Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, October 22, 1892, Page 12, Image 12

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THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1892.
Is COMMEMORATION ODE.
TYhat Was Read and Stm? at
Dedicatory Ceremonies
tbe
ON THE WOBLD'S FAIR GE0UXD3.
nie "Work of a Chicapo Cirl Uo Drifted
Into Journalism.
A BRIEF SKETCH OF THE FAIR POETESS
CHICAGO, Oct 21. Oue of the pleasing
features of the "World's Fair dedicatory
ceremonies to-day was the reading
find singins of the Commemora
tion Ode, written by Miss Harriet
Monroe. Miss Monroe is a Chicago girl
pnre and simple, and she is inclined to
boast of the fact. Her early education was
secured in tbe Moseley School. Then she
went for three years to the Dearborn Ladies'
Seminary, which at that time, under the
direction of Zenas Grover, was one of the
leading educational institutions of its kind
in the West The finishing touches to her
career as a scholar were gnen at the George
town (D. C) Convent, where she remained
two years. Here she studied the art of
versification. In a desultory manner Miss
Monroe toiled in her .literary workshop
until she was 23 or 26 years of age. It may
be remarked in passing that the lady is one
of the fair sex that has the courage to
openly avow her age. She Mas born on
December 23, 1SG0, and therefore two days
before the coming Christmas she will be 32
years old.
Her first really ambitious effort and the
one that has gicn her - place among the
SS IIARKIET MOXKOH.
rs of poetry ' this country
mil entitled "Valeria and
day been a toiler in the
urnalism; indeed she has
: newspaper work. Her
ier writing was dramatic
-s. Sarah C LeMoyne,
read Miss Monroe's
vs in full:
o dewy flowers
ratrics und from
i led tlio steadfast
jrld its licnker fills,
g of Messed themes
u a deep couch of
Jer-born of Time,
)ues to hear.
s, trrad with thee
-igly lend the car.
., in thebroidered robe of chivalry,
iue3 with slow loot and inn nrd-biooding
ejes.
Bow to her banner! 'twas the first to riso
Ont of the dark for thee.
And England, royal mother, whoso light
hand
Molds nations, whose white foot the ocean
tread,
Lays down her sword on thy beloved strand
To bless thy wreathed head:
Hearinc in thine Lor voice, bidding thy soul
Fulfill her dieam, the foremost at the goat
And France, w ho once thy fainting form up
bore. Brings benuty now where strength she
brought of yore.
France, the swift-footed, who with thee
Gazed in the eyes of Liberty,
And loved the dark no more.
Around the peopled world
Bright the banners are unfurled.
The long procession winds from shore to
shore.
The Norseman sails
Through icy pales
To the green Vinelanu of his long aio.
ltussla rides down fiom realms ol sun and
snow.
Germany casts afar
Her Iron robes ol war.
And strikes her harp with thy triumphal
sour.
Italy opens wide her epic scroll.
In bright hues blazoned, with great deeds
writ lonjr.
And bids thee win the kingdom of the soul.
And the calm Orient, w ise with many days,
From hoary Palestine to sweet Japan
Salutes thy couqaering youth:
Bidding thee hush while all the nations
praise.
Enow, though the world endure but for a
span.
Deathless is truth.
Bo! unto thu-e the ever-living Fast
Ushers a mighty pageant, bids arise
Dead centuries, freighted with visions vast,
Blowing dim mists into the Futuie's eyes.
Their son? is all of time,
Daughter of mystery.
Alone! Alone!
Behind wide walls of sea!
And never a ship lias Hon n
A prisoned world to Iree.
Fair Is tbe sunny day
On mountain and lake and stream,
Tet wild men starve and t-l&r.
And the young earth lies adream.
Long have the dumb years passed with va
cant eyes,
Bearing rich gifts fornatlonsthronedafar,
Guarding thy soul inviolate as a star,
Leaving thee safe with God till man grow
wise.
At last one patient heart is born
Fearless of ignorance and scorn.
His strong youth wasteth at thy sealed gate
Kings will not open to the untrod path.
His hope grows sere while all the angels
wait,
The prophet bows under the dull world's
wrath,
Until a woman fair
As morning lilies are
Brings hlni a Jeweled key
And To! a world is free.
