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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1897. LINCOLN'S LIFE AND ITS LESSON Fame of the Great Ameri- can Is the Heritage of His Countrymen. Patriotic Words of Chauncay M. Black, National President of Democratic Clubs. A Letter From Frcdorick D. Grant. | Certificates of Membership Will Be Ready Next Week. | | e certificates of membership in the | oln Monument League will be ready ¢ rext week. The design is artistic beautiful. The certificates will be put | up in books of fifty. Persons wishing to become mem the league may join by paying into the fund twenty-five cents n return for this payment they get one of the above-mentioned cer- tificates. W. W. Stone, president of 1l commence sending out rs. The following circu- ssued for the guidance of | April 15, 1897. P Is of the Public Schools of San | AND GENTLEM are receive and distribute rculars of the Lin- | 1 to receive con- ildren for that purpose. sc0—LADIES CHARLES L. BARRINGTON, sident Board of Education. | ing men of the country tone appealed for support | rise was General Chauncey | sut of the Association of United States. | he letter addressed | ponse: | 0. March 27, 1897. President Democratic | shington, D. C.— | but'ns slight per- reputation es | with any y have organ- gue. We pro- subscription for ahnm Lincoln to be erected upplemental to the e monument is u oin day” in the | y and officially, | ihe memory of riy of the A rv of his life and bis broad patriot- determination 10 preserve the fend the flug, are all mod: e youth of the 1at on the Fridny preceding { this yesr the schools of the evote & east of the idren on matiers connected for the preservation of the | 1 as {0 the most appro- | ire celebration of the National advisory ¥ | be to consult on | 10 the end that & 1on may be ascer- | a s of publicopt are in_a position to fon. Your position, n, your patriotism will pose to lift Lincoin Day in ae of the narrow limiis of it a patriotic, | rom you at your early con- nisnce, I remain yours sincerely, W zue. , 1897.. . W. Stone Esq.— 1 have your rof March 27. coln’s fame is the age of ail his countrymen, and every American ought o feet an equal interestin it. | No nonors 100 great can be pald to his mem- | ory, and if the use of my name s one of the embers of the board mentioned by you wiil t in the erection of an appropriate monu- at the Golden Gate Fark I will be save you employ it, and proud to be remotely connected with the enter- 1 remain very truly yours, CHAUNCEY F. BLACK, . Grant, son of the illus- Grant, acknowledged the re. of the letter sent to him in a com- ceipt munication as follows: FREDERICK D. GRANT, Commissioner. POLICE DEPARTMENT OF CITY OF NEW YORK,, Avril 9, 1897, W. W. Stone, Esq., 522 Haight street, San Fran- ¥ DEAR SIE: I hasten 1o acknowledge eceipt of your letter of April 2and in sympathize greatly with the object of your work I am un- able at the present time to devote the atten- sary to developinterest in the league E overwhelmed with my o Jittle or no time for anything else now. Wishing you success in your patriotic enterprise, 1 beg you will be. lieve me, very truly yours, FREDERICK D. GRANT. Next Wednesday a committee of the Monument League will visit Salinas and present the monument plan to the Depart- ment Encampment of the Grana Army of the Republic. ART ON MARKET STREET. The Native Sons’ fountain—in comm into the Union—will very soon bs by far th | monumental feature of San Franciseo. G farket and Mason streets on or about May propriately dedicated on Admission day, S The fountain will in a direct way be the mute sculptor, and of the financial Mayor Phelan, who will pay the many tho in a general wav over a year ago when the enterprise became news. proved by Mr. Phelan was the fifteenth submitted to him by Mr. Tilden. the sculptor has been busy with the model especially that of the young miner. In th right hand, while his outstretched left flu way. The accompanying picture is from re | model as it stood a few days ago in Titden’ shown is now at a local foundry being cast emoration_of the admission of California e most noticeable and prominently placed round for its foundation will be broken at 1and the completed creation will be ap- ember 9. a creation of the genius of Douglas Tilden, ability, public spirit and critical taste