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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1891-8-7, Page 2• 11 2 THE SIGNAL: GODERICH, ONT., FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1891 e memos THE LADY, UR THE TIGER'? j•T flues a. neocaaox.l 1■ the vary skies time there Idv.da semi - barbaric king, whose ideas, thoagb soma what p lishel sial aharps•ed , the pro gremtveoese of distant Min neighbors, were still targe, fiend and untrammeled, as became the hall et him which was barbaric. He was a :nen of esuberat.t fancy, and with• al of an authority so irrwnttWe that, at his wall, hr turned his vaned fancies Into facts He was greatly given to self communing ; and when he and Muesli agreed upon any thing the thing was duns When every member of hr domasur and poleaxed systems moved smoothly 10 ata apponte.l course iY• nature was bland and genial ; but whenevef there was a little hitch, azul some of his CAM got out u( their orbits, lir was blander and more genial still, for nothing pleased him so much as to [Hake the crooked .traght and crush down uneven places. .lnocng the borrowed notions by which his berbae urn hall become acetified was that of thr public arena, an which, by exhibitions of manly and beastly valor, the minds of hu subjects were retinal and cultured. Kut even here the exuberant and barbaric fancy aeser'.el itself. The arena of the king was guilt, not to give the people at oppor tunity of hearing the rhapsodies of dying gladiators, nor to enable then to view the inevitable ..otirlua of a conflict between religious opinions and hungry jaws, but for purpss far Letter adapted to widen and develop the mental energies of Jite people. 'This vast amphitheater, with its encircling galleries, Its mysterious vaults, and its unseen passages, was an agent of poetic justice, in which crime was punished or virtue rewarded by the dlrrees of an impar tial anti incorruptible chanes. When a subject was accused of a crime of sufficient imp.rtanre to interest the king, public notice was given that on an appoint- ed day the fate of the accused perm would be decided in the king's arena a structure which well deserved its name; for, although t1. form and plea were borrowed from afar, its purpose emanated solely tont the brain of this dose, who, every barleycorn a king, knew no tradition to which be owed more allegiance that pleased his fancy, and who engrafted upon every adopted form of hu- man thought attd action the rich growth of his barbaric idealism. When all the people !meg assembled in the galknes, and the king surrounded by his teen sat high up on his throne of royal state on one side of the arena, he gave a signal, • door beneath him opened, and the accused subject stepped out into the un- phitheater. Ihrectly opposite him on the other side ..f the nickeled space were two doors. exactly alike and side by side. It was the duty and the privilege of the person on trial to walk directly to these doors and open cue of them. He could open either dour he pleased ; he was subject to ne guidance or influence but that of the aforementioned impartial and incorruptible chance. if he peened the due, there dame out of it a hungry tiger, the fiercest sal most cruel that could be precured, which itnmeili- ately sprang upon him and tore hiin to pieces, as • punishment for his guilt. The moment that the cameo( thecrimiral was thus decided, doleful iron hells were clanged, great wails went up from the hired mourners plated on the outer rim of the arena, and the vast audience, with bowed heals and downcast hearts, wended slowly their home ward way, mourning greatly that one so young and fair, or so old and rspeete.1, should have malted ao dire a fate. Kut If the accused person opened the other door there aurae forth frown it a lady : the moat. suitable ths years and station that his majesty could select snug his fair subjects : and to this lady he was immedi- ately married, as • reward of his innocence. It nattered net that he might already possess wife anti family, or that Iles affections mieht be engaged upon an object of ins own selec• tion ; the king allowed no such suborditate arrangements to interfere with his great achente of retribution and reward. The ex ercises, as in the other umstaa e, tock place immediately, auk in the areae. Another door opened beneath the king, and a peat, followed by a Land of chorister@ and dant:- mg maidens blow -UN joyous ran on golden horns and treating as epithalanuc measure, a leancrd to where the pair stood, side by side ; and the welding was promptly and cheerily udemnaed . 