"Wide swings the portal never touched be
fore. Strange luring winds blow from an unseen
shore.
Toward dreams that cannot fall
He bids the three ships sail.
While man's new song of hope rings out
against the gale.
Over the -wide unknown.
Far to the shores of Ind,
On,through the dark alone.
Like a feather blown by the wind;
Into the west away.
Sped by the breath of God,
Seeking the clearer day
Where only His feet have trod:
From the past to the luture we sail;
We slip from the leash ofkings.
Hall, spirit of freedom-hail!
Unfurl thine Impalpable wines!
Becelve us, protect us, and bless
Tny knijrhts who brave all for thee.
Though death be thy soft caress.
By that touch shall our souls bo free.
Onward and over on,
Till the voice of despair Is stilled.
Till the haven or peace Is won.
And the purpose of God fulfilled!
O strange, divine surpriso!
Out of the dark man strives to rise.
And struggles Inch by Incn with, toil and
tears; . . ,
Till, lo! God stoops from his supernal
spheres,
And;bares the glory of his face.
Then darkness flee- -
This earth become:
Man leaps up to tbe 1
Vfe ask a little all is g
We Seet a lamp God a tu
Bo these who dared to pi pale
For an Idea tempting: t .' .as,
Sought bat Cathay. , G .'. faith
prevail -
To find a world blessed his purposes!
The hero knew not what n virgin soul
Laughed through glaloyes hen at her
leot ho laid
Tho caudy trappings of man's masquer
ade. She who had dwelt In forests, heard tho roll
Of lakes dowu-thunderinir to tbe sea.
Beheld from gleaming mountain heights
Two oceans playing with tho Ibrhti
Of eve and morn ah! what would she
With all the out-wprn paseantry
Of purple robe s and heavy mace and crownt
Smiling she casts them down,
Unfit her young austerity
Ol hair unbound and strong limbs bare and
brown.
Vet thev who daro arlso
And meet Iter stainless eyes
Forget old loves, though crowned aueons
these be,
And whither her winged feet fare
They follow though death be there
So sweet, so floet, so goddess-nure Is she.
Uer voice is like deep rivers, that do flow
Through forests bending low.
Her step is softest moonlight, that doth
force
The ocean to its course.
Gentle her smile, lor somothtng in man's
face,
Woild-wom, time-weary, furrowed deep
w nil tears,
Thrills her chaste heart with a moro tender
grace.
Softly she smoothes the wrinkles from his
brow.
Wrought by the baleful years.
Smiles sunshine on the hoar head, whispers
low
Xew charges from the awakened will of
truth
Words all of Are, that thrill his soul with
youth.
Not with his brother Is man's battlo here.
The challenge of the earth, that Adam
heal d.
His love austere breathes in his easrer ear.
And lol the knight who warred at love's
command.
And scarred the facoof Europe, sheaths
Ills sword.
Hearing from untaught lips a nobler
word.
Taking new weapons from an unstained
hand,
With axe and osr, with mallet and with
spade,
She bids tho hero conquer, unafraid
Though cloud-veiled Titans be his lordly
foes
Spirits of earth and air, whoso wars Drook
no repose
For from far-away mountain and plain,
From the shores of the sunset sea,
Tho unwearying rulers complain, complain,
And throng lrom tho wastes to defend their
icign,
Their threatened majesty.
The low prairies that He abloom
Sigh out to the summer ain
Shall our dark soil be the tomb
Of the flowers that rise so fair?
Shall we yield to man's disdain.
And nourish his golden grain?
We will lreezeand burn and snare.
Ah! bidliim beware! beware!
And the forests, heavy and dark and deep
With the shadows of shrouded vear,
In a murmurous voice, out orage-long sleep,
jn. .. . auuo. ii imb cre-amres ruue
ould storm onr solitude?
Hath his soul no fears, no tears!
The prono rivers lift up their snow-crowned
heads.
Arise In w rath from their rock-hewn beds,
And roan Wo w ill ravage'and drowu
Ei e w e float his white ships down.
And the lakes from a mist
Of ametbvsc
Call the storm-clouds down, and grow ashen
and brown.
And all the four winds wall:
Our gales shall make him quail.
By blinding snow, bv burning ban
His strength 6hall be undone.
