Bonn ( ures Blood Folison EloRemam, Etc.—Medicinoe Somi Free. If you have offensive plmples ox eruptions, nloers on any part of the body, aching bones or joints, falling hair, mucous patches, swol- len glands, skin itches and burns, sore fips or gums, eating, festering sores, p, gnawing pains, then you suffer from serious blood poison or the beginuings of deadly cancer. You may be rmanently cured by taking Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. 1.), made espe- sially to enre the worst blood sud skin - pages, It heals every sore or uloer, stops oll achos and pains and reduces all swellings, Botanic Blood Balm cures all malignant blood troubles, such as eczema, scabs and scales, pimples, running sores, carbuncles, scrofula, ete. Especially advised for all obstinate cases that have reached the second or third stage. Druggists, #1. To prove it cures, sample of medicine sent free and prepaid by writing Dr. Gillam, 12 Mitchell Street, Atlanta, Ga, Deasribe trouble and free medical advice given, Canter, Ulcers, The average savings bank deposits in this country 18 more than $400; in all Eu- ropean countries it is abont $100, AT SHAKESPEARK'S HOME, “ Stratford-on-Avon."” “1 am finishing a tour of Europe; the best thing I've had over here is a box of Tetterine I brought from home.” —C. H. McConnell, Mgr. Economical Drug Co., of Chicago, Ill T'etterine cures itching skin troubles, b0c. a box by mail from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga., if your druggist don’t keep it. Baltimore pays about $300 a year for its display of flags on the municipal build: ings. Famsure "iso's Uure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mzs, Tuomas Ros- mins, Maple 8t,, Norwich, N.Y., Feb, 17, 1900, Love of a man for himself never grows 88. Strange as it may seem, a bore 18 a man who never comes to the point. Asthma “One of my daughters had a terrible case of asthma. We tried almost everything, but without re- lief. We then tried Ayer’s Che Pectoral, and three and one-half bottles cured her.””— Emma Jane Entsminger, Langsville. O. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral certainly curesmany cases of asthma. And it cures bronchitis, hoarseness, weak lungs, whooping - cough, croup, winter coughs, night coughs, and hard colds. Three sizes: 25¢., 50c., $1. All drugyists, Consult your doctor. If he says take it, then do as be says If he telis you not to take it, then don't take it. He knows. Leave it with him. We are willing Ye J.C. AYER CO. Lowell, Mass. SOZODONT A PERFECT LIQUID DENTIFRICE FOR THE TEETH ~~ BREATH 25° EACH SCZODONT TOOTH POWDER HALL & RUCKEL, New York removes from the soil large quantities of Potash. The fertilizer ap- plied, must furnish enough Potash, or the land will lose its pro- ducing power. Read carefully our books on crops—sent free. ERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York, The tire buyer should lopk well before choosing. A good pair of tires adds to the life of your wheel — saves it many a jolt and jar. Service is what G & | Tires give first, Inst and al the time, are comfort. able, satisfactory and easy to repair. Just the kind for country roads and big loads. Send for catalogue, (&J TIRE COMPANY, Indianapolis, ind, FOR EIGHT DOLLARS You can buy the very best 800 1b. Platform Scale. Other sizes equally low, Jones (He Pays the Freight.) N°} BINGHAMTON, N. Y. son's Eye Water oak Cee wes “DREANS” Dr. Talmage Says They Are the Avenue Through Which God Has Marched Upon the Human Soul, Proof of Immortality-— Waraed by God Wasnixaron, D. C.—In this disconrse Dr. Talmage discusses a much talked of subject, and one in which all are inter. ested. The text is Joel i1, 28: “I will pour out My spirit upon all flesh. Your old men shall dream drear's, your young men shall see visions.” In this photograph of the millennium the dream is lifted into great conspicuity. You may say of a dream that it is a noc- turnal fantasia, or that it is the absurd combination of waking thoughts, and with a slur of intonation you may say, “It is only a dream,” but God has honored the dream by making it the avenue through which again and again He has marched upon the human soul, decided the fate of nations, and changed the course of the world’s history. God appeared in a dream to Abimelech, warning him against an un- lawful marriage; in a dream to Jacob, an- nouncing by the ladder set against the sky full of angels, the communication be- tween earth and heaven; in a dream to Joseph, foretelling his coming power under the figure of all the sheaves 8 the harvest bowing down to his sheaf; to the chief butler, foretelling his disimprisonment: to the chief baker, announcing his decapita- tion; to Pharaoh, showing him first the seven famine struck years, under the