'Then the gay braes bells rang forth their merry' peals, the people shouted glad hurrahs, and the innocent man, preceded by children strewing flowers on hu path, lel he book to he house. This was the kings eendi-barbaric method of administering justice. ate p•rfect fair- ness se obvious. The criminal eenrd not know out of which door would come the Lady ; he opened either he please(, without having the slightest ids whether, in the next instant, he was to be devoured or mar- ried. On some a aAstons the tiger came out of une door, and on some out of the other. The decisions of this tribunal were not only fair, they were positively deter urinate ; the accused person was instantly punished if he found himself guilty ; and if innocent he was rewarded on the .pot, whether he like( it or not. There was no escape from the judgment of the king's arra. The institution was a very popular our. 11'hee the people gathered together on use of the great trial days. they never knew whether they were to witness a bloody slaughter or • wedding. This element of uncertainty leant an interest to the oceasios which it could not otherwise have retained. Thu., the nexus were entertained and pleaded, and the thinking part of the coin munity .could bring no charge of unfairness against this plan ; for dal not the accused penal have the whole matter in his own heals' This semi-hariorer kin, hal • daughter as blooming as his most florid fancies, read With • sour as fervent and imperious as hu own. As u usual in such eases .he was the apple of his rye, and was loved by him above all humanity Among hte courtiers was . young man of that firmer of blood and lowness rel elation (mentin to the oem- vent. nal heroes of mamma's wen Inc. royal tna.dens This rays' stmt :en was well eat - ',aim with her lover, for he ase handsome and Loa. e to • degree uaeurpa ssI in JI this kungd.xn. and she love( him with an ardor that had enough barbarism a• it to make It exoedtugly warn end strong. This lova affair moved along happily for wisotba, until one day the king Imppss� to discover ate extseamr. He did not had tate mow waver in renard to his duty in the premises. The youth was onmediately cast hate prima, and • day was appointed Ise kis trial is the ktaogg's areas. This, of emeres, was me aerially important oneasina; and els se self es all the people, were atses&Mdl ia the work*. aid davelspmsat d this trial. Never b•• Ire W meek • sees o.•vnd g sewer blare bad • ••N•et dead te 1.w, the daptiet kits. In after years suck things became ase a•w•plaes esiuigh ; bus thea they wars, in so .light degree, novel sad martinis. The tiger cages of the kingdoms oms wen searched for the must ta and relentle.r beasts, tram which the Bev»at tw,uster might be selected fir the areas, 5414 thin ranks of mettles youth and beauty through- out the laad were carefully surveyed ley minimums' judges, u order that the young man ought have a fitting bride a case fate did tut determine for kim • different destiny. Of course, everybody knew that the deed with which the accused was charged had been der. He had loved the prancing, and neither he, she aur any one else thought of denyu,g the fat ; but the king wools not allow any fat of this kind to interfere with the workings of the tribunal in which he took such great delight and satida:tio1. No matter how the sigh turned out the youth would be deposed of ; and the king would take an ..sthetic pleasure an watch * the teens of eveutr which would de - termitic whether ur not the young nils had .1,.ie wrung 111 allowing himself to Love the pnucres. The appnutel .lay arrived. bruin far and near this people gathered, and thronged the great gallants o1 the areas ; and crowds unable to gain almtttance roared them- selves against the outside walla. The king and has .wort were in their plats, opposite the twin doors -those fatal portals, w ter- rible an their similarity. All was ready. The signal mea. given. A duor beneath the royal peaty opened, and the lover of the prioress walked into the arena. 'Fall, beautiful, fur, he appearance was greeted with a low hum of alairattum and anxiety. Half the audience had not known so grand • youth had lived among then. to wonder the lanes@ loved him What a terrible thing for hon to he there As the youth advanced into the arena he turned, as the custom was, to bow to the king, but he did not think at all of that royal personage nage ; has eyes were fixed ups the prmuw, who sat to the right of her lather: Hal it not been for the moiety of barbarian* in her nature it is probable that the lady would not have been there ; but her intense and fervid soul would not allow her 14, be absent on au occasion in which she was so. terribly interested. From the n.o- ment that the decree had gone