Then men in league with these
Bi others of wind and waste
Hew barbs of flint, and darklv haste
From sheltering tents and trees;
Andmntter: Away! Away!
Ye children of white-browed day!
Who dares prorane our wild gods' reign
iVe torture nml trnn nnrl cla..
Child of the lislit, tho shadows "fall in vain.
Herald of God, in vain the powers con-
Arni'ed with truth's holy cross, faith's
sacred flie, . m a
Though often vanquished, he shall rise
agnui,
Xor lest till the wild lords of earth and air
Bow to lus will, his burdens glad to bear.
ihe angels leave him not through tho long
P.'Jit!ln?tIl",ro annaIs of their own wide lire.
Luring him on to freedom. On that field,
i rora giants won, shall man be slave to
man?
Lo! clan on clan,
lhe embattled nations gather to be one.
Clasp hands as brother 'neatb. Columbla'3
shield,
Upraiee her banner to tho shining sun.
-along her blessed shore
One heart, one song, one dream
Jlan shall be free forevermoro.
And love shall be supreme.
LIBERAL TERMS OF CREDIT
1 ii i.. i Wjj .! I (ol 'i f J i ;r iIIih
r-r?- " - L-'i aw...i...3Jfia
$27 -E
0MUN0S0N
& PERRINE'S.
9 Cash and i Week.
& PERRINE'S.
Solid Oak, 3 Pie'ces.
13 Cash and 1.50 Per Week.
(TOO at-TDMUNDSON
300 . e.
CIE OE AT CDMUNDSON
vpiD.ZD & PERRINE'S.
$S Cash and 75 c Week.
THE LARGEST BED LOUNGE MADE.
Free Delivery
CASH or
CREDIT.
When dreaming kings, atodds with swift
paced time,
Would strike that banner down,
A riobler knight than ever wvit or"rhyme
With lame's bright wreath did crown
Through armed hosts bore it till 1 floated
high
Beyond the clouds, a light that-cannot diet
Ah, hero of our vounger race!
Great builder of a temple now!
Ruler, who sought no lordly place!
Warrior, who sheathed the sword he
drew!
Lover of men, who saw afar,
A world unmarred by want of war.
Who knew the nath and vet forbore
To tread, till all men should Implore;
Who saw the light and led the way
Where the gray world might greet the day;
Father and leader, prophet sure,
Whose will In vast works shall endure, '
How shall we praise him on this day of days.
Great son ot fame who lias no need or praise?
How shall we praise him? Open wide the
doors
Of tbe lair temple whose broad baso he
laid.
Through its white halls' a shadowy caval
cado Of heroes moves o'er anresotinding floors
lien whose brawned arms upraised these
columns high,
And reared tho towers that -vanish In the
skv
The strong who, having wrought, can.never
die.
And lo! loading a blessed host comes-one
Who held a warring nation In his heart;
Who knew love's agony, but had no part
In love's delight; whose mighty task was
done
Through blood and tears that wo might walk
in joy,
And this day's rapture own ruo sad alloy.
Around him heirs of bliss, whose bright
brows wear
Palm-leaves amid their laurels ever fnir.
Gaily they come, as though the drum
Beat ont the call their glad hearts knew so
well.
Brothers once moro, dear as ofyoro.
Who in a noble conflict nobly feQ.
Their blood washed pure yon banner In tho
sky,
And quenched the brands laid.'iteatn these
arches high;
The brave who, having i fought, .can never
die.
Then surging through the vastnesssiso once
more
Tbeaureolod heirs of light, whotonward
boro
Through darksome times and trackless
realms of ruth
The flag or beauty and the torch af truth.
They tore the mask lrom the foul face of
wrong;
Even to God's mysteries they dared aspire;
High in the choir they lit yon altar-flie,
And filled these aisles with color and with
song:
The ever-young, the nnfallen, wreathing for
time
Fresh garlands of the seeming-vanished
vears:
Faces long, luminous, remote, sublime.
And shining brows still dewy with' our
tears.
Back with the old glad smile comes ono-we
knew
We bade him rear our hquse of Joy to-day.
But Beauty opened wide her starry way.
And he passed on. Bright champions of
the true.
Soldiers of peace, seers, singers ever blest
From tho wide ether of a loftier quest
Their winged souls thiong our rites to
glorify
Tho wise who, having known, can never
die.
