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The greatest sale ever held in this city—and the most successful. But there’s a reason—it’s the faith of the people that counts, and we have never broken it. The contractors adding several more Stories to our byilding have disappointed us, and we have been obliged to c'ear our stock to make room for our holiday goods. This week we add carpets and draperies to the big sale. LIBERAL CREDIT TO YOU AND EASY PAYMENTS. THE SAN.FRA NCISCO CALL. SUNDAY, \OVEMBER 6. 1904. ADVERTISEMENTS. Do not miss it.. Your Pin Money Will Buy Any One of These 1.$5.50RATTANROCKER —Strong basket weave, but gives A great $2.85 with the body’s weight. comfort chair for tired people. Now 2. $8.75 CHIFFONIER Made of ce: drawers brass handles. large. Cut to dar, golden finish. Five ith locks and keys and Very $5.85 3. $3.50 ENAMELED BED - Made with strong durable frame, $1.75 This week 4. $25 COUCH Of “Chase” | i leather, spring seat, clipper edge, warranted not to peel or $15 00 . crack. Now 5. $1.75 to $3.00 ARECA PALMS —Coated so they will last forever, including pot. Clos- e Ay e (1< Golden oak, 66 inches high; dia- mond-shaped mirror. and cane rack _and brass hat hooks. 6. $30.00 FOLDING BED— Golden oak, mantel top with mir- ror. Patent dust proof mattress. Ad justable to avoid crowd- -$20.00 7. $7.50 HALL STAND— ng of bedding. Now Umbrella $3.75 Now $6.00 FUR RUGS 28x64 inches. A great thing (3 grays equaled west of Chi- cago. This week on your floor; the yard $1.25 LEICESTERSHIRE VELVETS so’id blacks See them $1.10 LEHIGH BRUSSELS g::masmn- for the cold days. and combination blacks and Three TAINS not 5¢ or fancy effects. pait 20x20-INCH $3.75 $3.50 ARABIAN CUR- yards long; good strong net, nicely corded. Your choice of straight Per $1.75 sy T ORIENTAL CUSHIONS Soft habit of wearing forever. This week, laid 70c LINOLEUMS O et i - and lins>ed oil, made fo last, this week; the square yard, laid igh pile velvets with beautiful luster, and a 95¢ Handsome Orienta! stripes, fassel on each corner, floss filled; lots of them. 50c !;(ZJ.SO ORIENTAL COUCH COVERS 45¢ ow Three yards long, 60 inches wide, fringed; 0od weight and reversible; e‘egant colorings. $2.75 Gas Heaters From NOOSE AWAITS A WIFE SLATER Town Is Adjundged Guilty of Murder in First Degree il ILLE, Va., Nov. D. J. 8 McCue, for two terms ¢ Charlottesville and for many ears t the bar before Y he was tried, was to-day found f T firs legre | | night of September 4 last. Mr. and Mrs. McCue had gone to church, re- turning home about 9 p. m. Shortly ifterward Mrs, McCue's dead body, clad in a night robe, was found in a bathtub filled with water. McCue that he had been knocked cldimed senseless and his wife probably killed by one who had entered their house while they were away. ———— Close the Campaign. OAKLAND, Nov. of the Presidential some —As the close campaign are being held in all parts of Alameda County and there is little doubt that this county will fully uphold its repu- tation as a stanch Republican strong- hold by polling a big majority Roosevelt i Fairbanks. Republi- can leaders in all parts of the county confident that Roosevelt's major- will be as large as any ever re- €or here for a Republican Presi- dent. —_————— Since the decree of the Czar in 1899 depriving the people of Finland of their constitutional liberty, 150,000 Finns have come to the United States. New. comers are looked out for by the Fin- nish Exiles’ Club, at Battery Park, New York. Ten per cent of Finland's pcpulation of 2,000,000 is now in America. MEN C. V. WAGNER & CO. Auctioneers and Commission Merchants, 115-117 BUSH STREET. CANNED FRUITS AT AUCTION, AT TENTIOIN! EXPORTERSE, DEALELRS, STEAMSHIF COMPANIES, HOTELKEEPERE BAKERS, RESTAURANTS, GROCERS, RAILROADS AND CONTRACTORS. JUST IN TIME FOR YOUR THANKSGIVING AND HOLIDAYS 22,860 Cases of the well-known high grade Canned Fruit and Vegetables Seiccted and Put Up in the Napa Valley, California. Will Be Sold AT AUCTION. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1904 At 11 o'clock A. M., by Catalogue. Removed Direct From the Napa Cannery for Convenience i and Pipe..... sase of Standard, Extra Standa REMEMEER Date, M. 25 Batiery Street v bet. "% 25 Battery Extras, c and Royal Ann Cherries, Green Gages, Hour and Place of Sale: of Sale to the Premises, .8an Francisco, . California. Solid Packs, Peaches, Apricots, Black Egg Plums, Blackberries, Tomatoes, Etc. Thursday, November 10th, 1904, 11 o’clock Bush and Pine, San Francisco WAGNER & CO., Auction and Commission Merchants. 