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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 1899. MARY MARTIN IS UP TO HER OLD TRICKS AGAIN Oakland Mesmerist Arrested on a Serious Charge. Mrs. E. L. Foss Claims She Was Hypno- tized, Held a Prisoner and Forced to Sign Away Property. vas sworn out yester-) and stood over me and s: gn.’ It was over to her all to that not un 1 by Mrs. V Oakl, Marti and Mary to r_several whereabouts ur "ot | ney became the will of | ter in the har d away her prop- | succeeded in loc E , In the P 1 time Mrs. Mart the offic We| rant on Mrs )£ hypnotist With & | her in bed . ’she claimed, with an realty spirited | attack of p Mrs. Martin is apt victim. Sarah | to be 11l wh ant When felt the mag- ard affair she R rom a tumorous e deeded a Svengali. “It is a case of blackma she sat up in bed under t of Officer J. F. W aid as 1l_eye Mrs, is c I do nc hyprotism, and, further, a thing. Mr past and th Foss ght she can scare me all fight this mat } ich was P2 the under- | ¢ me $200 2 ¥ District Court Business. | v Morse of the U t to Wa d thet ir e od weeks | DR VOORSANGER ~ WARNS AGAINST - IVIPERIALISM: Reviews the Dreyfus Case. {THE LESSON IT CONTAINS A | | | SAYS THE INCREASING ARMY IS | A MENACE. Lt During the services last night at Temple Emanu-El in celebration of the feast of | Sukkoth, Rabbi Voorsanger lectured on | | “The Dreyfus Case After the Second | | Court-martial.”” So large an audience | | gathered that the seating city of the ouse of worship was entirely inadequate to seat it, many remaining standing till the conclusion. The music was particu- | larly delightful. | In beginning his discourse Rabbl Voor- o g 7 747 gy % 7 L7577 05, 7777 22 A 7 Vo a SOUTHERN PACIFIC ECONOMY AND WRECKS Kruttschnitt Blamed for the Policy of Retrenchment. Traffic Manager Stubbs Defends the Gen- eral Manager, and Says He Must Not Be Censuredfor Trainmen’s Carelessness. HE recent frequency of wrecks on | Spreading rails, negligent trainmen, the Southern Pacific Railroad has|storms and in the last accident in Ala- attracted more than the ordinary meda fog have been blamed for the share of public attention. The | wrecking of trains and the malming of do: that occurred on different | travelers. None of the heads of the com- pany will make any statement that seem to throw any light on the menacing state of affairs. When they are asked concern- | ing any or all of the accidents they 3 swer (hat the company would p: them if it could; that it feels the loss its cars and its engines; that it does like tc be put to the expense of sending wrecking trains and surgeons to the scen of every accident, and that if there any possible way to avert the disasters they would only be too glad to learn it and to put it into practice immediately. Then the officers of the company allow the impression to get out in sume way or another that the fault Les really with the trainmen, who disobey orders.” Unfortu- nately_tor the trainmen, they dare not | teil. "Should any one of them feel cour- ageous enough to deny thé innuendoes of | the heads of department he feels that he would get lus discharge in short order. | Consequently the men Keep mum and the cidents go on happening with the regu- larity of clockwork. ! The public, which has long waited for some explanation from the railroad peo- ple, has about finished building up a theory of its own to fit' the series of accidents. As a basis it began with the well-founded rumors that floated up from the south shortly after the wreck of the train bearing delegates to the National ducational = Association convention at s Angeles. Two women were killed on n and any others up and scaping said that he fact that pecial was olutely unable to reason of the fact parts of the system during the first the engineer of the ti asleep at his post, al hold up his head by that he was overworked. Putting two | and two together—and for this purp there are more than four accidents—the people have come to the conclusion that there is only one theory that will account | for the nearly a score of accidents that have occurred along the line of the South- | ern Pacitic during the present year. T theory, which has atfained the p tions ‘6f an uncontradicted rumor, 3 reat number of people. It is poii of retrenchment inaug- | urated by the Southern Pacific Compan at the beginning of the year is respon | ble for all the accidents, in that it com- pels engineers, firemen and trainmen to | work when they are nearly dropping on their fe 5 sleep, while it has cut | down the force of trackwalkers to the ger point. 