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(-] JESSIE MORRISDN IMPENCING DEAL 5 K0T CORVICTED| 8 TWO RHILAOADS After Long Deliberation the | Powerful Interests Buying Jury Fails to Agree on Stock of the Wabash a Verdicl. and Erie Lines. FERTEAELLS | Vanderbilts and the Pennsylvania Peovle Are Reported to Be Connected With the Father of Mrs. Castle’s Slayer Is Hopeful of Her Release, While the Prosecution Hints at Perjury. Transaction. ) 5. De ¥ YORK, Dec. 14 —According to all 3 son’s r r = in Wall street important develop- < arg are pending the affairs of the k Rallr, ne ently report well-informed as 3 powerful In- ysten ith regarded other ris Penns e one hand her have stock 2 in Sugar Refining. A the i Arbuckle I refuse dis- Shot by a Girl. WHOM A E! i CONVICT step- | a West th street saioon-keeper November 30, was of homicid: At the had struc and She seized a re- since which time he | rday agel down. m. ehsch gir a h s be MISTAKE IN SIGNALS CAUSES TRAIN WRECK| Five Passengers and Five of the | Train Crew Are More or Less Badly Injured. PITTSBURG, Pa., Dec. 14.—The day ex- press from Chicago on the Pittsburg, Fort and Chicago collided with the le accommodation train near Edgeworth this morning. F gers and five trainmen were inju rig The injured: R. L. Stever ew York, 3 condition serious; J. E. Hanson, Ch: ack 1s quoted Mrs. J. F Hanson; Willlam A cher, 14; George Fleming. : . fireman, probably Dorsey baggagemaster, die; James son, conductor; Fred Schuch, brakeman. - A mistake of signals caused the acci- g - | REFUSE TO JOIN MINEWORKERS' UNION | Hoisting Engineers May Be Forced Out of Employment by Not Affil- ison murder case has been one esting in the annals of The principals were . Gaughter of M. H. Mor- | artobate Julse; N | iating With Organization. stie d Ol Cast e e e aeinen | CLINTON, Ind., Dec. 14—The United - d in the county for | Mineworkers have demanded that all quarter of a ce Miss Mor- | hoisting engineers join their union. The nd Castl> were clerks in a “rack- | engineers have refused and the miners’ he married Clari union has demanded their discharge un- entione to the Pris- | jess they comply with their demands. n_the trial thai| State President Van Horn of the United een the two | Mineworkers has sustained the miners. All mines in the district are idle to-day. | 1t is belleved they will resume with new | enetneers to-morro "OT AND KILLED BY | HIS BROTHER-IN-LAW had abstracted from in the racket store. Mis plea was self-defense, and on | Husband Goes to Shoot His Wife, but Instead Himself Meets Death. . which the defense declared that Mra. Castle | BUTTE, Mont., Dec. 14.—J. V. Cunning- into the house and attack- | ham, proprietor of a lodging-house, was € it necessary for the de-|ghot and instantly killed this afternoon back to save her own life. indicted and has five days £ red men | ach side pre- witnesses and elght ed. The taking of | eleven days’ time begun Saturday | nt fainted in her ight after a fit of | e in the courtroom. | by Louis L. Felker, his brother-in-law. The shooting took place in the bedroom of Cunningham’'s wife. Appearances point to the conclusion that Cunningham went there to kill his wife. The couple had not been living hnprn together. Each accused the other of infidelity. - WILL BE SHOT FOR SLEEPING AT HIS POST General MacArthur Approves the Death Penalty Imposed Upon Private Skinner. SOUTHINGTON, Conn., Dec. 14—News Ehe the detalls of the terrible | death ggie without hesitation, and der- the rig'd cross ema: 7 | has reached here in the form of an of- the B toreve without ehow of | clal communication from General Mao- fear. 3 Len she has grown brighter | Arthur that Linas BSkinner, a former &nd stronger as her hopes of scquittal | Southington boy, has been sentenced to be erose | shot on Christmas day for sleeping at his _ Former Judge Morrison has been at his | post when on sentry duty. His father, caughters ‘sife conctantly during the | John P. Skinner, who s 71 years old, 18 which has dally attracted great | nearly heartbroken by the news and has crowds of people left for Washini dent McKinley M By o Taxation Bill Passed. LANSING, Mich., Dec. 14—The House sitting in committee of the whole has passed the taxation bill. Sunday, surrounded | by her relatives, M Morrison spent the time in her cell ging and praying, e Olin Castle joined a party of hunt- Castle was not in the courtroom dur- g the :‘.'s'!’