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38 MARY F GALLOPS IN _ BEFORE EQUORUM REX| IS EXPLAINED] OF SAN FRANCISCO CALL S RACING FORM CHART. OAKLAND—Saturday, April 1. Weather fine. Track fast. S115. FIRST RACE—One and a sixteenth miles, selling; 4-year-olds up; val. to first, $325. Horse and Owner. s K. % % B Fa l Jockey. | Op. Cl. ogus Bill, & (5. 4. Bryan) . /110/ 2 7 % 71 2% 21 11%/Bell .. 10 10 « (Haves & Co.).[101/ % 81 88 52 42 23 3 19-5 o E. Nagli). 1101010 10 10 8§32 31 5 4 , 4 (BUl & Co).{104 3 11 1%11 1h 4h 5 18 Slackburn).|110/ 1 & % 6% 81 T1 64 1B 20 < 563 bh 61 6%61 g5 s ¢ 2%2h 41 5% 71 88 7T813823%318¢2 10 e 5082 893 94 8410 93 30 80 s 631 4h 71 9210 TR m : At post 1 minute, 13%. Bogus Bill, place, 4; | piace, ;_show, 4-5. 1 O 1. Winner, ch. §._ by by 8. A. ‘Bryan. Scratched — Rim Rock. Start on driving. Winner best ridden. Tannhauser should have won. sjow beginner. J. V. Kirby no account. Foxy Grandpa faded away in & vfi’m. % . %. %. Str. Fin. Soesr e st 8 B st o orwe 19 g g oo BacmHe e Ay Bled wide entering the stretch: Fountain, breaking it up in general. With a Jack Little improved some. Dundrea: S-year-olds and up; to first, $3: s, ¥ | Jockey. | Op 11%18 |Travers ...| © 8 61%2 2 |Wright ....] 4 16-8 2h 2384 [0 Chandlery 7 12 | 81 81 43 |R Fisher..| 50 100 €2 51 52 |L Jackson.| 15 30 | 51 4 % €1 Grahamr 2 5 | 41 72 7-5 18-10 | 8 10815 | 9 ® Pu; Cross Nur H Futurity course; @ $400, third $200, se 2% minutes. Off at -5. Dora,_ show, "Scherzo_aw. ran her race. Jingler | North West ran out | lled up lame. se ran a poor race. year-olds; the Gebhard handicap; to first $2420, Fin. | Jockey. ‘ Op. C. | 1 — 3 |W. Knapp.| 45 34 | 24 |Minder . 8 132 | 34 (Tooman .0f 6 11 ! 45 (Birkenruth | 3 9.2 55 |J. Jones...| 12 20 6 |Fountain 1B 18 Mary, place, 7-20; show, out. er, b. f. by Canopus-Princess Start good. Won easily. Daruma not at her best Wagner, place, er, b. g. by Long» Won all driving. Winner 3n a heavy track. Fogest place Delagoa. Hopetius { Birkenruth | Fountain .. Wing, plac r, br. f. by TI show, man-Right 1d third driving a fair race. So did the stretch. g vyesterday t Oakland 2000 added y moderate well for the 5 Sir , leav- ¥ Mary ¥ r ad “Big Bill” K1 weht to the Daruma was d to the stretch took charge of at the wire won pricking the hard ridden Rex. Daggma led Abe Meyer for the small end of FAVORITES FAIL BACKERS. The efstrings to most of the while the avalanche of S z outgjfers may have pleased avers, the talent wept. Bogus B G e, Hainault and Hans two-year = of the old ptured the open- sixteenth selling event 5 to 1. The outsider re- support and beat Tann- more than a ran third. p of this came the victory 16 to 1 shot in the bet- Bell BERKELEY'S NEW EESIDENCE SECTION. Thirty-five minutes from the ferry—that means you can live in the University town apd do business in San Francigeo; car lines on three sides—that means the location of your home will be the most central on this side of the bay; street work done, sidewalks laid, trees planted—that means a choice residence district; large lots—that means sun- shine, air, lawn and gar- den; easy terms—that means a lot in Rairview Park will fit your pocket- book, s 9225 OFFICE ON mos_ 'mn, Bal- snce o Ve Essy Terms. 5 a certainty and played down to was badly to 5 favoritism, »out, messed finishing unr In a hard before the tay Jack Little took the show, only a head farther away. Fiile 4'Or. HAINAULT AN EASY WINNER. Because it was supposed Hainault | could not travel over a fast track, the | ring laid 10 to 1 about the brown geld- | i ing and he came home an easy winner of the mile and seventy yard selling af- fair. Travers had the leg up and at| post time 6 to 1 was the market | quotation. North West, the 13 to 10| favorite, ran out all the way with Fountain, arriving with the tail end- ers. Hainault gained the lead on the | back stretch and at the wire led Scher- | | zo out three open lengths. The latter | horse was almost left or he would have | i been returned the winner. went to Dora L Just to be in line, Andrew Mack, rid- | den by Travers and favorite for the | mile and seventy yard handicap, fin- The show | ished third. Hans Wagner, a well- | vlayed 102-pounder nvpiloted by Jakie Je turned the trick. The visitor |from Los Angeles headed Delagoa on, the far turn, and with little Jeft at the | close disposed of Mindanao by a length. Bombardier and Horatius showed to no | particular advantage. 