4 iis policy of retrenchment, rightly or ? I not, has been generally attributed to @ | General Manager Kruttschnitt. A re- + | porter for The Call paid a visit yesterda to his office for the purpose of interview ing him in re; d to the recent criticisms O e 2 tely left the ttorney, CASEY OF THE | hi to dump’ ” | board, that he was ) the gang that robbed the Alameda or that he owes rgo & Co. one do Hence it s he Chief to produce his evidence and ( town ey and his evidence, ing says t he will remain in await the production thereof. COUNTY HOSPITAL AROUSES DISCUSSION 5 AT LIBERTY Ordered Discharged| appeal made by the Board of | | to the Merchants’ Association, by Judge Murasky. G e e e | a new City and County Hos. i . | was the topic of discussion o B8 | the Methodist Ministers’ Union y 1 Witk many | morning. Rev. Dr. Urmy brou police « with | subject by~ reading a communication Alan ia robbery | which he had received from the Health ving t ed by | Department. It was decided that dump . Dr. Urmy represent the body before the 4 woa”® | Supervisors in the afternoon. but later it accused AVINE | was agreed to allow the matter to rest 1’ from 5| During the discussion Rev. J. N. Beard, his intended vic-| wh church is in vicinity of the s and then pad- | hospital, blamed the hospital management miles away when | for the terrible condition of the institu- ¢ berty. With | tion. The speaker said the only way to « i W1 | clean the hospital would be to begin with Chief oL Fo- Dr. Hammond stated was held in hospital had been in ex- the wenty-five years, and < CK, the ion hat the present man just | rn down and another x nerve | 1 the | Rev Andrews of Ashbury M. E. certaimnly € a | (Church kland 1 an Interesti A writ of habeas | per on of the Holy S ut on b wccused | The paper aroused a great deal of favd earing of the [ able comme he discussion which fol- nd whe y had been | Jowed the reading of the essay was with the law bearing | ticipated in by Revs. Harris, B ed Judge Muras Smith, Dennett edham, Hammond t on the writ, h Urmy. J. W. Ross, Chapman, Kirby, Si- ice did not e monds and prosecution of an e B B e ] The Crystal Hot Sea Baths. 1 granted and Casey is at lib-| Physicians recommend the Crystal warm sea g baths. | water tub and swimm »rth Beach, ; involves some inter i ire had made | The Cabinet Visits. his statements, Farg: &| The members of the San ¢ cided that 1t b ame agency | Cabinet of the National Union B people reached the | official visit last night to R08t if not money | Council of that order. The v fratern fous persults | rece s Lees and his | and skt vl in the criminals. | there of enter- i bit of remaining | tainment arranged by the members of the indisposed o hurry | sitting council. There were short ad- arm hours of the dres Pre rter of the ( hurried to He was i imes . F and when it was | doorkeeper of th of the order: Teataiid not know any of the | character sketch rge Monks « surrounding the ¢ the | dialect stump ake Roth, recl : imvestigating it was immedi- | tations by J. S. and remarks by poll D that guilt was sealing his | Deputy J. N. Bunting and others. The <igned to a bed in the | visitors were made the guests at a coll habeas corpus for his | tion. sworn out and | S s Alled | padies’ tallor-made suits, fur capes, cloaks, Chief Lees, thro 1 his co ' "‘w. Credit. M. Rothschild 34 Post st. . return in which ho set forth that Casey ssRothachiin e} Doptat 8 held A e of the crime being that [ Court