THE WEEKLY THE WEEKLY El. th for $1 > we advance, and 1 nah Vemor al flhbum of Sir Macdimald th mn th Nend your to THE EXAMINER i bs i BikM* five Doutiars a Yran NEW SERIES. ee nee = RE a a “ This is trne Liberty, when Free Born Men. having to advise the Public, may speak free.” CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. Caiendar for Febuary, 1892 MOON'S CHANGES et () r € 4h diy ; -. F ‘ i aime Fui Moon, 12th day 3 14 afte Les? Qasrter, 20th day in 6h New M 27 iy a * 1) High W ater { Db ¥ of Week — } remeestnansee Mon Morn. | After i Rh. m hm i Monday ; 8 i> ee 2 Puesday | @s8 | ite 3 ' W ednesday i 1 28 1 49 4 hursaday | 2 is 2 36 5 | Peisay | a) =a 6 | saturday 4 10 4 4 7 | Sundiy ; £2) Ca 8 | Monday Lio. 8. 2a | Tuesday 816 | 8 44 10 i We doesd y ; 9 2 9 26 li Huraday j 9 5y 10 17 12 Friday |} 10 36 | 10 54 13 satu clay ae.08 fF 2h i4 ‘unday | ll 46 ; 1: | Mowebew Se. 7 | 0 16 16 ; luesday 0 $l 0 47 17 | Wem sday a 119 18 | Thu ad y 1, ts 1 53 19 | F idsy 3 i 2 29 20 } Ss a day 2 5) 3 12 21 } Suad-y 34 . = 3 | Menday 4 46 c 5 23 | Tu sday | 6 10 6 55 24 Wednesday 7 33 8 il 25 Thu sday | S 44 9 16 26 =|: Friday | 941 10 6 27 satuid y | 10 26 10 46 YS Sunday | as 2 VW 2% 29° «| Monday } 1140 | 11 57 ———— JM s . MOR 150°, H LIF AX. WARK .. GAKESREAD & CO.. TEA MERCHANTS, i:HE AMH« RST MAKE Boots and Shoes ARE ACKNOWLEDGED EVERYWHERE TO BE THEE BHeST VALUB MADE (x) 4& FULL LIWE OF THIS MAKE AT Jit hs ID & GV3, --$JI83992 LOI 6. SPLAGUS, tanown, Now 17. 1891 — \ E GIV¢é THE ABOV«s WATCH, or one that looks better, for $450, warranted. hes Vig epi London. «= England, — AND ALSO—— First-Class West Firms, ete. Severa! SPECIALTIES: Careful attention given to vousignments of Prince E iward Island Produce. REFERENCE—Bank of Nove Scotia. i OFFICE — Pickford & Biack’s Wharf. Halifax, August 13. 1891--dy & wy 4. A. WeLEAVN, Attoraey-at-Law. Noti’y Pablic, 0 SBrowa's Bleck. Charlo tetown. nova 3m eod & wky —) Sootnina, CLEANSING, ANIA HEALING. Sti toe instant Relief, Permanent j ; Cure, Failuce lmpossitle. ; Many so-called Ciseases are A; * aimuply symptoms of Catarrh, 9 oe eel Ny guch as heacache, losis 8. use of sme.l, foul breast" whing and apitting, ge: of dcbil.ty, ete troubled wit! a kindred sy. pt Catarrh, and + time procnari i Nasa, BaLM. Jie waisinect in time, neglected cwvid im he va resulta in Catarrh. followed by consumption and death. fold by al! drugris 5, or sent, post paid, on rece. t of price (50 cents aud #1 by iddressing FULFORD & COU. Bro. kville, Ont. ra aun SOQA /S THE BEST EMGELSJOW C4 TIWE MARAET TO DAV. HOO4L¥ TASTE LINE OTHERS. JT IS SOLD BY ALL ORUECISTS JN BIC BO7= TLES, FIFTY CENTS KRONE DOLLAR, LA GRIPPE VANQUISHED. puce one of the OZONATOR DISIN- FE TANTS in voar hese and La Gripp’ wil! not trouble you The most powerfal and p!-asant Disinfec- t v tant Known to the medical profession. F. DeC. DAVIES DROSASIST, E JOHN W’LEOD & CO., MERCHANT TAILORS, ONE ENIOYS Roth the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, hesd- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pros duced, pleasing to the taste ek ace ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its efieets, prepared only from the most heaithy 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 75c bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Manufaciured only by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORE, N. Y. W. R. WATSON, Wholosale Di uggist, Charlotteetown. mw! jyl3 AM MONEA We have ROCK¥ RD ani WALTHAM WATCHES at. prices within the reach of a'moat anyore n2eling a good |W BAKING POWDER is a india timekeepe. A wi Watch sold, except the $3 2) ant $£59 oes, wiiecd are net. They don’t need 4 K+y, as nearly all are stem winiers, ard ’ therefore do no: require openiaz, and the dust is he easier Tea, Sugar and Molasses. rence Chain or Distouat is given with e fery mi VV... TAY iOse CAMERON BLOCK. | Charlottetown, Jan: 16. 1892 Big Reductions ——ON BALANJE OF — | WINTER GOODS! nnceta~ndiane Remnants at Cost! — Fur “aps at Cost! 10,0090 yds, Cloth in Stock ! ——{) Rogers’ Buildiaz, Queen Street. Charlotthtewn, January 12, 1892—s0d & wky | {jf an Emergency ‘Lee CR Joes] JOHNSTON’ le RE eS? ae Fe . Ie . ice cotati] Fluid Ba f is A GO0D STAND-*Y. si It is made quickly. is effective in cases of exhaustion. Adap ed to the weak digesiioa of the aged and very young. February &. 