.;g arguments. esele Morrison is 29 years old; Mrs. Castle was 28, and Castle is 28 on to plead with Presi- or his son's life. ers. Traveling Dressing Cases Crockers w Ghristmas Presents Umbrellas Vienna Novelties Calencars Traveling Bags Dress Suit Cases Large line of Novelties in Leather 215.218 Bush Street / 225.227 Post Street THE SAN FRANOISCO CALL, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1900. NEW MINISTER FROM THE SHAH IS A DIPLOMAT OF SOME NOTE General Isaac Khan Mofakhamed’s Mission Is to Cement Commercial Relations. 3 ENERAL ISAAC KHA AKHAMED DOVI Persian Mi who requested Kinley to protect cartoonists of the United States, has been for many years one of Persia's most trusted diplomats. He represented that country for ten years at the court of St. Petersburg, passed three years in | Egypt and in Belgium. He enjoys the confidence of the Shah in the highest | Me- | | President him from the | one + < | THE NEW PERSIAN MINISTER AT WASHINGTON IS IMMENSELY WEALTHY, A NOTED DIPLOMAT, 40, UNMARRIED AND A GREAT | LOVER OF OUTDOOR SPORTS. e + , degree and accompanied Mozaffer-ed-din on his recent visit urope. his is the first time that the general has visited the United States, and he will be the first representative sent by Persia to Washington in ten of imposing presence, tall, athletic and of rather handsome features. He is 40 unmarried and is fond of outdoor sport The prlm'i‘;nl business of his mission Is to establish. closer cemmercial relations between Persia and the United States. to the capitals of @ ieieiviviinirivielimieieieii e 9 RIGID CHARGE T0 GRAND JURY Chicago Judge Declares That Vice Must Be Put Down. CHICAGO, Dec. 14—Rigld investigation of various departments of the municipal government, especially the police depart- ment, was demanded of the December Grand Jury by Judge Gibbons to-day in his final instructions to that body con- cerning their course in regard to the prev- alence of vice and crime in Chicago. Be- sides his reference to the alleged corrup- tion in the police department, Judge Gib- bons scored prize-fighting, which he sald was plainly against the law. The recent money loan scandal was also referred to. The court traced much of the Immorality in Chicago to child labor and the employ- ment of girls and women in factories and stores at emall wages for long hours. The charges are regarded as being the most drastic ever given a Grand Jury in Cook county. The cases against Terry McGovern, Joe Gans and Manager Harrls, the promoters of last night's fistic encounter, wers to- day dismissed for wani of prosecution. ANXIOUS TO NURSE HER LEPER HUSBAND Mrs. George Kaniku of Honolulu Asks Permission to Go to Molokai. HONOLULU, T. H., Dec. 7.—The Board of Health has recelved a letter from George Kaniku, one of the lepers at Molokal, uklng that his wife be allowed to join him in his exile at the settiement. Mrs. Keniku is living in Honolulu, and is willing to go and spend the rest of her life among the lepers, nursing her husband, 0 is at an advanced stage, and is becoming helpless. Laborers for Hawaii. HONOLULU, T. H., Dec. 7.—Getting Portuguese from Califcrnia is one of the latest plans of the sugar men in their ef- forts to add to the labor supply_here. M. A. Bilva, a well known young Portu- ese, will leave here next week for San cisco in the interest of Olaa and Pepeekeo plantations. The plantations of- fer good inducements and are willing o y the fares qf the men coming here. '‘amilies are wanted and not single men. Homes are furnished, and Olaa offers a profit-sharing proposition. oty Bank Robbers Captured. ‘WHEELING, W. Va, Deec. 14.