Deflance’s Anniversary. o procured a sult of clothes from| Court Defiance, Foresters of America, -was vet unpald for. | o celebrate the twelfth anniversary of Two f 1 were then | fio ingiitution by a complimentary ball, :worn out_on b iefendant. One | {5 be given in B'ne B'rith Hall on the oned the jurisdiction of the cOUrt| gvening of the Z7th inst. On the same he ground that the prisoner had been | pjght there will be a reception to its 14 in custody for the purpose of Pre-| two volunteer soldiers who have returned ination against his objec-| from the Philippines, George Rosenberg for a longer period than six days|ang Herman Cook. "l the other contended that there was no Probable cause for the placing ol the| GOGIEOLR TR0 NG00 O000N charge aga defendant’s name. b} E, i AT e Tatter ground that the court Next SUNDAY’S CALL will be a nassed upon the merits of the e hat It was not evident that the de- was upon the the court ‘2 CAL ) nt thi marvel of beautiful illustrations ant had committed the crime charged —its half-tone work being es- n " he evidence given during the prelim- & e o nination was to be considered, pecially fine. and Casey was ordered dismissed from o SOROENNIIG G RO RGO GRLTRNR "Case '; pleased at the outcome, immedf- ¢ | manner of | @+0+-64-0406404+-0+0+@| | sanger called attention to the 9th of Sep- | tember, the day on which the court-mar- | within the | pears to be almost like taking on | ently busy investigating, but | t | to | of the mas nt growing out of the | s on the system. The s very busy with his + | correspondence and would not say till & | to-day whether or not he cared to give out an interview. Traflic Manager Stubbs ¢ | was asked for an interview on the so- @ | called Kruttschnitt policy of retren 4 | ment said to be responsible for the re | accidents on the road and for the delays @ |in the overland train service. He gave + | out _the following: T | “Mr. Kruttschnitt's policy, whatever @ | it may be, good, bad or indifferent (and + | T believe it to be good, for he is one of the & | best transportation men in the country), | is not re ible for the recent accidents 2 *| ‘1‘” :|.ur TC nor fu_r‘h(!f‘ll:l,\' to the over- 0 & |land train service. The latter, I am in- SHE STOOD OVER TAE s formed, s largely due to failure of our AND SAID 'SIGN. ¢ | connections to make schedule time, which & | is followed through to ination with o | incre ng loss of time, the heavy | traffic_of the Southern Pacific Company @ | precludes the possibility of its making up + | the time lost by its connections, as has | been its custom under ordinary condi- +oeie b o@® | tions. The disposition to make the general manager responsible for the disobedience or forgetfulness or carelessness of train- men is unfair, is harmful to him person- six months of the year have been fol- lowed closely by six or seven more resent month that people are r;x;«i«l!) gaining the opinion that some- | &1Y ;\Q;Lj*,,"‘ fitive ,‘-’,‘,{;‘r'::-"wtn“, ey e | thing fs radically wrong with the road, | fts power for good when it beco “per- and that the sooner it is traced and | sonal: : Ralaare remedied the bette: As 1t is now it ap- | life THE NEW COAST in one’s hand to make a journey over | any of the lines of the company. En- gines are smashed, c ditched, lives crushed out of the bodies of passengers and train crews day after day. The com- | pany and the Corone tationed at v rious points on the system are appar- up to date seem no nearer to the seat of the danger 1 when they started. arious theorie ve been advanced account for this succession of disas- ters, but no one thec ible means will all. v - STEAMER HERE Pathfinder Is in Port From San Diego. y by any po them cover PO DS compassed by any unkind act or any re- iatory method, but, he continued, the French people ought to understand that the source of American indignation at the Drey verdict springs not from a de: to meddle with other people’s busine: but from the strength of their own ideals, The people of the United States could not The United States survey steam New York last Sunday night. coast and geodetic Pathfinder arrived from She is a at Rennes found Dreyfus guilty, as | understand any judge and jury holding | brand new vessel, having been completed e s e e in contempt the opinlon of the highest 7t bt 4 ¥ he day upon which human justice | court in the land, ks the DrestaslShest| during the Spanish war. She will go to «d and the French nation sa | martial had held the opinton of the Courr | the navy yard and have a few small guns by crime ; of Cassation when militarism declared | Put aboard, after which she will do some understand,” he said, | Dreyfus a traitor to his country. He con- | important work for Uncle Sam in the particular point in the world's history | tinued S neighborhood of Hawall. After that she that there ome people who will ask h“hn‘l '1"13“" think? Is he a traltor? I will go to Alaskan waters. The Path- do not want to present the Jewish | aya some here as well. Who declares Drey as she can steam 250 knots on a con- standpoint of this case,” he continued, re- [ fus quilty? Political traitors; Priests sumption of ten tons of coal. ferring to the Dreyfus court-martial. “At | ple who desire pews in churches as step. The Pathfinder left New York in June me other time, when you feel like it, | Plnk stones to apsreny: people Whe 2 | last and went to Washington, D. €. From y open the books of Jewish history for| gna upon treason. They declare Dreyfus | there she went to Norfolk and some de- and show you that the story of this| gujlty to-day. The civilized world has de- | fects having been found in her she went man is but an added chapter of the his-| ¢ of the martyr known to you as the H that it is but one of the ndering J ' rehear which h scaped apol- | ogists who write history—but to-night I| intend to confine myself to a consideration of this case from the standpoint of an or- American citizen, to ascertain :thier or not it has merit. There are a good many and elsewhere whose stupid prejudice, | whose unreasoning race hatred, whose fanaticism forever prevents them from coming to a reasonable conclusion, but 1 dislike to argue with people who believe | that there is a Deity who turns an eye of | love to the Christian and an eye of hatred to everybody el I hold such sentiments and teachings contemptible, and I would | hot dignify them by denouncing them as | being unworthy of the lowest grade of human intelligence. No! no! I will not gpeak of Dreyfus as the Jew, but as a man, a Frenchman and a citizen. What | has he to say for himself before the bar | of public urlnlnn in America? Is he guilty | or not guilty ' Rabbi Voorsanger briefly reiiewed the Yr-nmn here : of the first court-martial, the ac- n five years later by the Court | assation and the recent of the military court at Renmnes. case he sald: Sometimes 1 think the whole affair ought | not to be taken seriously. Wasn't it a | beautiful arrangement. They had a tradi- tion in olden times of the “‘Man with the | Iron Mask'; and they had the prisoner of the Chateau d'If, and that story must be f reproduced for the entertainment of France. | The people of France needed another spasm and Devils Island was put on as the last | scene In the tragedy that was gotten up, { because, forsooth, the nation needed enter- | talnment. Sometimes it appears so, and I was afraid that the whole affair must be | taken as humorous. It didn't appear that | Justice could fall so low. |, Voicing his contempt for the military | judges of Dreyfus and their partial ver- dict, Dr. Voorsanger said he did not be- lieve that the ends of justice would be proceedings | Of the | clared him innocent Fellow citizens, we in the United States ought to ‘learn something else from this Dreyfus case. I am a Jew, a co-religlonist of Dreyfus, and T would rather stand with him and suffer with him than to be in the place of his judges. We ought to learn something with which the Jew is not con- cerned and with which the Frenchman is not concerned. It seems to me that when a