of usands invotved. The design was pictured The design ap- Since then ing and has somewhat modified the desien, e first design the miner bore toe lag in the ng out his hat in a triumphant and spirited cent photograph, and shows a portion of the s studio with tue artist at work. Thestatue in bronze. The flag has been Iransferred to the other hand, the hat is on the head and the right band holds a shouldered pick. The miner is here pictured as he will appe Market street for generations._ ar to the thousands who will daily throng During an interview with Mr. Tilden yesterday, carried on by means of a pencil and tablet, the sculptor wrote concerning this change: “The outstretching of fwo arms at the tor’s pointof view. ! stretched the other should be doubied up. one.” ame tinie is not agreeable from a sculp- The rule of composition rather demands that if one arm is out- Of course, that rule is not an ironciad ‘Anyway, it is settled that the bronze young miner of heroic sizs shall proclaim the glory of statehood with hat and pick. The shaft will bear on its top a nautical creation symbolizing the Genius of History, and this will be ready for the foundry in six weeks. This handsome and impressive monumental fountain will occupy a space fourteen feet square at the corner staved, intruding itself mainly into Market street close to the sidewalk at the point of the Turk-street gore. It will rise to & height of thirty-five feet. It wiil be a worthv jewel for the City to wear, and it will be the only one of the sori until the inchoate Donahue fountain takes tangible form at Battery and Market streets. HOW THE OHINOOK COMES. Even the Cattle in Montana Recogoize the First Breath of the Wind. Picture to yourself a wild waste of snow, wind-beaten and blizzard-furrowed until the vast expanse represents a billowy white ses. The frizid air, blowing Laif a gale, is filled with needlelike snow and ice crystals which sting the flesh like the bites of poisonous insects, and sift through the finest crevices. The sun, low down in the southern horizon, looks like a frozen globe, with halves, crescents and brighit prismatic bars encircling it. Greac herds of range cattle, which roam NEW TO-DAY. ¥ —Extracted WITHOUT PAIN. —Filled WITHOUT PAIN. —Crowned WITHOUT PAIN. —Bridge Work WITHOUT PAIN, These are the only dental parlors in San Francisco that have the patent appliances and ingredients to extract, fill or apply gold crowns | and porcelain crowns undetectable for ten years, without the least particle of pain. with cheap dental establishments, but with first-class dentists at prices | from natural teeth and warranted We are not competing less than half those charged by them. For the purpose of at once springing into prominence, until May 20 we will make Full Set of Teeth for. silver Filling Gold Fillings. Cleaning Teeoth . . Ail Arilficial Sets of Teeth are made by dentists of twenty years' experience and & perfect it guar- anteed. By leaving order for Teeth In the morning you can get them the same das. NO CHARGE for Extraciing Teeth when piates are ordered. ‘Work done well at night as by daylight by the modern electrical de- vices used here. DR VAN VROOM and his skilled staff of operators are in con- stant attendance. @ We will give $500.00 for any Dentist who will duplicate our Crown or Bridge Work. VAN VROOM DENTAL PARLORS, 997 Market Street. Three skilled opcrators. Lady attendants, German and French spoken. Open Evenings till 8. Sundays, 9 till 12 Al surgical work done by G. W. Willlamion, M.D, ! 1at will and thrive on the nutritious grasses indigenous to the northern stope, wander aimlessly here and there, or more frequently drift with the wind in the vain attempts to find food and shelter, moan- ing in distress from cold and hunger, i their noses hung with bloody icicles. their legs galled and bleeding from | treaking the hard snow crust as they travel—tliey appeal to the hardest heart or pty. It is sure death for human engs 10 be caught out in one of these awiul bhizzards, with the temperature down to thirty or fifty degrees below zero, unless rescue is speedy. Yet such con- ditions frequently exist in this latitude, they did for filteen days in November, 1896, when it seemed as if the elements had conspired to bring about anotter ice age and snnihilate every living thing Would the “'chinook’’ never