figure of the seven lean cows devouring the seven fat cows; to Solomon, giving him the choice between wisdom and riches and honor; to a warrior, under the figure of a barley cake smiting down a tent, encouraging Gideon in his battle against the Midianites; to Nebuchadnesz- zar, under the figure of a broken image and a hewn down tree, foretelling the over. throw of his power; to Joseph, of the New Testament, announcing the birth of Christ in his own household, and again bidding him fly from Herodic persecutions; to Pilate’s wife, warning him not to be- come complicated with the judicial over throw of Christ. We all admit that God in ancient times and under Bible dispensation addressed the people through dreams. The question now is, does God appear in our day and reveal Himself through dreams? That is the question evervbody asks, and that question I will try to answer. You ask me if I believe in dreams. My answer is, 1 do, bat all I have to say will be under five heads. Remark the First go full of revelation from God that if we we ought, nevertheless, to be satisfied. Wit to get to New York or Pittsburg or Lon: don or Glasgow or Manchester do want a night vision to tell you how to make the journey? We have in Scripture full direction in regard to the 3 celestial city, and with this grand guide book, this magnificent directory, ought to be satisfied. I have more in a decision to which 1 come enn 1 wide awake than when I am sound I have noticed that those who give a deal of their time to studving their brains addled. They ar jous to remember what they about the first night they slept in house. If in their take hand of a corpse going If they dream of a garden it means 3 ulcher. If something turns to a night vision, they not surprised; I dreamed it out jifferent from the night say, “Well, dreams go by their efforts to rhythm they put into discord. Now, the revelation that we ought to be satisfied if we get no further revelation Sound sleep rece great honor Adam slept so extraordinarily that surgical ineisior hich gave him Eve not wake him, but there is no such for extraordinary sher now, who catches an Eve must needs awake! Neo need of such a dream $0 had, with n ten thousand times earth communication. No such dream nes that which was given to Al leel ing him against mnlawful m when we have wrda of the eco clerk's office. No need of faith 3 asleep gre © dream they they are sav » Visi contraries their dreams waking tho ibie ¥1 when the need 80 it has been dem- that and heaven are in ints was years of famine, given to and rail train carry tc { demonstrate righteousness sooner or later will victory. If there should come about a erisis in your life upon which the Bible does not seem to be sufficiently spec in prayer, and you will get especial direc: tion. I have more faith ninety-nine times out of a hundred in directions given you with the Bible in your lap and your thoughts uplifted in prayer to God than in all the information you will get uncon- scious on your pillow, I can very easily understand why the Babylonians and the Egyptians, with no Bible, should put so much stress on dreams, and the Chinese in their holy book, Chow King, should think their emperor gets his directions through dreams from God, and that Homer should think that all dreams came from Jove, and that in ancient times dreams were classified into a science, but why do you and I put so much stress upon dreams when we have a supernal book of infinite wisdom on all subjects? Why should we harry ourselves with dreams? Why should Eddystone and Barnegat lighthouses question a summer firefly? Remark the Second-—All dreams have an important meaning. They prove that the soul is comparatively independent of the body. The eves are closed, the senses are dull, the entire body goes into a lethargy which in all languages is used as a type of death, and then the soul spreads ite wing and never sleeps. It leaps the Atlantic Ocean and mingles in scenes 3000 miles away. It travels great reaches of time, flashes back eighty vears, and the octoge- narian is a boy again in his father’s house, Ii the soul before it hae entirely broken its chain of flesh can do all this, how far can it leap, what circles can it cut when it is fully liberated? Every dream, whether agreeable or harassing, whether sunshiny or tempestuous, means so much that, ris ing from your couch. you ought to kneel down and say: “O God, am I immortal? Whence? Whither? Two natures. My soul caged now--what when the door of the cage is opened? If my soul can fly so far ‘in the few hours in which my body is asleep in the night, how far can it fly when my body sleeps the long sleep of the grave?’ Oh, this power to dream, how startling, how overwhelming! Immortal! immortal! Remark the Third—The vast majority of dreams are merely the result of dis turbed physicial condition, and are not a supernatural message, Job had earbuncles and he was scared in the night. He says, “Thou searest me with dreams and terri fiest me with vikionse.” Solomon had an overwrought brain, overwrought with pub. lic business, and he suffered from erratic slumber, and he writes in Eoelesinstes, “A dream cometh through the multitnde of business.” Dr. Gregory, in experiment. ing with dreams, found that a bottle of ot water put to his feet while in slumber made him think he was going up the hot sides of Mount Etna. Another morbid hysician, experimenting with dreams, hie eet uncovered through sleep, thought he was riding in an Alpine diligence. But a great many dreams are merely narcotic disturbance. Anything that you see while under the influence of chloral or brandy or hasheesh or laudanum is not a revela- tion from God, The learned De Quincey did not aseribe to divine communication what he saw in sleep, opium saturated, dreams which he afterward described in the following words: “I was worshiped, 1 was sacri ficed, I fled from the wrath of Brahma, through all the forests of Asia. Vishnu hated me. Bceva laid in wait for me. I came suddenly upon Isis and Osiris. I had done a deed, po said, that made the crocodiles tremble. 1 was buried for a thousand years in gtone coffing, with mum- mies and sphinxes in narrow chambers at the heart of eternal pyramids. I was kissed with the cancerous kiss of eroco- diles and lay confounded with unutterable slimy things among wreathy and Nilotic mud,” Do not mistake narcotic disturbance for divine revelation. But I have to tell you that the majority of the dreamy are mere- ly the penalty of outraged digestive or- gana, and you have no right to mistake the nightmare for heavenly revelation. Late suppers are a warranty deed for bad dreams. Highly spiced salads at 11 o'clock at night, instead of opening the door heavenward, open the rn infernal and diabolical. You outrage natural law, and vou insult the God who made those laws. It takes from three to five hours to di est food, and you have no right to keep your digestive organs in struggle when the rest of your body is in somnolence. The gen- eral rule is eat nothing after 8 o'clock at night, retire at 10, sleep on your right side, keep the window open five inches for ventilation, and other worlds will not dis- turb you much. By physical maltreatment vou take the ladder that Jacob saw in his dream, and you lower it to the nether world, allowing the ascent of the demoni- acal. Dreams are midnight dyspepsia. An unregulated desire for something to eat ruined the race in paradise, and an unreg- ulated desire for something to eat keeps it ruined. The world during 8000 vears has tried in vain to digest that first apple, The world will not be evangelized until we get rid of a dyspeptic Christianity. Healthy people do not want the cadaver ous and sleepy thing that some people eall religion. They want a religion that lives regularly by day and sleeps soundly by night. If through trouble or coming on of old age or exhaustion of Christian service vou cannot sleep well, then vou may ex- pect from God “songs in the night,” but there are no blessed communications to those who willingly surrender to indigesti- Napoleon's army at Leipsic. Dres- den and Barodino CAme near being de. stroved through the disturbed gastric juices of its commander. That ix the way von have lost some of vour battles " AN dreams that make vou better are God How do I know it? Is not the source of all good? 1t does not 1 i » that ent bles, ogical mind t« ind Martin La The dreams of John St. Augustine, the father, gives us the fact that nian physician was persuaded mortality of the by heard in a dream the wife her soul whe hie ¢ } re his assassinalion that hushand have to were 1 r the man wi swers. The wandered 11 prayer meet ng great aposiie y hed miven of They stood and at the clase of the religions ser. and started wed him day tuberoses vices he took the tuberoses homeward, and the German fol! and through an interpreter told Mr. Lam- ad dreamed of white flowers, Suffice it to £1 fal. phier that on the sx he h a man with a handful of and was told to follow him say that through that interview and lowing interviews he became a Christian and 1s a city missionary, preaching the gos pel to his own countrymen. God in a dream! John Hardonk, while on shipboard, dreamed one night that the day of jude ment had come, and that the roll of the ship's crew was called except his own name, and that these people, this erew, were all banished, and in this dream he asked the reader why his own name was omitted, and he was told it was to give him more opportunity for repentance. He woke up a different