court of limited jurisdiction, as this court- can override the decrees of the to Newport News for an overhauling. She started on her long journey to San Francisco on June 16, and stopped on the way at San Lucie, Pernambuco, Rio de Janeiro, Montevideo, and then made her way through the straits of Magellan to Callao, and from there to San Diego and thence to this port. The trip was an uneventful one. The men caught sixteen martial was ; T X B e Coite oF the ond s of the | turtles after leaving Callao and the last T mng sotten in Denmark e ust be | one was not consumed until San Diego hed. At San Diego, as already mit any court to insult the dignity o St e ., Phat court which represents the hignes; | told in The Call, one of the cadets was authority of our constitution. In France | taken sick and died. Captain Perkins is in command of the athfinder and he is assisted by Execu- tive Officer Dow, Second Officer Glover and Third Officer Atkinson. Chief En neer Goldsborough is In charge of t a court of soliders laughs at civil jurisdic- tlon. That shows that in reality there are two factors in France, that is the army and the people; and, in the United States, if you know what is good for vou; If you will take notice of the trend of events, engine room and Eugene Wheat is pay and if you have any desire to preserve your master. The Pathfinder is anchored in manhood and the rights and privileges for naval row, just astern of the Marble- which your fathers fought, the standing arm; 0 on Increasing of the United States and find out to your t what will occur when a military ollgarchy or a military conspiracy will _endeavor to override the will of the people as It has done in France, That is what is going to happen to us: that will be the result of the growth of standing armies all over the world. In Germany and Russia, a standing army may be a glorlous thing from the point of the feudalists, but from the standpoint of a free man, a standing army is a constant menace to the free institutions which we hope to defend with our lives. I have refrained from talking politics from this pulpit, but the time has come when the pulpit must take a hand when men feel In their own minds that the rights and privilezes of the people are in jeopardy and with the possibility of an army seek- ing to impose upon the people, can take place In this country as will as in France. Let us not sacrifice our ideals of democ- racy, or our ideals of fustice In this new passion, in_this new-grown love for im- perialism, in this new fad of the nation. Let us take care not to sacrifice too much of the simplicity of our lives, lest we fall and sorrow as unhappy France is sorrowing. head and lowa. The German gunboat Geier went to sea vesterday. She will stop at Esquimalt, . C., and will then go for a cruise in Bering Sea. ; The steamer Sequoia had a narrow es. cape yesterday. She went on Duxbury reef, but was got off without assistance. Owing to the dense fog Captain Thurieg had stopped the engines, having run up his distance, and the vessel was drifting with the tide. The first intimation of danger was when the vessel struck. She stayed on the reef about four hours and then came off. "She had on board 17,000 feet of lumber, and as soon as it is dis- charged she will be docked for an ex- amination. Captain Thurieg does not think the hull is materially damaged. The Occidental and Oriental Company’s steamer Coptic, which arrived from the Orient Sunday night, had aboard elghty cabin, fourteen second cabin and 536 Jap- anese and three Chinese steerage pas- sengers. On_September 3 she spoke the four-masted British bark Ancona, bound from Manila for New York, and on Sep- j tember 12 the malil steamer Alameda THE EMPORIUM. THE EMPORIUM. | ;5’9 PRIRIR VP RR SRR RRPPRUPORRRTP RPN PR RE RIS Free demonstration of Vzlox Paper in Camera - Departm-nt daily jrom 12:30 fo 5 p. m. ‘Bring vour best negative and vet a free print. Professor BEmporium Herbert, Economist Magician, and Our mammoth Daivirm10 o BB GoldenRule Bazaar. Winterte B - AndCAUIFORNIAS LARGEST—AMERICA CRAMDEST SToRe. 