come? The wind veered and _backed, now howling as if in derision, and anon b>coming calm as if in contempiation of the desolation on the face of nature, while the poor dumb animals continued their ceaseless tramp, | erying with pain and starvation. At I on December 1, at about the hour of sun- set, there was a change which experienced plainsmen interpreted as favorable to the coming of the warm southwest wind. At sanset the temperature was only 13 deg., the airccarcely in motion, but vccasionaily secming to descend from overhead. Over the mountains in_ the southwesta great bank of black ciouds hung, dark and awe- some, whose wide expanse was unbrol by line or break; only at the upper edge the curled and :errated clond, blown into tatters by wind. was seen to be the ad- vance courier of the iong-prayed for *‘chi- nook.” “How eagerly we watched its ap- proach! _How we strained our hearing for the | first welcome sight of the gentie breath ! | But it was not until 11:35 P. M. that the ylinu influence was feit. Kirst, puff of hear, summer-like in comparison with | what had existed for two weeks, and we | ran to our instrument shelter to observe the temperature. Up goes the mercury, 34 deg. in seven minutes. Now the wind Lias come with a twenty-five mile velocity. Now the cattle stop traveling, and with muzzles turned toward the wind, low with satisfaction. eary with two weeks' standing on their feet they lie down in the snow, for they know that their salvation has come; that now their bodies will not freeze to the ground. Tne wind increases in strength and warmth; it blows now in one steady roar; the temperature has riren to 38 degrees, the great expanse of snow, 30 inches deep on a level, is becoming damp and honey- combed by the hot wind, and we retire satisfied that the ‘‘chinook” is a genuine and lasting one. Twelve hours afterward there are bare brown hills everywhere; the p covered with floods of water. days the wind will evapo 8t- ure and the roads will be dry and bard. —United States Weather Review, WRECKAGE THAT HOLDS A SECRET Part of a Ship’s Deckhouse Adrift Off Crescent City. Ship-Owners Co:jecturing as to What Coaster It Came From. A Scries of Raids on British Ships in Sausalito Bay Hes Paid the Thieves Well. The Pacific Coast Steamship Company’s Walla Walla arrived from Puget Sound ports yesterday. It was a fair-weather passage all the way, buton occasions the foz was anusually heavy. Whnen sixteen miles west of Crescent City a small quan- tity of wreckage was run into. “There were eight or ten boards joined together,’’ saia Captain Wallace yester- day, “‘and a quantity of moldings. They looked like the remains of a ship’s deck- house, and I suppose tnat some coaster suffered during the recent storms. Both boards and moldings were painted white.’’ Shipping men connect the wreckage with the missing Samaria, but it is doubt- ful whether the wreckage could be from that vessel, as the Walla Walla was away out of the course usually taken by sailing vessels. The wreck of the steamer Yaquina has been abandoned. Captain C. Miner Good- all is of the opinion that the vessel cannot be raised, so he ordered the tug Vigilant back to San Francisco. The wincbes and everything movable will be removed and then the wreck will be either blown up or removed pescemeal. The engines and boilers would cost more than they are worth 10 remove, 8o they will go to pieces with the hull. Tne Pacific Coast Steamship Company’s Orizaba left Enscnada at10A. M. yester- day and will be due here early to-morrow. She hasa large consignment of bullion aboard and will go to the Selby Smelting Works after landing ber passengers. The Alaska Commercial Company’s Dora that went on the rocks a month ago has been repaired and will only be a few aays iate on her reguiar run. She will leave on about May 6 from Sitka, connect- ipg with Pacific Coast Steamship Com- pany’s steamers from Puget Sound. Tae | Dora carries passengers_and merchanaise to Cooks Inlet and the Yukon. Gligo Radovich, who keeps a restaurant at 19 Bryant street, and Thomas Meechan | and Eugene Eagan, two yoang hoodlums, | aged 20 years, had & liyely time of it yes- | terday. ~ Kadovich had some wine barrels on the sidewalk drying, when the two | 1ads came along and staried rolling them away. The restaurant man gave chase and u free fight ensued. The