1892 — eo = NOTHER M:DICAL MAN TESTIFIES TO THE WONDERFUL EFFECTS OF | \ / . ] A Ia Cases of Dyspepsia and Nervous Depression, ———- 0: — —— —— ENTLEMEN,—I have purp sely delayed writing you, as I wished to give a thor- oughiy cnnplete trial te che MP P_ It sff-rds m» mach pleasure new to give it my onqa.! fi d »pproval in the clases of cases in wineh [ hove used it: In Atonic Dys- pepsia. tn coav descence from Norv us Depression, and im cvses where the stomach is irmviable and rejects strong :r form: of stunulants, have found most marked results from its use, and | strorgiy recommend its employment. Although thia note is un- swlicited by you, it is at your disposal for any use you wish to make of it. Faithfully yours, ' GEO H. H. DeWOLF, M. D., M. B. C. M., Edin. E@ For sale by ali Draggists. A upply of M. P. P. hes Dee 3s red vith GORGE &. {UGHE3, ‘harlottetowa, which will ve delivers durtag taa Wia 3° meant co Lalaad paccoas, oy arder from The Malte Peptoaized Porter Co. (Utd)., ‘AMMONIA is impracticable. . DISEASE preduciag AGENT.) SATURDAY, fone halls. Hells, Aauciest and Medern. MR FULLS BIBLE CLASS BY MR THEO. L CHAPPELLE. The idea of a place of punishment after death of wicked men is found in most, though not all, of the religions of the pre sent trme and of antiquity. According to some beliefs the punisbment is to last for- ever; according to others, the torments are to continue only for a time and te result in purifying the imprisoned souls and firting hem for heaven. The Roman Catholic re'igion has both a purgatory, or place of ‘elnporary punishment, and a heli, which weverlssting No idea of penalty was connected with the classic Hades—it was aimp'y an under-world where dwelt all those who had the misfortune to he dead, irrespective of their conduct in life. The word comes from the Greek adjective meaning unseen. The English word * hell’ —Evriripes. FEBRUARY 13, 1892. PAPER KEAD ON SUNDAY AFTEROON LAST AT ated eben an For neat, clean, tasteful Printing, and prompt attention to orders, THR EXAMINER Job Printing Depart- ment is peculiar, Don't forget it. Stver® Corres Two Canze VOL. 29.—NO. 219 trond there is 4 vast and direful structure |lost souls, crushed them like grapes agsinst with doors that face the north. It is/his teeth, and then drew them by his breath ‘urmed entirely of the backs of serpents, |down the dey cavern of his throat. Demons wattled together like wickerwork Bur |“ith hooks of red hot iron pluoged souls che serpents’ heads are turned toward the |*ternately into fire and toe. Some of the wuside of the hall, and continually vomit lost were hung up by their tongues, others forth flods of venom, in which wade ail|¥*'e S*¥" oat thy see Bo chose who commit murder or who fore. | Pent others bea*en together on an anvil and saoed andieaaaa weldedintoa single mass, othersh iled andthe e : ; : strained through a ecisth, others twined in fhe Jews in Old Testament times had no | the embraces of demons whose limbs were of idea of # hell. There is no. mention of flame. The fire on eerth, it was said, wes punishment after death in the teachings of Moses, nor is this doctrine taught by the prophets, The word Sheol, which is traas- lated by hell in the King James version of he Bible, meant simply the abode of the iead, and correspomied the Greek Hades, used in the N-w Testam-at and ther Greek writings. Gloomy and repul sive ideas were assocuted with Sheol, similar to chose we connect with death and the grave, but it was the destination of gol and bad alike, and not a place of punishment. The troubles which the had also originally the same meaning. It is derived from the Teutonic base ‘*hal,” whenee also the Angto-S..xou “*helan,” t: hide, *‘so that the original sense is the hid-) den or unseen “‘place.” (S. keat ) The conception of furure existence which lays claim to the greatest antiquity is that ‘the ancient Egyptians. According t the Eyyp7ian be tef, if