forth that her lover should decide his fate in the king's arena she hal thought of nothing night or day but this great event and the venous subjects connected with it. Possessed of more power, influence and force of character that any one who hal ever before been in- terested in such a case, she hal done what no other person had done she hal ptrseseed herself of the secret of the dors. She knew m which of the two roes that lay behind those doors stood the cage of the tiger, with its open front, and in which waited the lady. Through these thick doors, heavily curtained with skins on the inside, it was impossible that any noise or suggestion should come faun within to the person who should approach to raise the latch of one of them ; but gold and the power of a woman's will had brought the secret to the ponces•. And not only dad she know in which room .told the truly ready' to emerge, all blushing and radiant, should her door be opened, but she knew who the lady was. It was one of the fairest and loveliest of the damsels of the evert who had been selected as the re- ward of the accused youth, should he be proved innocent of the crime of aspiring to one so far above hint ; ani the princess hated her. Often had she seen, or imagined that she hal seen, this fair creature throwing glances of admiration upon the person of her lover, and sometimes .he thought these glances were perceived and even returned. Now and then she hal seen thein talking together, it was but for • moment Or 180, Lut much can be said in a brief .pace ; it may have been on most unimportant topica, but how could .he know that' The girl was lovely, but she m.4 dared to raise her eyes to the loved one of the ponces., and with all the intensity of the savage blood trans- mitted to her through long lines of welly barbaric ancestor. she hated the w who blushed and trembled trhund that .01 door. %Then her lover turned and looked at her, and his eye met hen as she sat there paler ami whiter than any one in the vast ocean of anxious faces about her, he saw by that power of quick perception which u given to those whose souls are one that ahe knew behind which door crouched the tiger and behind which stood the lady. He hal ex pecteil her to know it. He understood her nature, and his soul was assured that she wou d never rest until .he had male plain to herself this thing, hidden to all other lookers on,even to the king. The only hope fur the youth in which there was any e1e. meat of certainty was Lased upon the suc- cess of the princess in discovering this mys• atery : and the raiment he hooked upon her he saw she hal succeeded, as in his soul he knew she would outs -eel. Then it was that his quick and anxious glance asked the question, "Which!" It was as plain u, her as if he shouted it from where he .toad There was not an instant to be lost. The question was asked in a dash ; it mpst be answered m another. Her raga anti lay .n the cushioned parapet before her. She raised her hand, and nude a slight, puck movement towards the right. No Dote but her lover saw her. Every eye but his was fi*ed on the man in the arena. He turned, and with a firm and rapid step he walked) across the empty spade. Every heart .topped beating, every' breath was held, every eye was fixe) immovably upon that Tran. Without the slightest hositatic41 he went to the door on the right and opened it. Now, the point of the story is this : led the tiger come out of that door or did the lair • The mon we reflect upon thr question the harder it u to ao.rcr. It ma elves a study of the human heart which kids se through devious nets 01 passion, out of which at a difficult to find .aur way. Think of it, fair Hader, not as if the decision of the question depended upon yourself, but upon that hot bleated, semi barbaric prin- cess, her soul at • white heat beneath the .methanol eres of despair and jealousy. She had Tort him, but who .amid have ham , How often, in her waking hone and a her dreams, had .he etertet in wild horny and covered her face with her hand. u .he thought of her lover opening the doer on the other sale of which waited the cruel fangs of the tiger. But how much oftener hal she seen him at the other door ' How in her grievous re- veries hal ■he gnashed her teeth, and tout her hair, when .he saw has start of rapier nus delight as he reseed the door of the lady ' How her soil had burned in agony when she hal seen ham rush to mart that wtmran, with her flushing cheek and spark ling eye of tnuitph; when she had seen him leaf her forth, his whole frame kindled with the joy of recovered life ; when .he hal heard the glee" shoats frau the multl- teat and the wild ringing of the happy