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(] THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, APRIL 21, DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. : Test for Yourseli the Wonderful ~ Corative Properties of Swamp-Root ( To Prove What Swamp-Root, the World-Famous Kidney, Liver and Bladder Remedy, Will do for YOU, Every Reader of the “ ca“n' M hi WiLLiam MOORE, CHIEF. GENTLEMEN: Some two years | ghts. Sometimes it seemed nate and n my symp emedy. After try m was entirely bladder taking are or I« the Police force are using s great remedy. ss of sleep and irregular meals. ay Have a Sample Bottle FREE. ago I was so run down that I lacked strength, had no appetite and could as though my back would break in two after stooping. I had to get up many go often through the day. After having the best physicians prescribe for me toms that the medicine I needed was Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kid- ing a sample bottle with good results I purchased six bottles of the regular cured. Swamp-Root is a wonderful remedy when a man is not feeling well, It is also a great medicine to tone up a man’s system. Other and recommending Swamp-Root, They, like myself, cannot say too much T he Officers (whose signatures accompany this letter), as well as myself, thank you for the good you have ac- complished in the compounding of Sw We remain, yours very truly, To Dr. K Binghamton, N. Y. If you are sick or “feel badly” begin Swamp-Root, will hel; ses kidney T8 ARE SU e nerves, makes ges you 1o EDITORL pec sands of testimonial let that you read this generou hamton, N. Y. dy convinced that § tles at the drug stores ev. -Root, and the address, B //:,Z&.'”.—» //’/W Chief of Police. Officers of the Binghamton (N. Y.) Police Department. p all the other organs to kidneys are responsible for more sick- other disease, trouble " Makes you pass water often through | get up many kidneys cause rheumatism, gravel, catarrh AL NOTICE—Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, angement has been made by which all of our readers who have not already by mail. - Also a book telling all abc amp-Root. Q/V ; 6&;\'—% Roundsman. /«%‘— YV & /VL@% Patrolman. of the bladder, pain or dull ache in the back, joints and mus- | cles; makes your head ache and back ache, causes indiges- | tion, storhach and liver trouble; you get sallow, yellow com- | plexion, makes you feel as though wou had heart trouble; you | may bave plenty of ambition, but no strength; get weak and | taking the famous | because as soon as therefore when | “oSte away. is, RE* TO permitted FOLLOW. you dizzy, restless, | Swam hospitals, tice and is taken by doctors themselves, because they recog- nize in it the greatest and most successful remedy that sclencg l has ever been able to compound. -Root is pleasant to take and is used in the leading times during the is so remarkably successful that tried it may have a sample bottle kidney and bladder troubles and containing many of the thou- ters received from men and women cured by Swamp-Root. In writing be sure § offer in the San Francisco Daily Call when sending your address to Dr. Kilmer wamp-Root i erywhere. inghamton, what you need, you can purchase the regular fifty-cent and one- Don’t make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root—Dr. \. Y., on =very bottle. recommended by physicians in their private prac- | STRIKE LEAVES | TOWN IN 6LOOM, { | Crescent City Suffers| From Halt in Busi- . ness Activity. —A strike of | es not promise an | demand of the the concessions. n completely " are per- cight of arriving or to mak th ks longshe » handle the ing vessels propose Stred to tex stment of the diffic | people » improvement of com: ADVERTISEMENTS. " Dr. Sho“op’s Rheumatic Cure Costs Nothing if It Fails, Any honest person who suffers from | Rheumatism js welcome to this offer. | I am a specialist in Rheumatiem, and | have treated more cases than any other physician_ I think. For 16 years I made | 2000 experiments with different drugs, testing all known remedies while search- ing the world for something better. Nine years ago 1 found & costly chemical in Gepmany which, with my previous discov- |, erigs, gives me a certain cure I don't mean that it c Joints the « foreve n ‘turn bony but it can cure completely and y ne it fully 100,000 times. I know this so well that 1 will furnish my remedy on tri Simply write me a ostal for my book on Rheumatism, and P @il mail you an order on your drug: | gist for six bottles Dr. Shoop’'s