the grest judyment resulted adversely, “‘the condemned soul i8 either’ scourged back to the earth s'raightaway, to live again in the form of # wild animal, as some of the emblems appear to denote; or piunged into the tor- tures of « horrid hell of fire and devils be- low, a8 numerous engravings set forth; or driven into the atmosphere, to be vex d and tossed by tempesis, violently whirled by blasts and clouds, till its sins are ex- plated, and another probation granted through a renewed existence in human fori, From Persia, also, we get a religion of great antiquity—-Z ‘roastriauism —which in a modified form, is held to-day by small bedy of Parsees still to be found iu Persia} and India. According to Parsee belief, the good, after death, pass safely over the bridge Chinevat, which stretches from Mount Alborj up to Gsrotman, the blissful reaim of Ormuzd; while the wicked fall from che bridge into the Guif of ,Duzahk, which yawns beneath, where they are torturea by devas. The Laws of Manu, one of the early sacred books of Brahminism, names twenty - Punishments for different sins ts volatility is abrilged by reacti : ; I . : oe ” sbri'ged by reaction are, to be reborn into one of these hells, or with the gluten of the fl ur to return to earth as a begyzar, « er:pyle, : 7 leper, or in the form of arat, a snake, or a The preparation of an UNOBJECTION- | °Pe™ ° - ~ ’ louse, the penaly being in each case, ABLE Biking Powder containing} Risk ani use GERWAN BAKING POWDER, Guiranteed to Contain NO AMMONTA. feb4 Avoid all WOODILL'S « , OU u ‘: ~~ € ‘ s E CSTEY’S EMULSION Y py 2 C09 Livén CiL? Piensant te teke as Milk. A great fiesh preducer. Endorssd by Mic€is @¢€ 2 end Wie & f Beane “tar a Estey’S Emulsion cures Coughs, Colds, Consumption, Throat and ail Lung troubles. A great remedy for weak and delicate children, builds them up, strengthens the bones, makes new blood. All desicrs sell if, don’t be induced to take nay substifute—it hasn't any. kL. M, Eatey Mfg. Co., Moneton, N.B, Ine’ ~eon having the HARTSHORN, yo BY ALL DEALERS. appropriste to the crime. Punishment need not be endless for any one, as each successive life is a new probstioa, in which righteousness wins admission to a higher stage of existence. In Buddhism, which is one of the religions of China and the State religion « f Thibet and other countries of Eastern Asia, future punishment is provided for in a great heli comprising a system of 136 lesser hells. The torments of these hells are depicted in many Buddhist books and psintings with much detail and vividness As for the two vuther religions of China, Confucianism teils nothing whatever about punishment after this life, while Tavouism has a theery of retribution much lke that of Brahminiam. In the Greek mythology, which was copied by the Romans, the place of future punishment is called Tartarus. The uni- verse is represented in the poetry of Homer and Hesiod asa hollow globe, divided by flat earth In the top of the upper hem wphere beneath the earth was Hades, the abode of ail the dead; and in the lowest depths was Tartarus. An anvil would be nine days and nights in falling from Olympus to the earth; nine days and nights from the earth to the bottom of Tartarus. ** Around it, mereover, a br+zen fence has been forged ; and abut it night is poured in three rows” In Tartarus there is dark- neas, and the air has no motion. P:ome- theus, who was guilty of over-reaching Leus, was punished by being chained to a rock, part of time on earth and part in Tartarus. An eagle devoured his liver every day, but it was renewed every night Ixiov, whvu had been treacherous to Z us. was chained by the hands and feet to a! wheel which is described as winged or fiery, and said to have rolled perpetuslly in the air. He is further said to have been scourg ed and compelled to exclaim: ‘* Benefactors should be honored.” Sisyphus is represented by different authors as guilty of treachery of various the top, always rulled down again.” Tanza- lus was « wealthy king, who divulged the secrets of Zeus. ** The gods punished him by placing him in the nether world in the for him to drink when he was thirsty, the water ulways withdrawing when he siooped. Branches Jaden with fruit, moreover, hung over his head, but when he stretched out his hand to reach the frait the branches Factory, Toronto, One CAUTION. BACH PLUG o TH Myrtle Lavy IS MARKED ’. & B. IN BRONZS LEPTESs. NONE OTHER GENUINE. is A ENT for »m h , und vill che rful \ show and exp +t heir ue hose who desire :t Cal snd see hm No ‘rou le te show them edawy—jaald teb4—dy & wiry TRURO, NOVA 8OULIA, jan2—dy & why withdrew. Over his head there was svs- pended a huge rock, ever threatening to crush him.’ The Danaides, or 50 daugh- ters of Danaus, all but one of whom, in ‘bedience to their father, killed their hus- bands on their wedding night, were punish- ed in Tartaus by being compelled, evar- lactingly, to pour water into a sieve, According to the Scandinavian mythology all who die bravely in battle are snatched away to Valhalla, Odin’s magnificent ban- cavern beneath the ground called Nifl»eim, i e., the mist world. is Nastroud, deepsr nadergrouad than N fiheim, and far toward the frigid north. wicked and the enemies of the Jews were thresteused with by the prophets pertained ro this world. They were pain, diso»se, osé of possessions aud kindred, hosiility cf neighbors, death and indigaities to tie but a picture of that of heli. The latter was 30 immeasural y more iptens could be called real.” By far the most elaborate description of the puniabment of sinners which the Middle Ages produced is that of Dante, whose ln- ferno combines the torm-n‘s uf the classical Tartarus and the herrors of the christian hell. In this poem, which was written about 1300, the author represents himself as being conducted through the infurnal regions by Virgil. Within the gites of hell, but before crossing the river Acheron, the visitors found those who had lived ‘“‘withouten in- famny or praise” and angels who had been neither faithfal nor rebellious, bus only sel. tish They ‘‘were naked and were stung exceedingly by gad ilies and by hornets that were there.” Beyend Acheron were found the great ones of old, whose sin that it alone midst of a lake, but rendering it impossible | i their teeth in hell?” quet hall in the sky. Those who, after lives jects for miracle plays and fur works of art, if ignoble labor or inglorious ease, die of sickess, descend to a cold and dismal‘ painted windows with * which his grim prison is described in the fullow- of jell. ing passage fromthe prose Edda, written agony made its rafters to resound, but his |Ptterns to select fron. in Ireland in the 13th centary :—‘‘ In Nas- hands were frees, and with these he seized the |4t half price.—John McLeod & Co, jead body: The idea of Sheol tirst became modified after the Persian capvity. The place was divided into two parts, which were separated only by ths width of | ‘Phe Reformers made little chaage in the thread. One of these divisions was for ths medieval coneeption of bell Calvin writes ; good, awaiting resurrection, and was called |For ever harrassed by a dreadfal tempest, Paradise; the other, set apart for the: they ehall feel themselves torn asuader b an wicked, was called Gehenna. This langry +)>t aud transtixed and silent by latter designation means ‘she Val | morta: stings, terrified by the thuanderb sits ley of the Son of Hniom,” and jof God, and broken by the weight of his was originally the name of a gorge outside | 244, so that to sink inte any griefs would be of Jerusalem, in which the Jew had prac-|°fe tolerable than to stand for a momeat ia ticed the tiery worship of Moloch, and —— ak oe La : where afterward « ffs! from the e:ty and the find fe i *4 on en ee bodies of criminals were thrown, to be coa- oe a ee en ee eee : nts. Their great poet Milson describes sumed by the fires always kept burning the place in the first and second books of there. The idea of Gehenna as a place of Paradise Lost. Satan and his host are cast future punishment had appeared in Rab-|into it, “thare to dwe'l in adem antine eb dine binical theology and become quite detailed | and penal tire.” a century or more before Christ, was lack of bapiem These were ‘‘oaly so far punished tht without hope we live on in Aesire.” A dungeon horrible on all sides round At the coming of Christ there were three} As one great furnaee, flamed; yet froin chief sects amovg the Jews. The Phari- these thames sees, who were by far the most numerous, No light, but rather darkness believed tha: sinuers were kept f rever in|—(! 