hells : when she had Mesa tie pri.ee �f(iihh kw joyous followers, advisees te the �M and make them man and wife kiQtn Mr =eyes :.ad when chs bad see them spas their path el /satesZit; amiss d w ,,.uwtd., i..bkh hat oa. despairug shriek was lam amd drowse Id Would it ant he better for Wet to Me at mos and go to watt for ►m a the blamed regimes of semi barbaric hilarity Aad yet, that awful tiger, those •►ricks, that blood ' Her devisee& bad been indicated to as u- nt&at, bat at had Cres male after dayr• and n ightie et &sguished dehbesueta. ilia hal kaowa she would be asked, ohs Wed decided what she would answer, sad, without the ' slightest hertauon,•he had' moved her hand to the right. The .tuestauu of her decision is own not to be lightly ooesadered,aid at is not kr ate to presume to N/ myself up as the one pinion able to atrwer at. And so 1 have it with all of you . %%'hech oaten out of the opened door -the lady or the tiger ? l'. K i, . + a as 3 1 had the muscles of my hand so con- tracted that 1 could not use it fur two year. MINARIJ'S LI\IMI'NT cured me, and 1 now have the use of my hand as well as ever. Dalhousie. Mag. Karam. SA1'!lDLas. C. 4'. Rs, -stamen k Co., I had • valuable colt so lad with mange that 1 feared I would lose him. MIN 4Kl) S LINIMENT cured him like magic. Dalhousie. t'uaWT.r man S.et'..uLmr. Mw \e meitmaneew nay Avesd .stag brew .ed. Many who cannot swim get into deep waiter and drown, says The Canadian Health Journal, wheu they should not. Want of "presence of mind" when one is suddenly thrown into the water is the greatest dttliculty. Dr. Mak'ormec, of Belfast, Ireland, vents that it as int at all necessary that a person knowing nothing of the art of swimming should be drowned if he depends simply and entirely uu the powers of self-preservation with which na- ture has endowed hint. "11 -hen one of the inferior animals takes to the water, falls or is thrown m, it instantly begins to walk as it does when out of the water. But when a man who cannot "swim" falls into the water he nukes • few spasmodic struggles, throws up he arms, and drowns. The brute, on the other hank, treads water, remains on the surface, and 1. virtually insuluerge- able. In order then to escape drowning it is only necessary to do as the brute dos, and that is to tread or walk the water. The brute has no advantage m regard of tie re- lative weight in respect of the water over ,,.an. and yet the man perishes while the brute lives. Nevertheless, any not, any woman, any child, who can walk on the land may abb. wedk in the water just as readily sus the aminal dues, mad that with out any prior instructions In dulling what ever." 'There as much in this, and if peo- ple who cannot swim would endeavor to im- press it on their mods when in the water they might he able to practise it in ease of accident. akrl.0 treses. " I suffered continual pain from canker of the stomach and my face and icily were al- most coyered with pimples. ! tried Bur- dock urdock Blood Bitten, the tint dose occasioned slight pain. but I woo found relief, and after taking 5 bottles I becatne completely cured. I think P B. B. the mo't powerful remedy known to science." Stephen Edge, Nicolet, P. Q. 2 The Illgbt tiled of teli.4... .lout at flus tine our country needs a religion that will make a mac pay hisdebs. Shouting don t settle old amounts with tial or Rant. We want to bounce right on a fellow and put him out of the church if he goes to a ball or theatre, but never say a word to the pious acting) who never pays his ,hbta. Preachers and people who never pay their debts are doing the church more harem than dancers or druukeris, for there are more in the church. Reader, we are getting pretty close to you' Then lay down and go and pay up, and you can lead on at ease. And don't stop paca ying bemuse the " statute of limitation ' excuses the open account you wale for meat and breed. lou must pay it an cash or trod will nuke you pay it in tire and hritrutone. trod knows no such excuses as "homestead ex- emption." When you viae that excuse to keep from paying your debts you can stop anging " when 1 ten read my title clear. ' You re got none up there. -Exchange. OF INTEREST TO WOMEN Pretty dresses for young girls are of pale pink care erepoa de chine, shirred at the waist under a soft folded sash of pink aurae, with long ends crossing .t the hack. A thick ruche of white Chantilly lace is around the bottom of ;he skirt. For • wrap a half long ape of white l'hantilly, with a wired Mary Stuart Dollar and a lace melee on the shoulders. The cape is open at the front and connected by two silver clasps with mello ornamentation. Klsck stockings and black shoes