Strange splendors stream tho vaulted aisles
along
To these we loved celestial rapture clings.
And music, borne on rhythm of Using
wings.
Floats from tne living dead, w hose breath Is
song.
Columbia, my country dost thou hoar?
Ah! dost thou hear the songs unheard of
time?
nark! for their passion trembles at thine ear.
Hush! for thy soul must heed their call
sublime.
Across wide seas, unswept by earthly sails.
Those strange sounds draw thee on, for
thouslialtbe
Leader of nations through tho autumnal
gales
That wait to mock the strong and wreck
tho free.
Dearer, more radiant than of yore,
Against the daik I see thee rise;
Thy young smile spurns the guarded
shore
And braves the shadowed ominous
skies.
And still that conquering smile who see
Fledge love, life, service, all to thee.
The years have brought thee robes most
fair .
The rich pi occasional years
And filleted thy shining hair,
And zoned thy waist with jewels rare,
And whispered in thine ears
Strange secrets of God's wondrous ways,
Long hid from human awe and praise.
f :52e"rsfe:
r y VJJ
C09 at ITDMUNDSON
4)0 Q EL & PERRINE'S
$n Cash and 1.25 Per
Week.
4)4 t & PERRINE'S.
Solid Oak, 3 Pieces.
$16 Cash and $1.75 Per Week.
1 1 Cash and 50c
Week. Solid Oak.
EDM
trSS 542 wifelnP
m fr I J SI 33l
i ' ' ' f mi iwu ; ?
1 f f PTTS PA . ijJMii 1
fU-Liiiu ftgi 1l-J l-"f'
nEk 1 bar fi.U IL,
$3.004 &R
We Will Furnish Tour Home Complete, Including Carpets, Curtains, Silver, China, Tinware, Stoves, Etc.
635 and 637 SMITHFIELD
For lo! tbe living God doth bare his arm.
So more he makes his house of clouds and
"loom.
Lightly tne shuttles move within his loom;
Unveiled his thunder leaps to meet tho
storm.
Front God's right hand man takes the
powers that sway
A universe of stars.
Ho bows them down; he bids them go or
stay:
He tames them for nis wars,
no scans the burning paces of the sun,
And names the Invisible orbs whose courses
run
Through the dim deeps of space.
He sees in dew upon a rose impearled
The swarming legions or a monad world
Begin life's upward race.
Voices or hope he hears
Longlumb to his despair,
And dreams of golden years
lieot for a world so fair. f
For now Demooracy doth wake and rise
From the sweet sloth of youth.
By storms made strong, by many dreams
made wise,
He clasDS the hand of truth.
Through the armed nations Ilea his path of
peace.
The oDen book of knowledgedn his hand.
Food to the starving, to the oppressed re
lease, And love to all he bears from land to land.
Before his march the barriers tall,
The law grows gentle at his call.
His glowing breath blows far away
The fogs that veil the coming day,
That wondrous day
When earth shall sing as througtvtbe blue
she rolls
Laden witn Joy for all her thronging sonls.
Then shall want's call to sin resound no
moro
Across her teeming fielifc. And pain shall
sleep,
Soothed by brave science with her magic
lore,
And war no more shall bid the nations
weep. ,
Then the worn chains shall slip from man's,
desire,
And even higher and higher
His swift foot shall aspire;
Still deeper and more deep
His soul its watch shall keep, .
Till love shall make the world a holy place.
WheTe knowledge dares unveil God's very
face.
Not yet the angels hear life's last swieot song.
Music unutterably pure and strong
From earth shall rise to haunt tho peopled
skies
When the long march of time.
Patient in birth and death, in growth and
Dug nt,
Shall load man up thiough happyrrealms of
light
Unto his goal sublime.
..
Columbia! Men beheld thee rise
A goddess from the misty sea.
Lady of joy, sent from the skies,
The nations worshiped thee.
Thy brows were flushed with dawn's I first
light;
By foamy waves with stars bedlght
Thy blue robe floated free.
.Now lot the sun ride high o'erhead,
Driving the day lrom shore to shore.
His burning tre.td we do not dread,
For thou art evermore
Lady of love whose smile shall bless,
Wnom brave deeds win to tenderness.