man. He became illus trions for Christian attainment. If you do not believe these things, then you must discard all testimony and refuse to accept any kind of authoritative witness, God in a dream! tev. Herbert Mendes was converted to God through a dream of the last judgment, and many of vs have had some dream o that great day of judgment which shall you have not dreamed of it, perhaps to- night you may dream of that ly Fhere are enough materials to make a dream. Enough voices, for there shall be the roaring of the elements and the great earthquake. Enough light for the dream, for the world shall blaze. Enough excite ment, for the mountains shall fall. Enough water, for the ocean shall rear. Enough astronomical phenomena, for the stars shall go out. Enough populations, for all the races of all the ages will fall into line of one of two processions, the one ascend. ing and the other descending, the one led on by the rider on the white horse of sternal victory, the other led on by Apol lyon on the black charger of eternal defeat. The dream comes on me now, and I see the lightnings from above answering the voleanic disturbances from beneath, and I hear the long reverberating thunders that shall wake up the dead, and all the seas, lifting up their stal voices, ery “Come to judgment!” and all the voices of the heaven ery, “Come to judgment! and crumbling mausoleum and Westminster abbeve and pyramide of the dead with marble voices ery, "Come to judgment! And the archangel seizes an instrument of music that was made only for one sound, and thrusting that mighty instrument through the clouds and turning it this way, he shall put it to his lips and blow the long, loud blast that shall make the soiid earth quiver, erying, “Come to judg ment!" Ten from this earthly! ness anit, aired in stars, we shall forever at. [Copyright, 191, L. Kiopwh.) COMMERCIAL REVIEW, General Trade Conditions. R. G. Dun & Co's Weekly Review of Trade de- mand equals or exceeds supply and prices | pp} says i —When consumptive are firmly held at an exceptionally high level it is generally considered that there is little to be desired in the business sit- These factors an unusual now in evi extent, yet many are halting. The principal disturbing element is the lack of cars to handle the phenomenal shipments that are urgently needed. A general advance in the price of pig iron indicates that record-breaking activity at furnaces fails to produce ac- cumulation of supplies. Steel mills are seeking material urgently, and Besse mer pig for prompt delivery at Pittsburg is not available below $16.50. The feat among the minor metals was the sharp advance in tin to much the high uation dence to industrie are In marked contrast to the rise in tin in 1898. Shoe shops Western producers were never before so Jobbing trade 1s tem and makers are importuned for engaged Failures for the week numbered 182 United States, against 178 last in Canada, against 21 last year, and 25 “Bradstreet’'s” says: Wheat, including flour, exports for the aggregate 5.1%.478 bushels, as 5,518,030 bushels last week and 2.407 880 in this week last year Wheat orts July 1 to date (twenty-two weeks aggregate 127,819,000 bushels, - week LATEST QUOTATIONS. “Jour Jest Patent, $400; Minnesota York No. 2 red 77%5a78¢; we IN CW Wheat 1 1 AICS large Go Ibs, , flats, 37 Ibs, 1014 to 1% 114 Turkeys do, cheese, £. 11 to Poultry fat, small and poor, Ch -a7Ysc. do old roosters, cach 23a30 Live and Dres young, + do, 2 rough ‘ Fancy, large, 9 a8: do, muscovy and Geese, Western, each soa a: do, small Live Stock. Chicago. Cattle.—~Market steady : good $360a6.00;: stockers and feeders, $2.00a cows, $1.28a4.75: heifers, $1.50a 50 canncrs, $1.23a230;: bulls, $2002 75. Calves, $23500%500: Texas steers, Hogs. -~~Receipts to day Monday, 45.000; left over, 4.500; 10 to 15¢c. higher: mixed and butchers; S.70a6.20; good to choice, heavy $35.7%a 0.30; rough heavy, $s5.50as575 light; bulk or sales, $570ab.00 sheep and lambs steady; good to choice weth- ers, $1z0a4.25; ethers, $4.25; native lambs, $2.50a4.00; Western lambs, $3.50 44.10, East Liberty ~Cattle steady; choice, $5.75a6.00; prime, $5.50a5.70; good, $5.15 25.40. Hogs higher; extra prime heavies $6.10a6.20; heavy mediums, $3.00a6.05; light do, $5.75a5.8¢ ; heavy Yorkers, $5.05 a$5.75; light do. $5.40a35.50; pigs, $5.25a 5.30; roughs, $4.50a5.60. Sheep firm: best wethers, $3.40a3.50; culls and com- mon, $1.00a200; yearlings, $2.50a3.75; veal calves, $6.00a6.50. LABOR AND INDUSTRY Russia has 15,000 physicians. Paris has automobile fire engines, Bengal has 4.000,000 quinine trees. Mississippi has 26 433 wage workers, Y ashington State has 444 lumber mis. Cuba has a Goo00-acre sugar planta. tion. Sugar plantations are appearing in Mexico. Four New