1 GOLD ENAMEL'S POOR SHOWING. The tame showing made by Gold En- {amel in the concluding mile event for | three-year-olds seems almost too ghast- ly to be true. Still it must be that the strapping chestnut is a false alarm or else is not right, for the stable connec- tions bet on True Wing, the winner. Gold Enamel ruled an even money fa- | vorite and trailed Sea Air into the istrelr‘h, In the interim Birkenruth had { been busily engaged extricating True Wing from a pocket. The last eighth of the tour the latter filly waded to the front, defeating Celeres in ragtime fashion. McBride dropped over to the rail with the first choice, finishing a weird fourth. TRACK NOTES. | called upon Magee this morning and Jake Holtman closed his season on | the coast at Oakland yesterday and de- i parts this morning for Memphis. Needless to say his work has been up to the usval high standard. Jakie Jones piloted two winners. | Twenty-three books cut in, an in- ;:rease of two over the previous draw- { ng. i The stewards decided yesterday that | Solomon Bonner will have to fulfill the | contract signed by his father giving his | services to W. B. Jennings. George W. Berry, recently appointed guardian of | the colored rider, says the matter will now be left for the courts to decide. Red Cross Nurse changed hands once more after the third race. George Wentworth claimed the mare from | Molera & Joseph for $1025. J. E. Cushing & Co. must have thought pretty well of Hans ‘Wagner to ride Jones and four pounds over- weight in the handicap. 8. T. K—You lose. Had cepted poolroom odds, the would have been a winner, you ac- wager THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 1905. - |WOMAN’S DEATH |HAGGARD TELLS Coroner’s Jury Is Satisfied That Polly Lecke Was Not Shot by Companion Spectal Dispatch to The Call SAN MATEO, April l.—'l_‘l:la verdict of the Coroner’s jury is that pretty Polly Locke came to her death by sul- cide. Jefferson Stewart, who was alone with her in & room in the rear of a sa- loon when she met her death last Tues- day night, and who was held withdut bail pending the result of the inquest, was released at the conclusion of the hearing. Stewart testified that the woman killed herself without any apparent reason, but the supposed direction of the bullet and the absence of powder marks raised a suspicion of foul play. This theory was refuted at the inquest IS MISSION Famous Novelist Addresses Audience of College Men at the State University BERKELEY, Haggard delivered ari address at the university this morning to an audi- ence that completely fillled Harmon Gymnasium. Hundreds were unable to obtain admittance. The distin- guished novelist was introduced by President Benjamin Ide Wheeler as “an Anglo-Saxon whose message to his kinsmen on this side of the At- lantic is well worth hearing.” Haggard’s tall, siim figure bowed in recognition of the university presi- dent’s hearty eulogy as he rose to greet the folk gathered to hear him speak. With the deliberation of the held by Judge Booth this evening by [typical Briton, the guest of honor be- the expert testimony of the autopsy surgeon, Dr. J. L. Ross, and by Sherift Mansfield, who demonstrated a new theory concerning the appearance and effect of gunshot wounds. They bound together two pieces of pork six inches | thick, skin outward, and pressing the muzzle of a 38-callber revolver, similar to that which caused the woman’s| death, tightly against the skin, dis- charged the weapon. The bullet made a large ragged wound at the entrance, while the exit was small and smooth, an entire reversal of the usual effect. No powder burn was visible on the ex- terior surface, but it showed beneath the skin, where a large cavity was| made by the explosion. They then tes- tified that the wound was identical with that which caused Polly Locke’s death, except that no powder marks were found inside the wound on the woman’s neck. They account for this by ®aying that the flow of blood in the case of the woman washed away the marks. District Attorney Bullock was con- vinced of the suicide theory and the Jury so found. The remains of the un- | fortunate woman were burled in the potter's field at Redwood City yester- day, as her family had discarded her. | AUTOMOBILISTS ~ARE JUBILANT AR N e S Special Dispatch to The Call bile law passed by the Legislature has filled the hearts of Marin's automobil- ists with joy, as it nullifies the county ordinance which prohibited the use of automobiles on the public highways after sundown. The ordinance was obnoxious to the owners of motor cars, and for the last vear they have been endeavoring to | find a legal defect in it. Last August Thomas C. Berry, a well-known resident of Ross Valley, at- tempted to run his machine after sun- | down and was promptly arrested. Ber- ry's friends advised him to test the| | validity of the ordinance, and acting | on that advice he applied for a writ of | habeas corpus. The case is now pend- ing before the Supreme Court. | SAN RAFAEL, April 1.