—Two men supposed to have been implicated in the robbery of the bank at Shanesville Wednesday _night at Bri rt, Ohlo, to-day, after a desper- ate t with the police. The fight and arrest occurred on a Wheeling and e Erie train, and the terrified passengers tried to jump from the windows. Man Ehots were fired, but no one was injured. iy Vaughn Files His Answer. WOODLAND, Dec. 14—Contestee Vaughn has filed an answer in the Nei- son-Vaughn Supervisorial contest, speci- flu.llY enying every allegation in the complaint. The case is set for next Mon- day, but there is likely to be some delay. Meyer to Be Embassador. WASHINGTON, Dec. 14.—The Senate to-tay confirmed the nomination of Von Meyer of Massachusetts be Embassador to Ttaly. » ———— For a Cold in the Head. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets. NEARLY KILLED BY BEING HAZED student of Northwestern University Roughly Dealt With. CHICAGO, Dec. 14.—Frank Lust, a stu- dent in the Northwestern University Academy, was hazed 'ast night by twelve students. He was taken from the univer- sity gymnasium, where he was practic- ing, to a secluded spot on the lake shore. There he was blindfolded and his clothes removed. A coat of black ink and soft soap was then daubed over his entire body. After the treatment of ink and soap the students Mned up apd compelled him to run the gauntlet. He was passed from one to another of the crowd and each one took occasion to slap him about the body. After fifteen minutes of this kind of treatment he was wrapped up In blankets and taken to his home on Sheri- dan road. The young man was nearly overcome from exposure and from the hard treatment he recelved, and fainted while being taken to his home. The stu- dents, however, manuged to revive him before he was taken to his room. Last week Lust received a threatening letter signed by sevaral fictitious names, in which he was asked to watch out for dire treatment. All the hazing band wore handkerchiefs over the lower parts of thelr faces. The clothing thei' wore was old, but despite this fact it is thought the victim recog- nized several of his tormentors. This is the second student at the acad- emy who has been hazed within the past week. Last Friday night F. H., S8andmeyer was visited in his room by a half-dozen students and treated to a coat of fly- paper. Br. Herbert Fiake, ncipal of the Northwestern University Academy, re- turned to Evanston yesterday and will at once commence an investigation of the haz! ng of Sandmeyer. assisted by the North- i versity faculty and states that the affair wiil be sifted to the bot- am‘.u?}t;‘r;g gtfllth? faculty, so far as could Do, 'parned late last night. had heard of THREE SUSPECTS HELD FOR TRAIN ROBBERY Special Officers Have a Lively Fusil- lade With a Negro and White Man. NEW ORLEANS, Dec.- 14.—Three ar- rests were made early to-day in the vi- cinity of the sensational hold-up on the Tllinols Central in the suburbs of this city last night. Shortly after the rob- bery Special Officers Luich and Daly saw & white man and a negro near the Illi- nols Central tracks. The men had a bag, and the officers called on them to sur- render. Instead, the white man drew his revolver and a lively fusillade followed tween the officers and the men. The Tatter - Anal # atter finally dropped thelr sack and escaped townra“me swamps. The sack proved to be a United States mail bag. e e Lning nmear the scene of the Shooting the police found a cartriage belt stained with blood and full of cartri . sho:thly before noon Speclal Officers Lulend:" “flbumy‘ h;a'z{t to police head- TSOn as one o A 4 3220 Aot i pr o n al ‘while the scene armed. It {s difficult to learn l-h::l dtb: r;b got away with, but it a several to secure Texl: b Des: of pouches and a large num . The ie is a man | | were | on Hawailan soli. | legal documents for such actions are now | trol, accordini LEPER WIL B RETURNED HERE Honolulu Authorities Will Not Permit Pratt to Stay There. VO A Treasury Department Rules That Chinese Who Were Naturalized Hawaiians Do Not Become Citizens of United States. B et HONOLULU, Dec. 7.—George Pratt, the leper, who came here from San Francisco, is still held at the Kalihi detention camp. | to be sent back when the steamship China | comes here. He has told many different | stories about himself. The latest is a| mysterious tale about his having been | sent by a high Masonic lodge in Washing- ton to use his cure in behalf of a Mason | here who ‘was afflicted with the dreaded malady. Pratt has a cure which he says | has arrested the disease in his case. It 1s | expected that there will be strong objec- | tons to taking him on the part of the | China, but the local authorities are deter- | mined that he shall go. | Kawaihao Church, the oldest church in | the Hawallan Islands, celebrated its sev- enty-fifth anniversary last Sunday. The church was organized in 1825, land being donated to the missjonaries at the time by King Kamehameha. At first service: conducted on the site in grass | houses, but ir 1839 the corner-stone was laid. 1In it was placed the first printed | copy of the first edition of the Bible pub- lished in the Hawaiian language, and is- sued only twenty-nine days before the | laying of the stone. The church bullding is the largest here. The chureh has had but three pastors during its career, the present one, Rev. H. H. Parker, having served for thirty-seyen and a half years In the congregation on the occasion of the celebration, which took place last Sunday, were daughters of all three of the pastors. Among the features of the celebration was the presentation by the Rev. W. D. Westerveldt of a Hawalian flag from Oberlin College, which used the flag in decorations last summer, and sent it as a greeting. The Mormon church here is also pre- paring for a great anniversary celebra- tion, the occasion being the fiftieth anni- versary of the landing of the first elders The eiders were Presi- | dent Lorenzo Snow and Counsellor George Q. Cannon. They are both expected to arrive here in time for the anniversary, which is December 12. ‘the religion they introduced here now has about adher- ents, nearly all natives, in Hawail. Honolulu is still disturbed by the ques- tion as to whether President Kinley contempiates declaring void land _sales and leases made her since September 2§, 1863, by the local gov- ernment. In spite of denials, the Hono- lulu Republican continues to assert that suits are to be brought in behalf of the | National Government to annul all such leases or sales, The paper states that Lae ed and will soon be filed. The sale of public iands at Olaa is the princi- pal deal involved. At the present time there are squatters on the lands, who re- | fused to leave in spite of the order to do | o0, followed as it was by a public sale. An attempt by several purchasers to take | possession resulted in their being driven away by gunk in the hands of the squat- | ters. T‘w,\' base their claims on the con- | being pre | tention that the local government had no | right to dispose of any public lands after | September 25, 1589, on which date Presi- dent McKinley gave his last instructions | in the matter, ordering that no more land | deals be entered into. The enabling act, however, gives the local government con- | to the contention of those who orderea the sales. | A treasury department ruiing in the| matter of Chinese citizenship has created excitement and surprise among the Cal- | ness population here. It deciares that the Chinese who were naturalized citizens | of the Republic of Hawali did not become | American citizens by virtue of the provis- fons of th territorial act. Section four of that act declared that “all persons who were citizens of the Republic of Hawali on August 12, 18%9, are hereby declared to | be citizens of the United States.” Under this section Chinese citizens of the late re- public were supposed to be Americans, 2nd they were allowed to vote on the 6th | of last month. If the Chinese in question | are not Americans they appear to be men | without a country. ey have forsworn | allegiance to China, and were citizens of the Republic of Hawall, but there is no such republic in existence now. The ques- tion arose here when some of the sup- osed American citizens wanted to leave lawaii for the United States. Collector Stackable wrote to Washington and re- | celved the new ruling on the 20th of last | month. Attorney Willlam A. Henshall, who has several