are worn with this, and the white silk gloves have lace tops embroidered in pink silk. One of the newel faahons in London mil- linery is dainty ('ireamian celeste. It has • crescent shaped) crown in puffed maize colored China crepe, crossed smut surrounded with straw lace. At the back, aigrette of black buttercups matching thenarrrw velvet strange. A morning jacket is of light rose or strawberry crape or surae, trimmed with ivory white lace. It elates in front below the middle with hooka,and has surah strips to front which are gatherer' together at the waist. The upper front parts are formed like an erlin•ry waist, and from the tick down are so arranged and opened as to shown • jabot. There are no Hart st•wr. Te. upper Imnt parte are trimmed with lace. Th. tseck npensng has a small Medici collar which is mreredl with lace. The puffed sleeves are trammed with lace, which is draped on the upper part of the sleeves and coven the cuffs. (loth grounds in dell check effects as ma- rine bine, bluish gray and broom are the most sa4bfe staffs for skiers next FaS The dell. barely virile checks are formed by r ill 'tripe& With a law base . illf�mall armored an obtained dosis which have made tbw goads great hear - Ave. Ivry mid email cheeks an represented. Another style which his lana favor shown l.r(- dull, smears a�i leta large squares hddt i g stroller oral lest inn WNW* cMvant-like goods, hat ere novo r - WAN. in cloth like Raab, and are dietin• gtib.d by riser 71. (bbdwe prim offered for the beet re'mamie sway (a Reglsad this year wee tarred .f ti • weame, Mies V isbrf.e Jamie, of Mmse►aMsr. The Hattori Maeraiknw, the wif..1 • Hama Media* aide, WI* • sameblog Mier of the fate of seta. R.miaa weenie wham she W Wawa. Mas. Iwa.etma r. •owed out a term of Sheen years of peaal..rvitude because of her tww•ecti u with • secret primas aloe. vera tlaesohtoi, • wsmaa of high rook, *hut sad killed the chid et =fiend brutally maltreating a primmest. Rha *uger.d two years' iwmrimwmeat, but was Sadly acynitted. Mite is now,bowever, to very pour health .ad r not likely to re - moor from the terrible shuck to which she was subjected. Vers Kier died m prima for MI to Oen the sssseematiu& of l:arrrwl &Matko( The embers Lubuluvitck, Witt) distributed tao*adiary literature, ars at bard labor in the Siberian mines Mme. Tchebnkova was exiled to the extrema' n orthern part of the province of Arehaagel- ssk for wntnng an open letter to, the Czar teadiaifor more kind treatment toward sub ata While out yachtnyt with her husband, up on the coast of Finland reoently,tbe l'rarina dreasexd in plow eottm goods. Comsat* leer \M.hher. Auy one may find out just what Iturdoek Blued Kitten is and does by asking a neighbor who Ilse tned at. It rarely bath iu nuking • complete cure of dyspepsia, twn- impattul, sick headache, bilou*nese and dise•ass of the sit mach, liver, bowels and blood. 2 The Fastest Nile The following items will prove of interest to young folks The f .stst mak run by • railroad train was u....*k in 504 eeronde. The (a•test reale made in rowing in a sin- gle boat Wok 5 minutes and 1 second. The fastest mile ever made by • reaming horse was rain in 1 minute and 36j seconds. The fastest nide male by • man on a tricycle was mole m 2 omnis, 49 2.5 se: - ted.. The fastest time on snow shoes for • mile is recorded as 2 minutes 25 3-5 seeunds. The best tier for a mile by a nun on • bicycle i• recorded as 2 minutes, 52 secoods. The fastest mile ever tnade by a man swintmIug was done in 26 muiut s, 52 sec - canals. The fasted mile ever ac oiuplehed by a man walking was made in b minutes and 23 seconds. In running, the fastest mile made by nen was .axxunpliahed in 4 minutes, 12i sec- onds. .1 Carr fee CeasIy.ts.n sadI iwdarne. Dr. Silas Lane, while in the Rocky Moun- tains. disco' seed a root that when combin• ed with other herbs, nukes .n easy and certain cure for conatipatioo. It is in the forst of dry roots and leaver, and is known as Lane's Family Medicine, It will cure tick -headache and is the hest Spring Meh- cine. For the blood, layer and kidney, and for c!earing up the complexion it does won- ders. Druggists sen tt at 50c. mad 41 • package. (fens) Fatherly Im.stset. A boy of four climbed up on the pillow beside his inother,who was weeping bitterly over the death of her father. After smooth- ing her hair and caressing her, he said :— "niwt cry,namua, Ell be a fodder to you." The boy grew in years and in worldly Wu - don,, and carne to twice the age when be had offered to act the part of a father. See- ing his mother weary with work, for she supported her three children, he said : "1 tell you what, mamma, you shan't work when 1 grow