2550 ™ Sale of Silk Remnants. One-quarter off the marked prices. On this day (Tuesday) only the big store offers a choice lot of Silk Remnants, consisting of fancy stripes and checks, plain taf- fetas, foulards, Indias and black silks, at a further reduction of 25 per cent from the marked remnant prices. Tray and*é_arviny Cloths. Special Sale for this day onliy. We place on sale this morning 10 dozen Linen Tray and Carving Cloths, size 18x27 inches, hemstitched and drawn work in very pretty designs, stamped ready for working, cloths that we sell regularly at 40c each—for this day only......... 220 Huck Towels” For this day only | Food Huck i close and a"rtai".s’ we ffer 200 pairs 42¢ Pair. ;i Lac: Cutains, TOWelIs, 12¢. 1.y, hoa 35 3 yards long, 30 inches wide, good pat- [red border, carefully hemmed, size 18 terns, and very special value at thelinches, an excelient wearing, perfect price, per pair 42 absorber, that retails ragularly at $1.75 per dozen—on sale this day only, each... 25¢c Hair Brushes, 13¢c. Coal 0il A wooi, StOVE, durable | 5 2@, I};{:mth |A reliable one- TUS, - burner Coal Oil mixed |geove solid cast bristles, |¢on¢) cast nick- hardwood back, medium size, a good [e]ed value 25c Brush—on special sale for this day only.. S oL top guaranteed rest, a safe, first-cla |stove; complete For this day only we offer |With Wwick—this Pearl 100 gross of a good |day on A .52¢ Buttons. iy o pear) Bu- ““Narcissus,” ottt tons—16, 18, 20 and 24 iine—two doz>n ime on a card, regularly 1Uc a card........7€ complete’ 32c' .:inc- its initial appearance the big store is en- “sj§ amal N?? T best of sham- labled to offer in sheet form th: heauti- poos, a raliable ful instumental piece, “Narcissas,” from Shamj 006 i ai scalp the Water Scenes by Ethelbert Novin, cleaner—on special sale Tuesday onlv, |that has alwa sold in folios at el S s d 2 2 at d g g2 a2t D E I T T LT R AT T AT RN TTE T T AT TS T T 4REARERRL QQ4Q“‘t44‘4(QQQ41QQ'QQQQ‘Q“(Q‘QQQQ(QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ(QQQ!QQQ‘QQ . package. .3e $1.25 i{’_‘.““.““‘fl“ AEAASA ALSSEAALASEASEESSEASIN) from San Francisco for Honolulu. The | transports Siam and Leelanaw were in UNITED STATES BRANCH. ho: The teamsters on the Leelanaw {6 work double to make up for their 10ss. CONDITION AND AFFAIRS to the transport. The horses on a Honolulu when the Coptle was there. Al- | were on a strike and threaten to_de- They were not allowed on deck du; OF THE both transports were landed and put i fred Watson hospital steward on !hfl‘ STAT”E_MENT sert. They asserted that two of their th age, and the crew of the ( | Siam, had his leg broken by one of the OF THE number were left behind and they had said were only awaiting a chance The schooner Anna W n_collision with the battleship Tow sterday, but very little damage resulted. The schooner was Deating out from the wharf, when the wind_ fell Hght and the ebb {ide carried ASSURANCE COMPANY her down on the warship. The captain o let go his anchor, but it was too late (¥, Lendon, }Ingl‘;n‘({)'fi»‘}nbl’l{hrfl I the Tow boat boom. 5 ‘Btate 1 5 3 o e A | Insurance Commissioner of ths ate of Cali- The ship Bohemia arrived from the can- | forpia, pursuant to the provisions of Sections neries last night. John Sodeberg, one of | 650 ana B11 of the Political Gode, condensed as the crew. had leg badly broken and | per blank furnished by the Commissioner. he was sent to the German hospital as | soon as the vessel anchored. During e some heavy weather one of the water [Amount of Capital Stock, paid up fa sks went adrift and while trying ure it, Sodeberg had his leg crushed. The men on the auxiliary crujser Bad- ger consider they only enlisted for the war, and that in conSequence they are being illegally kept on the vessel. Nine- teen of them deserted some weeka ago to ASS 5 Real Estate owned by Company. Loans_on Bonds and Mortgages.. Cash Market Value of all Stocks and Bonds owned by Compan: 2,224,157 50 Amount of Loans secured by pledge of Bonds, Stocks and other mar- and the others rt they will “jump | jetable securities as collateral the ship” on the fi opportunity. In| cash in Company's Office. 