Chinese clients who want to travel as American citizens, has a pealed to the Treasury Department. The number of Chinese who come under the rullnF as citizens of the late republic is emall, but they are mostly wealthy men of long residence here. Porter J. Conway, said to be very much wanted in Salt Lake City for embezzle- ment, has been spending a few days in Honolulu, under the name of George Clarkson, according to several people who have recognized him. He arrived on the steamship Mariposa from San Franclseo, having eluded the detectives there, and he has now taken the steamship Doric for the Orient. High Sheriff A. M. Brown says that he Is absolutely certain that Clarkson is Porter Conway, but that there | was no way to hold him here, as there are no papers from Utah. For several days | after he was recognized here by a man who had known him at Salt Lake, Con- way was in town on the public streets | and the police were powerless. Conway is | said to have been a forger and embezzler | last month, in Balt Lake, after cutting a | wide swath as a business and soclety man, and the amount of his haul is placed | at over $13.000. He was being watched for | at San Francisco, but in some way passed | on board the Mariposa. The first wireless telegraphy message | ever sent to Honolulu from a vessel at sea | was received to-d &(mm the vacht La | Paloma. which has been chartered by the telegraph company to visit the various stations and make the needed repairs. day she sent messages from the open near Molokal, and received replies. 8 stations on Oahu and Molokal are now in successful communication, but so far | Honolulu has not been able to reach the | other fslands. | DEPUTY COLLECTOR IS SUSPENDED FROM DUTY Lively Row On Between Chief of Hon- olulu Customs Service and His Subordinate. HONOLULU, T. H., Dee. 7.—Collector of Customs Stackable has suspended Dep- | uty Stratemever, chief of the outside | force of inspectors, for fifteen days with- out pay, for insubordination and for using | language to Stackable ‘‘unbecoming a | gentleman."” e row between the two | officers_created a sensation in Honolulu, | where Stratemeyer has lived many years | and is very popular. Each y sends to | ‘Washington by this mall, it is said, his | account of the affair. | Stratemeyer is said to have refused to carry out an order of the Collector re- ({flrdln the esplonage of an employe who alled to report for duty. There was a sharp discussion and the deput: to have told the Collector, wit adjectives. that he ought to be ashams of himself to ask employes to spy upon one another. Stackable declares %u at his | dewt{ {s action in_suspending the deput; ig mecessary for the discipline of the of- Has a Japanese Crew. HONOLULU, T. H., Dec. 7.—The ship Kennebec, Captain Lewis, left to-day for the Sound with a Japanese crew. The Saflors’ Union, which still controls the labor supply for vessels here, men being | scarce, demanded $50 a man for the | pay such trip, and captain refused t a r"into. Getting Jsvn-rwu his ‘c’mly alter- native, ‘Prosperity for 1001. Indications everywhere point to great pros- perity for the coming year. This is a sign of @ healthy nature. The success of a country, as well as of an individual, depends upon There can be no heaith if the stomach is weak. | NEW RAILWAYS IN CAR'S REALM Number of New Projects Now Under Way or Considered. RS S Coungil of State Grants Its Approval for a Government Line to Con- nect the Don and Dnieper. —— LONDON, Dec, 14—A special from St. Petersburg says: Prince Khalkioff, the Minister of Railroads, to-day gave the correspondent of the Associated Press a complete outline of the rallway projects which are now under way or are seriously considered. A new line nearly 300 kilo- meters, or about 20 miles, In length has | just received the approval of the Council of State. It will be a Government line and | will connect the basins of the Don and the | Dnieper rivers, paralleling the line to | Yekaterinoslaf and running some distance south of this line. The Yekaterinoslaf line | is crowded with grain traffic. The cost will be 15,000,000 or 20,000,000 roubles. Work