The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 21, 1905, Page 7

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THE SAN FR ANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1905. (0AL TAR DIE [BOHEMIA SMILES ATI|WEBER HEIRS HIS SIGN. Matias Suspends While He Visits Europe IN CORDIALS City Chemist Finds Adulter- ants in Samples of Creme de Menthe He Analyzed TO QUARANTINE BRANDS Health Board Warns Public Against the Practice of Coloring Carnations Green ol AR City Chemist H. D. Gibbs yesterday filed & report with the Board of Health covering the analysis of nine samples of creme de menthe which were found o contain coal tar dyes. In order to give an idea of the amount of coal tar dye present, Gibbs submitted two pleces of cloth which were dyed in one sample. One piece was dyed green and the other blue. The following d'k nds were found to contain coal tar ye: the Saj de Ment L les contained fusel origin in se to replace alcohol was was care- report and to place onding to arantine. 157 restau- 31 were n. Eleven sanitary con- ng repairs. ctical test H. Ury to be s to prevent as- a florist, called at- 1 carnations sold by saying they are danger- are dyed with rank placed in the mouth of a E us sickness, or The board ordered a warn- given the public pinks and will nt to various dealers to cease alleged poisonous dye. i appointed Lawrence poison an h would notices e cer Ragan was directed tigate the complaint that the spensary, at 828 Sacramento in filthy condition. Chief In- ting Physician Hassler reported the hospital and its ap- but Mrs. St. Clair said is 2 nuisance, notwith- reports to the contrary. Aged Widower Suicides. a widower, 60 years nt Zion Hospital yes- uries inflicted by at. 455 Tehama been rooming e old man had while and be- On Tuesday he by cutting his left wrist. ‘He d and Emergency to Mount Zion Hos- supported for adult sons, Ellis, shing ered soon » the Central thence ADVERTISEMENTS. The Special Sale of ‘Weber Pianos used by the Metropolitan Cpera Artists is the paramount, attraction at, Kohler & Chase’s this week. e —— The pianos used by the artists of the Conried Metropolitan Opera now be:nxssom &t material center—Kohler {| KohlersChase Post and Kearny Sts. —e——— Los Angé-iés Time San Francisco Office is located in ROOM 10, CERONICLE BUILDING ARTHUE L. FISN, Representative If you would do effective advertising In the Southwest drop a line to the above pddress or telephome Main 1472, and our tepresentative will be pleased to call on fou with full information as to rates, pte. THE SUNDAY TIMES, with 35-page magazine, $2.50 a year by mail. ~“JUST LIKE A PLEASANT HOME" NEW RUSS HOUSE r=axcie ANCISCO, CAL. CHAS. NEWMAN CO., Props. Convenfent to all car lines piaces of amuee- foent and prominent bulldings. A hotel of un- $xcelled mervice. European, $1 per day up- ward; American, $2 per day upward. Speeial eies to femilies. The famous Russ a la carte immm 76c. The table ls supplied with proa- cte direct from Mr, s ranch. Mer tantile Lunch $7 per Dr. Gibbon’s Dispensary, regarding | | | REFTANGART t | | TELL OF NEEDS FOR THE YEAR The Finance Committee of the Board of Supervisors listened yesterday to estimates of various departments of the city government of the amounts needed by them for the next fiscal year. The claims of the Board of Health, the Election Commission, the Civil Service Commission, the Coroner and the Jus- tices of the Peace were presented. The Peace Justices claim that the additional salary granted them at the last session of the Legislature should become due with the beginning of the fiscal year. Supervisor Brandenstein contended that as they were incum- bents the increase did not apply to | them. After some discussion the com- mittee decided to refer the matter to the City Attorney. Many innovetions are proposed by the Board of Health. It asks for four medical inspectors, whose duty will be to examine school children for skin iseases. This custom, Dr. Ragan maintains, is observed in nearly all the large Eastern cities. Four extra market inspectors, a plumbing inspector, two factory inspec- tors, two general nuisance inspectors and eight extra laboratory assistants ure also asked for. One of the most immediate needs, Dr. Ragan declared, was a night steward for the detention ward at the Central Emergency Hos- pital. At present there 1§ but one steward on duty for the entire hos- pital at nights. When he is out on an { ambulance call the insane patients are left practically unguarded. Besides there is more work in the detention ward than the matron can possibly attend to. | The board recommended that the of- fer of the Dundon Iron Works to equip and care for the automobile sterilizer for 3250 a month be accepted. It is believed that this method of operating the “bugkiller” would be the cheap- est. The Election’ Commissioners want 165 voting machines, which number, with the forty now on hand, will be suffi- cient for all the precincts. The com- mittee expreseed some hesitation as to recommending the purchase, as it was sald the voting machines were being improved continuaily and those avail- able now might soon be out of date. Commissioner Leffingwell recom- mended the copying of the assessment | |roll and the preparing of a list of | Federal, State and municipal employes, | in order that the board could protect | itself from ineligible applicants for po- sitions as election officers. The com- | mittee pronounced this scheme im- practicable and advised the board ;to have applicants sworn. ‘ Coroner Leland declared that Dr. ‘Blclgalupl‘- time was continually tak- en up with police work and that the | Morgue needed a pathologist and toxi- | cologist. The Civil Service Commis- | sloners want $500 to remunerate ex- perts called in to help at examinations | Following are the amounts asked ye: | térday: Department of Elections—Election Commis- | stoners’ salary, $5000; Registrar, $2400; depu- | ties, $84,000; stenographer, $1200; mechanic, | $1600; carctaker, $1500; advertising, $1500; bal- | 1ot paper, $1200; printing ballots, $1150; print- ing and binding index, $5100; binding registers, $450; postage, $900; stationery, $2000; rosters, | poll and telly lists, $5000; 00; blank forn, 1700, | $2006; booths, $6500: repairing booths, $10,000, | furnishings, $2150; salaries of election officers, 24,500; rent of polling places, $1750; delivery supplies, §300; livery, $450; telephone serv- ice, $75; copyIng assessment roll, $1500; copy- ing list of Federal, State and municipal em- oyes, card file of assessment roll, $1000; Total, $118,275. Health Board—Health Office salaries, $79,- $0980; Emergency Hospltal 000; misceil ries, $37,440; expenses, $12. ous, $1375; Leper Hospital salries, $4680; ex- penees, $5400: Smallpox Hospital, $580; Alms- house, $100,000; miscellancous, $2950; City and County Hospital, $106,700; salaries, $08,920. “Total, $423,485. Civil Bervice Commission, $142,000, the same amount as last year, and additional for costs of examinations. Coroner's Office—The sum requested last year, §23,965, and §1200 additional to pay sal- ary of a toxicologist and pathologist. | Justices of the P mtogan. | month each in salary, as provided for the | last Legislature. A German contemporary states that ‘within the last decade the population of Europe has increased about 38,000,- 000, of whom Russia contributed 14, 000,000 and France less than 100,000, . MATIAS RESTAURANT, FAVORITE RBSORT OF BOHEMIANS, WHOSE PROPRIETOR 1S RESTING. | ST T The artist colony of Lower Mont- gomery street, the Latin Quarter, and the true Bohemians of this city have received a shock. Like a bolt from the April sky it came, and as a result the real Bohemian cult is looking for a new dining-place to make famous by its presence, for there’s a lock on Matias’ door! The little old Mexican restaurant on Broadway, near Kearny, which has for so long been a home to | all classes and nationalities, who met there on a3 common footing, and where the host would proudly open for in- spection his priceless volume of auto. graphs, original bits of musical com- position and artists’ sketches, many of which were made by men of rec- | ognized fame in the world of art, is closed. The shabby portal is made se- cure, the dingy windows are barred, and the tortilla, the enchilada and the | albondiga will cease their savory odors. for Matias has gone. { With no more ado than when the conventional being hangs on his of- fice door a sign, “Will be back in fif- | teen minutes,” the patron of Bohemia has had placed entirely across the front of his place a large sign bearing the words, “Gone to Europe. Will be back in six months.” In the windows are other notices, such as * vacation,” ““Closed April 18, to open in October.” With an amusing abandon- ment of business cares the round-faced Matias of Slavonia and the senoza his wife, from sunny Mexico, have shut up shop for a half-year's rest in Eu- rope. Incidentally they furnish to the busy American a unique example in business methods. WILL QUESTION A LICENSE LAW The law enacted by the California Legislature at its recent session to tax every corporation doing business in this State $10 a year for the privilege will be contested. Already steps have been taken to ascertain whether it is valid. There are several sections in the law. The first provides that “no corporation heretofore or hereafter in- corporated under the elaws of this State, or any other State, shall do, or attempt to do, any business by virtue of its charter or certificate of ircor- poration in this State without a li- cense therefor.” The first step has been taken by the Rowley Investment Company, which has sent out a circular letter to all cor- | porations- in this city asking them to | take part in making a test of the law |in question. Counsel has been re- tained and a vigorous fight is prom- ised. ment Company makes the following assertions: | which will ultimately place an unjust buraen upon corporations un! it be resisted. It | is especially onerous on the small corporaiions, However, as the amount of the tax is ex- | ceedingly small it is impossible for any one | company to assume the burden of contesting . We are advised that the act Is invalld, | ana it we can get the co-operation of other | corporations sufficient to warr: it we pro- pose to employ the best legal assistance avail- - to contest the validity of the act in | the courts. As the tax will be payable in | & few months and the act provides that the charters of all corporations failing to pay it shall be forfeited you must act promptly if you desire to aid us and obtain the benefit of ‘this contest. All that we ask you to do is to slgn the inclosed agreement to pay us one-half of the first years tax In case we are successful in having -the tax held illegal. We will pay all the costs and attorney fees and it will cost you nothing If we fal and only one-half of the first years tax it we win. This move has had the effect of bringing a large number of firms al- ready in touch with the Rowley In- vestment Company that has assumed the task of making the fight against the corporation license measure in court. The last section of the law is as follows: At_the expiration of said sixty days from the date of such proclamation (of the Gover- nor declaring that the provisions of the law will be enforced) the charters of all domestic corporations who have not complied with the provisions of thie act shall be forfeited to the State of Californja; and ail foreign cor- porations who have not complied with the visions of this act and pald said tax shall forfeit the right to do business in this State, —————— i | Appoint District Officers. The trustees of the San Francisco | Soclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals met yesterday. Twenty-six new members were elected. The fol- lowing members were appointed as district officers: Ernest S. Simpson, B. F. Blockman, Bdward W. Maler, P, L. Lilienthal, George A. Turner, Adam L. Vercevich, Stephen R. Thorne, E. Reed Wilson, E. Herman, Frederick Birdsall, J. S. Earls, Clyde Lemon, John P. Faivre, Charles B. Parker, F. Henry, George E. Hart, A. R. McCul- lough, D. Newell, Samuel F. Pond, W. A. Hunter, Dr. A. H. Wanz, James B. Stetson, Donald M: 4 the In a letter the Rowley Invest- e consider the act a mers entering wedge, Assert That Miner Channel Will Go to Them When the Diverting Canal Is Dug TAKE POSITIVE STAND Say That Right of Way and Not the Land Was Given to the City of Stockton —_— | Speclal Dispatch to The Call. STOCKTON, April 20.—When the di- | Miner Channel, which enters the city on the east side and traverses it for | more than a mile, will become dry. The heirs of Captain Weber, founder &f Stockton, claim that a large acreage of land in the bed of the former chan- nel—or slough—will thereupon revert to them. Ceorge A. Atherton, a clvil angineer familiar with the surveys, de- clares the same. It seems that Captain Weber did not deed the Miner Channel to the city at the time it was improved in 1878, but simply gave the city a right of way there for the stream. The city will forfeit the right of way as soon as the channel ceases to carry water, which will be as soon as the diverting canal is finished. That not all of Miner Channel will | revert to the Weber heirs is due to the fact that they sold some of the prop- erty abutting on the channel before the waterway was improved. Nevertheless property worth a fortune will revert | to the Webers soon as the diverting i canal is car g water. CYCLONE TEARS DOWN HOUSES —_— Special Dispatch to The Call. FRESNO, April 20.