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KOREA CARRIES RAILROAD EQUIPMENT FOR'JAPAN AS PART OF LARGE CARGO ™t rebis coe cioe - = PN for Far East With Many Passengers, Among Whom Are Two |5i mhomas i Brown. its commander. Bridal Couples Who Are Made Targets for Rice. Bombardment isuea. . tons of tons dre for nese consignment con- aipment and The cargo THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 17, 1902, . Y] ENIGHTS TEMPLAR WILL 4 ===161000 T0 WEAK MEN! 1 Will Pay It to Any Man Suffering From Rheumatism, Lame-Back, Varicocele, Weakness and Waste of Power, If I Cannot Cure Him Quickly and Forever by the Grand Product of Nature, Dr. McLaugh- Next Thi 7 evening in the Me- tendered by No. 1, Knights Templar, to Eminent More than 5000 invitations have been There will be a review of the en- acific Mail Steamship Company’s Big Liner Takes Departure |chenics pavi ,,m';f"c‘;';;‘m‘;fi},,‘;;g ‘. H =¥ | tire commandery in full Templa: uni- lin’s Electric Belt. Send for the Free Book. form, an exhibition by California's famous drill corps under command of | Captain R. P. Hurlburt, who led the Wear It While You Sleep. Look Manly. Feel Manly. Be Manly. | same corps to victory at Loulsville in | | | |1901. There will also be a cholce pro. 1 gramme of muslc, instrumental and | | | | 1 | | vocal, after which there will bz a ball —_———— Police in Contempt. | The contempt proceedings mlnst,i i Chief Wittman and Captain Duke for | @ | disobeying an injunction restraining|@ { the police from interfering with the : | business of Jean Pon, restaurant own- |er at 1129 Dupont street, were called | ® 'in Judge Cook’s court yesterday. An | jafidavit was read by Pon alleging | | that for the last ten days two police- | ! men In uniform have been placed in|® |front of his restaurant and arrests| | made in violation of the injunction. | The respondents were given till to. ! morrow morning to file an answer. — e Gives Lecture on Sweden. | A lecture on “Sweden and the | Swedes” was given last night at the| |auditorium of the Young Men’s Chris- | tian Association, corner of Ellis and | Mason streets, by B. R. Baumgardt. | The lecturer took his auditors through | centuries of history of the land of the | | Vikings and illustrated his talk with | many interesting and Instructive stere- e ‘g FREE ELECTRIC SUSPENSORY FOR WEAK MEN ————————— | l The United States export trade in| | South America is but a dollar annually for each of the inhabitants of that con- | This Electric Suspensory carries the current direct to the weak parts and cures all weakness of men, varicocele, etc. It is free. It develops and expands all weak organs and checks unnatural drains. No case of Failing Vigor, Varicocele or Debility can resist the powerful Electric Suspensory. It never fails to cure. Itis and provisions, s and 4 cs gro 'or the North. which saled on | arried a general carso | Bertha... Exports f | Cottage Ci s | necessitated a temporary discontinuance of the | service. Fy |1t 1s put 1n Movements of Steamers. TO ARRIVE. . M ma S - eries s : \ Smith, | ¥ " s Overdue B Arrives Raw Silk % ¢ mearly 00. - The & ken f & hol¢ * dock placed on SRS Makes Fair Passage. b American ship e, which ar- stra « veather b she nsistec al ed here in g tion al City of Para Sails. The Pacific Mail Company’'s lin City of Par ) ama a cargo NEWS OF THE OCE. Matters of interest to Mariners and Shipping Mecrchants. The French ALK cherteres orior - Tacome to Eurove Prench & Puge: Sound t Valuable Cargo for the Orient The steamer Korea salled Hongkong via 'F olu and Y & general merch 456, exciustve of s follows | hand column and the successive tides of the 18 | given is subtracted from the depth given by | Meric. 