Turned to Stone, The Superstitious Mountains oom up from the arid desert to the east of the Salt River Valley. On the crest of this unique range, and in full view of the rarefied atmosphere for an immense d's- tance from the plain, are hundreds of queer figures, representing men in all attitudes. When you look first you are sure they are men, and a second glance confirms the impression. They repre- sent bail throwers, outlooks, mere view- ors of the country roundabout, men re- cumbent and contemplate, others start ing on a foot race, and in every con calvable posture and position. They are not real flesh and blood, however nothing but stone sienite—yet it Is fm- possible to convince the Indians, and some white men, that they are not gen- uine., They say they are real mortals turned to stone, petrified by the pecu- liar condition of the alr on the moun- tains. The Indians will have nothing to do with the mountains, has grown out of an Apache leg: handed down of They have it it an anclent chief, characier Mountains, for go there, A dis a precipitous the top. It Thelr belief nd for hundreds years. who had learned of the curlous of the bade any of large band, ered a way to route, and fina resulted as the never got down Superstitiot to one day in by his De nle pel however, OV a0 lly reached 1d +} hist h i chief h s8iQ—1L alive, — ITI - Some pe orally they only ne A — a— Known to su hey need healt! t i energy. Wateralone has been life for fifty-five days, Prayer and Profanity are all right in their Tetter or Eczem 3 y have ori. bette i y al = When there is a coffi a welco or the pr No-To-llae for Over 400,000 1 regulate or Saves no i (hire guaran druggists, cured CASCARETS bowels, Never ‘Scrofula Cured fro » t Par Gas the One on Sarsa- parilla roe Blood Pur Hoo I+ the hewet { LB 1 Hood’s Pills <i. ’ ‘ | of Hires Rootbeer on a sweltering hot day is highly essen- tial to comfort and health. It cools the blood, reduces temperature, the stomach. \HIRES Rootbeer ft should be in every home, in every i} office, in every work- § shop, A temperance drink, more health- ful than ice water, more delightful and @ 1 satisfying than any if other beverage proce i duced. Mads only by the Charles WB, Wires Co. Phtiadeiphia. A pask- age makes § gallons. Sell ev sryohere your toutes a —— ll . - DRUNKARDS AVeD The craving for drink is a disease, 8 marvellous mre ror which bas been discovered called “Anti. Jag,” which makes the inebriate loss oll taste for strong drink without knowing why, as it can be ven secretly in tea, coffee, soup and the lke, If “Anti-Jag’’ is not kept by your ruggies wet one dollar to the Henova Chemical Co, Broad. way, New York, and it will be sent postpaid, in Tn Wr , with fall directions how give secretly, Information mailed free. REY. DR. TALMAGE. Sunday Sermon. - — Improvidence and Aleoholism Arraigned «Most Overpowering Enemy of the Working People is Strong Drink A Plea for Earnest Christian Prudence, Text: “He that earneth wages wages to put into a bag with holes.” gall, 6. In Persin, under reign of Darius Hystaspes, the | did not prosper. They made money, but did not keep it, They were like people who have a sack in i which they put money, not knowing that { the sack {8 torn or eaten toths, or in | some way made {neapable of holding valu- { ables, As fast as the colin was put in one end of the sack it dropped out of the oth. er. It made po difference how much | wages they got, they lost them. “He | that earneth wages earneth wages to put it fruto a bag with !} " What billions earneth Hag- the sople of n has becon } he billions and ountry paid to f these mon. rent, or the wr wardrobe, or essities of life, old age. What Wastad in ramming ta- | family expenses provide in OMe billions? 1 at »i2 rid a | garden, and} { fr at dd n | bays, and secure | Anos, that the j maintained afte &0 to the mechar vay to work, and at t even. roy pal 16 at a of a oh wn tp Yn ee kes and is full y and beer, Pe i fu 0 workingmnan, , And yout no ing dram, 3 iave over for tobacod and you insure poverty for yourself idren forever! : generous fat of the capi. talists the Government of the United States twenty-five per cent. or fifty per cent, or 100 per cent. were added to the wages of the working classes of America, it would ba no advantage to hundreds of thousands of them unless they stopped strong drink. Aye, until they quit that evil habit the more money the more ruin, the more wages the more holes in the bag. My plea is to those working people who are in a discipleship to the whisky bottle, the beer jug and the wine flask, And what I gay to them will not be more appropriate to the working classes than to the business cinssecs and the literary classes and the pro- fessional classes and all classes, and not with the people of one age more than of all ages. Take one good square look at the suffering of the man whom strong drink has enthralled and remember that toward that goal multitudes are running. The disciple of alooholism suffers the loss of geil respect. Just as soon as a man wakes up and