—To the fact that they had recently arrived from Kansas, two families by the names of Cullom and Whiteside owe thelr escape from death at the hands of a cyclone-like wind which swept over a section of country four miles south of Visalia | Wednesday afternoon. The twister | raised a two-story house belonging to | F. M. Busby more than one hundred | feet in the air and dropped it on the top |of a huge oak tree. Fruit trees were | uprooted, fences were demolished and | even oak trees were twisted to the | ground. The two families residing in Busby house saved themselves only by noting the danger in time and using an irrigation ditch as a cyclone cellar. Whiteside was some distance from the house when he saw the funnel- shaped cloud approaching. Remember- ing his Kansas experiences he dashed to the house and, routing out the wo- men and children, took refuge with them in & near-by ditch. The children lay flat on the ground with the grown | persons lying on top of them to hold them down. All escaped injury, but when they arose.not a vestige of the farm bulldings was to be seen. —_————— A TRIP ROUND THE TRIANGLE. | san Francisco-Grand Canyon-Los An- Reles. Forty dollars! Five stopovers! Nine days! Leaves May 1st, personally con- ducted via Santa Fe to Grand Canyon of Arizona, San Bernardino, Redlands, Riv- erside, Los Angeles; thence Southern Pa- cific Coast Line to Santa Barbara and San Francisco May 9th. Nine days; five stopovers; forty dollars. Ask the Santa Fe. 653 Market street, for itinerary. * e FARM HAND TOUCHES LIVE WIRE AND DIES Henry Gllbertson Is Accidentally Electrocuted on a Ranch Near Visalla. VISALIA, April 20.—Henry Gil- bertson was accidentally electrocuted this evening on the Harry Brown ranch at Naranjo, near this city. He was a native of Alexandria, Minn. His death is sald to have been due to care- lessness. (LAIM TITLE| | verting canal is dug east of this city | STRANGE FIND OF JUNKMEN Trunk Bought by Them at an “0Old Horse” Sale Holds Certificates of Deposit UNCLAIMED FOR YEARS ] Other Papers Show That the Owner Was at One Time in Dairy Business at La Honda ‘ Special Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Wash., April 20.—When Judd & Co., second-hand junk dealers, opened a trunk purchased at an “old horse” sale of the Pacific Coast Com- pany’s unclaimed baggage to-day they found it contained certificates of de- posit for $3725 in the name of Carlo P. Bolonelli, who, judging from other papers found, was a resident of Cali- fornia from 1890 to 1897. The trunk came to the Pacific Coast Company’s warehouse about five years ago as baggage from San Francisco, but no record of Bolonelli as a pas- senger can be found. Among the papers is a certificate of membership in Laguna Lodge, I. O. O. F., of Guadalupe, Cal, with dues paid until 1897. Other papers show Bolonelli was engaged in the dairy business with Antone Bassetti at La Honda. Two of the certificates show that on June 19, 1897, Bolonelli deposited $1500 with Tonini & Co., San Fran- cisco, and on various dates sums ag- gregating $2225 with J. F. Fugazi & Co., San Francisco. For the latter i deposits he was given a certificate of deposit on the Banca Cantonale Ticin- ese, Bellinzona, Switzerland, all bear- ing interest. There is also a deed showing he purchased a stock ranch from A. V. Kieffer of La Honda in 1892. In another paper, involving the sale of a stock of goods for $240, is the name of Mrs. Bolonelli. LARGE REVENCE FROM OYSTERS Special Dispatch to The Call TACOMA, April 20.—State Fish Com- missioner Kershaw announces that the . State has suddenly come into a fine revenue from the sale of seed oysters taken from the State oyster reserve. By recent legislation fifteen thousand [acres of valuable oyster lands on Puget Sound and Willapa harbor are placed in charge of the State Fish Commissioner. Under the State regu- lation the owners of private oyster lands can take seed from the State beds by the payment of a license fee between April 1 and June 15. The rate for the seed is ten cents per sack at Willapa harbor and twenty-five cents per sack on Puget Sound. A sack comprises one hundred and twenty pounds. No person can take from the State reserve more than five hundred sacks from each acre prepared for seed- ing. All moneys derived from these sales shall be paid into the State oyster fund for the development and main- tenance of Btate reserves. The State’s income this year will probably reach $25,000, and with good care of the beds will increase rapidly hereafter. —_———— RESIDENCE DISTRICT IS TO BE IMPROVED Board of Trustees of Vallejo Take Steps to Widen Many of the City’s Thoroughfares. VALLEJO, April 20,—The first re- sults of the work of the Twenty Thou- sand Club which was recently organ- ized for the improvement of Vallejo is found in the instructions of the City Board of Trustees to the City Attor- ney to draw up an ordinance widening the sidewalks in the residence por- tion of the city from fourteen to twen- ty feet. When this has become a law it is planned to divide the city into districts and improve the streets by macadamizing them. PRAGERS riday Surpriseno..40 Prices for to-day only. No C. 0. D. or telephone orders Except Groceries. Choice Creamery Buiter 29¢ a sq. Special Friday and Saturday. (Fourth floor—Grocery Department.) 1 /3 Dress Goods and Silks Table Linens and Wash Goods Paas Easter Egg Dyes 100 different colors and designs. Friday Surprise Price, Off on All Remnants For This Friday Surprise Only. Laces and Embroideries Curfains and Draperies Patent Leather Belis For the little boys aad girls. Special Friday Surpri o iy Mercerized Sateen 36 inches wide; in all colors and black; suitable for drop skirts and petticoats. Regularly 20¢ a yard. § 1 Frid Su’r;rise pem i 14C Pretty 25¢ Glassware 10c Friday Surprise Only. (Third Floor.) Choice 10¢c. « Full fire polished glassware, clean looking. The design is an entirely new one, just unpacked—a perfect imitation of cut glass. clear and of any one of the following, One-handled Olive Dish. One-handled Pickle Dish. One-handled Pickle Dish, oblong shape. Two odd-shape Flower Iiolders. One Water Pitcher. Fancy Veiling Some are plain, others have pretty chenille dots; come in the leading colors and black Taffeta Ribbon Pure silk; good heavy quality; width 3 inches; colors black, and white. Worth up to soc a white, pink, blue, red, lavender yard. Special Friday and all other popular Surprise Price, a 15c shades. Friday Sur- 10c yard ol % prise Price, a yard.. Y ethe- Ice Cream Easter ra ?r o — Novelties, Finest of Eggs and s " Cards ALWAYS RELIABLE Candies rortovayana| [} MASKET 5 e : SONES ST3 _ vs ooy RED MEN OF BAKERSFIELD PLAN A BIG CELEBRATION Appoint & Committee to Arrange for the Fitting Observance of the Fourth of July. N BAKERSFIELD. April 20,—The largest Fourth of July celebration in the history of this city has been ar- ranged for by the local tribe of Red Men. At a meeting of the order last night a committee on finances for the celebration received orders to raise $5000. The business men of the city are showing the greatest interest in the project. Governor Pardee and staff have been invited and the Gov- ernor has sent word that he will make every effort to attend. —_———— Farmer Is Killed by a Train. °* MARYSVILLE, April 20.—John J. | McGrath, a farmer, was run down by a freight train near his farm south of town last evening and sustained inju- ries from which he died this morning. He leaves a wife and several children. ————————— It's a poor religion that will not stand the trin from the church to the street. HAYS DECIDES NOT TO OFFER ANY EVIDENCE Accused Cashier Will Submit Case on the Testimony Produced by the Prosecution. LOS ANGELES, April 20.—When court convened this afternoon to re- sume the trial of H. T. Hays, the Riv- erside cashier, charged with embez- zlement, one of the jurors, John Mec- Arthur, a retired capitalist, was taken suddenly i1l and had to be ecarried from the room. The defense then an- nounced that they would not offer any evidence. The court limited the time for arguments of both sides to three days and adjourned court until next Monday. ———— SELVAGE STAYS IN JAIL.—B. F. Selvage, an Oregon Deputy Sheriff, was taken befors United States Commissioner Heacock yesterday for identification on -the charge of having de- frauded Jobn F. Erhart, an Oakland butcher, out of $5 on pretense that Seivage was a4 TUnited States secret service agent. The liminary examination was set for 2 p. m. Sat- urday of this week and ball was fixed at $1000. In default of bonds Selvage was taken back to jail. ———— There is no lift in a long face. A great deal is said in these days | about Liquozone. Millions are telling of the good 1t ! has done; for one home in five— wherever you 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 al- | most banished. These facts have injured some in- terests. And a few of the injured— to serve a selfish interest—seek to disparage