hoodlums were joined by two companions. and Radovich was getting the worst of it, when a teamster took a hand in the melee. Soon afterward Officer Ciifford appeared on the s.ene, and he got into the rough and tumble. The fight was a running one and lasted from Folsom street to Main, where two of the boys made their escape, and Meehan and Eagan were arrested and_locked up in the Harbor police station. Radovich 1s nurs- ing & sore head, and says he was struck with a_buugstarter during the scrim- mage. In consequence Meehan and Eagan were charged with assault with a ueadly weapon. Bay pirates have been at work in Sausa- lito among the British suipping of late. The wife of Captain Pearce of the British ship Moreton mourns the loss of an entire outfit. All she saved from the raid was one stocking which she had around ber weck to cure a sore turoat. Captain Bor- | land of the Kensington lost his vest and trousers and $5 in cash, while Captain Fraser of the Bnaigow Kept his clothing but lost §15 and a goid watch. The Pegasus was ransacked, but the noise the thieves made awoke Captain Molton and he called out, frighiening the robbers away. The Fairport was next visited, but Mrs. Captain Smith was suffering from neuralgia, and twice she awakened her husband {0 see what was going on. The second time he went on deck Captain Smith saw a boat puiling away and fired his pistol in the air to attract attention, but noibing came of it. Two men and two women are suspected ol the thievery, and officers from San Francisco and Sausalito are on their track. THE BIG TOURNAMENT Getting the Grounds at the Presidio Ready for the Athletic Ev:nts, A Small Camp on the Parade Grcund. Men Who Will Take Part in the Contests Out for Practice. Yesterday was a busy day at the Pre- sidio. On every side there was evidence of preparation for the grand military tour- nament that will begin to-morrow and continue probably for four days. On the western end of the parade ground there are a number of snow white tents as quarters for the men from the barracks at San Diego and Benicia, who have been selected to take partin the contests ana the site on which they have been pitched has thejappearance of a miniature camp. The men were forced to pitch tents, as there was not enough room for them in the barracks. All day yesterday there wasa force of men at work on the grand stand putting on the finishing touches (0 have it ready for the great crowds that will want to ob- tain seats to watch the many events that are to be presented each day. In addition to the men a. work on the rand stand there were squads of men in En:tamnz suits at work laying out the grounds on which the events are to take place, the work being directed by Captain Alexander Rodgers, kourth Cavalry, di- rector-general of the games and senior officer in charg d his_assistants, Sec- ond Lieutenant Thales, L. Ames, Third Artillery, ana Second Lieutenant Dennis Nolan, First Infantry. Then there were teamsters with wagons and men following them .removing the earth which had been removed in the lev- eling of the ground, and these were fol- lowed by teams hauling heavy rollersthat flat as a billiard tions 10 the men in the several con:ests. On anotber part of the parad there was much sctivity, for t! number of teams that will enter into the contests that were practicing. There was fence-scaling by men wearing ali their acouterments, such as they would have on the field in an active engagement. A full belt of cartridges, blanket roll, haver- sack, canteen, cup and rifle, the whole ag- gregating fifty-two pounds’ weight, is what the men carried in performing the feat of scaling perpendicular fence at two heights—twelve and fifteen feet—and getting ready to shoot at the supposed enemy in less than a minute if possibla. Others were practicing mounted tug-of- war. In thisthe men were strong and willing, but the exercise was new to the horses,’and they evidently did not under- stand what was wanted of them, for they did not seem to mind their riders. Daring several trials a number >f the riders who bad a “lead-pipe cinch’ on the rope were unhorsed because they could not make their borses mind. Then there were oth- ers who took points in the art of tugging on the cieated boards. A scratch ten ona side puiled for two minutes, but neither side pulled the handkerchief over the