115 Bush Street, San Francisco. MAX COHEN, Auctioneer. draws | near Republican meetings and rallies | SPECULATO MOVE SLOWLY, = L roximity of Presidential | Election Has an Effect| on the Dealers in Stocks| CoN 0 G 1 50 | NEW YORK, Nov. —To-day's | rather dull trading in stocks was | largely in the hands of room traders | | i | | for | { and their uncertain mood left small ‘imprflssloll on the market. The tone of the market was decided by the United States Steel stocks. These affected by realizing and the s gold in consequence. There a rally late covering in the morning on of shorts, but prices eased off again sympathy with the late decline of a point of United States Steel preferred. The decline of 11 in Amalgamated Copper was an addi- tional influence in affecting a market which was still largely given out to the industrial specialties. There was no marked pressure to sell the stocks, but the disinclination to proceed with | speculative ventur until after the election left little sustaining power. There has been a halt in the spece ulative activity of the stock market this week and a reactionary tendency. The week's movement of prices, how- ever, was irregular and mixed, the list at one time moving in unison and va- ried. by occasional ‘reactions both ways. in —_————— | The General Manager Is “It.” The fact that the chairman and di- rectors of British railways are not, as a rule, high salaried experts like the presidents and vice president of American roads has made the posi- tion of general manager on British railways one of the first importance. The salaries paid by the great British | companies to their general managers range as high as $30,000 a year. “The first discovery that any one makes on being appointed to such a post,” said Sir George Findlay of the London and Northwestern, himself one of the best of English railway managers, “is that if the day consisted of forty-eight hours instead of twenty-four, and -every hour were devoted to his office, his time would still be insufficient to | meet the demands on it.” One of the maxims Sir George laid down for economizing time was: “Always make a point of refusing, except, of course, in special circumstances, to see chance callers,”—New York Commercial. | prepar | The sources, however, | spec | nese and our critici TR ARE DISCLOSED Merchants’ Association Hot After the Men That Are Seeking to ‘Vote Iltegally REGISTRAR IS SILENCED The Merchants' Association yester- day transmitted to the Registrar of Voters an additional list of 202 names | of persons who are reported to be il- | legally registered. The association also addressed this important com- munication to the Registrar: “SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. & 5. “George P. Adams Es Registrar of Voters, City Hall, City—Dear Sir: | We beg leave to acknowledge vour favor of November 2, with regard to the action of the Department of Elec- tions regarding the names of persons submitted as being illegally on the Great Register of this city and county. “We are pleased to know that the work done by us is appreciated by the Election Commissioners, but note I with considerable surprise yvour state- | ment that our lists were not carefully d and were, as a matter of fact, erronegus in a majority of cases. “Out of a list of about three hun- dred and fifty names in all submitted by us to date, not including Chinese, you have so far only claimed that we were mistaken in thirty-seven. U der the present showing, therfefore, it would not appear to be a fact that we rere in error in anything like a ma- rity of cases submitted by us to you. It would be remarkable, indeed, if, in preparing lists of this sort with the limited time at our disposal, they should be absolutely free from error. from which we information are have derived our sources in which we have the utmost | confidence, and every list of names, before being submitted to the Elee- tion Commissioners, has been very carefully checked and verified. Referring particularly to the names of those persor any of these gentlemen of their re- election if they are on the Great Register. And if these persons have, as requested by us, been cited to appear before the Election