19 | the charts. The plane of reference ls the mean 119 | of the lower low wate | toria and Puget Sound ports. Inca, for Honolilu Honolulu & Kal San Diego & Way Pts./Apr. 2 .| Mendocino & "|San Pedro & Way Pua. Ay | @octro. Mexican Ports Steamer. | Czarina. ... W.H.Kruges Centralia §. Cruz. cupplies, 8 ke Oregon.... | 4 pkge rubber goods, ums wood spirits, 4125 cs er milk, 3561 c= canned saimom, 114 assorted canned goods, 5740 bs sugar, 312 istons, 24 ctls o Centennial. T 1bs cheese cx mealf, 200 ibs bre 3918 gals wine, and bacon, ibs 4 cs cheese, | Umatilla. Ibs sugar, | Amast 5 cs canned provision 469 gals 80 oo whisky. | SUECLGG State of Cal Fonite. ... - ‘oos Bay direct.... s Angeles Ports. | Honolulu, P M 88 co. Diego & Way San Pedro & Astoria & Portland §. Rosa....| Sa [=3=-19 3 Seattie & Tacoma. Pt Arena & Albion| Los Angeles Ports Bww wes Puget Sound Ports. Hamburg & Way. 8 g | 8. Barbara. | Los Angeles Ports. Argo.......| Eel River Ports Coquille River .... San Diego & Way. Newport & Way.. B < ] EEGans BYY B 55.3533 B iR " Tahiti direct w38 o aaBuw Bun B } | tinent. kane, for San Francisco: stmr San Gabriel, for | San Pedro; Ital ship Agostino Terrizzano, for LE—Arrived Apr 16—Schr Al- Mar 31. er ship Lika, for Melbourne; » ck, for Fremantle. COSMOPOL rived ~Apr 15—Sehr Roy Somers. henc 5 UMPQUA RIV Gabriel. fc Safled Apr 13—Stmr San ), via Eureka. Schr Lucy, from San Pedro. rived Apr- 16—Stmr Charies Cureka Stmr Asuncion, for San Fran- | “Arrivea Apr 16—Fr bark Marguerite Doll- | fus, rrom Hull | _Sailed Apr 16—Stmr City of Seattle, for | | skagway. | REDONDO—Arriv Apr 16—Schr Hono- Anaco HARBOR—Arrived Apr 16—Stmr Melville Dollar. hence Apr 13 Sailed Aor 15 Guide, for San Fran- irig Lurline, hence Apr 4; . hence Apr S§: schr Fannie chr Deflance, hence Apr hence Apr 1 boro, from Point toria; schr Alice stmr Bonita, hence Apr 13 Sailed Apr 16—Schr Bangor, for Port Gam- ble; schr Jos H. Bruce, for San Franclsco schr Henry Wiison, for Grays Harbor: stmr Bonita, for San Francisco; schr Lottle Carson, | for Eureka: stmr Centralia, for San Francisco: | sehr Willis A. Holden, for Port Townsend, Sailed Apr 16—Schr Meteor, for Port Town from Astoria AMERICAN SHIP REUCE. WHICH ARRIV FROM _ AUSTRALIA FRIDAY WITH CARGO OF COAL. nd. ASTORIA—Sailed Apr 16—U S stmr Ros crans, for San Francisco; schr Mabel Gale, for San Pedro; Fr bark Armen for Queens’ | own. Arrived Apr 16—Schr Expansion, from S: Valdezr & Way Ports..|Apr. 19 | Ped: . . & lon...... Skagway & Way Ports |Apr. 19| SKAGWAY—Salled A - i City Seaitle. . | Skagway & Way Ports.|Apr. 26 | Humbolat. for Seattle, # - ° » m—Stmr| & Way Ports.[Apr. 28 | TACOMA—Sailed Apr'16—§chr James Rolph, MG e o — | for S8an Pedro. Time Ball. | BANDON—Arrived Apr 16—Stmr Chico, | Branch Hydrographic Office, U, §. N., Mer. | DRCe Aor 13 B - e ! COOS BAY—Sailed Apr 16—Schr James A. shante’ Exchange, San Francisco, Cal. | Garfield, for San Pedro An accldent to the Time Ball mechaniem bas ' Biaitiey, hence ALE 10; sioir chabs oo from Seattle. SAN DIEG __ FROM SEATTLE. Steamer. For. | Satls. the notice will be given when 2 Arrived Apr 16—Schr A, F. 5.5 DUENETT, Coats, ‘rom edro, r. Lieutenant. U >, imi=el PORT TOWNSENDSailed Apr 16—Ship —_— | Star of France, for Pyramid Harbor; Ger San, Mook and THs ehip Octavia, for Callac. United States C 4 Geod i A e 1 Ftates Coast and Geodetic Survey— | HONOLULU—Sailed Apr 16—U 8 stmr Iro- Time and Height of High and Low Waters for cruise; Fr hl:;( Asnferes, ";nrr New at Fort Point, entrs ¢ e Pol Caledonia Bay. Fublished by 3 KAANAPALI—Arrived Apr 15—Schr Aloha, _the Superintendent from Honolulu NOTE—The high and low waters occur at | KAHULL the city front (Mission-street wharf) about 25 | for San Franci minutes later than at Fort Point; the height EASTERN PORTS of tide is the same at both pl 5oy St btk Siete. NEW