Whose tears the lost restore.
Lady ot hope thou art. We wait
With courage thy serene command.
Through unknown seas, toward undreamed
fate
We ask thy guiding hand.
On! though sails quiver in the galo!
Thou at the helm, we can not fail.
On to God's time-veiled strand.
Lady of beauty! thou Shalt win
Glory and power and length of days.
The sun and moon shall be thy kin,
The stars shall sing our praise.
All hall! we bring thee vows most sweet
To strew before thy winged leet.
Now onward be thy ways!
KUSSLVN hotels, by Frank G. Carpenter,'
In THE' DISPATCH to-morrow.
Highest ot all in Leavening PowerLatest U. S. Gov't Report
& j&m, ircMfuSflr
ABSDULTTELY PURE
UNDSON &
fr H p p h-s,,
$45 AT E
AT PDMUNDS0N
& PERRINE'S.
J5i5 Cash and gi.75 Week.
6 large pieces, covered in Mo
hair Plush. A handsome suit.
OUR PARLOR FLOOR
Is a revelation of 'harmonious beauty. Great in magnificence
and wonderful in low prices. Can you use a sample suit that
has been on our floors? That may be a little dusty?. We've
cut the prices on 2 1 suits because the balance of the stock is
closed out, leaving only pne.
$160 Suits now $120 $120 Suits now $90 .
$100 Suits now $15 $85 Suits now $65
And our liberal terms of credit
'room. You take the profit.
LATE NEWS IN BRIEF.
English soldiers at Chelsea-Barracks are
still cutting harness.
The last vestiges of the rebellion In
Honduras have been crushed.
Geores Hopkins, rt provision merchant
of Cardiff, Wales, has failed for $1,400,000.
United States Minister Scrnggs has
recognized Crespo's Government In Ven
ezuela. Belgium will have a double World's Fair
simultaneously at Brussels and Antwerp.
They will be connected by an electric rail
way. The rebels at Santla del Estero, Argen
tinia, have made their Governor prisoner.
A junta has been formed to govern their
province.
Joseph' Itllev, who had been keeping
company with Kate Dugan, tho murdered
girl at Wilmington, Dot, has been arrested
on suspicion.
The spread or the phylloxera In France
has led to the formation or syndicates In
several departments whose object Is to
crush out the plague.
The British steamer Borrowdale, having
on board three steamboats In sections
destined for the interior 'African lakes. Is
ashoie not far from Zanzibar.
Tbe Missouri, Kansas and Texas Ball
road Company has given each family or the
murdered citizens of CoffeyVillo, Kan., $1,C00
and divided $1,000 among Ave other defe nd
crs of the town against the Dalton gang.
Utilizing tho News Telephone.
Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 21. The first long
distance telephone message ever sent from
Chlcago'to a dally newspaper was received
to-day by tho Standird-Union. Not only
were tho woids or the correspondent dis
tinctly heard, but his voice was as clearly
recognizable as ir he stood In the office
when the message was received.
A DREADFUL SCOURGE
The Case of Mr. Palmer Pneumonia Car-
' ried Him Off Suddenly Everyone Should
Know the Symptoms and Be on Guard.
Mr. Wilton B, Palmer, of New York City,
'left a circle of iriends one afternoon recent
ly, and received their congratulations upon
his bright and vigorous appearance. That
evening ho felt a tickling in the throat, a
slight pain across the chest, a chilly sensa
tion, and be coughed once or -twice. The
next day bis nostrils were Inflamed, bis
throat soie, his ohest pained him. his bones
ached and he felt sore all over, Tbe day fol
lowing be was In bed, with physicians shak
ing their heads, and the third day he was
dead from pneumonia, which he failed to
take in time.
There are ten thousand men and women in
America to-day in the samo condition as Mr.