Commisssioners and have then and there, under oath, proved to the satis- faction of the Commissioners that their names we prope on the Great Register are entirely satis- fied with the resuit. “Referring to the list of Chinese submitted by us to you, will you kind- lv inform us whett in investigating the legality of the registration of these Chinese, you have ascertained wheth- er those under 31 years of age who appear on the register were interro- gated and put upon their oath as to their ability to read the constitution in the Eng- lish language and write their own names. As vou will recall from our former communication upon this sub- ject that was the point of our eriti- cism against the registration of Chi- m about this Chi- nese registration was not directed to a question of residence. “We hand you herewith an addi- tional list, in the city, who, our information causes us to believe, do not reside at those places at the present time. We would respectfully request in this, as in previous cases, that these partles be immediately cited to appear and show cause why their names should not be stricken from the Great Regis- ter. Respectfully yours, MERCHANTS' ASSOCIATION. “L. M. KING, Secretary.” 1s to whom you claim | { we were in error and who are claimed | by vou to be properly upon the Great | Register we have no desire to deprive properly enrolled | containing names of par- | ties registered from various locations | Sausali'o INORE STUFFERS |GUNS BOOM SALUTE | PAND CHILDREN SING (ag ed Wi a F ; i ive rights to vote at the coming | ls _Presen Nov. 5 ausalito SAUSALITO —To-day was a gala for being the pr of a flag and pole to the town. took a half holiday one the occasion | and dedication The | 1d the tior merchz residents gathered at the plaza to at- tend the exercises. The flag was pre- sented to Sausalito by Captain Harold Cloke, who was recently stationed at Fort Baker. Captain Cloke was one of the most popular officers at the ! fort and married a Sausalito belle The pole was presented by William A. Boole of the Boole Shipbuilding Com- It is tall and massive and can pany. be seen from many points around the | upper bay. { The dedicatory exercises com- { menced at 2:30 p.'m. Mayor J. Thom- as presided and at his signal t} and stripes were hoisted by | from the U. McCulloch { banad plaved the “Star-Spangled Ban- ner” and a salute of twenty-one guns was fired when the flag unfurled in | the breeze. The school children of Sausalito sang the “Red, White and Blue' i waved small flags. Chairman Thomas then introduced | Captain J. C. Cantwell, who, after de- | livering an eloquent address on the ! history of the flag, formally presented | it to Sausalito. | Town Trustee W. J. Martin followed, | | proper MRS, BONET TO IS CoOMMI ASYLUM AT STOCKTON Modesto Woman, Who Murdered Her Husband, Is Judicially De to Be Insane. red MODESO, Nov. 5.—The Superior Court to-day committed Mrs. James Ronett to the Asylum for the Insane it Stockton. She killed her husband Tuesday night aft losing her mind through excitement caused by religious revival meetings at Turlock During the examination she continually pro- claimed she had killed her husband because it had ordained by God. ——— e Two Sides to the Flurry. America means to pay full and respect to all international law and usage, as her prompt action in the | Guerney case shows. But just the same she does not expect the gentle- men who come here in diplomatic ser- vice. to act as if superior to all law. | There are two sides to most of the li | Boniface CARS COLLIDE IN DENSE FOC Serions Accident Oceurs on Eleetric Line Ten Miles South of Los Angeles FORTY - EIGHT INJURED RS X PEIAL Physicians in Attendance on Vietims Are of the Opinion That All Will Recover S LOS ANGELES, Nov 5.—The most serious accident the history of th Electric Railway Company's em occurred about Pacific Interurban o'clock this morning at Willow Brook a station on the Long ch line, t miles south of Los Angeles. Forty-eigh persons, according t company’s official list, were injured Of these fifteen were passengers, two were car men, one was foreman in charge of a work crew and thirty were Mexican laborers empioyed on construction work by the railroad No one was killed and physicians in attendan upon the Injured to-night belleve all will recov The majority of the hurt suffere from cuts, bruises, cc tusfons and a sev ghaking up though several sustained fractures ana sprains, The accident was due to a dense fox A southbound passenger coach, which was a few minutes late, stopped to a low passengers to get off, 1 a work train following closely crashed into it A northbound passenger car ap- proached and stopped at the scene, too, and also was rammed by a closely fol- lowing work train. Both the the first collision were smashed to kin g wood and the passenger car which received the im- pact of the second accident was badly shattered, but was run to the eity. Among those severely injured are Motorman Seamans of the work e boc 1y er will probably Tho! Wilkin oreman of e struction, bro Oscar Daiton, shoulder dislocated Thomas Galvin, foreman, ank injured, cheeks torn open; M. Dalton, scalp eut, wrist bro- ken; J. W. Dalton, neck cut, shoulder spra Dalton, leg bruise James nso, arm sprained; Jose Lore: injured; E. C. Mite r 1, body Allan leg air hand cut; M. An- Thom as Mu e e NEW BIDS ARE WANTED FOR NAVY YARD Offers of Firms to Complete Work at DOCK Mare Island Considered Exces- sive in W hington. WASHIN( 5. — The Bureau of and Docks probably all bids that tvare re- Saturday for the comple- ti of the big drydock at the Mare Island Navy Yard. The bids are con- sidered excessive and if the contract were made on the basis of these figures the cost of the dock wouid far exeeed the original and the amount avallable for the work. It is probable that the work will be carried by yard labor, except in certain parts, such as furnishing the electrical material and building the caisson, which would have to be done under contract. e e Anna Gould, Countess de Castellane, has some much-named children. They are named in a petition signed by the Countess as Marie Jean Jay George Paul Ernest Boniface de Castellane, Georges Gustave Marie Antoinetta Charles de Castellane and estimate and in an eloquent address accepted |tle flurries like the present ome.— | Jason Homore Louis Sever de Castel- i the flag on behalf of the citizens of ' Philadeiphia Press. Vlane. ADVERTISEMENTS. One Million Dollars Have Been Spent to Give Liquozone Free to the Sick. We have bought a soc bottle of Liquozone—and given it free to each of 1,200,000 sick ones. And we have spent over $1,000,000, in one year, to announce and fulfill this offer. show you the wonderful product which warrants an offer like that? Before we bought the rights to Li- quozone, we tested it for two years, through phy s and hospitals, in this country and others. We proved it in all kinds of germ diseases—in thousands of the most difficult cases obtainable. And we cured with it nearly \every . disease which was con- sidered incurable. We knew then that the product was of vital worth to humanity. We knew that everywhere there was sickness which Liquozone alone could cure, and, suffering which nothing but Li- quozone could stop. We knew, that thousands died daily whom Liquozone could save. But what was the best way to quick- ly let the sick ones know it? How could we get this help to them at once? How could we best convince them that Liquozone did what medi- cine never could do? We decided to buy the first bottle and give it free to every sick one we learned of. We would let _the prod- uct itself prove its power. So we pub- lished this offer, again and again, in nearly every newspaper in America. The. result is that millions use Li- quozone now. Your own neighbors, wherever you are, can tell you about it. And half the people one meets, in any part of America, know some one whom Liquozone has cured. What Liquozone Is. Liquozone is not a medicine. It is not made by compounding acids or drugs, nor is there any alcohol in it. Its virtues are derived solely from gas—largely oxygen gas—by a pro- | cess requiring immense appartus and 14 days’ time. Each cubic inch of Li- quozorne requires the use of 1250 cubic inches of gas. Liquozone is the result of a process, whic%. for more than 20 years, has been the constant subject of scientific and chemical research. The main re- sult is to get into a liquid, and thus| into the blood, a powerful, yet harm- less, germicide. Another result is tq create a vitalizing tonic with which no other known product can compare. Kills Inside Germs. The great value of Liquozone lies in the fact that it does what oxygen does. Oxygen is the vital part of air, the very source of vitality, the most essential element of life. It is the blood food, the nerve food, the scav- enger of the blood. It is oxygen that turns the blue blood to red in the lungs; that eliminates the waste tis- sue and builds up the new. Too lit- tle oxygen always causes lack of vi- tality. An excess of it gives sirength to every function of Nature. Oxygen is also a germicide. The reason is that germs are vegetables; and an excess of oxygen—the very life of an_ animal—is deadly to vegetal matter. Liquozone acts like oxygen. Butit does more than oxygen, because it is stable. it carries its virtues into the blood to go wherever the blood goes. It is a remarkable tonic—the best thing in the world for you. Yet it is a germicide so certain that we pub- lish on every bottle an offer of $1000 for a disease germ that it cannot kill. The discoverer of Liquozone has solved the xreat problem of killing germs n the body without killing the tissues, too. And there is no other way. Any drug that kills germs is a poison, and it cannot be taken inter- nally. Liquozone is the only way that any man knows to end the cause of any germ disease. Nine Nations Now use Liquozone. The product is more widely employed than any medi- cine ever was; more widely prescribed by the better physicians. And no one can doubt that it is doing more for sick huma use coml We paid $100,000 for the American rights to Liquozone; and the British rights sold for a similar sum. Those | are the highest prices ever paid for y than all the drugs in) similar rights on any scientific discov- | § ery. We tell you this fact because it illustrates the value of Liquozone. A | product whose rights can bring a price like that must have very great | merit—must be of very great worth to humanity. Germ Discases. These are the known germ diseases; all due to germs, or the poisons which germs create. These are the diseases to which medicine does not apply, for drugs cannot kill inside germs. All that medicine can do for these troubles is to act as a tonic, aiding Nature to overcome the germs. But those results are indirect and uncer- tain. They depend on the patient's condition. When drugs were pre- scribed for these troubles, nobody knew of germs. Now every good phy- sician knows that thev call for a germicide. Liquozone alone can destroy the cause of these troubles. It goes wherever the blood goes. No germ can escape it, and we have found no disease germ which can resist it. Dis- eases which have resisted medicine for years yield at once to Liquozone, and it cures diseases which medicine never cures. In any stage of any disease in this list, the results are so certain that we will gladly send to any patient who asks it an absalute guaranty. Asthma Hay Fever—Influenza Abscess—Anaemia Kidney Diseases Bronchitis La Grippe Blood Polson Leucorrhea Bright's Disease Liver Troubles Bowel Troubles Malaria—Neuralgia Coughs—Colds Many Heart Troubles Consumption Piles—Pneumonia Colie—Croup Pleurisy—Quinsy Constipation Rheumatism Catarrh—Cancer Scrofula—Syphilis Dysentery—Diarthea Skin Diseases May we buy you a bottle to Dandruft—Dropsy Dyspepsia Eczema Fevers—( Stomach Trouble Thetat In nervous 1r debility Liquozone acts as & vi- talizer, accomplishing what no drugs can do. First Bottle Free. If you need Liquozone. and have never used it, please send us the cou- pon below. We will then send you an order on a local druggist for a fu sized bottle—a 30c¢ bottle—and will pay the druggist ourselves for it. This applies only to the first bottle, of course—to those who have never used it. The acceptance of this offer places you under no obligations. We simply wish to convince you; to let the prod- uct itself show you what it can do T‘hen you can judge by results as to whether you wish to continue. This offer itself should comvince you that Liquozone does as we claim We would certainly not buy a bottle and give it to you if there was any do]ubt of results. You want these re- sults; you want to be well and tc well. Then be fair enough !o”vl:v:ue: self to accept our offer to-day. Let us shr\w_ you, at our expense, what this wonderful product means to you. Liquozone costs s0c and $1. CUT OUT THIS for this offer may not appear agal: out the bianks and matl It to the Lice Ozone Co.. 438-464 Wabash Ave., Chicago. full address—writs plainly. Any physician or hospital Liquozone will be gladly mopu‘:l‘ t:;‘::'