YORK—Cleared Apr 16, to sail Apr 17—Stmr Nebraskan, for San Francisco. PHILADELPHIA—Cleared Apr 15—Stmr | Hawalien, for New York FOREIGN PORTS. FALMOUTH—Arrived _Apr 15—Br _ ship Monkbarns, hence Dec 28; Fr bark Charles | Gounod, from Portland. SWANSEA—Arrived Apr 12—Fr bark Gene- | vieve Molinos, hence Dec 12. | Sailed Apr 14—Fr bark Marie Madeleine, for | San_Francisco. VENTNOR—Passed Apr 15_Br ship Peleus, from Antwerp, for San Francisco. HAMBURG-—Salled Apr 13 and not Apr 5—Fr | bark Anne de Bretagne, for Santa Rosalia. PERIM—Passed Apr 15—Br ship Peleus, | S ol from Antwerp, for San Francisco. 2 in the above exposition of the tides Passed Apr 15—Stmr Peleus, from Tacoma. | he early morning tides are given In the lert | for Liverpool, and not Br ship from Antwerp, a3 before reported the order of occurrence as to time; the MAZATLAN—Sailed Apr 15—Ger stmr| t time column gives the last tide of the San Francisco. i day, except when there are but three tides, as rived Apr 16—Ger ship SI- | cmetimes occurs. The heights given are in Victoria. dition to the soundings of the United States N—Arrived Apr 16—Ger stmr N ast Survey charts, except when a minus (—) | T2, hence Dec 1. sign precedes the height, and then the number | PORT SAID—Arrived Apr 16—Br stmr Co- from New York, for Manila. YOKOHAMA—Arrived Apr 16—Ger stmr Ti- berius, from New York. HONGKONG—Arrived prior Apr 16—Br ailed Apr 15—Stmr Nevadan, | SUNDAY, APRIL 17 Cleverley, {rom New York; Br stmr Sat- | fom New York. Intelhgence- | OHAMA—Sailed Apr 16—Stmr China, — | for San Francisco. ARRIVED. | ADELAIDE—Sailed Apr 15—Schr G. E. Bel- lings, for Newcastle, Aus. Saturdaz, April 16. NEWCASTLE, AUS.—Safled Apr 11—Schr Stmr Umatilla, Patterson, 60 hours from Vie. g g B C.—Apr 16—Ship Glory of Stmr Eureka, Jessen, 24 hours from Eureka R 5 n s 4 in towing hence Apr 11,for Comox, Stmr North Fork, Nelson, 30 bours from Eu- | B .. By stmr Empress of Japan, for Hong. . kong, delayed until last night; Br sealing schr Simr Phoenix, Odland, 80 hours from Eu. | Tyjumph reported lost from Uclulet. OCEAN STEAMERS. LIVERPOOL—Arrived Apr 16—Stmn Sylvia, ‘omo, Ahlin, 12 hours from Albion | from Boston; stmr Armenian, from New York. rek: Etmr Brooklyn, Johnson, 15 hours from Men- v, via Polnt Arena, 10 hours 20 minut Sailed Apr 10—Stmr Carthagenian, from Str: Marshfield, Dettmers, 20 hours . fipm | Glasgow, for Philadelphia; stmr Cevic, for Little River. New York. CLEARED. LONDON—Arrived Apr 16—Stmr Lancas- ¢ trian, from Boston. Saturday, Aprtl 16. Sailed Apr 16—Stmr Mesaba, for New Tork. Stmr Redondo, Krog, Petropolovaki, Roth, | GLASGOW—Salled Apr 16—Stmr Columbla, Blum & Co. * | tor New York. . Stmr Santa Cruz, Alberts, San Pedro, P C| NAPLES_Arrived Aor 12—Stmr Liguria, sslcf,v s Mo B from New York, é‘" Bgc’:‘l.m't 5 mr Alaskan, Nicols, Seattle an Safled Apr 11—Stmr Citka, for Genoa. A| Williams, Dimond & Co. 4 Honoluly, | 1 80 e ‘Lombardio, for New York. . Stmr Oregon, Doran, Astoria, O R & N. COPENHAGEN — Arrived Apr 14—Stmr Stmr Pomona, Swa. : Dodge, from New York. Stmr Koren, Seabur: Tdatied Apr 9—Stmr City of Palmo, for New York. Stmr City of Para, Zeeder, Panama, P M| PALERMO—Salied Apr 10—Stmr Neapolitan § § Co. Prince. for New York. Ship Henry Villard, Shaube, Honolulu, Hing, | CHERBOURG—Sailed ~Apr 16—Stmr st. Rolph & Co. " | Louts, from Southampton, for New York. Ship McLaurin, Hammer, Bristol Bay, Bris. | ROTTERDAM—Sailed Apr 16—Stmr Amster- tol Packinz Co. dam, for New York. Bark B, P. Cheney, Johnson, Bristol Bay, | ANTWERP—Sailed Apr 16—Stmr Finland, Naknek Packing Co. " | for New York. SAILED. . - NEW YORK—Arrived Apr 16—Stmr Phila- ' delphia, from Southampton: stmr Columbia, Saturday, April 16. |from Genoa and Naples. Stmr F. A, Kilburn, Jahnsen, Watsonville| Sailed Apr 