finds that he is thd cape tive of strong drink, he feels demeaned, I do not ears how recklessly he acta. He may say, “I don't ecare;” he does gare, He cannot look a pure man in the eye un- Three-fourths of his nature is destroyed; his self-respect is gone; he says things he would not otherwise say; he does things he would not otherwise do, When a man is nine-tenths gone with strong drink, the first shing he wants to do is to persuade ou that he can sop any time he wants to, fe cannot. The Philistines have bound him hand and foot, and shorn his looks and ut ont his eyes, and are making him grind in the mill of a great horror. He cannot stop, Iwill prove it, He knows that his course is bilbging ruin upon himself. He loves himself, 1f he could stop, he would, He knows his ecurse is bringing ruin upon bis family, He loves them. He would stop if hie could. He cannot. Perhaps he could three months or a year ago; not now. Just ask him to stop for a month, be knows he cannot, go he does not try, God only knows what the suffers, Pain flies on every travels every muscle, and gnaws bone, and burns with every flame, and stings with every poison, and pulls at him with every torture, What reptiles crawl over his sleeping limbs, What flends stand by his midnight pillow, his ear, soul, Talk of the rack, talk of the inquisi- nerve, crushing Juggernaut-—-he fesls them all at ones, Have you the hospital where these (nebrintes are dy- ing, the stench of their wounds driving buck the attendants, their volees sounding through the night? The keeper comes up and says: “Hush, now be still, Stop mak- ing all this notse.” Dut it is effectual only for a moment, for as soon as tha keeper {8 gone they begin again: “0 God! 0 Godl Help! Help! Drink! Give moe drink! Help! Take them off me! Take them off me! O O God!” And then they shriek, and they rave, and they pluck out their barr by handfuls and bite thelr nails into the quick, | and then they groan, and they shriek, and | they blaapheme, and they ask the keepers to kill them-—-*Btab ma! Bmother mel Btrangle me! Take the devils off me!” Oh, { 1t 18 no fanoy sketch, That thing is going | on now all up and down the land, and I | tell you further that this {8s going to be the | death that some of you will die. I know it. I see it coming. Again the inebriate suffers throu loss of home, I do not eare how loves his wife and children, if this passion | for strong drink has mastered him he will and it ha r way he na things, do tha most outrageous could not get drink In any o would sell his family into et i b have been broken ona but God knows 4 + destr How many homos I that way no Oh, there anvthing that will so YA MAT for this life and damn him for the life that fstoe Do not tell me t} A mMAnR © be happy whe he knows that he is break. ing his wife's heart his eohil. dren with rags. 1a and streetao {idren, barefoote , want or me? and clothing thers are land to-ds of darkness i perance # the the dead march of 4 nks the very glance ip would make you shudder, olor of the liquor would make you think of the blood of the soul, and the foam on the top of the cup would remind you of on the maniacs lip, and you would kneel 1 pray God that, on down and rather than your children should become captives of this evil habit, you would like last sloop, until at the call of the south wind the flowers would coms up all over the grave—sweot prophecies of the resur. rection. God has a balm for such a wound, grew on a drunkard’s sepulcher? , Corean Paper The statement is made by a writer In the Apotheker Zeitung that a re rk- abl» Kind of paper is produced in Cores entirely by manual labor and without the use of machinery. Its quality ex. cels that of the very best made in China or Japan. The raw material used for this paper 1s obtained from the bark of Broussonetis papyrifera, which is coliected in the spring and beaten in water containing a large ad. mixture of wood ashes, until reduesd to thick pulp: this is taken In large ladles and epread upon frames of bam. boo, and In this way formed Into thin sheets. Another kind of paper is pro- duced from old seraps trodden into pulp, much in the same way that grape julce is expressed in some countries - a process of pulping which, though slow, has the advantage of not break- ing the fiber so much as when ma chinery Is used; then, after the pulp bas been made into paper, the gheots are plied up to the height of six feet qnd cut into pieces, to be again gub. jected to the feet stamping--at the game time the roots and seeds of a plant ealled “tackpa.” are added, the soluble parts of which are supposed to KILLED ON A PLEASURE TRIP, A Train Crashes Into nn Tally-Ho Filled With Brooklyn Young People. A despatch from Now York says: Five young people were killed and a number of sthers Injured in a rallroad accident at Val. vy Bpring, L. I. A tally-ho, with a party of twenty-one excursionists from the Greene Avenus Baptist Chureh, Brooklyn, which started out for a day's outing through Loong (sland, was struck by a train on the Long [sland