York banks control $500, deposits, hansas farmers are feeding wheat to their cattle. Torsaw's Yavuryes Dye produces (he fast ewt and brightest colors of any known dye stuff. Bold by all draggists, Palms never live more than 250 years Ivy has been known to live 450, chestnut, 800; oak, 1600, and yew, 2880 years, Denfness Cannot fe Cured eased portion of the ear. There is only one ing, and when ii is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and nnless the inflammation ean be taken out and this tube restored io ite normal Nine cases ont of ten are caused by eatarrh the muoous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any F.J. Caxxxy & Co., Toledo, © Bold by Druggiste, 75¢, Hall's Family Pills ars the best. The people who claim that marriage is a failure are usually the people who never tried it. Best For the Bowels, Ko matter what ails you, headashs to a movements, cost you just 10 Cas- in metal boxes, every tablet has The Pritish teach singing to the Boer children in the concentration camps. Brooklyn, N.Y., Nov. 20 Garfield Headache Powders are sold bere in large quantities; this shows that people realize the value of & remedy at once harmless and effective. The Powders Investigate every grade of remedies of fered for the cure of Headaches and the Gar field Headache Powders wil! be found to bold first place. Write Garfield Tea Co. for samples New Orleans, la. a city of nearly 300, 000 population, consumes less than 15.000, 000 gallons of water daily, FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ness after first day's use of Dr, Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise froe Dr. B.H. Krixe, Ltd, 431 Arch 8¢t., Phila. Pa The fellow with a poor memory scldom forgets his troubles. Mre. Winslow's Boothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma. tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢ a bottle Tact is a way of getting what you want without letting others know you want it — WE HAVE HEARD OF IT BEFORE Conquers Pain Price, 25¢ and soc. BOLD BY ALL DEALERS IN NEDICIEE SUES LE ENS BIBI IS SIRS RE Re ENB SI RSS SR I Dee Ry Oa Br, Me nllom's Meguiators * & pever fall is i years By nu CAPE Ct PD CHE Al <0 O% FRYILLE Mass s SALES © canton. Write for prices JESSE MARDEN LEB Comlm 8 (BarLTiNons Ma DROPSY Ir iis em cases. Book of testimonials and JO days’ Free. be. B 5B GREEN S30NFE Bex B, Allsate, Ga. $2600.00 GIVEN TIAN EOE RE SIR IE See RE OPORTO ER ET RT TR AN OPEN LETTER Address to Women by the Treas- urer of the W. C, T. U. of Kansas City, Mrs. EG. Smith. a “My Dean Sisters: —]1 believe in advocating and upholding everythin that will dift up and help women, a but little use appears all knowled and learning if you have not the heal to enjoy it. MRS. E C. BMITH. “ Having found by personal experi ence that Lydia EB Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a medi- cine of rare virtue, and having seen dozens of eures where my suffering sisters have been dragged back to life and usefulness from ap untimely grave simply by the use of a few bottles of that Compound, 1 must proclaim its virtues, or I should not be doing m out housekeepers, * Dear Sister, is your health do you feel worn out and used up, especially you have any of the troubles which beset our sex, take my advice ; let the doctors alone, try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ; it is better than any and all doctors, for it cures and the do not.”"—Mgs. E. C, Sairn, 1212 Oak St., Treasurer W. C. T. U., Kansas Mo.—88000 forfeit if above testimonial lg not genuine, Mrs. Pinkham advises sick wo do New and Enlarge” Edition of Bnglsh, Diography, Geography, Fiction, ete. 25,000 NEW WORDS, ETC. Edned by W. T. HARRIS, PLD. United States Commumoner of New Plates Throughout 2364 Pages. sooo Iliastrations. BEST FOR THE HOUSEH Also Wabster's Collegizte Dictionary with a waluabie Scottuds Glossary soo Pages. | LL TXI0ORS bin » W 1 on Fryacanen GC. GC. Merriam Co., SpringSeld, Mass. $900 TO $1500 A YEAR We want intelligent Men and Women a8 Traveling Representatives or Local Managers; salary $000 to Piso a year and all expenses, scoording 10 experience and ability, We iso want local representatives: salary §g to fis a week and commission, depending upon the (imme devoted. Send stamp for full particulars amd Sate position prefered. Address, Dept. B, THE BELL COMPANY, Philadelphia, Pa. Lead the World, Are You Sick? ie and P. O Send sour nan address to The R. B. Wills Medicine Co., Hagerstown, Md. Gold Mewn ui swha'e i. xposition., = po PER DAY AWAY! Mahogany, Speckled Beauty, Apple Jack, Man's Pride, To appreciate That we are giving $2000.00 our best efforts to deceived by im Punt desorintions of. for tages, to fix the mem- to iden from offered for our _ apon request to i waa