16—Stmr Umbria, for Liverpool; Landing. stmr_MinnehAha, for London; stmr St. Paul, Stmr Empire, Macgenn, Coos Bay. for Plymouth, Cherbourg and Southampton: Stmr Alliance. Hardwick, Astor stmr KEroonland, for Antwerp; stmr Numidian, Stmr City of Para, Zeeder, Panama. for Glasgow; stmr Furnessia, for Glasgow Stmr Korea, Seaburg, Honolulu, Hongkong stmr Victoria, for Norfolk; stmr Belgavia, fo and Yokohama,/ Hamburz. Stmr George Toomis, Badger, Seattle. QUEENSTOWN—Arived Apr 16—Stmr Lu- Stmr Redondo, Krog. Petropoloveki, cania, from New York for Liverpool, and pro- St Point Arena. Miller, Mendocis ed. Bumr i.;.'mn-,_' Sh:-nlen.&,hlre:k:c 7 = HAYRE—sailed Apr 10—Stmr La Savote, tor Stmr tia, Johnson, wens La: Nt Yo Stmr Despaich, Levinson, Port or?gufi" Satied ,?r 16—Stmr Arablc, from Liverpool, Ger ship Nal, Behu'tz, Portland. for New York. Ship Griental, Wilson, Bristol Bay. BREMEN—Satled Apr 16—Stmr Parbarossa, ShlpkLnnlllfi. Anderson, Bristol Bay. York. |+ | free with Belts for Weak Men. No_man should be weak; no man should suffer the of_that vital element which renders life worth 1iv- . No man should allow himself to become less a man than nature intended him: no man should suffer for the sins of his youth when there is here at hand a certain cure for his weikness, a check to his waste of power. Most of the pains. most of the weakness of stomach. heart, brain and nerves from which men suffer are due to an early loss of nature's reserve power througn mis- takes of youth. You need not suffer for this. You can be restored. The very element which you have lost you can get back. and you may be as happy as any man that lives, vy Electric Belt, with special Electric Suspensory (fred), will restore your power. It will check all un- natural drains and give back the old vigor of youth. Just lately I have received letters of praise from these men: 10: 709 Devisadero street, San Francisco. He ouble of 12 years' standing J. M. Gaskill, 220 Chestnut avenue, Santa Crua, Cal. who says I cured him of Indigestion, Constipation. Nervousness and Lumbago, from which he had suffered for fifteen years. This drain upon your power causes Kidney Trouble, Rheumatism and Stomach Ailments. You know it's a loss of vital power and affects every organ of the body. Most of the ailments from which men suffer can traced to it. T have cured thousands of men who have squandered the savings of vears in useless doctoring. My Belt is easy to use; put it on when you go to bed; you feel the glowing heat from'it (no sting or burn, as in the old style belts), and you feel the nerves tingle James P. Daniel: was cured of a back with the new life flowing into them. You get up in the morning feeling, like a two-year-old. Alfred 8. Hamlin, 105 Elm street, Reno, Nev.: “My health hae improved wonderfully during the past month. 1 feel better in every respect than I ever did. My back is stronger and I am better generally.” An old man of 70 says he feels as strong and youn; as hfi did at 35. That shows how it renews the vigor o youth. It cures Rheumatism, Sciatic Pains, Lumbago, Kid- ney Trouble. It banishes pain in a night, never to re- turn. Mr. George Tanner, Watsonville, Cal: “I wore the Beit only a #w times when all paln and weakness left my back. 1 recommended it to a friend up North who had & lame back for vears, and he received wonderful results.” ‘What ails you? Write and tell me, and, no matter where you are, I think 1 can give you the address of some one in your town that I have cured. I've cured thousands and every man of them is a walking adver- tisement for my Belt. _ Every man who ever used it recommends it because it is honest. It does great work, and those whom I have cured are the more grateful because the cure cost so little. Every man who uses my Belt gets