—The automo- Marin’s ordinance put a damper on the use of autos, as after sundown the | beautiful drives throughout the county | were unavailable. Now that the law | has been nullified many San Francisco aftomobilists have expressed their in- tention of summering in this county. PRSLEA L LA MARIN JOSIICE - LOSES IS FEE Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN RAFAEL, Avril 1.—Justice of the Peace Magee says a joke is a joke, but a joke that deprives a Justice of his fee is no joke at all. When Patrick Henry Vahey and Mar- garet Mary McGrath of San Francisco | requested that he unite them in wed- lock the popular magistrate put on his best smile and extended a hearty wel- ccme to the couple. Visions of an ex- tra fine luncheon and probably a drive through the valley flashed through his mind as he proceeded with the cere- mony. But when the groom fondly kissed the bride and whispered, *“This will be an April fool joke on some one,” it déwned on Justice Magee that it was April 1. ‘When the nuptial knot had been tied Mr. and Mrs. Vahéy gave the Judge a rleasant nod and started for the door. “By the way,” suggested the aston- ished magistrate, “haven’t you forgot- ten my fee?” “Oh, that's all right, Judge,” replied Vahey. “I'm broke, but still I am very much obliged to you: Ta-ta.” Vahey and his bride then disappeared as suddenly and quietly as they came, ROMANCE GETS A HARD BLOW OAXKLAND, April 1.—This city is no longer to be the Gretna Gréen of eloping San Francisco couples, and it is claimed the sage legislators, In passing a law prohibiting the issuance of a license to a couple outside of the county of either the bride or groom, struck a death blow to romance. There is mourning also in the camp of the local Justices of the Peace, whose monthly incomes have been material- 1y increased in times past by the fees received for the tying of lovers’ knots. The law, which will go into effect in a few days, means that every cou- ple must be married in his or her home county. Young Lochinvar is to be relegated into the realm of myth. No more will man and maid, feeling the promptings of spring, be able to hie themselves to distant flelds and pledge their troth among strangers. H. S. G. McCartney of Los Angeles, it is stated, was responsible for the passage of the measure, and will be execrated by would-be eloping couples for all time, gan his address, which was intended to reveal the speaker’s serious view of serious things, particularly with re- lation to sociological problems. The novelist referred modestly to his au- thorship of books that have made him famous and added that while the books in question may have amused or interested the world, he wished now to be heard as one with a serious purpose rather than as a writer of light literature. The evils attending the congestion of great populations in large cities of April 1.—H. Rider i the earth, evils so hideous that they portend, in the opinion of Haggard, the overthrow of western civilization unless a cure for the cause of the dis- ease is found, have attracted the speaker’s attention and aroused his interest until now he devotes his en- tire time to seeking means of amel- lorating the ills of which he speaks. SLUMS OF LONDON. The slums of London, he declared, breed iniquity and send forth moral miasma of such foulness as to vitally affect the health of the entire British nation and in similar fashion, Hag- gard said, the slum population of other great citles has influence upon the life of the nation which permits such conditions to exist. Haggard be- lieves that the very heart of clviliza- tion is rotting as a result of this thing and he has made it his life work to toil with such men as General Booth of the Salvation Army and others of political and social fame in an attempt to change, in every way possible, the conditions that make possible these festering evilsa Haggard said that he came tb Amer- ica as the representative of the British Government to study colony life here, S0 that he can recommend upon his re- turn the founding of proper colonial en- terprises in America and other coun- tries for those of the great English cit- ies who now live in squalor and In re- stricted areas, a prey to disease and fit subjects for the propagation of crime bacilli. A strong word picture was drawn by Haggard as he contrasted the possibil- ities of life in the slums and tenements and life in the broad, free prairies or mountains of such a land as this. He urged that those who heard him give | heed to the problem which he and other Englishmen are trying to solve, and to aid, if possible, in speeding the day when a satisfactory solution should be provided. Haggard concluded his ad- dress with the following words: MISERY AND SIN. “A few years ago I noticed that the | land in which T lived was being swept of its best, and