Palmer when leaving his friends, Out they
do not know it The slightest appearance of
the symptoms above named should strike
terror to any man or woman. A sudden chill
means the beginning of pneumonia; aohes
and pains throughout the bod aie the first
symptoms. It is necessary to bring about a
reaction at once. How, then, is tho best way
oi urmging auout a reaction? ask any pny
slcian and he will toll you to use pure
whiskey. No matter how prejudiced anyone
may be, pure wniskey at such a time is a
necessity, but unfortunately theie are few
pure whiskies in the world, and In lact there
is but one that ba rocelved the unqualified
endorsement of physicians, chemists and
the highest authorities, and that is Duffy's
Pure Male This remarkable whiskey which
is sold by nil first-class druggists and grocers,
will absolutely check the first approach of
pneumonia, while at the samo time Ids cer
tain to build up the wusted system. It de
serves to be kept in every household, not
only to be used in cases ot emergency, but
to assist in prolonging life and bringing
health and happiness.
$75
AT r-DMUNDSON
. t & PERRINE'S.
$25 Cash and S2.50 per week.
Magnificent Silk Brocatelle Cov
ering. All overstuffed. No wood
showing.
at these prices.
We want the
54ES
ONU ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figa is taken; it ia pleasanl
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation, Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50o
and $1 bottle3 oy all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hana will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCI3C0. CAL. .
LOUISVILLE. KY.- HEW YORK. tl.Y.
EXTRACT OF BEEF!
Inferior and imitation sorts are coarse,
of disagreeable odor and unpleasant
flavor, but the genuine
m
Bearing the au
thorized signa
ture of Jnstus
von XJcblg, the
great chemist,
rZ
has the odor of roast beet craw, a fins
flavor, dissolves clearly In water and
assimilates with the finest and simplest
cookery.
Poa DzticiOTTS, Kefbeshtsq Beef Tea.
Fob Isipkoved and Economic Cookeht.
USE
FRAGRANT
fTRT-PHOS
POH 3
HOUSE CLEANING.
DIRT and GREASE
Melt Before It. "
Grocers and Druggists
Sell It,
ACTUAL RESULTS
Show DISPATCH adlets to be
most profitable to advertisers.
Try them.
PERRINE
AT PRICES POSITIVELY
OTHERS ASK FOR
n -j" "cssp,
y r I --
u, fiB L
$25
ETDMUNDSON
AT
& PERRINE'S.
3 Pieces. Large Mirror.
$8.00 CASH AND $1.00 WEEK.
31Bggg
i
-.- '. --BBB
$69.50.
LMMHgr
$20 Cash and $2.50 Pr.Wk.
SOLID OAK SUIT,
Consisting of
" E&P.
Bedstead, Drtsssr and washstand.
Massive Carvings, Deep Beveled Panels,
Plate Mirror. Unly to De naa 01
EDMUNDSON&PERRINE.
ST. 635 and 637
OOjMM4jg
KEff. ADVERTISEMENTS.
17PRFDIT17
SIXTH ST. V1 11 J-i A SIXTH ST.
LARGEST CLOTHING
CREDIT HOUSE
IICsT TIBIIE TTISriTEI) STATES.
KOEHLEFTS
N5TALLMENT H
17 SIXTH
OUR FALL AND WINTER STOCK
Is now complete, and we show ON OUR 3
FLOORS a larger variety in
ALL OUR DEPARTMENTS
Than ever before. Call and we will sell you
FINE CLOTHING
WITHOUT SECURITY.
WE ALSO DO
MERCHANT TAILORING
ON CREDIT WITHOUT SECURITY.
LADIES' JACKETS AND WRAPS
ON CREDIT WITHOUT SECURITY.
WATCHES wiSSSSst JEWELRY
OUR TERMS ARE
One-Third Down, the Bilance-in Weekly, Semi-Monthly or Monthly Paymenti
KOEHLER'S
17 SIXTS
We Occupy the Entire Builiing:
Open
oc2J3
$41.00
$14.00 Cash
$ 1 Cash and
Week.
Beveled
Back 3 ft. 3 in. high.
Only shown by
EDMUNDSON
& PERRINE.
I
tajlisip psiif
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Chairs. 3
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STREET.
INSTALLMENT
HOUSE,
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Evenings till 9.
Saturd ay3 Ml 11 P. 1L?
LESS THAN
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and $1.50. Per Week.
$17.50
ETDMUNDSON
AT
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& PERRINE'S.
$6 Cash and 75c Per Week
For 8 pieces 1 Bedstead, 1 Mat
tress, 1 Bedspring, 2 Feather Pil
lows, 1 Feather Bolster and 2 Comforts.
'Easy Terms
or CASH to
SUIT YOU.
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