the advice and counsel of a physician free. 1 give you all that any medical man can give you and a lot that he can’t. Tty my Belt. Call and see me and let me show you the Belt. or write me to-day for my beautiful ilius- trated book with cuts. showing how my Beit is applied, and lots of good reading for men who want to be “The Noblest Work of God.” A MAN. Inclose this ad. and I will send this book, sealed, free. Coalinga, Gunderson, Bristoi Bay. Schr King Cyrus, Johnson. Fai Schr C. T. Hul, Huhs, Tillamook. Schr Bainbridge, Ingelbrutson, Port Blake- TELEGRAPHIC. POINT LOBOS, April 16, 10 —Weather clear: wind west: velocity 8 mafies per how DOMESTIC PORTS. EUREKA—Salled Apr 15—Stmrs Bureka Pasadens, for San Francisco. e Apr 16—Stmrs South Bay and Hoe. rhaven. [ Dr. M. C. McLaughlin, °29 Market se 3 [ 3 Office Hours—S8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundays, 10 to 1. Not sold in drug stores. | CHINESE BURGLAR ARRESTED FOR ROBBING MANY STORES Ah Gong, Ex-Convict, Musician, Mason and Ilighbinder, Taken Into Cus- tody by Police. Ah Gong, a Chinese highbinder and ex-convict, was arrested last night by Officers Skelly, Wren and Dinan on Stockton street for. burglary. He is suspected of breaking windows in the business section of town during the past few weeks. The police claim he was responsible for the burglarizing of the Berteling | Optical Company on Kearny street, the Asahi Company at 224 Post street, the Hinomoto Company at 217 Geary ! street and Raphael’s pawnshop on | Sacramento street. All of these crimes were .committed during the past | month and in each case the glass in the show windows was broken and the cases rifled. A bunch of Chinese | pawn tickets were found on the bad Celestial when he was searched at the City Prison. Several fine opera and field glasses were recovercd from the Chinese pawn ishops. Gong is employed as a mu- sician in the Chinatown theater and xsqF member of the Chinese Free- al magons. —————————— TWO MEN ARE REPORTED TO POLICE AS MISSING Ernest Stripe, a Painter, and Edward Laurey, a Sailor, Have Been Ab- sent Two Weeks. Ernest Stripe, a painter, 26 years of age, residing at the corner of Zoe and Bryant streets, was reported last night to the police as missing. Stripe is a German and had been in this country but a few months when he ‘disappeared. He has not been seen for two weeks and his friends fear that he has met with foul play. Sailors from the ship Indiana re- ported to the police last night that one of their fellow craftsmen, Edward Laurey, has been missing for ten days and they fear that he "has been drowned or murdered. When last seen he had a large sum of money on his person. PORTOLA COUNCIL WILL GIVE AN ENTERTAINMENT Chapter of Young Men’s Institute Will Celcbrate Seventh Anniversary ‘With Music and Dancing. On Wednesday evening next Portola Council No. 470, Young Men's Insti- tute, will entertain its friends at its seventh anniversary entertainment and dance, to be given in Golden Gate Hall, 625 Sutter street. A programme of unusual merit has been arranged. The committee in charge includes: . G. Fitzgerald, D. T. Powers, W. H. Murphy, Joseph Tait, F. J. Daunet, T.,Sheehan, W. L Reardon, A. W. Murphy, W. G. Fahy, J. J. Driscoll, Joseph Graham and P. F. Scully. e Alumni Meeting on Tuesday. On Tuesday afternoon, April 19, the Alumni Association of Notre Dame of San Jose will meet at Notre Dame College on Dolores street in this city. All students and graduates are invited by the secretary, Mrs. Mary Sullivan Spence, to attemd the meeting. —_———————— Japan has fifteen docks capable of accommodating warships. : YOUTHFUL PRISONER 'WORK OF mSBmY MAKES HIS ESCAPE Sensational Exit of Young Fred Kelly From Juvenile Jail at the City Hall. Bolts and bars have no terrors for Fred