61 63) prison in the under-worli ; the Essenes| The Puritans in America were no less em. believed that the vicious suifsred eternal | Phatic in their depictions of hell than the punishment in a dark, cold p ace; and the | Parent stock in Kugland Many are the Sadducees thought that the suul died with |P‘ss*s°s in the sermons of that New the body. The first threats of hell in the | &9slead divine, Jonathan Edwards, devoted Scriptures vccur in the teachings of Jesus. to ae forth the agonies of eternal punish. There are three words inthe New Testa- or a ea cee cee we typical net ment which were translated by hell in the ani ee ee a eee Kiog James Bible :—Hades, meaning the “y i tf to | : : same as elsewhere in Greek literature ; ow a ee = oe. ite. Gory Gehenna, which was properly the hell of ~ an Agreatiurnace, where your pain te ’ heim ig Sich woulr 2 e aa much greater than that vecasionnd ew conception, and is uniformly 80} by accidental y toaching a coal of tire as the rendered in the revised version ; and ar-| heat is greater. Imagine also that your body tarus, used only once (2 Peter 3, 4), which |was to lie there for a quarter ot an hear, is the re@ular Greek word for the place of }full of fire, and al! the while fol af punishment atter death. The place of |quick sense; what horror woul! you feel at future punishment represented in Christ's |e entrance of such a turnace! ad teachings is a region of fire -** Whosoever and how long would that qiarter of an hour shail say, theu fool, shall be in danger uf |8¢e™ to you? Aad, after you lied audured it the hell of tice” (Matt, 5-22, new version) fur one minute, how overbearing wo id it be —the fire is to bs eternal and unquench- to you te think that you hid to endure it the Aas : other fourteen! Bat what woud he the able. It — oe to enter 1ato life | og ot on your sonl if you kaew yon mast be maimed, rather than having thy two hands] chee endaring that torment to the toll, for to go int» hell, mto the unquenchable fire tweaty-four hours! And how much greater where their worm dieth not, and| woud be the effect it you knew yon knew the fre is net quenched” (Mark 9, 43 48.| you had to endure it fora whole year! And See also Matt. 188). In Revelation, Sc. | how vastly greater stil if y u kuew you must John informs us what fuel is to support the }evdure it for @ thousand years! Ob, then anquenchable fire :—** If any man worshp-| how would your hearts sink if you knew that peth the beast and his image * * he | You must bear it for ¢vor and ever! and that shall be tortured with fire and brimstone in | there would be no end! that after millions of the presence of the holy angels, and in the ages i torments woul! be no nearer to an presence of the Lamb; and the smoke deliv at tae ori. should be of their torment goeth up forever; and ee a ae et ae an aen a 2 y greater than this il. ustratioa re. they have no rest day and night (Rev. 14- presents ” 9.11.) In another passage At is revealed|” Christian preachers and writers of the concerning various kinds of sinners that | present day do not agree as to the nature of “their part shall be in the lake that/heli’s torments Many of them are coming to burneth wich fire and brimstone, which is|attach a figurative mesning to the Biblical the second death. (Rev. 218) This doc- {description of hell, and seem as loath as their trine was intended to last unchanged for | Predecessors were eager to dwell He the all time. for we find in the last chapter the |*¥hject. In the Fortnightly Review for statement that if any man shall add to or|?