the cities became glut- ted and seething tanks of misery and sin. You may say that the rich live in | the city; but five minutes from the houses of the wealthy what do you #ee? In England to-day the conditions in the cities, in the slums, is terrible. The civilized people of the Westerd world must ston this conglomeration of people in a few large cities or it is in- “In every collection of things there is a superior, one that stands sbove all the rest and is kn>wn as the best, or king of its class. By its record of forty years of cures S. S. S. has demonstrated its superi- ority over all other blood purifiers and is known and where as the best—The King of Blood Purifiers. The people everywhere endorse it, and there are few homes where this used, and today there are thousands in all parts of the country who have been cured recommending it to those who are in need of a blood purifier. It has held the confidence of the public for this long period of time, and is more in favor now than ever before, because it does all that is claimed for it, and “S. S. S. for the blood” has of diseases by its use and who are daily t remedy recognized every- is not known and to be a household saying. One of its greatest claims to the title of “The King of Blood Puriffers” is that it is purely vegetable, being made entirely from roots, herbs and barks of the forests and fields, selected for their purifying and healing action on the blood and their fine tonic properties for building up and strengthening theentire system. Notso with the usual blood medicines, for they contain Potash and other strong mineral ingredients that derange the stomach and digestion and otherwise damage the health. § Bad blood is responsible for most of the ailments of mankind. When from any eause the Liver, Kidneys, Bowels or other organs of bodily waste become torpid, dull or sluggish in their action, and fail to carry out the poisons which are being constantly formed in the system, these poisons are absorbed by the blood. As this vital fluid is the very life of the body, nourishing and supplying strength, through its circulation, to every muscle, nerve, bone and tissue, disease in some form is sure to follow when it becomes contaminated. Gentlemen:—My opinion of S. S. S.is that every-bottle is It has been used extensively in our family, given to both young and old, and always with the best results. It thoroughly cleanses the blood of all impurities, at the same time it builds up the general health, gives appetite, strength and energy. given it to our children as intimated, and found it to be always capable of purify- It is superior to every- thing else as a cure for blood diseases, \ MRS. CLARA DAUBERT. worth its weight in gold. non-injurious to the system an: ing the blood and restoring health. Schuyilkill Haven, Pa. We have rected and the the distressing itching and b as the disfiguring, humiliating symptoms will remain” to torment the sufferer. amount of salves, washes, skin foods, rouge, Eczema, Tetter, Acne, Pimples, Boils, etc., while they show on the skin have an un- derlying cause which is far deeper—a poi- soned blood supply—and until this is cor- blood made dpure and strong, burning as well No eic., can reach the trouble; a real blood remedy is required. S.S. S. cures these and all other skin diseases, and when it has cleansed the blood of the poisons and impurities the cure is permanent and lasting. Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula, Chronic Sores or Ulcers and Con- tagious Blood Poison are all deep-seated blood diseases. When the blood becomes contami- nated with the poisons producing these diseases, the entire vitiated, and these painful and dangerous diseases will continue fluid is cleansed and made strong and healthy again. In all these disorders S. S. S. has provet{ the title of “The Kin itself a lation grows polluted and grow worse until this vital 2 perfect remedy, and has well earned of Blood Purifiers.” It goes down into the blood and forces out all poison of everykind, all waste and foreign matter, and makes it pure and health-sustaining as nature intended, curing the disease rmanently. Nothing reaches inherited blood taint or old chronic troubles like S. S. S., and being a strictly vegetable remedy it can be taken by old or young without fear of bad after-effects or injury in any way to the system. Not only is S. S. S. a blood purifier and system builder of the highest order, but a tonic and appetizer without an equal, and is unexcelled in cases of general debility, loss of appetite, weakness, that tired, run-down condition, lack of energy and force, and other distressing complaints common to Spring and Summer months. If you have any blood trouble write us about it, stating the case fully, and