center line. These men were not jock- eying, but were pulling for all they could, consequently neither side gained an ad- vantage. In various partsof the field thera were aggregations of hurdles, brush fences, gates, ‘‘obstructions’” of different kinds, and various articles that will be used in the carrying out of the several events. The gzn:es will be called about 1 o’clock in'the afternoon, and the fifty-two events thatare slated will be called in the order the committee has arranged them, untit all have been gone through. To-morrow it is expected there will be a broadsword centest, tug-of-war, wall-scaling, mounted cartridze race, mounted gymnastics, spare-wheel race, hasty intrenchment and other events, A Discovery of Greatest Importance in the Eiectrical World The current issue of the Electrical Re- view contains the announcement of a dis- covsry in the art of casting copver. Cop- per is ordinarily cast by the use of alloys. Itis stated that the new metal, which is known as M. B. copper, is cast pure. Foundrymen have heretofore considerea this an impossibility. It is also stated that the new metal pos- 4 per cent, and that a much higher per- centage of elasticity has been developed, and that the new metal hasa conductivity of 95 per cent as compared with the best rolled copper. This will cause distinct changes in the building of dynamos, motors, raiiway and telegraphic_apparatus, because the new copver is believed 1o carry the same amount of current with one-third the amount of metal. Wire made of it will have greater strength and conductivity than the ordinary copper wire. Mr. Edison says he accounts for the evident change in the atomic structure of the metal by the theory that the shape of the crystais has been sitered so that their lines are parallel, and ihat the molecules are thus brought closer together and into more intimate contact with each other. It is understood that Mr. Edison is inter- ested in the development of this metal, and that it will be manulactured under his supervision at his Menlo Park works. —New York Su “I have called, sir, to collect the insur ance on my late husband’s life.” “Let me see; what was your husband’s business?” “He was a newspaper correspondent with the Cuban arm “Call again in land Plain Dealer. sesses an additional tensile strength of | CHIRLES LIOIS' WS AND ETHODS The Biggest Merchant Tailoring Business in San Fran- cisco Built Up By Truth-Telling and Square Dealing. GUARANTEES 'HAT GUARANTEE Pric>s Are the Lowest, Quality the Best. It pays to be well dressed. That isn’t exactly the way Shakespeare put it, but thatis what he meant when he wrote, ‘““fhe apparel oft proclaims the man.” Shakespeare had a level head and could give more good advice than any man that ever lived. When you go to size up a man you look at his clothes as well as his physiognomy. And the man who is try ing to figure out what sort of a fellow you are aces the same thing with you, Good clothes have gained many a man a good position, and the lack of them haslost many a man the best chance he ever bad. Other things being equal, the man who is pest dressed gets the best place every time. Now, in these days it is not enough that a man’s ciothes should be of good mate- rial. That may suflice in Earope, but it won’t go here. The man whose coat sooner or later has to drop out of the pro- | cession of business competition. The clothes must fit to make ihe proper im- pression. There are many people who are trying to persuade their fellow mortals that a ready-made suit fits as well as a suit made to order. But they are finding out, as Abraham Lincoln said: *'You can’t fool all of the people all of the time."” They Cost No More. No man, uniess he be an idiot, would one made to measure—that is, one made to fit him—provided he could get it at the same cost. But he can get it at the same cosi—he can get a suit that will it him for no more money than he would have to pay a ready-made clothier for a suit that doesn’t fit him, Charles Lyona is the man who will make it for him, How He Does It, | Naturaily, though, if you have been in the habit of patronizing a so-called “fash- | is that Lyons can’ double disconnt him in the matter of prices while sacrificing noth- ing in the quality of the materials fur- ten years,ma’am’ —Cleve- | nished, the excellence of the workman- | | shipand