Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 February 1895 — Page 3

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va ucii-Mown noiei xian. - Excrutiatinfi Pain. ' .o iours uraieiuiij.

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Geo. M. McClelland, of the Ar lington Hotel, Tipton. Mr. McClelland, known to the traveling community as a first-class landlord, says : " For years I suffered with stomach disorders and irregularities of the bowels. I found no relief until I tried Lyon's Seven Wonders. After taking two boxes, my trouble has ceased and my general health is firstclass In my opinion it is the best medicine on earth." " ; - I.TOX'S SETEX WONDERS Ar put tip In concentrMM fonn.itxty doses iu a box (twenty rTnys trsatmeut) ) price 91.0U a box, or six ior &5.00. Bent prepaid on receipt of price to any part of the United States or Canada.. For tale by all druggists. THE LYON MEDICINE CO., - Indianapolis, Iwd. OT) CO . j : f ; t

( SUICIDES FOR LOVE

rKOF. I.OMUROSO, OF Ttlll.V, HAS .W IHEHKST1.W AUTICX13. 3Ian'M Love AVeaker, but More Kn- , urliiK, Mini Dinsrruee for a Value Wife Is Harder to Hear. JfuHare Lombroso, in Kew York Advertiser. I deem it not idle to prove to the lasting honor of our epoch that love has not succumbed to the yawning rrtoloch of politics and high finance and that suicide through love is still of frequent occurrence, especialV anions women. Let na consider these fgurcs: Three thousand and eighty-five persons committed suicide in Italy during the last two years. - Of these 2,310 were men, (39 women. If we consider the causes, 71 to 75 per cent. 'of the females embraced death , with their heart troubled or broken through love; the percentage of men, suffering from the same emotions, was JO to ! ic-r cent. Here aro the French figures: Deaths hy suicide, 20,441;' men, 19.082 ; women, 5.6S3. Percentage of self-destroyers for , love: 28 anions the women, 7 among the men. Brlerra fle Hoismont, the French scientist, also investigated the causes of suicide by 4,516 individuals with tha aid of coroners' reports and judicial papers. His statement reads as follows; ' . Number of cases Domestic . trouble ,3ti Disappointment .311 Lovo got; Fdver ty '. .".282 Loss of fortune....;.... 277 Tired of life.................... ....237 Conscience stricken .134' Vicious habits .........124 ljazinfss fto Ambition 4 UainWing 44 Scarcity of labor 4:; ltelipious or political crankism.. 3S I'ride Pr. ct. 15 13i sr 12 ." 1 Love, according to this authority, holds third piace anions th causes of suicide. It really ought to take . first, as - domestic troubles are usually caused by love affairs Among1 the 308 love cases the special causes are given, as follows: Love trouble, pure and simple 177 Perfidy of the loved person 88 18 11 It Adultery or disappointment jjeatn or tne groom.... ji.nrorcei divorce.. Jove quarrel..... Infidelity In respect to suicides the stroncrer sex proves itself the weaker. The male slfdetttroyera ( outnumbered the female by 400 and 600 per cent., but at the same time very lew of them commit suicide through love troubles. In the uncivilised nations suicide U a prerogative of women, and the predominating causes are love trouble and fear of tftttlnjc old and -ugly. - Science agrees With Mnie. Da Stael's saying: . "In the lives of mn love is but an anecdote, an epistle; in that of women it is something very serious it is fate." . 'MUX' TAKE. IT HAIiDER.' lUre is another remarkalle fact proved by statistics. The number of men who cumwlt suicide out of grief at Uie death or infidelity of their wives Is nearly four times as great a the mimbeir of women embracing death in consequence of the demise or tlight" of their husbands. How true is Dant characterization of women's lpve "A flame, which soon dies out when sweet kisses or fiery .eyes do no longer enliven it." It ?cems Vetticd to me - that; love with women is niore sudden and intense than lasting. It ouite frequently happens that women kill themselves after the nun whom they lov ha. insulted tbem, while .others, 1j heroic, ' get married to some outsider out of spite. j I't nutiifrrout are suicides caused b- the fllsfbt or the death of the JoveU person. Kuii-idea of thin t kind often ocur several months after :ht? d-ath of th beloved person, when the deadening paroxysm of the first great agony has been superseded by tlw difrturbini? elements of a If k violent, tout eaiiotionally stronrer, chronln grief. ULx friend L'a'do vli:td wifc'Jf jjrave

Roscoe C. Barnett, a Druggist at Arcadia, Ind., Gives His Experience.

Four Tears of Suffering from Indigestion. Arcadia, Ind., Oct. 1, 1894. Lyou Medicine Co., Indianapolis, Ind. : Gentlemen No one but myself can ever know what I have suffered during the last four years with indigestion. I tried everything iu my drug store that was recommended for that trouble, but found no relief. I suffered such excru- 5 ciating pain that 1 would have to hold my Hands on My Stomach while trying to get some sleep. I could not digest anything I ate, and kept on losing flesh all the time. Three boxes of Lyon's Seven Wonders have cured me, restored me to perfect health, and have made me feel like a new man. ROSCOE C. BARNETT. LYON'S SET EN WONDERS Are put up in concentrated form, sixty doses in a box (twenty days' treatment;; price fll.OO a box, or six for 05. OO. Sent prepaid on receipt of price to auv part of the United States or Canada. For sale by all druggists. . THE LYON MEDICINE CO., Indianapolis, Ind. A. for four years, day after day, never failing in what he considered his sacred duty; then he could stand it no longer, and, after causing the inscription, "He went to find his loved one," to be inscribed on the tombstone, killed himself." Another person whom I knew, after his wife's death, found solace only in visiting; the room where she 'had breathed her last. When the owners of the house forced him, for some reason or another, to leave the premises, he shot himself through the heart on his wife's deathbed. While the ordinary suicide usually endeavors to end his life in some secret spot, the lovesick suicides, on the contrary, seem bound to proclaim their troubles before all the world by seeking a public deathbed, so to speak, or by destroying their life in the presence or In the house of their loved one. In a noble family at Berlin the butler recently drank a cup filled with carbolic acid in the breakfast room, where his master and mistress were at table, at the moment when his faithless love, the governess of the children, entered. DOUBLE SUICIDES. , Let us consider double suicides. A young lady, living in the neighborhood of my house at Turin,, was commanded by her father to marry a certain rich man. She had a lover, then serving his term in the army. When the lover came to spend a. few days with her on leave of absence she persuaded him to run away with her. They went to the St. Bernard. There they stayed for a few hours, then bound themselves together by hands and feet and threw themselves into the sea. '.. "I prefer to die," she had written to her parents, "as I am afraid, if living, to become an adulteress, or, what is worse, to be unfaithful to my lover, whom I love better than life." , Until recently two families lived next door to each other in that jolly old town of Ivrea. ' One day a young man belonging to one of' the families was toM to depart for Turin to finish his studies. "Mother," he said,' on the eve of his journey, "I wish you would get me my favorite dish for to-; night." He ate of this with great appetite and spent the evening talking ; with his father and friends in the most animated manner. When bedtime came he vanished ami could not be found. A young girl of the neighboring family, with whom the student had been on lovers' terms, the same evening had made a demand upon her mother to furnish her vith a certain dish, that which her lover &ad asked for. She was pleasant and, indeed, full of fun during the meal-and after. Once she walked up to her mother, showing her a new dress she had made for herself unbeknown to any one and said in . a playful manner: "Do I not look like a bride, mother?" - Next' day they found a letter, written bv the studenf. In which he said: "Death is much preferable to parting." They discovered the bodies at the river's bottom, in ach other's arms, the faces illuminated by happy srniles. Later on. ilaria's diary' was found, which proved tat the poor child had anticipated this ending of her love affair for a year or longerv'and that the.neafer her doom approached txn more - easy she grew in her mind. SCIENTIFIC TCXPIjAXATION. - The psychological aspect. suicide on ac-j count of thisxgeneral cause is easily explained when it is remembered that love i the outcome 6t a sort of elective nflniiy backed up. and strengthened, by tcmpera-t inent, which forces the molecule of the on organism to unite and iiantify itself witri that of the other to such an extjr.'t that separation "becomes impossible, er, r.t least unbearable. : ' .. The origin of the peculiar files pre ailing in Hindostan and Mal-iiMr, whr. widows voluntarily c mount the woodpile on -Mhich their husband's body is to Ua nurnd, nsay be ascribed rather to the above symptoms than to-religious considerations. But. you will say thfse are outlandish countries; with u ywimf nnd pvoUy widows expose theruselAis ta other ilamcs than th deadly ones of the woodpile Tioi, tho number of , suicides by widows is, happilv, vt ry small wry much smaller '.han the percentage of sulfide by widowers but, t n the other hand, very nanv women destroy themselves on account of blighted hopes of love, arid this proves the opinion, above recorded, that woman's love is, perhaps, not very lasting.' bat. at any rate, very intensew

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I eouia mention, a aozen suicides from memory who demanded to be burled togeth er with their loved ones. One of them wrote: "Oh, thou, whotver thou urt do not separate those Whom death tihrted. This is our last wish.- Let It.be sacred to thee, and let 11s 1 iu th same grave, shoulder to shoulder." " ' . .'-" " " - y.. :: . , Moralists arul thetdoijians may-think about th'. us they please, but I maintain ti--t in our times, wbe,:i everything anl vcrj , fy I . '

1HE INDIANAPOLIS

Twenty Years of Pain. KelieTed of Impaired Digestion and Kidney Trouble. John B. Patterson, for 13 Tear an Engineer. on the Bradford . DiTlaion of tne P. C. . A St. Ii. B. B. Indianapolis, Jan. 7, 1895. Lyon Medicine Co., Indianapolis : Gentlemen For twenty years I have been troubled with my stomach and also with my kidneys. Until a few weeks ago I could not eat a breakfast that my stomach would retain. In connection with this my Kidneys Pained Me Intensely - - at times and I was afflicted with sleeplessness. Life became a burden, and though I tried one physician after another, I could obtain no relief. Vhen my condition seemed past hope, I fortunately heard of Lyon's Seven Wonders and began to take it. After taking two boxes I am pleased to say My Troubles or Sto maeta and Kidneys . have ceased. My health is now good, my digestion perfect, and I can eat anything I choose. In this connection I would say that my weight has increased from 137 pounds to 151 pounds. . Yours truly, ' JOHN 8. PATTERSON, IrON'S SEJEN WONDERS Are put up in concentrated form, sixty doses in a box (twenty days' treatment) ; price 81.00 a box, or six for 85.00. Sent prepaid on receipt of price to any part of the United States or Canada. For sale by all druggists. THE LYON MEDICINE CO., -. Indianapolis, Ind. seems to grovel" to moneyed interests and agio, these most painful dramas, instead of awakening a feeling of horror, are calculated to bring tears to our eyes and fill our hearts with sad emotion, for they prove that strong, ideal, unselfish passion is still alive in the human breast, and that we know how to die for our convictions. GEXERAL LOGAX'S LlQl'OK. AmnsluHT Story Told lyIIls Old Colored llody Servant. New York Recorder. Daniel P. Slater, the Mayor's messenger, is a Herculean colored man, who although not yet forty, has had a varied and interesting career. He was born In Virginia of slave parents in 1856 and when the war. broke out his parents and other adult slaves , were kept in ignorance of the fact until the Emancipation proclamation was issued. Then the entire slave household was hurried off to Tennessee, where ultimately they obtained their freedom at the"close of the war. Daniel's father was a very devout man and when his son reached the age of fifteen intended to make him a preacher. Dan, however, did not take kindly "to the idea, and ran away from home. - He got a position in a hotel as a. waiterand from that job progressed by easy stages to Washington, where he became the body servant of the late Gen. John A. Logan. Upon him fell the solemn duty of atending upon the General in his dying! moments, an event of which Daniel never speaks without a tremulous voice and tearful eye. He has, however, a fund or funny stories of happenings in the General's household, in most of which he personally figured. It was his duty to see that the General's supply of those things which make for' social happiness in guest room of a United: States Senator was never short. Daniel, . however, noticed that the finest whiskies were disappearing in an unaccountable manner-, and suspecting that the purloiner of them was a fellow servant he determined to: lay "a trap for the miscreant. As Jiis. duties took him away from the house dur.ing'a portion of the day he thought his only way to detect the culprit was to mix a cathartic in one of the bottles. This he did and placed the Jxttle in a position which made it easily accessible.It unfortunately happened, however, that General Logan had arranged for a meeting with some of his friends that day, at an hour when Daniel was called away., As his guests were partial, to. good whisky, the General treated them from his store, and there being but one brand in the cabinet, he helped the gentlemen from the first bottle which catae to his hand. Always a keen observer of men, General Logan noticed that his friends made wry faces as they drank the liquor. He then proceeded to extol its merits, told its age and how it came into his possession. He then attempted to persuade his friends to try a second glass. ... They unanimously asserted that it was the best liquor they had ever tasted, but protested against taking' a second dram, on the plea that such extremely fine goods should be preserved for a future generation. Knowing his friends to be men who rarely balked the second tubler, the General was puzzled, and took a sample himself, r-; : Lr: --"By thunder! It. has a queer, taste," he exclAimpdi ,-, , . At', that moment Daniel entered the room, ,11? '.eyes fell upon the bottle, and he knew Jt; was' 'Jthe': one he had dosed. The convrhai lot', depicted upon his face was observed by, ail, and noticing his manner, the General said: "What's "the matter with this whisky, man?!. , . ' t "Dal' wniSKyr retorted Daniel. ' "Certanily, that whisky," replied 'the General.- ' " . "Did yo' drink dat whisky?" asked DanieL "Ves." - " . 'Ail of you gemmen?" "What do you mean . by ' asking these questions?" roared the General. "Well, I s'pose I must done-gon and gitanudder job, den. I done dose dat Whisky to ketch a coon who's been stealin it." Daniel was not compelled fsjget another job. but General. Logan left orders that he had better keep out of sight until the recollections of that "good liquor", we re dimmed in hi memory. , . After the General's death Daniel came' to -New York, where h obtained a rxwition as - butler in Colonel Strong's household. - He iiid not remain lomr with Colonel Strnnp. 1 however, 'and then tried his fortunes in

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Philadelphia, xnerene got his first notion of becoming a politician, and when Ala yor Strong was nominated he ram to. New York, asked, for and obtained the position of doorkeeper at Colonel Strong's headquarters. "In that capactiy ha became a terror to strikers, as no mri could pass the portal without giving-name and rea.ons f ar visitins the candidate. On on occr h fc-rred Wl'.ryl, Drwli'Z.li out r

JOURNAL, .-SUNDAY;

Elmer E. Fletcher Cured by Lyon's Seren Wonders After all Other Bemedies Failed. - Indianapolis, Dec. 10, 1894. . Lyon Medicine Co., Indianapolis, Ind.: Gentlemen I take great pleasure In testifying to the almost .miraculous benefits I have received from the use of Lyon's Seven Wonders. My occupation as a traveling man, with the irregular hours of eating ana sleeping consequent upon my vocation, gave me a stomach trouble, which, from indigestion developed into a 1 Chronic Dyspepsia, from which I suffered for years. This suffering, interfering with my occupation and reudering life miserable, can only be understood by those who have gone through the same experience, and it is for the benefit of these fellow sufferers that I write this letter. After all Otber Remedies failed and no relief was to be' obtained from physicians, I was induced to try Lyon's Seven Wonders. I found relief -with the first dose, and from the beginning my recovery was gratifyingly rapid. I am now a well man. I have no care of my diet, for 1 can eat auy thing and my digestion is perfect. I can not say too much for this remedy . which , has restored me ' to complete health. v Yours gratefully, ELMER E. FLETCHER. Mr. Fletcher now Sweat Collar Co. '. travels for - the Hoosier LYON'S SEVEN WONDERS Are put up in concentrated, form, sixty doses in a box (twenty days' treatment); price ftl.OO a box, or six for 85.O0. Sent prepaid on receipt 6t price to any part of the United States or Canada. For sale by all druggists. THE LYON MEDICINE CO., i -. ' ' Indianapolis, Ind.

LYON'S SEVEN WONDERS. It is composed qf seven different Ingredients, each one sovereign and specific in its action, and all combined with pharmaceutical skill and exactness to produce the MOST PERFECT SYSTEM BUILDER AND CORRECTOR.

f i '., and asked Chairman Hackett. of the State committee, to show an envelope addressed to himself, or some other proof of , his identity. His zeal has been rewarded, and now he does not know whether to give his political ambition full swing or settle down and court some wealthy young or middleaged lady in colored society. . AllOl'T SLEEP. Some Theories About, the Cnnse of It Recent Itesenrehew. New York Evening Sun. "Sleep is one of ,the greatest puzzles known to scientists," ,said.,a physician. "There are, of course, any number of theories regarding it. We know its invasion is marked by . anemia, or bloodlessness of the brain, using this term in contradistinction to the working state, in which the: brain is abundantly provided with the vital fluid; but it is one thing. to assert. that the brain is anemic in . slutnber and another thing to hold or to prove that this depression of the circulation is, the cause of sleep. Besides, as has well beerf pointed out, sleep Is not a condition which affects the brain alone. The whole organism is slowed down, and the mechanisms of life work, for the time being, are at low pressure. Latelv there has been a revival of an old view of the causation of sleep. It is pointed out that certain chemical agents, and especially certain gases, when inhaled, may produce phenomena which closely resemble those of I ordinary slumber. Of- course, we- have an- ?" An.l.A.tA . . 3 J i . .. kfief, I f f . tV i man which rob us of consciousness and tide us over the pains and pangs of life, but these agents do not oxactly correspond in then- effects with the causes of ordinary sleep. In carbonic acid gas, which Is a natural waste product of our frames and which is breathed out from lungs , and skin, we may find an agent that Is capable of producing a condition closely resembling the sleep that follows on the toil of the day. To start with, everybody knows that the sleepy conditionand it is a very typical example of its kind which follow -our stay in a badly ventilated room Is dueto:our breathing into our blood more than onr due share of carbonic acid gas. Recent research, however, would add that these effects; and still more the effects of after-damp in mines, are due not so much to the presence of carbonic acid gas as to the want of oxygen. So that instead of carbonic acid. gas being considered, as f ormerly, . as a highly: dangeious gas, we are to-day Inclined. .to look upon it as- relatively, harmless, even when breathed in greater proportion -than was once regarded as possible . without injury following on the experiment. Now comes another item of interest in ;the theory that our sleep is really due to the action of carbonic acid gas. In sleep the amount, of carbonic acid given off from the, lungs diminishes, hence it is urged the, gas in sleep passes into the Wood, gives a slight increase over the amount proper to that fluid, and thus induces slumber Slowly but surely this increase is got rid of as sleep progresses, and wakefulness supervenes when the blood once more appears-, in Us normal and natural, or, rather, , in its. diurnal, con-yl llt1on " . ? ? . - I THE FAIRTESTATE. Local Estimate of the Value of the Xnte Millionaire' Property. ' San Fracisco" Chronicle. There are a number' of well-posted buslness men who place the value of . the Fair estate at $15,000,000 and-claim that a fair appraisement will be somewhere between $14,0130,000 and $33,000,000. They - argue that the estate cr.nnot be worth more than that for many 1 easons.. They say that Fair's monev was made almost entirely durinsr the strike jf the , big bonanza, and that since that time he has earner! only a fair income, from his property.' The deceased millionaire had also , suffered .some severe .losses. ... . " ' " i".: " ' The estates of rich people-: are generally overestimated." Stanford was wildly quoted as being worth anywhere between $S0,000.000 and $100,000,000, but' Ms estate-was appraised at , $17,000,000 and is probably not worth more than two-thirds of hat. Generally - speaking." Fair has -made neither heavy gains nor heavy losses since the great strike in the middle seventies. , ' When Flood, O'Brien," Mackay and -Fair -were partners, in 1872. jus: - prior to the .big strike, it is jnot probable that-the four were worth over $1,000,000, say the reasoners. When the Nevada BaukTwas; opened, about four years , later, the bank had $8,0C0,00I In cask and $34,000.$) in good bonds. This $40,000,000 did not. represent the entire wealth of the Big Four. They were worth $15,000,000 "more, , principally . In mining interests.-, ' ; : " . ' '-7 ' "- Of the total of $55,000,080 Mackay owned a -two-fifths share, and the. rest, one-fifth each. This would place Fair's wealth at $11,000,000 in' 1877,- The sudden accession of riches is explained toy tfce fact that the California nd the " Consolidated- Virginia, then two rrate fines, were etich aytTz mociy c.vt: - j t; r.'::?.c.j.

FEBRUARY 10, 1895.

A. Prominent Farmer of Orange ,'. County, Indiana. Fifteen Tears or Affliction with ' Stomach, Heart and Kidney Troubles. t ' Orleans, Ind., July 27, 1891. : Lyon Medicine Co., Indianapolis, Ind.: Gentlemen For the past fifteen years I have been afflicted with stomach, heart and kidney troubles. During that time I have Seareely Known a Day Free From " Pain, and that I felt like a man. I tried many kinds of medicines. I consulted physicians and took tbelr medicines. I could find no relief. I bad almost given up in despair when I was induced to try a box of Lyon's Seveu Wonders. I am more than pleased to Bay that the first box gave me Almost Instant Belief. I am now using them and am improved in a wonderful degree. I consider myself almost cured. My stomach trouble bas about disappeared. My heart has resumed its normal action and I am otherwise greatly benefited. In fact, I Feel Like a New Man. I can cheerfully recommend this remedy to all persons who are afflicted with stomach, heart or kidney troubles. ALFRED PARISH. MTOK'8 SEVEN WOJfDERS Are put up in concentrated form, sixty does in a box (twenty days' treatment) ; price $1.00 s box, or six for &5.00. 8ent prepaid on receipt of price to any part of the United States or Canada. For sale by all druggists. THIS LYON MEDICINE CO., iNDiAHArous, Ind. the time Fair was worth $11,000,000 he did not make any big money, His investments paid a good net profit of about $500,000 a year or so, but no startling move was made by him. At the time Fair gave his wife $4,000,000 it is reasonable to presume that that was a fair percentage of his estate, especially as he was not then on friendly terms with Mackay and Flood, whom he believed had Interfered too much iu his family affairs. Mackay and Flood must have known about what figure Fair's wealth could be properly placed, and they would not have counseled Mrs. Fair to accept $4,000,000 as a reasonable proportion of the community property without good reasons. It is believed that Fair could not have been worth more than $14,000,000 at this time. This would leave him about $10,000,000. Since that time Fair's business matters have prospered, but only ina business manner., His profits could not have brought his wealth up more than $5,000,000 during the past five years. The reasoners ask where any such wealth as $40,000,000 could have come from in the face of these figures. Fair was the second largest, real estate taxpayer in San Francisco, the Sharon estate alone paying greater taxes. It is believed that Fair owns a large amount of wheat, on which he will lose considerably. A sale .of 20,000 tons yesterday shows that some one Is unloading, and it is believed that AIcGlaughlin is Fair's agent. Fair's buildings along the water front have not proved profitable investments, and his big deal at North Beach will not realize its cost for many years to come. Fair's experience with the railroad now known as the Santa Cruz division did not profit him much, if at all. He still has a large lot of bonds which he got for it and on which he has not been able to realize much money. Fair . owns the Lick House property, but there is a mortgage of $5ot,(KM) on it. The Lick trustees refused tii take all cash for the purchase of the Lick House, which Fair got for $1.230.000 a cheap price. The trustees had no use for $500,000 and caused Fair to borrow it from them at a low rate of interest. The Lick House is at pres-. ent the most profitable piece of property belonging to ttt Fair estate. ATTAR OF ROSES. V Six Billion Dniuask Bads Gathered 'Every Year to Make It. . J. London Public Opinion. Since the emancipation of the Balkan provinces the manufacture of attar of roses has become a great industry in Bulgaria, and has been taken up. on a large scale in Germany. We have all been accustomed to connect the fabrication of attar of roses with Persia and Syria, and even now India and Constantinople furnish probably the largest markets for it; but, although the art of making It was discovered in Persia, the manufacture has now nearly or. quite died out, and -the center of the business is now the country about Kazanlik, on the south slope of the Balkans, close to the Shipka, or Wild Rose Pass, famous in the history of the "Russo-Turktsh war. . The rose-growing belt is situated at an average altitude of 1.000 feet above the sea. and extends to a length of about seventy miles, with an average breadth of ten miles. On this ground are - produced annually "from 5,000,000,000 to 6,000,000,000 rose blossoms. The number of varieties . cultivated is very small. Ninety per cent, of ' all the blossoms are taken from a bushy variety Rose Damascena.. or damask rose, known to our gardeners mainly as -the ancestor from which the infinite variety of hybrid perpetual roses derive a large part of their blood. Of the remaining 10 per cent, a part are gathered from the white musk rose, which- is -frequently planted as a hedge around the fields of pink Damascena, while the rest are -furnished by a dark-red variety of Damascena. Other sorts of roses have been tried, but some yield no attar at alt, and others give an essence having the purfume of violets, -or pineapples, or hyacinth, rather than of roses. : German Public Kitchens. " Lend a Hand Magazine. 1 f; It is ; now nearly thirty years since the first pubiie kitchen for working people, was established in Germany. Three thousand two hundred and fifty dollars was raised by subscription at first and a local committee took charge of-the work, which has extended rapidly. , For a sum varying from Z.i& 6 cents, a. workingman can now obtain ah excellent meal. A bowl of good, substantial German soup costs but 4 cents, and bread, vegetables and even pudding can be bought for a fraction of a cent esch. j A central council now controls the entire work, which consists of many kitchens in various parts of the city. Fair wages are paid, old servants -pensioned, and yet there is each year a reserve fund -toward opening new kitchens. - - Everything is done on the most economical plan, while giving a large amount of comforj. The dining-rooms will seat three to foor hundred men - each, and are warm any light. Newspapers arc also provided, anT the patrons are w fell cared for iTurlnj

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Filtrated from, an Attack La Grippe, is Restored to Health. A Remedy That Glres I4fe and Vigor to tlio Entire System. Tliorntown, Ind., April 2, 1894. Lyon Medicine Co., Indianapolis, Ind : My experience with Loyn'a Seven Wonders justifies me in saying that it is a health restorer of the highest degree. Last January, after having la grippe, I was left in that weakened condition which so commonly followed that disease. After trying Numerous Remedies Without Getting Any Relief, ' I commenced taking Lyon's Seven Wonders, one after each meal, and the third box had Completely Restored My Health. I now feel better than I have for years. This remedy does certainly give new life and , , Vigor to the Entire System. I can chsrfully recommend it? Yours truli W. C. BURR, LYON'S SEVEN WONDERS Are put up in concentrated form, sixty doses in a box; (twenty days' treatment); price 1.00 a box, or six for QS.OO. Sent prepaid on receipt of price to any part of the United States or Canada. For sale by all druggists. THE LYON MEDICINE CO., Ikdiakapolis, Im EDUCATIONAL. BBYANT & STHATTON Indianapolis P USINESS UlIlVERSIT V When Bide.. TEMPORARILY REMOVED to N. K corner of Ohio and Delaware streets, Gaston Block. Spacious, light rooms. Large faculty. Full attendance. Day and Night School. Enter now. Call Tel. 499, or writa for particulars. ELI F. BROWN, Superintendent; E. J. HELB, Proprietor. DENTISTS. DENTIST E. E. REESE East Ohio St.. bet. Meridian and Pennsylvania. OPTICIANS. VL EAST MARKET ST1 INDIAMP0US-'ND.' DAY Richard Day died Feb. 7 at Athens, Ga. ' PANTZKR F. Will, at Colorado Springs, age twenty-eight years, died Feb 7. Funeral at Sheboygan, Wis. BELLIS Fannie, wife of John R. Bellis, died Saturday, ' Feb. 9. Funeral from. St. Patrick's Church Monday at 2 p. m. MIISGROVE Feb. 8, at 6 p. "m.. Olive Biddle Musgrove. Funeral Sunday at 1:30, r from residence of her .daughter, 24 Easternavenue. ML?RRAY Ralph D., son of Samuel J. and Annie E. Murray, Friday morning, aged three years and six months: Cincinnati pa- .' pers please copVt . - NACHTRIEB Rev. Gottlieb Nachtrieb, at' New Palestine, Ind., Feb. 7. Funeral Monday, Feb. 11, at 1:30 p. m., at First German M. E. Church, corner New York and New ' Jersey streets. .Friends invited. --. B BRENNAN The funeral of Mrs. E. J. Brennan, wife of Dr K. J. Brennan, will occur Monday morning, at 9 o'clock, at: the residence, 240 North " Capitol avenue, and will leave Sts. Peter and Paul's Church, on North Meridian,, at 9:30. v BILTIMIER The funeral- of Henry A : Biltimier will take place Sunday, Feb. 10 at 1:30 p. m., at his late residence, 32tt East: Vermont street, at 2 o'clock, . at First Ger-; man M. E. Church, corner of .New Jersey and New York streets. ; Friends invited. cnrncii Notices. Baptist. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH-Northeast cor-: , ner New York and Pennsylvania streets : Rev. D. J. Ellison pastor. Preaching by -the pastor at 10:43 a. m., subject, -'An' Outlook Beyond; M 7:30 p. m., subject. ; "The Pleadings, of Brotherhood." Baptism! , at the" evening service.-'" Sunday school , ,9:30 a. ro.; Junior BT Y. P. U., 3 p. m.-' young people's meeting,- 6:30 p. m: In-4 quiry meeting,-- Monday i evening. Regularprayer and conference meeting Thursday , evening. Pastor and people extend a cor-' dial invitation tt ail the services. Muic for to-day: Morning-Te Deum. Kotsch-' mer. choir; quartet, selected. Evening,v IJoyd's Te Deum. choir; "Jesus, Lover of; My Soul," Williams, quartet. - ' .". ,.y--,i LOST Square pocketbook in B.wen-Mer- 1 ii. o umm i r, ,11(J irfSHie. T inder please leave iwcketbook at Donlson Hotel and keep money. t ; ! vvFOR SALE Two Arctic Ice Machines with combined, capacity of 20 tons per dav terras reasonable. Address Tfrpp 4 Inly -E 15RKW1NG ;?Sfc FORRiaT. FOR RENT Furnished front rwm; ' f'ase"-" bath,, board. 2a West Vermont. ' ANNOUNCHM nXTJ!j "Tietlo ), :ii -prevent snd cvre raratyr'. M

A Grand Medicine.

So Says Mrs. Cynthia Ransom, Trbor Is Sef eaty-fsur Tears old. ' Her Appetite Iifrtsitd Wondr fully, sin Sne Has Gained In Fiesta. St. Joseph, Mich., May , 1894. i Lyon Medicine Co., Indianapolis, Ind.: " -1 wish to congratulate you on being in poeses ion of such a grand medicine as Lyon's Seren Wonders. I was in very poor health lor a lonf time ; Could Eat Ma Solid rood and scarcely anything else ; had no appetite, but a continued distress in my stomacu, and wa very poor In flesh. Your remedy being recommended by one who had used them, I got a box of same, andean cheerfully and gladly say, after using them, The Distress In My Stomatcl Entirely Ceasod, my appetite Increased wonderfully, and I gained in flesh very perceptibly. I am a lady seventy-four years of age, and can say that " I-y-" on's Seven Wonders ". has given me A New tease on Life. I feel grateful to you and your remedy. I does more than you claim for it, and no words of praise can do it justice. ; - Gratefully yours, , . - MRS. CYNTHIA RANSOM. ' EYOX'S SETEX Tt'OHDEBS Are put up in concentrated form, sixty doses in a box (twenty days' treatment); price ftl.OOabox, or six for $5.00. Sent prepaid on receipt of price to any part of the United States or Canada. For sale by all druggists. THE LYON MEDICINE CO., - . Indianapolis, ind. WANTEP-ACEXTS. WANTED AGENTS One earned $1,200; several over- $1,000 in 1894. Free prepaid outfit to pushing honest men. P. O. 1371, New York, N. Y. : WAN T E D AGENTS Experienced build-, ing and loan men can rind good opening, and double their present pay. Address WHEELER & CO., 10 E. 14th St.. .New York. - ' WANTED Lady agents to sell the best wearing and best selling corset on earth The Hygeia. For all particulars, writ " THE WESTERN CORSET COMPANY. St. Louis, Mo. WANTED Salesmen wanted; $5 a day. No deliveries or collections. Costly outfit free. Side line or exclusive. Address MANUFACTURERS, 3341 Jdarket street, Philadelphia. Pa. WANtUd GINGER AND SNAP A lady possessing these qualifications to represent us in every county. - New and nivel - necessity. Send stamp. Salary or commisslon. NYE & DE PUY. Warsaw. Ind. WANTED Ladies and gentlemen to canvass this city. Latest books; new plan. Also, general agents in everv State.' E. J. HEEB & COMPANY, Publishers, Gaston Block, 113 East Ohio street. Indianapolis. WANTED Agents to sell Sash Locks and . . Door Holders. Sample Sash Lock free by mail for 2c stamp. Best sellers ever invented. Beats weights. $12 a day. Write quick. BROHARD & CO., Box 64, Philadelphia. . : WANTED Educated young ladies . and others having, spare time for light work at home. Permanent. No canvassing. No fake. Inclose 5e stamp for all necessarv to begin. CHICAGO PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU, ZH La Salle street Chicago. WANTED Agents. Why do people complain of hard times when any woman or man can make from $5 to $10 a day easily. All have heard of the wonderful success of the Climax Dish "Washer; yet many are apt to think they can't make money selling it, but any one can make money, because every family " wants one. One agent has made $178.36 in the last thre months, after paying all expenses and attending to regular business besides. You don't have to canvass; as soon as people know you have it for sale tney send for a Dish Washer. Address the CLIMAX MANUFACTURING COMPANY, 45 Starr avenue, Columbus, O.,' for particulars. . . ,, . , ;. , , v 1 z3 "WANTED Men to distribute circulars, pamphlets and other advertising matter; cash paid; inclose stamp and reference. ' A. A. A., Drawer 157t,- Philadelphia, Pa. FQR 8ALE-rtKAli ESTATE. FOR SALE Central California fruit lands in famous Santa Clara valley, seventy-flvn miles south of San Francisco: onlv three miles from Gilroy (population 3,500); no experiment; near bearing orchards, where irrigation is unnecessary. Price. $IC0 and $125 per acre; foot -hill 3 land, $40 to $60. : Terms easy. Next excursion Feb. 19,. free to porchasers. Full particulars by ad- . dressing SETH RIFORD, 1102 Security Building, Chicago. BUSINESS CHANCE-MONEY HERE' ; Patent for Corn Shocker. Michigan, $1,- ' Indiana, $3,000; Illinois, $8,000; Ohio. $7,000. Part payment good residence prop- - ertles in manufacturing cities. - A. N. RUSSELL. Mound Valley, Kan. riXANCIAL. V50?, : oa. mortgages. C. F. ,9 ii,a-bL aiarKet srreet. LOANS Money on watches, diamouas,' ' 1, Wr,,tllout Publicity. CITY LOAN OFFICE. 57 West Washington street. MONEV TO LOAN-We have pienty of per cent, money to Joan on Indiana farms C, N. WILLIAMS & CO.. Crawfordsville, Ind. LOANS 6 per tent, money on improved ; real estate in this city only. (No loans wiado outside. Bo.Tower has tho privilege or prepayment semi-annually. No ' Reasonable fees. JOHN S. SPANN & CO.. 86 East Market. 10 MUSIC O HOUSE "wululJ' A mcuk r- . '

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