our physi- cians will help you to get rid of it by free medical advice and will send books on the different ~ diseases, which contain valuable information, without charge. TE SWIFT SPSCIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA. who have not the evils of the Occident, will sweep over us, as they have done in the past. The men are strong in Asia; and why? Because they are brave, because they ar patriotic, be- cause they are determined and whole- hearted. But why are all these things true? Because they have drawn on a land of primitive virtues, which alone make people great. That I believe to be the absolute truth. “It is worth while to help in that movement. It is no small thing; it is the greatest. I do hope that what I haye said may carry some conviction with you, and that all of you may do what I believe is a very great and vital work. I am addressing here a large number of young men who are about to enter upon life. “There is just a word I wish to add to the young men. We are told nowa- days that the world is very prosy, sordid and unromantic. think so. There is romance in every evitable that race suicide of the most aggravated type will grow. 4 “Another danger is from the East. Unless we reform the Mongol hordes, line of life and work to do. Just look now upon the careers of such men as Charles Gordon, who perished at Khartoum—what an example of a ro- I do not quite | mantic figure. Would it have been said that within this prosy age and world that such a man could have arisen to-be a glory to us for all time? Cecil Rhodes is another. What an image be became, not in the world of finance, but as a builder? He was a man who began as any of us might have begun. He was the sixth son of a clergyman in England—a man with- out any means. et “I believe him to be one of the greatest men of the entire century. In his brief forty-six years he added a territory larger than the United States to the civilized world. It was rot ac- I cident. The man aimed toward it and willed it and achieved it. And General Booth—look at that man! He began without any advantages, and he has instituted the greatest charitable or- ganization that the world has seen. And he did it by settling to an ob- Jject, by strength of will, by determin- ed and ordered effort, by the exercise of a marvelous goodness of heart. With such examples before us, none of us need feel that.there is nothing { left undone.” SAN FRANCISCO GIRL RECEIVED BY THE POPE Miss Crocker One of a Party of Nine That Pays Visit to the Vatican. ROME, April 1.—The Pope to-day re- ceived in private audience Mrs. Burton Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Burton Harrison and Miss Keating of New York, Miss Wade Hampton of South Carolina, Miss Herndon of Virginia, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp of Balti- more and Miss Crocker of San Fran- cisco. / —————————— MARRIAGE. LICENSES. OAKLAND, April 1.—The follow- ing marriage licenses were issued by the County Clerk to-day: Willlam W. Vose, 24, and Gladys E. Forsythe, 18, both of Berkeley; Lee I. Rowland, 21, and Olive N. Gaunce, 21, both of Oak- land; Edward Lane, 56, and Annie M. Splars, 58, both of Fruitvale. ————— PARIS, Aoril 1.—The demy de Beaux Arts has elected John Singer Sargent to mem- bershiv in place of the late Adolph von Menzel. ADVERTISFMENTS. - We Offer $5,000 As a Guarantee on Liquozone. The First Bottle Is Free. A great deal is said in these days about Liquozone. Millions are telling of the good it has done; for one home in five—wher- ever yon go—has some one whom Liquozone has cured. This remarkable product has be- come the talk of the world. In the past two years the sick of nine na- tions have come to employ it. But so great a good could not be done to humanity without harming the interests of a few. The consumption of medicine has immensely decreased. The popularity of the few physicians who cling solely to drugs has diminished. And in numberless homes where Liquozone is in daily use, sickness has been almost banished. i These facts have injured some in- terests. And a few of the injured—to serve a selfish interest—seek to dis- parage that which has done the good. The usual method is to insinuate that Liquozone itself is a medicine; that, despite our claims, it is a com- pound of acids and drugs. Such statements are oft repeated; and we cannot doubt that some are led to believe them. —_— Qur answer to all is this: The virtues of Liquozone are de- rived solely from gas, by a process re- quiring immense apparatus and from 8 to 14 days’ time. The gas is made, in large part, from the best oxygen producers. Nothing whatever enters into the product, save the gas and the liquid used to absorb it, plus a touch of color. And, to emphasize this answer, we