the exactitude of the fit. Buta NEW 7TO-DAY. bangs on him like a shirt on a bean pole | choose & ready-made suit in preference to | [ lonable_tailor,” you must wonder how it little reflection” will convince you that it is not quite so wonderiul as it seems. Where your fashionable tailor sells one suit Lyons selis 8 thousand. And when it comes to prices Lyons is away below the high-priced tailors, and he also beats th’ manuracturers who employ sweaters al hollow. : Wholesale warehouse and main store, 721 Market street, in the Bancroft puild- ing. Branches, 1212-1214 Market sireet, between Taylor and Jones, and 302hnr.ny street, corner Bush. - ———— MR. RUST GETS A LETTER. It Is Somewhat Delayed Because Ad- dressed Under His Christinn Name. As curious a letter as has been received in Kansas City for many mon:hs reached the postoflice yesterday morning, and after a great display of learning on the | part of some of the clerks, it was finally delivered to the man for wiom it was in- tended. The distribution clerk, who first got hold of the letter, looked at it in de- spair. It was plainiy evident that the writer of the letter had been burning the midnight oil in an attempt to baffle tne postoftice force. % The first line contained the letters *J. 8. FE203.” The letters were plain enough, but what did they mean? The next line began with a lerge A, then there was a careully executed drawing of what had the appearance of a barber’s comb, then a small a, and finally a representation of a house, drawn by one whose early educa- tion had been sadly neglected. What should have been the third line of the address was in the shape of a more or less sccurate map of Kansas City, showing the junciion and the streets in that vi- cinity. The last line was another map, showing the boundaries of the State of | Missouri. | It was plain enough that the letter was | for some one who lived in the State of Missour: and in Kansas City. Itdid not take a preal stretcn of 1magination to dis- cover that the comb and the sketch of a house had some vague reference to the Acoma builaing. So far it was easy sail- [ing. But who was ihe mysterious ‘‘J. §. Atter puzzling his brain for a long time without any good result, the clerk took the letter to Nixie Clerk Canfield, who is supposed to be able to guessall sorts of conundrums. “1 can tell you a part of it,” said he. I can tell you that 'FE203’ are the chemi- cai symbols for ferric oxide. Now, if you | can find out who he is you are all right.” | "Still the aistributing clerk was unable | to solve the question. He went atout | asking every one what he knew about fer- ric oxide. He finally encountered one man who was more of a chemist than the others, and he imparted to him the infor- mation that ferric oxide in common par- lance is called “‘rust.” That is how J. S. Rust received the let- ter over which his friend in Concevtion, Mo., had spent so much time,—Kansas City Times. | A hou-ehold carboniser has been de- vised an. is manufactured by a construc- tion company of New York. The garbage is burned to charcoal in aretort inserted in the kitchen stove pipe, or into an en- | larged section of it. It issaid there is not | the least smell from it, and that the char- | coal can be used for kindling the fire. DR. §A world. 'S BLECTRIC BELT L BELT G RRSVEL Free Electric Suspensory for Men With Each Belt. THIS IS DR. SANDEN’S LATEST IMPROVEMENT IN HIS WORLD-FAMOUS ELECTRIC BELT. perfect as science and money can make it. Itis as near This is a means of curing disease which is equaled by no other treatment in the Nor is this all. It is the result of thirty years of close application to dne hobby—one glorious desire to-invent and perfect an appliance which will, without inconvenience, cure humanity of the serious ills which afflict it—and that all this study, this experimenting and self-sacrifice on the part of Dr. Sanden is repaid can be seen from the thousands of grateful voices which are raised in thanksgivings to the man who has restored to their owners health and happiness. enjoys to-day the largest sale of all the remedies in the world for the cure of nervous and chronic diseases. or appliance approaches it in point of numbers in use nor in its curative effects. It Has Made a Wonderful Record. People who are sick and have tried so many different remedies are loth to pick up with anything new. And having so fre- quently heard of the poor results derived from the use of the cheap class of electric appliances which are peddled on the streets, they perhaps give no heed to the announcement that Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt will cure. Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt No other remedy But time and proof will remove these obstacles, and Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt is here to stay. It is bringing about a period of popular evolution in the ways and means of doctoring one’s self. A few years ago Dr. Sanden’s Belt was little known in San Francisco, and people who had tried all the quacks who infest the City without getting relief from their troubles scoffed at this new remedy, but as cure after cure was reported day after day, as men of prominence gave testimony to their recovery of health, and finally, as the medical, profession, after a fair test, were forced to acknowledge it a wonderful appliance, the popular education came about, and to-day there are 1000 cures of Nervous Complaints, Rheumatism, Kidney, Liver and Stomach Troubles and many forms of weakness, This is no toy. will. +1 feel altogetner a different man. well man. My emissions are stopped and Shasta, Cal. €ven a crutcl or a cane. Reno, Nev. street, San Francisco, Cal. his patients. what the effect of his Belt will be Consuitation and examination free. by mail, free. Call or address “Your Belt has done mo a grent deal of good. I have not had an ach has had rheumatism for years and it has done her lots of good. There is no take $50 for mine.”’—George Madsell, box 91, Milpitas, Cal. “ purchased your Beit for sexual weakness and piin in the back. By its use and the pain is all gone. I would not part with my Belt One of the reasons for the great success of Dr. In no case will a Belt be apolied where it ca rather than sell one where it will do no good. If you feel that you need help call on him and he will tell SANDEN ELECT 832 Market Street, Opposite Palace Hotel, Office Hours, 8 A. M. to 8:30 P. M.; Los Angeles Office, 204 South Broadway. Portland, or., NOTE—Make no mistake In the number—632 Marke! 1 feel k I was so badly paralyzed. and exp:ct to be entirely cured $o0n."”—George F. Bliss, box 191, 1or anything if I could not get accomplished within 100 miles of San Francisco during the last six months by Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt. You Must Use It. It is a powerful Electric Belt, giving a continuous stream It ismostly worn at night, while you sleep, and its life-givi saturated with new vital force in the morning. Its power is felt as soon as applied, It has improvements that are possessed by no other electric appliance. The following are extracts from letters recently received: I have 1 t of electricity into the body for hours ata time. ing currents fill your system with new vigor, so that you wake up and can be made miM or strong at worn your Belt thirty davsand 1f I improve as much next month I shall 50 bright and fresh that I am more thun pleased with the Belt."J. D, aip':;n., “When I first put your Belt on four months ago I could not wal I am improving all the time, Now I can walk a mile without e or a pain sincs I commenced to wear it. My wife qusstion about the merits of your Belt. I would not my sexual powers are completely restored, omar.P'—cuuln Fon?en. 310 Twelfth. A Doctor’s Advice. Sanden, with his thirty years of ¢ . Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt is the pe Before applying the Belt every patient is given a thorough examinati of the complaint, and during the treatment Dr. Sanden spares no pains to cause ination is of great value to the patient, and Dr. rsonal attention which Dr. Sanden gives to on, free of charge, to determine the nature a quick and permanent cure. mediaml experience, is qualified to, say frankly 0 - = 3 % nnot do 2 s s vays d with his patients on the principle that one cure is the means of selling twenty more Begltosu,da'nds hDer psr:f"ei;nnl(‘yiat;;h;:fi sa fi:}: you frankly whether there i in his Electric Belt/ If you cannot call send for his late illustrated book, s"?'h?:lge(llpl;g;ez ‘::l; "l:flkelns.” Seec“{l:ealilfi}, RIC CO, This free exam- San Francisco, Cal. Sunday, 10 to 1. 253 Washington St. Denver, Colo., 933 Sixteenth St. t Street. i }!\ L p