Rallroad at the Merrick Doulevard crossing, Rome of the dead were glad, The body of ground to pleces, was badly mangled, Winslow Lewis had his neck broken, both legs were broken snd his head was badly gashed, he orash came almost without warning, and the occupants of the coach had no time to make any effort to Before the most of them knew of the impending danger the train was upon them, the coach was up #ot and the engine was pushing it along the ralls, the dead and injured mangled beneath ft, The train which frightfully man- Lester W, Roberts was also GROR DO, being cut and struck the tally-ho was bound east from Minola. It was not run- ning fast when the accident happened, and wounts differ as to whether the whistle was blown, It is also a matter of dispute whether the bell was being rung. It is claimed by some give tenacity and toughness to the paper. wry party on the } ise that the maxing so t hear the bell, team of tally-ho had 'k and had the front w much n the heels pon the rails when the pilot of Ho gave ww t WAS LOO the engine was seen by the driver, Ee t with the whip, but it bate, and & nent later the crash came, A COOPERATIVE COLONY, Keheme of Eugene V. Debs and Henry D. Lloyd Is to Be Tried in Utah A despateh from Denver, Col... says: } ‘ ge few ’ sha tional presides ue liperate ( UNIONS HOGE PRODUCTS —shis Livar ri i¢ Har Mens J LARD (Cy Lest refs rt BUTTER Fine Cry Under Fipe : Creamery Rolla CHERSR CHEESE--N. Y. Fancy... # N.Y. Fists . Bim Cheese 12Y @ 12y 12% $2 44 6 BOGE, J 2 EGR. SBinta ¢ Big ; : . ® North Carolina LIVE POULTRY CHICKENS <Hens.......9 Ducks, per Turkeys, per Ib 11 12 TOBAOOD, TOBACCO-MA Infer's..® Sound common. Middling Fancy 150 300 0) ww @ 250 400 00 240 LIYE STOUR. BEEF -—Dest Dooves......8 42 @ SHEEP. . . 2 50 350 PURS AXD BEING 450 MUSERAT Hed POR... aria, Bkank Black. .,.. Opossa Mink....... FLOUR-—8outhern WHEAT--Xa, 2 Bed RYE-~Western.......... COlN-—No. 3.......... OATS-—-No. 3...........e BUTTER--8tate. ......... EGO8—-8tate............. CHEESE--8tate. ......... PHILADBLPAIA WHEAT No. 2 Red... ... CORN-No, Biiaeritsncion Eases ee ME A Crawling Rug. Among the first “instruments” to be used toward the education of the little son of the Duke and Duchess of York is a crawling-rug, designed by Minx Emma Windsor, who is famous for her intelligent interpretation of the Froe- bel idea of education, Froebel, she says, constantly urged upon mothers the necessity of the in fants’ education beginning at thelr mothers’ knee, and thinking of this has led me to the Invention of the ba bles' crawling rug. It is a large floor pleture of animals, birds and domestic figures, made of real skin, swansdown, and other materials sewn on to flannel, and is quite in harmony with Froebel's idea, . Yor as sqon as baby is put on the rug begin to kick and streteh out its limbs: then it begins to roll over about, and tries to clutch at the pretty animals on the rug. Then baby finds and to crawl is after puse, or some other equally familiar form which it the rug. The kicking, hand, the obse and education. As grows older It lk the help of mother Bees OD the stretching ryation, th all out the ie crawling, are what Froebel calls BO On, baby arns and tate the different sounds mals make, to pick other, and to | earn thelr Then baby should be taugh ench animal gently, and to tender tones. Thet that love of animal calls forth the Jove of mankind It is a good plan to teach the ba notice pictures of animals in } books, and ITHDALR } early learn to call its and their fatto Miia ead Lin HALL’S Vegetable Sicilian HAIR RENEWER =F yy IEEE EIR ETRE HAY PRESSES MIROYE TER FUL2 1 1.3 4 to : . FULLY CHANTE § tr WLR | CATAL aS tn. Bh LEWIN, Leer, MERIDIAN MACH! ~E Mimi Timm AGENTS B20 %0 Iii Titre: SHOPS ie HOW TO BUILD asx WILLIAMS M70. 00. KALAMAZOS, Mion, Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, Also Backache, I cannot speak too highly of Mrs. Pinkham Medicine, for #t has done so much for me. I have been a great suf- ferer from Kidney trouble, pains in muscles, joints, back and shoulders; feet would swell. 1 also had womb troubles and leucorrheea. After using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, and Blood Purifier and Liver Pills, I felt like a new woman, My Mrs. MacGie Ports Philadelphia, y 324 Kauffman St. Backache, down, backache My system was entirely run terrible back and could I was more in the ! g than on retiring at night I had no a taking Lydis in the hardly tired Vp tite Since Pinkham's Vegetable 4 af, and I ndrews Bay, Fl NN EA OO OIRO WRONVOSNOOWOY , A snl} Ty : 1897 Columbia Bicycles mwors. 100 lu 806 Columbias, S785. HARTFORDS $50, $45 POPC BAFG. CO. Hartford, Coan FTALOGE TERE PROW » Wl DEALER BY WA TRON U8 . t beat £0 eal : wy v ENT ET awh NI CO AU OR NUON, NNUVRRRNNS A A A A A A A A A A A A RR AAR RR ARRAY Ne A UA “IAI NE Houss @ SPO cooreoreoreorooceomon No or Rew Tork, 2 1 received from taking what 1 eat * would stay with me.’ these United States.” 1 commenced taking them aml
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers