "none the less a robbery because it is done under the forms of law and is called taxation." Let us then appreciate ihe fact that we not only stand upon sure and safe ground when we appeal to honesty and morality in our championship of the interests ot the masses of our people, as they are related to tariff taxation, but that our mission is in vested with tbe highest patriotism when we attempt to preserve from perversion, dis tortion and decay the justice, equality and moral integrity which are the constitu ent elements of our scheme of popular govern ment Sincerity or His Free Trado Message. Those who believe in tariff reform for the substantial good it will bring to the multi tude, who are neglected when selfish greed is in the ascendancy; those who believe that the legitimate motive of our Government is to do equal and exact justice to all our peo ple and grant especial privileges to none; those who believe that n nation boasting that its foundation is in honesty and con science cannot afford to discard moral senti ment, and those who would save our institu tions from the undermining decay of sordid ness and selfishness, can hardly excuse them selves if they fail to join us in the crusade we have undertaken. Certainly our sincerity cannot be ques tioned. In the beginning of the struggle we were not only bitterly opposed by a great party of avowed enemies, but were embarrassed by those in our own ranks, who had become infected with the unwhole some atmosphere our enemies had created. We hesitated not a moment boldly to en counter both. We unified our party, not by any surrender to the half-hearted among our members, but by an honest appeal to Democratic sentiment and conscience. We have never lowered our standard. Neither Policy Ifor Expediency. It surely was not the policy nor the expe diency that induced us defiantly to cai?y the banner of tariff reform as we went forth to meet a well-organized and desperately determined army in the disastrous field of 1888. A time-serving or expediency-hunting party would hardly have been found' the day after such a crushing defeat, undis mayed, defiant and determined, still shout ing tbe old warcry, and anxious to encoun ter again, in the people's cause, our exult ant enemy. We had not long to wait. At the Waterloo of 1890 tariff reform had iu vindication, and principle and steadfast de votion to American fairness and good faith gloriously triumphed over plausible shifti ness and attempted popular deception. The Democratic party still champions the cause which defeat could not induce it to surrender, which no success short of com plete accomplishment can tempt it to neg lect. Its position has been from the first frankly and fairly stated, aad no one can honestly be misled concerning it We in vite the strictest scrutiny of our conduct in dealing with this subject and we insist that our cause has been open, fair and consist ent. I believe this is not now soberly denied iu any quarter. The fiecord of the Opposition. Our opponents, too, have a record on this question. Those who still adhere to the doctrine that an important function of the Government is especially to aid them in their business, those who only see in the consumers of our land forced contributors to artificial benefits permitted by Govermental favoritism, those who see in our working men only the tools with which their shops and manufactories are to he supplied at the cheapest possible cost, and those who believe there is no moral question involved in the tariff taxation of the people, are probably familiar with this record, and abundantly satisfied with it. It may,howcver, be profitably reviewed by those who believe that integrity and good faith have to do with Governmental opera tions and who honestly confess that present tarifi burdens are not justly and fairly distributed. Such a review may also be of interest to those who believe that our consumers are entitled to be treated justly and honestly by the Government and that the workingman should be allowed to leel in his humble home, as he supplies his family's daily needs, that his earnings are not unjustly extorted from him for the ben efit of the favored beneficiaries of rnfair tariff laws. , Methods of the Republican Party. This, then, is the record: When we began the contest for tarifi reform it was said by our Eepublican opponents, in the face of our avowals and acts, that we were deter mined on free trade. A long advance was made in their insincerity