up" "Well, what will you do for me, soar I'll marry • rich wife." - Harper's Young People. Ver tats Myr. Sailor collars ending in revers to the waist line are egged with embroidery. Legging are of cloth or ooze calf in tan or black. Black shoes and hose are always worn. Figured gingham of the plainest de- scription have a gathered skirt and round waist. Pique dresses having a round waist are trimmed with cellars, cuffs and Iretelles edged with embroidery. Little boy% of two and three years wear their front hair banged and the rest in hose curls or waved ends. .locket suits of pique or gingham have a plaited or gathered skirt, short coat sleeves and • square three -pie ;e jacket. Cotton dresses are cut with • round, broad waist in three pieces, corded and sewed to the full gathered or plaited and hemmed skirt. Flannel and cotton .Tresses for little chaps just donning boyish gowns have one-piece dresses in three box • plaita, back and front, caught to just below the waist line. Emma M. Hooper, in The Economist. People Wonder WHEN they flail bow rapidly health is restored by taking AFo s Sar- saparilla. lansaparilla. 'Ibe reason is that this preparattoo contains only the purest and most powerful alteratives sad tonics. To thousands yearly It proves a rentable elixir of life. Mrs. Jos. Lek., Brockway Cent, )(kh., writes : "Liver complaint sad indigestion made my life • burden and came near ending my existence. For more than four years I suffered nn - told agony. I was reduced almost to a skeleton, and hard) had strengthto dreg myself about. All kinds of food distressed me, and only the most dell - tate could be digested at all. Within the time mentioned several physicians treated me without giving relief. Noth- ing that I took seemed to do any per- manent good until I began the nee of Ayer'. Sarsaparilla, which has pprto-o- duce! wonderful results. floor altar commencing to take the SarsaparillacouIsee ea Improvement fa my ooeditlo.. ray appetite hegan 10 return anwith k came the •bi lty to digest .11 the food taken. my Improved each day, and .her • 6ew months of faithful att .none to your dtreetime, i found myself • well woman, dile to attend to all hoaesbold duties. The mdkioe has gives me • mer team d Me, and I eanoot thank w " pea W the ..drdgmad, citizens 5t iteskrwy .trete, Mfeh., hereby certify ittthe above et-s.m.nt, rade by Lake, a true der every particular =Wed to full credence."— 0. P. as*8g e� Dr. 0. A. pi41g, O. A. kat a Pmode to Med to \ seat. ti medo mesas of awes en his feet A,yer's Almoner mad the 1- '—'- it eo.t.la.d bdeced b1m to imeeparill.. Atter ming It • wWIs, be add cared. sad Is now a wdl mm., ildrikankQworkin�gla• sew till n�, O Whirled Lek.,, Australia" kt_ A. Whiot)rle. Aysr's Sarsapiria '.tsFAtrn me Or. d. 0. Apar & ow, Lame. Mom Masi elshantwel. AotuitfegtA MILLINERY. B4ILLINERr, MRS. R. B. SMITH Mag ALL THE NOVELTIES AND LATEST STYLES, A Cordial Invitation To the ladies of Goderich and vicinity to examine her stock. Prices right. MRS. R. B. SMITH. tI11-11. ONE THING ABOUT A FROG Is that the sue dor not Were is esr•Isxtss or getting wet he the feet LIT' It • end, but ladies who desire to he free from tan, freckles. etc., should use Bell's Tag and Freckle Lotion. D'Avignon a Witch Hanel cream, roc sunburn. irrit•ttoe. redeem. roughness of templet tea, eta FACE POW Delta.- We bare Fes coal's. Tetlow'•. Hansoms*. s. y.under.', etc. TANGLEFOOT STICKY FLY PAF IE .test In the world. First-class preserintloo work at all hours. W. C. GOODS., - Chemist. LAVPIS MOWERS Latest patterns and most improved styles. Prices right CARDER TOOLS, Just what you want. HOSE, Best brands and lowest prices. R. P, WILKINSON & Co. NOW TH.T THE WARM WEATHER IS HERI REFR�BH YOU;RERLF BY DRINKING 1 MONTSERRAT LIME JUICE The most cooling and healthful of all Kummer drinks. F. JORDAN, - MEDICAL HAIL, GOr)ERICH- PUBLIC NOTICE! Another Targe consignment of Fresh Teas of superior quality. In order to counteract the dis- honest practices perpetrated on the public by peddlers and others, we are offering Special Inducements in Tea and Coffee, and solicit your pat- ronage. REES PRICE cSr SON. Hay's Block, next Bank of Commerce, Square. Orders by Telephone promptly attseded to. 33.ARR7Y =imps Dealer. s'Nting •U Iamb .f rytm stt• of the Mw�les. t Wildlit pi alit tart that M SellsC.ect.p pie melt Me a ate the lm�1m� vndertdkes the taws. nmh•Im/aliFlwli aware m ~ Maltelm r ekes • ..eaelb et Pet>,rs Alva him • esU haler+ t►r+�r Frmamlaas .eswbre. •d _yea wE( `d wt tlat h• �MM.eesm• se he sego nee elate For Cash - In shamblest ase sad V hAhse da-rma,•mys ke hood fowMt. d .sail.•+•' d?t ear. GEO. BARRY .. rpae �azniltonwet a, ;