offer $5,000 to any one who can dis- prove ijt. . In this business, methods which are subject to criticism are most care- fully avoided. We permit no misrepre- sentation: no claims which have not been fulfilled. Our product is too vital :19 humanity to be laid open to preju- ice. g What we say about Liquozone is truc. What we claim it can do has, again and again, been done. And in any disease which we claim Liquo- zone will help, we assume the whole risk on a two-months’ test with every patient who asks it. Before we bought the rights to Liquozone it had been tested for years in thousands of the most diffi- cult cases obtainable. diseases which had resisted medicine for years yielded at once to it. Sick- ness which had been pronounced in- curable was cured. The value of the product was placed beyond possible question be- fore we staked our fortunes and repu- tations on it. Yt was amply proved that, in germ trdubles, Liquozone dia what medicine could not do. Then we gave the product away— gave millions of boltles, one to each of millions of sick ones. ‘We have published no testimonials; no evidence of curés. We have never asked a soul to buy it. - . Our method has been to buy the first bottle ourselves: to let the sick try it without the cost of a penny; to let the product itself prove its power. Most of you know the result. There is no neighborhood—no hamlet so re- mote—but. knows some wonders which Liquozone has wrought. And Liquozone is probably doing more to cure sickness, and to prevent ;:é" flaan all drugs, all medicines com- How petty is that self-interest which would have you go to the old ‘methods—to -the days before Liquozone! Back to the time when the very cause of disease was un- n. or when no one knew how to meet #' ik Is. L nis ” ol The greatest wvalue of Liquozone lies in its germicidal powers.. It is a | Consumption We found that| germicide so certain that we publish on every bottle an offer of $1,000 for a disease germ that it cannot kill. Yet it is absolutely harmless to the human body. Not only harmless, but helpful in the extreme. Even a well person feels its instant benefit. Liquozone is the only way known to kill germs in the body without kill- ing the tissues, too. Any drug that kills germs is a poison, and it cannot be given internally. Medicine is al- most helpless in dcalix)x with inside germs. But germs are vegetables; and Liquozone—the very life of an animal —is deadly to vegetal matter. This fact—above all others—gives Liado- zone its value. There is no other way to directly end the cause of any germ disease. s These are the known germ diseases. Nearly all forms of all these diseases have been traced to germs. or to the poisons which germs create. 3 These are the diseases to which medicine does not apply, for drugs cannot kill inside germs. All that medicine can do4s to act as a tonic, aiding Nature to overcome the germs. f But those results are indirect and un- | certain. The sick cannot afford to| rely on them. And no onme needs to now. . $ Liquozone alone can_ destroy the cause of these troubles. It goes wher- ever the blood goes, so no germ can escape it. The results are almost in- evitable. We have seen them so often | in every disease in this list that we have come to rely on them. Liquozone | has proved itself so certain that in any | stage of ax:‘; of these diseases we wili | gladly send to any patient who asks it an absolute guaranty. sthma Fever—Influenza APOTS Avsemia Kidney Dissases Bronchitls La e Many l-m Piles—Pneumonta Colle—Croup Pleurisy—Quiney Constipation Rheumatism _ —\ Catarrh—Cancer Serofula—Syphilts Dysentery—Diarr! Skin Diseases —Dropsy Stomach_Troubles Dyspepsia Throat Troubles ma— Erysipelas Tuberculosis Fevers—Gall Stones Tumors—Ulcers it Varicocele tre—Gou Gonorrhea—Gleet Women's Diseases All diseases that begin with fevers—all ine ion—all catarrh—all contagious dis- gases—all the results of impure or potsoned In nervous debility Liquozone acts as & vitalizer, accomplishing what no drugs can do. 50c Bottle Free. The way to know Liquozone, if you have never tried it, is togask for a bot- tle free. We will then send vou an order on a local druggist for a full- size bottle—a 50c bottle—and will pay the druggist ourselves for it. This ap- plies 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. Then you can judge by results as to whether you wish to continue. This offer itself should convince Wu that Liquozone does as we claim. ‘e would certainly not buv a bottle, and give it to you, if there was any doubt of results. You want those re- sults; you want to be well and to keep Then be fair with vourself: ac- Let us show cept our offer to-day. you, at our expense, what this won- derful product means to you. Liquozone costs soc and $t.