and impudence when they accused us of" acting in the in terests of foreigners, and when they more than hinted that we had been bought with British gold. Those who trusted the eflect iveness of these senseless appeals insulted the intelligence of our people by claiming that an increase in the cost of articles to the consumer caused by the tarifi was not a tax paid by him, but that it was paid by foreigners who sent their goods to our mar kets. Sectional prejudice was invoked in the most outrageous manner, and the people ot the North were asked to condemn the measure of tarifi reform proposed by us be cause members of Congress from the South bad supported it. These are fair samples of the arguments submitted to the American people in the Presidental campaign of 1888. It will be observed that the purpose of these amazing deliverances was to defeat entirely any reform in the tarifi though it had been enacted at a time when the ex pense of a tremendous war justified the ex action of tribute from the people which in time of peace became a grievous burden, though it had Congested the Federal Treasury with a worse than useless surplus, inviting reckless public waste and extravagance, and though in many of its features the only pur pose of its continuation was the bargaining it permitted for party support There were those, however, in the ranks of our oppo nents who recognized the fact that we had so aroused popular attention to the evils and injustice of such a tarifi that it might not bo safe to rely for success upon a bald opposition to its reform. There were the grave and sedate Eepublican statesmen who declared tnat tney never, never, could consent to subserve the interests of England at the expense of their own country, as the wicked Democrats proposed to do, and that they felt constrained to insist upon a tariff, protective to the point of prohibition, be cause they devotedly loved our working men and were determined that their em ployment should be constant and that their wages should never sink to the disgusting level of the pauper labor of Europe, but that, in view of the fact that the war in which the tariff then existing originated, had been closed for more than 20 years, and in view of the further fact that the publio treasury was over-burdened, they were will ing to readjust the tariff, if It could only be done by its friends Instead of "Eebel Brigadiers." Why the Country Went Democratic I will not refer to all the means by which our opponents succeeded in that contest Suffice it to say they gained complete pos session of the Government in every branch, and the tariff was reformed by its alleged friends. All must admit, however, that either this was not done by the people's friends or that the efforts In their behalf were sadly miscarried or ungratefully re membered; for a few weeks" thereafter a relegation to private life among those oc cupying scats in Congress who had been active in reforming the tarifi occurred which amounted to a political revolution. These victims claimed that our voters failed to indorse their reform of the tariff because they did not understand it It is quite "probable, however, that if thty did not understand it they felt it, and that, be cause it made them uncomfortable, they emphatically said such a reform was not what they wanted. At any rate, the consumer has found life harder since this refold than before, and if there is a workingman anywhere who has had his wages increased by virtue of its operation he has not yet" made himself known. Plenty of mills and factories have been closed, thousands of men tens lost em ployment, and we daily hear of reduced wages; but the benefits promised from this reform, and its advantage to people who really need relief are not apparent. Beclprodty Limps in the Right Direction. The provision it contains permitting reciprocity of trade In certain cases,depend icg on the action of the President, is an ad mission, as far as it goes, against the theory upon which this reform is predicated, and it lamely limps in the direction of freer commercial exchanges. If "hypocrisy is the homage vice pays to virtue," reci procity may be called the homage prohibi tory protection pays to genuine tarifi re farm. The demand in your platform for free raw, materials ought, it seems to me; to be warmly seconded by the citizens of your State. The advantages to the people of Ehode Island of such a policy do not seem to be questionable, and I am not here to discuss