Kelly, aged 14 years, who made a sensational escape from the confines of the jail for juvenile offenders at the City Hall shortly after 9 o’clock last night. The lad has been on probation from the juvenile court, but failed to re- ! port to Judge Murasky as is required. | Miss Stebbins, the probation officer, | was notified and took the lad into cus- | tody. He broke away from her while on the way to the City Hall and man- | aged to elude the vigilance of the po- lice until last night, when Officer Scott | arrested him at Seventh and Market streets. Scott took his charge to the City | Hall and turned him over to Steward E. H. Manville, who placed the boy in one of the cells provided for the ] | youthful prisoners. Manville closed the door and securely fastened the heavy spring lock. About twenty min- utes later, while sitting in the outer office, his attention was atiracted by a jpnoise in the corridor and uvon in- vestigating he found Kelly disappear- ing through the door. blocks, but the lad was too fleet of foot and made his escape. The lock on the cell door was found on the floor, broken in half, and it is a mat- ter of conjecture” how the youthful prisoner accomplished this. Kelly resided with his parents at Gough and Hayes streets. The steward gave chase for several } v e~ CELTIC UNION ARRANGES FOR SOCIAL FESTIVAL The Celtic Union held a meeting at the Knights of the Red Branch Hall on Mission street, near Seventh, last evening and transacted considerable routine business. J. Caniffe report- ed that the members had made heavy demands for hall stock and that a good fund is assured. J. D. Condon, P. J. Reynolds and John Mulhern were appointed a committee to take charge of the arrangements for the annual festival to be held at El Cam- po on June 12. Exercises consisting of Gaelic dane- ing and athletic games will help to en- liven the occasion. Valuable gate and game prizes will be given. The pro- ceeds of the ir will be added to the fund for tHe building of Celtic Hall. Steindorff to Lecture Tuesday. The Channing Auxillary lecture by Dr. George Steindorff, which was to have been given last Tuesday evening, has been arranged for next Tuesday evening, April 19. The subject will be “Egyptian Temples and Ceremon- VAT el Those holding tickets for last Tues- day may use the same on this date. The second of the course of lectures given by Professor Griggs under the auspices of the Channing Auxiliary will be heard this. morning at 10:3 the subject, “Marie Bashkirtseff, a Modern Woman's Problem.” The third and last of this series of day lectures will be given next Mon- day .at 3:30 .p. m. on “Ravenna, the Light That Failed.” illustrated with stereopticon. Those holding season tickets may use two or even three of &he admissions at one of the lectures, g O'F. IS BROUGHT TO CLOSE Licentiate W. A. McDowell Ordained a Minister By Missionary Society. Votes of Thanks Given. The California presbytery concluded its annual session yvesterday and ad- Journed until April next. Reports were received from the committee on temperance indorsing the papers on prohibition that have been read at the session. Licentiate W. A. MeDowell preached a sermon, at the conclusion of which he was ordained a minister by the presbytery. A vote of thanks was given to the | pastor and also to fhe Call in appre- ciation of favors rendered ————— Gives itary Dance. Company B, First Regiment, N. G. C., gave a military entertainment and dance at Armory Hall, corner Page and Gough streets, last night. The programme consisted of a compan: drill, selections by the First Regiment band and dancing. The affair was largely attended by friends of the or- ganization. ADVERTISEMENTS. Scientific Natural Simple Home Dv. Lawrence's VACUUM DEVELOPER AND INVIGORATOR Perfected Ry