#na*y, 1876, Lionel A Teilamache says : take from the words of this book, he shall in wiver among us are s-eking to drop euler all tho. tammente acd tote bf the nell out of the Bib'e as quietly and as logic rewards which are written in this pro voa8 we arealy eoacrive to disregard “{the plain texts forbiddi Christi ‘ phecy. (Rev. 22 1819 ) ¢ plain texts forbidding Christians to gu ’ : to law and Christian women to plait their The reiigiva of Isism is characterized by |hair” Canon Farrar ia a series of #*rmons lack of vriyinality, ani the Mohammedau | has emphatically declared his disbelief ia a hell contains nothing but easily-made | hell of material ani everlasting flee Many variations of the Gehenna of the Jews. Tojother brilliant minds hava ren uiced the the man that disobeys the precepts of the dogma and there are at the preseat day but Koran it is promised that ‘Got shall cast |few who even allude to it. him into the hell-fire; he shall remain t+O+e therein for ever. For Oven Fiery Years Mra. Winsloe’s The fathers of the Christian Church | soothing Syrup has been used by millicus of generally taught the existence of «# hell of | mothera for their children while cuttiag teeth, material fire and brimstone. Alger gives|[t relieves thy little sufferer at 108 ; it pro- as their belief that at the resurrection the |44ces uataral, quiet sieep by relieving the d-mued “were to be banished to a fury shild from pain, and the litle cherab awakes *3 } Vial die, kinds. ‘His wickedness during life was|hell in the centre of the earth, there to |* “bright as 4 button.” lois very pleasant severely punished in the lower world,jendure uncomprehended agonies, both ane oe ne on child, softens the where he had to roll up hiil a huge physical aud spiritual, without any Re ipods al a " t Wiad, regu etea marble bluck, which, as soon as it reached | respite, without apy end.” Tein. a eee reeds for : ag liarchees, whether arising from teething or strict literality with which these doe- | sther causes, Twenty-five cents a bottle trines were held is strikingly shown is | Ge sure and ask for “ Mrs. Wiraloe’s Soothing Jerome's artless question, ** [f the dead be |Syrup,” and take no other kind. lyr not raised with flesh and bones, how can the damned, after the judgment, gnash Remember the cleariug out sale ‘ vt Origen, who waslof boots and shees at “tnuneer’s ja lavonist, and heretic on many points,” |Corner. The sho» has t» be vacat- says, Alger, was severely condewued forled for bailding pu-poses. Now is saywg that the fice of hell was inward aud|the time to get bargains in fine of the conscience, rather than outward and | boets. overshoes, slippers, Kc. as jof the body.” Tertu lian says: ** The | the stock mast be soid —R. K. Jost. -damoed burn eternally without consuming, tft jas the velcanves, which are vents from the eo eee stored subterranean fire of heil, burn fur! A ReMEDY that is endorsed by physicians ever without wasting.” These words point |must have some merit, for no physician of also to the belief, noted above, that hell|45y standing will place his seal of approval , was located upon earth. In the middle|®®® preparation un'esm he knows it to be ‘uges the Christian conception of hell be- good Now Estey’s Kmu'sion of Ond Lives css more detailed and more terrible. The | 2%! eh not only endorsed by p'ysicians but details cau be found not only in the books ee 1 nsed by them in their practice. of the period,*but they were favorite sub-| ‘© “™ eee is ee As A RESTORER of the system after the weak eapeciaily fur the “p-cture a ening effects of la grippe, Camp ell’a Elixir of exthedrals | 1 ife seems to be all that could be desired, Jt were adorned. The monks of the period | j, pleasant to take, and hs besa used by the This abode is ruled produced an extensive literatura of visions | foremost physicians ot Montreal, with most vy the guddess of death, whose nams3 is d scribing the torments of hell. In these gratifying resul's, Hel. The place ef torment for reprobstes vistuns according to Lecky,— Price #1.0) per For sale by A. S. Johnson, sian bottle. The devil was repvesentel bound by red : . ; hot cheias 97 a baroimy gridiron in the centre] | W Hare offering the big .sat bargains ever (he screams of his uever-ending |Siven in this city ia trouserings. Hundreds of Fifty pant remasnts fenhO 4i Area z - ie ROMs a 4 U ae i _— A LLL LE LE MAGS ELEN A MN Ii t PG se ei!