them in detail; but all I have said touching the conduct and record of the Democratic party and its opponents in regard to tariff legislation is in support of the proposition that all who, uesirc lue epcci&i reuei reierreu iu in your platform, or any other improvement in our tariff laws in the general Interest of the peo ple must look to the Democratic party for it The manufacturer who sees in free raw materials a reduced cost ot his products re sulting in an increased consumption and an extension of his markets, and a constant ac tivity and return for his invested capital, can hardly trust the party which first re sisted anyreform in the tariff, then juggled with it, and at last flatly refused him the relief he still needs. The Manufacturer and the laborer. The workingman who has been deceived by the promise of higher wages and better employment, ana who now constantly tears the closing of manufactories and the loss of work, ought certainly to be no longer cajoled by a party whose performance has so clearly given the lie to its profession. The con sumer, who has trusted to a reformation of the tariff by its friends, now that he feels the increased burden of taxation in his home, ought to look in another direction for relief. If the Democratic party does not give to the state of Ehode Island during the present session of Congress the free raw materials she needs, it will be because a Eepublican Senate or Executive thwarts its designs. At any rate nothing shall divert us from our purpose to reform the tariff in this regard. ap well as many others, be the time of its accomplishment near or remote. It doubt less would please our adversaries if we could be allured from our watch and guard over the cause of tariff reform to certain other objects, thus forfeiting the people's trust and confidence. The National Demo cracy will hardly gratify this wish and turn its back upon the people's cause to wander after false and unsteady lights in the wilder ness of doubt and danger. The Silver Question Isn't In It Our opponents must, in the coming na tional canvass, settle accounts with us on the issue of tarifi reform. It will not do for them to say to us that it is an old and de termined contention. The ten command ments are thousands of years old, but they and the doctrine of tariff reform will be taught and preached until mankind and the Eepublican party shall heed the injunction, "Thou shalt not steal" As I leave you, let me say to yon that your- cause deserves success, and let me ex press the hope that the close of your can vass will bring you no regrets on account of activity relaxed or opportunities lost De monstrate to your people the merits of your cause, and trust them. Above all things, banish every personal feeling of discontent, and let every personal consideration be merged in a determination, pervading your ranks everywhere, to win a victory. With a cause so just, and with activity, vigilance, harmony and determination on the part of Ehode Island's stanch Democracy, I believe you will not fail. LADY GYMNASTICS. Swell New York Females Astonish Hale Friends A Clever Muscular Matinee They Fly Throcgli the Alp With the Greatest of Eblo and Are Perfectly Able to Do as They Please" Ne-W York, April 2. Special. The Berkeley Ladies' Athletic Club at their third annual opening yesterday, astonished their friends with their exhibition of mus cular prowess. The pupils wore gymna sium suits which consisted of a dark blue blouse braided, military fashion, with gold braid, very full Turkisk trousers, reaching just below the knee, with the same mate rial and color as the blouse. Black hose, and low black, rubber-soled shoes com pleted the costume. It was quite a lesson in metamorphosis to recognize a Bwell girl whom you had seen on the avenue an hour before now hanging head downward from tbe horizontol bar; or to see tne aaugnter ot a leading divine tak ing a little excursion up and down the room on the "traveling rings;" or another meek-tongued maiden transformed into the woman with the iron jaw. Two young ladies whirled round and' round the horizontal bar with a rapidity that would make ou dizzy, while the. others were performing on trapeze rings in a way to substantiate the Darwinian theory. The high jumping was excellent Mme. Beserer, with three of her pupils, gave a brief exhibition of a fencing lesson. Last in order were the fanoy steps. The girls formed in two platoons. At each suc cessive descent of the hall was added an extra hop, or kick, or pirouette until there was scarcely a motion left untried. There were 72 pupils, the youngest under 7 years, and not a few gray haired. The figures were well developed, and they were by no means like the inmates of Mrs. Squeers' school, where "the general run of limbs was crooked." MAY GET SUNDAY BEER. A Jersey Millionaire Has a Scheme How He Proposes to Plant on His Soil a Ger man Idea Powerful Enough to Chance the Lam to Salt Himself. New York, April 2. Special Gott fried Krueger, the millionaire brewer of Newark, has views in connection with the improvement of the Newark and South Orange Eailroad, which he and other capi talists have just purchased, and his views are xtremely broad. He owns the shooting park just outside of cal garden to excel all others in this country, the city line on South Orange avenue, and hitherto it has been a most unprofitable venture. With the eleotrio equipments of the street railway, Mr. Krueger will make great changes in the park, and chief among these will be the establishment of a zoologi- xt is jur. jirueger s intention to buy $200,000 worth of animals, and spend a liberal sum In providing quarters for them. It will not be a free garden, but the admis sion fee will be as low as It can be made consistent with the expenses. Of course, it is intended to make it a Sunday garden, with music the feature and unlimited beer, but the present laws will have to be changed to make this possible. Mr. Krueger is a shrewd business man, a Democrat, and a party leader, as well as a lay Judge of the Court of Errors and An. peals. His great wealth gives him great power and influence, and it is not impossible that within a year public gardens may be allowed to keep open on Sunday after- Dors' stylish suits That Will Take the Easter Prizes P. C. C. C. Boys with their parents are now trooping Into our store to be fitted with new spring suits. , An elegant present for every boy that will make him happy, free. The new penny suvings bank, shaped like a bucket, holds i00 pennies and registers eaoh time, or a regulation League Dat and ball. free. Boys' double breasted suits, fine cassi mere or cheviot, size 4 to 15, stylish end tasty, real value $8 SO; our speoial price 4i go At $2 40 a special line of boys' silk mix tures and checked nnlts nleAteri np plain: regular $4 0 goods, we sell for.. $3 (0 A big llne.of boys' confirmation suits and Sunday suits; plain cloths and tne newest that's out, at $2 73 and 13 75 Come and see us Monday. P. C. C. C., Cloth iers, corner Grant and Diamond streets. 'TWIXT HAY MP CORN Is About tbe Time That the Tories . Would Like the Election. MOELEY ON LOCAL GOVERNMENT. Durham Miners Begin to Bee That They Can't Win Their Strike. oACKYlLLE WEST IN HOT WATER AGAIN rBT CABLX TO THI DISPi.TCH.1 London, April 2. Copyright. Yester day Mr. Labouchere made another attempt to extract from the Government some defi nite declaration as to the date of the general election, and Mr. Balfour made a very care ful reply, which seemed to afford little in formation, but it evidently conveyed some thing satisfactory to Mr. Gladstone, for that wily old strategist spoke honeyed words to Mr. Balfour and advised Mr. Labouchere not to press the Government further for the present It has since become known that Mr. Gladstone is of the opinion that Mr. Balfour's statement contained a virtual promise to dissolve Parliament before August, probably early in tbe summer. Mr. Gladstone 8 belief may be due to in formation which reached him from the Tory camp, quite as much as to the substance of Mr. Balfour's guarded statement in Parlia ment A large number of Tory members have recently caused to be conveyed to the Min isters, through the party whips, their deep concern at learning that there are members of the Cabinet who desire to postpone the general election until autumn. The memor ialists point out that such a course would deprive them of their customary holiday after an exhausting session, and would con stitute such a strain that many of them would be compelled to refrain from seeking re-election. A Campaign Between the Harvests. They suggest that the dissolution should not be delayed beyond the beginning of July, and that the best time for the elec tions they cannot take place immediately after Easter, would be between "the hay and the corn harvests" that Is to say, at the end of July. The probabilities at pres ent are that an authoritative announcement will be made by