will | be begun next spring. The road from Orenburg to Tashkta will 0 X1 T or between 1200 and 1300 miles long. will be begun at both ends at the same time. The total cost will be out 0,000,000 roubles. The line from Sesterosk, on the Finnish border, will be given a St. Petersburg ter- minal next year. Work will also be begun, according to a recent decision, upon the | St. Petersburg branch of the Great Sibe- rian line, which will join the Moscow line in the Ural passes before reaching Che- | laybinsk. | A private company is seeking a conces- sion for a line trom the Dnieper Valley, beginning near Necicopol or Alexandro\s_ko 5 to Odessa, with a total length of versts, or something over 410 miles. Tnei surveys have been begun. | Another company has long been asking for a concession for a line from Yalta to Sebastopol, but it is hardly thought this | will be granted, as the road will have to pass through the Emperor's property. It ! was proposed that electricity should be substituted for steam as motive power, but the Emperor still objected, and the line will probably uitimately be built more to the eastward, running from Yalta to_Simferopol. The Siberian rallway will probably be completed from Stretensk to the Chinese frontier within a few month: Gr ernment hopes to compl the line around the Lake of Baikal to e able the boat to make its crossing twenty miles shorter before the end of the year. with a length of 290 kilo- 40,000,000 roub! PRAIRIE FIRE IN THE CITY OF CHICAGO Sparks From an Engine in the Sub- urbs Set Fire to the Grass. CHICAGO, Dec. 14.—A midwinter prairle fire was a dangerous novelty witnessed in this city last night. It swept ten acres of grass, and was subdued by farmers, firemen, policemen and street railway em- loyes, who attacked it with brooms, | {:Aankels‘ rubber overcoats and sod. Many cars loaded with beef on the Panhandle tracks were threatened, as was an ice house and several farm houses. The scene of the fire was the prairie be- tween Leavitt street and Western avenue and Fortieth and Fifty-first streets. The flames are supposed to have started from sparks from the engine of a south-bound passenger_ train whigh sed at 9:30 o'clock. For a time the blaze smouldered, then broke out in several places and fanned by the wind, spread rapidly. o5 i Is Gr;ud a Divorce. HONOLULU, T. H., Dee. 7.—The di- vorce suit hrought by Mrs. Miner against Dr. Miner was decided last night by Judge Humphreys in favor of the wife. She was given an absolute divorce on the ground of cruelty, was awarded the lump | Sum of $30,000 from her husband, with $3000 | additional for her attorneys, and the cus- | tody of her child. In addition to the| money already mentioned Dr. Miner is to pay $60 a month to Mrs. Miner for th support of the child. The case was a hard | ught and sensational one, lasting three weeks, The attorneys for Miner will ap- peal the case and have already filed a mo- tion for a new trial. oA SR Police Captain Beaten. HONOLULU, T. H.,, Dec. 7.—Captain | Fox, head of the Honolulu mounted po- | lice, was attackd and besten by a| crowd of natives on the Pacific Ml | Wharf last Wednesday morning because he tried to stop a card game on the whart. The crowd knocked hitn down and struck him many times, but he managed to fight his way through, and, with the aid of | another officer, who arrived, made two ar- St | | | ADVERTISEMENTS. | THE LITTLE SICKNESSES Which Grow Into Big Omes. A little cold in the head is a trifle, but if neglacted and it hangs on from week to week and gets Into the throat and lungs it | is no longer a trifle. It is then no longer a slight cold but the beginning of chronic catarrh. Do not make the mistake of thinking vou ! have no catarrh because the head and nose appear to be clear. If there is cough, tickling in the throat, hoarseness or a | sense of oppression in the chest you have throat and bronchial catarrh. If the ap- petite is poor, nausea. gagging and dis- gust_for food, especially in the morning, You have catarrh of the stomach. The surest and safest treatment for| every form of catarrh Is an internal rem- | edy which acts especially on the blood | and mucous membranes. | Such a remedy is the new catarrh cure, | s0ld everywhere by druggists under name | of Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets, a medicine in pleasant, convenient tablet form and con- tairing all the best and latest specifics for catarrh, whether located in nose, throat bronchial tubes or stomach. Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets are composed | of Sanguinaria, gualacol, Red gum and similar _antiseptics which destroy the| germs of catarrh in the blood, and no one who suffers from any form of catarrh and has seen the uselessness of sprays, douches, and powders will ever .go back | to them after once trying so convenient, | leasant _and harmless a rem as | tuart's Catarrh tablets and ome which | gives relief in so short a time. | Even in cases where catarrh has af- | fected the senses of smell and hearing, | these tablets accomplish a cure because the blood belng cleansed of catarrhal germs, the mucous surfaces of the nose and throat no .onger clog up the respira- tory passages with u(mh.\’ secretions. All druggists sell full sized treatments of Stuart'’s Catarrh Tablets for the nominal price of 50 cents, and the regular daily use of them will effectually cure this trouble- some and dangerous disease. | BAJA CALIFORNIA Damiana Bitters § A GREAT RESTO! s ¥ o SREAT RESTORATIVE, INVIGORA i ‘The Tonie for the Sexual Ofpeas fu vand The Mexican for Diseases of the Kid- gestion and bilicusness. Obtain our Almanac N &' SRUNE. Leata for 1901—free. It valusble information. | 323 Market st., 8. F.—(Send for Twenty-six pianos so the six day record. Think of it! Twenty-six pianos sold and in weather lik this! It's remarkable proof « the popularity of these annt Curtaz sales Up to midnight last night we worked. No small job getting pianos ready for parlors. Some are going out of town —some stay until day before Christmas. Santa Claus is going to tall What a magnificent Chick- for some. present one of these erings will make! Until the end of the sale (Christmas eve) you can buy pianos here at S155 OPEN EVENINGS. Benj.Curtaz & Son 16 1020 OFarrell St STATEMENT —OF THB— CONDITION AND AFFAIRS Fireman's Fund INSURANCE COMPANY. F_SAN FRANCISCO, IN THE STATE OF California, on the ilst day of December, e Ty T T Ty | A. D. 189, and for the year ending on that day, as made to the Insurance Commissioner of the State of California. pursuant to th provisions of sections 610 and 811 of the Politi- cal Code, condensed as per blank furnished by the Commissioner. AL, CAPIT, Amount of Capital Stock. pald Cash . AssETS. Real Estate owned by Company. $461,700 20 Loans on Bonds and Mortgages. @a@mn Cash Market Value of all Stocks and Bonds owned by Company........ Amount of Loans secured by piedes Ot Bonds, Stocks and other marke abie securities as col Cash in Company's Office. 2.115.00 0 153,000 00 18,519 13 183,990 35 = Re- insurance on losses already paid... 7.097 &8 Total Asse! 8,797,512 % LIABILITIES. Losses adjusted and unpaia. Losses in process of Adjustmen: or in Suspense ... " Seseg 7,884 72 Losses resisted. including expenges 315 @ Gross premiums on Fire Risks ru ning ome year or less. $963,154 44: urance 0 per cent g sesT 2 Gross premiums on Fire Risks run- ning more than one year, $1,35 - 026 §1: reinsurance pro rata... . T » Gross premiums on Marine Time Risks, $......... reinsurance 30 per cent S eeseeeee. TIRI04 67 Total Liabilities. ™~~COM®E. Net cash actually received for Fire premiums ...$1,415,323 00 Net cash actually received for Ma- rine premiums avees Received for interest on Bonds and nterest and dividends ns, and from Recelved for Rents.............ccceeeen Received for profit on sale of seouri- ties .. b years) . ¥z Net amount paid for Marine Losses (including i . w N vious years o SR et Dividends to Stockholders b Paid or allowed for Commission or Brokerage g - Paid for Salaries, Fees, and other for officers, clerks, oto. State, National and Loeal cl Paid for Taxes WM. J. DUTTON, Prest. BERNARD FAYMONVILLE, Subsertbed and Secy. O Ty, T e s Gy M. M. RHORER, THE WEEKLY CALL 1 per Yecar.