12,960 50 consequence Commander _ Miller' has | Cash in Banks 3121 stopped all shore liberty and the men are | Interest due and accrued on all growling worse than ever. Stceks and Loans . . 24,600 00 2 | Cash in hands of United States T = Trustees s e S p rse ot Collec: ADVERTISEMENTS. i 164,566 T4 —————— Bills receivab fatured, taken for Fire and Marine Risks. Rents_due and accrued . Due from other Companies for Re- insurance on losses already paid.. Total Assets . 120,075 08 LIABILITIES. | Losses adjusted and unpaid 24,104 00 | Logses in process of Adjustmen | “in Suspense ... 188,275 00 Losses resisted, 24,455 00 | Gross premiums on ning one vear or less | relnsurance 50 per cent. 750,350 51 | Gross premiums on Fire ning ‘more than one year. : 265 64; relnsurance pro rata. 636,085 89 Gross premiums on Marine n land Navigation Risks. $———— reinsurance 100 per cent | Gross premiums on Mart T0 BE ASTOUNDED. Risks, $—— re The developments that are now taking per cent .. ce, and which will be publicly an- ATl other dem ed in the papers of the 22d, will pany se the value of the stock of this company 100 per cent. Total Liabilities . All persons registered on our books & — as stockholders prior to September 2ist INCOME. will receive the benefit of this increase. | Net Cash actually received for Fimn‘” e | _premiums & eereeeene. 31,992, INVESTIGATE. NEL Cash actually received PROSPECTUS FRE: | "rine premiums Duion. Consolidated 01 and § 5755 | Transpartation (o, Received for_intere on Bonds, Stocks, all other sources .. Recelved for profit o 322-323 PARROTT BUILDING, | SAN FRANCISCO. OAKLAND 0FFICE: 460 TENTH STREET. ties Offices open 8 a. m. t6'8 p. m. | 76,400 3% 3,483 05 Recelved from ail Total Income .. EXPENDITURES. Net amount pald for Fire Losses (in- cluding $289,742 73, losses of p ous vears) . ...$1,182,711 9 Net amount paid for Marine Losses (including_§ los of | _previous years). s 3 Dividends to Stockholders.. ; Paid or allowed for Commission or ETREE R — | _ Brokerage .. ceseceee 426,893 T8 p— —— Paid for Salaries, Fees and other charges for om\ i c‘h]’rk\: 10‘!{ 135,134 17 i Paid for State, National and lo Stylish Men R 62, | Al other payments and expenditures. 210,091 : = Wear Our Tailor-Made Suits. Let us make a suit or a pair of pants for you. You do not know what a perfect-fitting. stylish-cut garment Total Expenditures 1 Fire. | Losses tncurred during the year......§1,158,515 9 Risks and Premiums. |Fire Risks remiums. Net amount of Ris] written during until you wear one year . 433,306 53,003,947 23 made by Net amou expired . year 3,208,248 54 Net amot December 31, 1895..... 85 66 The Tailer, E. B. CLARK, Assistant iManager. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 25th All - Wool Business 3 Suits, gay of Ja . 0. RUGER, Notary Publlc. $15 50, | All-Wool Pants, $4.50. {BUTLER & HALDAN, 201-203 Montgomery St., San Francisco. 1110°1112 Market St., San Franclsco. 1011 Washington St., Oakland. 143 South Spring St. L Angele: General Agents for Pacific Coast, 413 CALIFORNIA STREET, | SAN FRANCISCO. DR. CROSSMAN’S 00000000000 0000000 o o SPECIFIC Ml RE. o™F PALACE “*o For the cure of Gonorrhoea, §Iu,ljsulclu:es | g GRAND HOTELS © and analogous complaints of the Organs of © Generstion, !0 SAN FRANCISCO. o Connected by a covered passageway. (] [+ Price §1 a bottle. For sale by druggists. o o & oy e = = ——————————— | D 1400 Room=—900 wi h Bath At:ached. oy . A !‘O All Under One Management. Wright's Indian Vegetable PIs 9., ors cas eaice: | © European Plan.$1.00 per day and upward @ Are acknowledged by thousands of persous | (o American Plan§3.00 per duy and upward o Who have used them for forty years to cure Correspondence Sollcited. SICK HEADACHE, GIDDINESS, CONSTI- | © JOEN 0. KIREPATRICK, Mansger, © PATION, Torpid Liver, Weak Stomach, Pim- ples and purify the blood. 000000000000000000