Mr. Balfour on the 25th of May, when he will address, in St James' Hall, the annual meeting of the National Union of Conservative Associations. The Government continues to muddle business and waste time in the House of Commons and accuse the Liberals of ob struction, while diligently assisting the latter in the work of cloggipgthe legislative wheels. The Easter recess is to be un usually long, probably from the 12th to the 25th inst, which affords fresh proof that the Government is in no hurry.to push forward the Irish local government bill, the rook upon which the ministry will break up. Merely an Unconsidered Trifle. John Morley, in a speech at Manchester on Thursday, put this matter very clearly. That bill, he said, contains 78 clauses and 4 rather elaborate schedules, and occupied nearly oo pages ot print. He douDted very much whether the ministers would be able to find it convenient to bring their men all through the long summer afternoons and nights to discuss a bill "which its own author, by the way in which he introduced it to the House of Commons, showed that he regarded it as a mere unconsidered trifle of legislation." Next week John Eedmond, in the House of Commons, will ask Home Secretary Mat thews another question with regard to ex Detective Superintendent James Black, of Birmingham, who is now known to have long practiced blackmail, and whose where abouts are unknown. Eedmond will bring before Parliament the information about Black that was obtained by The Dispatch reporter in Birmingham, and published in last Tuesday's Dispatch, and it will be impossible for the Home Secretary to re fuse an investigation into the career of. the ex-detective, upon whose testimony Daly and Egan were convioted ot treason and felony, and are now undergoing life sen tence in Portland prison. That such an in vestigation will result in the liberation of the two men there is little doubt CHEAPEE BIDES IN FBAKCE. The Railroads All Beduce Their Bates 10 to 30 Per Cent. BT CABLE TO THE DISrATCn.5 London, April 2. Americans who pro pose traveling in France will be glad to know that the reduction of railway fares to the rates charged before the Government tax in consequence of the Franco-Prussian war was put upon the companies came into effect yesterday. The reductions made in the fares for passengers on all the French railways are 30 per cent on the previous third-class fares, 20 per cent, on second-class fares and 10 per cent on first class fares. The knowledge that these reduced fares were to be applied on the 1st of April had the efieot of reducing the number of passengers very considerably during the last few days, bnt from an early hour yesterday morning every train which left Paris was besieged by passengers who had postponed their jour neys in order to profit by the reduction. The arriving trains also steamed into the stations, yesterday and to-day, with almost every seat occupied. The loss entailed by these large reduc tions is of course very great, but the rail- Si' A SHADOW ON TEE MAP OF EUROPE. way companies look forward to a great and rapid growth of passenger traffic, and are already making preparations for it The Paris, Lyons and Mediterranean Railway Company is building over 500 new carriages and 100 new engines. The Northern, East ern, Western and Orleans railways are also largely increasing their rolling stock. B0BLS FAMILIES'' QTJAEBEL8. A Couple of Them Interesting the British Public Just Now. BY OABLB TO TUB DISPATCH. London, April 2. The Marquis of Staf ford haying gained a partial victory over bis father, the Duke of Sutherland, in the matter of cutting down timber at Trentham, recently referred to in The Dispatch, is now opposing the Duke's proposal to dis entail a considerable portion of his Suther landshire estates. Members of another noble family are quarreling about money matters . Lady Jane Lindsay is accusing her sister, Lady Theodore, of coercing her aged mother, th'e late,Marchloness of Westminster, into mak ing a will in her favor. The old lady, who died in February, was left nearly a million sterling by her husband 23 years ago. Carpet Salel Carpet Salet This weeki 23o ingrain carpet at lbo; heavy two-ply 40o camet at 29c: GOo brussels at 42c; $1 brussels at 80c: 05C oilcloth at 17c; 33c oil cloth, 25c; best So and 10c stair oilcloth at Sc. Cut this item out. J. II. KtraKEL & Bro., 1347-1349 Penn avenue, corner fourteenth and Penn avenuo. A BIG REAL ESTATE DEAL THE DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE DISPOSES OF HJS TOWN HOUSE. He Thereby Bakes in a Cool Three-Quarters of a Million The John Barns' Wages Committee's Treasury Almost Bankrupt A Striking Contrast IBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. J London, April 2. Copyright! It i stated that the Duke of Devonshire has de cided to sell his town house in Piccadilly with tbe land around it, nearly four acres in extent The" purchase money js 5750,000, with which the Duke will be able to buy another first-rate house and then put $500, 000 in bank. It is expected that the pur chasers will cover the ground witn a big hotel and aristocratic flats, which is the only method by which they can hope to make a large profit Cheet by jowl with the announcement of this big deal by which the Duke pockets $750,000 solely because he is the son of his father,' the moralist may read an appeal from the John Burns Wages Committee for funds to help pay the famous labor leader the modest salary of JE2a week. When Burns was elected three years ago to a seat in the London County Council he was earning 3 a week at his bench as a fitter. He stipu lated that as he would have to give np all his time to municipal affairs the working men of London should enable him to live by raising that sum per week by voluntary subscription. Consequently, the John Burns Wages Committee was formed, and Burns has since received his modest stipend as a member of London's municipal parlia ment. He has rendered incalculable service to the cause of labor, but labor has not shown much gratitude to its champion. The com mittee has raised the necessary money from week to week with great difficulty, and sev eral times, as at the present moment, the treasury has been almost- empty. The fact is that the older and richer trade unions ob ject to Burns because he is a Socialist, and only the Dockers Union, which he estab lished, has contributed to the fund. OPENED A BOMB WITH AN AX A Texas Boy's Successful Experiment With a Bayou Find. HOUSTON, Tex, April 2. Special During the war a large amount of bomss and other ammunition was thrown into Buffalo bayou to avoid capture. To-day a boy, Charlie Harris, got one of tbe bombs out of the bayou, took it home and pro ceeded to open it with an ax. He succeeded. One foot was blown off; he has a sing in bis groin, and another in his head. The stable where he was experi menting was blown to atoms. HoiseiioluX CREDIT CO. , f 723 and 725 Liberty St, M WL Corner Eighth, head g fc of Wood Street Maf WE ARE STRICTLY IN IT! AND WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF OUR FRIENDS WE ARE STAYING AT THE TOP OF THE BUNCH. PBIGBS ALW1YS THE LOWEST! -&&. -"- n i IMS ALWAYS-?! EASIEST! BER SUIT B '. HoiseMflX H CREDIT CO., 9 723 and 725 Libsrty St- M 'Ni Corner Eighth, head Xy of Wood Street. vNj? MMMD HI EVERY ONE A WORLD-BEATER AT PRICES THAT ARE NEVER TOUCHED. STEP IN AND SEE THEM. Seven Pieces. $20 $20 $20 Cash or Credit Terms easy, as you like them. Look Here, Friend ! $0 $60 tp&O Buy it and credit your self with a $ro note. We start our BED LOUNGES With this one at $10 $10 $10 Cash or Credit Have you a few spare moments? If so, drop in. 127 styles parlor suits. This one goes at $30 $30 $30 Cash or Credit THEY WILL PLEASE YOUR POCKETBOOK. Don't Wonder at This ! Our price is $18 $18 $18 $6 Down $6 $1 per .week for balance. &$P- Did You Ever! Only $15 $15 $15 Cash or Credit Cheaper Than Sleeping on the Floor. ?""5" 4 ""st-st .yBBMSiBg'; gj.ivt, !.UH5W s CARPETS. ANY STYLE. f 'iiiiiiJihiii' ICTr EgJ I ESSE 1 W III I I l II v iBiSi J This Cheval Suit 3 Pieces 3 Just as you see them. 825 $25 $25. Cash or Credit Here is something that will give you an appetite to eat a hearty meal $10 $10 $10 Cash or Credit Br (gJJjSTllp j rL Tn-i'.f ' H ' - Kxm 1 'SBS pg rn'ffl 1 Efif I III A -a- -. IhuH mtt Ml if Hil mm 6 mm . t4 i iWi n . "li1 fi'nvrsv j r Do you feel tired when you come from work? If so, buy this couch. $9 $9 $9 Cash or Credit frcySg CARPETS. ANY PRICE. CARPETS. ANY QUALITY. Tllllftgalflfffflu&rnnnl CARPETS. ANY QUANTITY. CARPETS. ANY TERMS. t Remember, we can make and lay them the same day purchased at prices always the lowest terms always the easiest HOUSEHOLD CREDIT COMPANY 723 AND 725 LIBERTY STREET, - - - CBRNER EIGHTH, - - - HEAD OF WOOD STREET. PITTSBURG'S -:- LEADING -:- AND -:-. MOST -:- ACCOMMODATING -:- CASH -:- OR -:- CREDIT -:- HOUSE anl-48 1 - i ----' s)& i'
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