that which has done the good. ‘ 5 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. Our answer to all is this: The virtues of Liquozone are de- rived solely from gas, by a process re- quiring immense apparatus and from eight to fourteen 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. A And, to emphasize this answer, we offer $s000 to any one who can dis- prove it. In this business, methods which are subject to criticism are most carefully avoided.. We permit no misrepresent- ation; no claims which have not been ADVERTISEMENTS. fulfilled. Our product is too vital to humanity to be laid open to prejudice. What we say about Liquozone is true. What we claim it can do has, again and again, been done. And in any disease which we claim that Liquozone 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 difficult cases obtainable. We found that dis- eases which had resisted medicine for years yielded at once to it. Sickness which had been pronounced incurable was cured. The value of the product was placed beyond possible question before we staked our fortunes and reputations on it. It was amply proved that in germ troubles Liquozone did what medicine could not do. Then we gave the product away— gave millions of bottles, one to each of millions of sick ones. > We have published no testimonials; no evidence of cures. 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 it, than all drugs, all medicines com- bined. e 3 How petty is that self-interest which would have you go back to the old methods—to the days before Liquozone! Back to the time when the very cause of disease was un- known, or when no one knew how to meet it! - What, Liquozone Is. , | The greatest . value of Liquozome lies in its germicidal powers. It is a germicide so certain that we publish on every bottle an offer of $1000 for a disease germ that it canot 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 dealing with inside germs, But germs are vegetables, and Liquozone—the very life of an ani- mal—is deadly to vegetal matter. This fact—above all others—gives Liquo- zone its value. There is no other way to directly end the.cause of any germ disease. Germ Diseases. 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. These are the diseases to which medicine does not apply, for drugs cannot kill inside germs. All that medicine can do is to act as a tonic, aiding Nature to overcome the germs. But those results are indirect and un- certain. The sick cannot afford to We Offer $5,000 As a Guarantee on Liquozone. The First. Bottle Is Free. Colte—Croup Pleurisy—Quinsy b Constipation Rheumatism Catarrh—Can Serotula—Syphilts tery—Diarrhea Skin Diseases — Dropsy Stomach_troubles Dy: s Throat Troubles Eczema—FErysipelas Tuberculosis Fevers—Gall Stones Tumors—Ulcers Goltre—Gout Varicocele Women's Diseases All diseases that Degin with fevers—all inflammation—all catarrh—all contaglous dis- - results of impure or poisoned l0od.. In nervous debdility Liquozone acts as a vital- izer accomplishing what no drugs can do. 50c Bottle Free. The way to know Liquozone, if you have never tried it, is to ask for a bottle free. We will then send you an order on a local druggist for a full-size bottle—a s0¢ bottle—and will pay the druggist ourselves for it. This applies only to the first bottle, of course—to those who have never used itl 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 you that Liquozone does as we claim. We would certainly not buy 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 well. Then be fair with yourself; ac- rely on them. And no one needs to cept our offer to-day. Let us show now. Liquozone alone can destroy the cause of these troubles. It goes wherever the blood goes, so no germ can escape it. The results are almost inevitable. We have seen them so often in every disease in this list that we have come to rely on them. Liquo- zone has itself so certain that in any stage of any of these diseases we will gladly send to any patient who asks it an absolute guaranty: Blood Potson m % h Bright's Disease Liver Troubles Coushe—Colds. Many Teart Troubles Consumption . Pllesw-Pneumenia you, at our expense, what this wonder- ful product means to you. Liquozone costs soc and $1. CUT OUT THIS COUPON offer may not appear again. Wil Lo the blanks and mail it to The Liguo- Company, s . 458-464 Wabash Ave., Chi- cago. My dlsease is... e 1 have never tried Liquozone, but if you will supply me & 50 bottle free I will

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