Rheu- malic Cure. Take it for a month at m: risk, If it guceceds, the cost is only $.50, | 1f # fails, 1 will pay the druggist myself | —and your mere word shall decide it. | T mean that exactly. If you say the | resuits are not what I claim, I don't ex- | pect a penny from you. I have no samples. Any mere sample that can effect chronic Rheumatism must be drugged to the verge of danger. I use no such drugs, and it is folly to take them. You must get the disease out of the blood. My remedy does that even in the most difficult, obstinate ca It has cured the oldest cases that I ever met. And in all my experience in all my 2000 tests—I never found another remedy that would cure one chronic case in ten. Write me and 1 will send you the order, Try my remedy for & month, as it can't harm you anyway. If it fails it is free, ress Dr. Shoop, box 63, Racine, Wis, id cases, not chronic, are often cured by ope or two bottles. At all druggists’. into flesh again TYPHOID MAKES MORE HEADWAY Epidemic at Palo Alto Spreads and Causes One Death. Special Dispatch to The Call STANFORD UNIVERSITY, April 20.— The epidemic of typnoid fever whi¢h has struck Palo Alto and the university during the last three weeks has, in the opinion of the health officials, reached a climax | and conditions are expected to improve steadily. Twenty new cases have been reported within forty-eight hours, a few of which are extremely serious. period of the incubation is supposed to be ended to-day it is not thought many new cases will develop. 3 Of the students who are seriously fil J. Pearce Mitchell, "02, E. E. Miller, '04, and R. D. Barrett, 94, are extremely low. :nts afflicted have only & 1 of the fever. Health Officer Moss of Palo Altc o stated to-day that there were sixty fever pa- tients in Palo Alto, including the suspects, | and twenty-five cases have been reported on the campus. Both Dr. Moss of Palo Alto and Dr. Snow of the university said that the fever was well under control and that there wa ing any further. The cause, they clatm was eradicated when the milk com- pany was compelled to suspend busine One death has occurred, that of Wil sole liam Pluntz of Palo Alto, who died from | a complication of typhoid and pneumonia. | com- | He was in the employ of an oil pany in San Francisco and was accus- tomed to travel back and forth on the train between Palo Alto and that city. President Jordan stated this afternoon that there would be no necessity for clos- ing the university unless conditions be- came much worse than they are at pres- ent. contagious and the physiclans have the matter well under control he sees no rea- son for the closing of the university. —— e SLNTA CLAKA PRESIDENT PERFORMS THE CEREMONY Miss Flizabeth@lurphy and T. How- ard Derby Quietly Married at Sunnyvale. SAN JOSE, April 20.—Two of the most popular young people in Santa Clara County were married at Sunnyvale to- | day, when Miss Elizabeth Y. Murphy be- ame the wife of T. Howard Derby. The bride is the daughter of the Hon. Ber- nard D. Murphy, and it was at her fath- er's home that the ceremony took plare. Only the immediate relatives of the fam- ily were present because of the recent death ‘of a brother. The Rev. Father Kenna of Santa Clara College performed the ceremony. The bride wore a beautl- ful trousseau of white silk. Misc Murphy formerly lived in this city and hae a host of friends. She is a tal- ented and pretty young woman. Mr. Derby is the son of Thomas Derby, su- perintendent of the Almaden quicksilver mines. He is manager of the East Side packing house. Fof a number of years he was captain of Company B, Fifth Reg- iment, N. G. C., and also a deputy in the County Clerk's office, After the ceremony Mr. and Mrs, Derby left on a honeymoon trip to Southern Cali. fornia. They will visit all the resorts in that part of the State, after which they will return and make their home in San Jose. —— "ECZEMA, NO CURE, NO PAY. Your druggist will refund your money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure Ry As the | no danger of its spread- | As typhoid is infectious rather than | ol OAM UPROOTS HISTORIG TREES Firs Planted by Fred- erick the Great Are Destroyed. BERLIN, April 20.—The gale of Sunday wrought such havoc on the grounds at | Potsdam that a full report on the subject has been telegraphed to Emperor Wil- liam. Many splendid firs planted by Fred- erick the Great were uprooted. The Im- perial wild park was also seriously dam- ! aged. The thirty-six-hour snow storm over iddle Burope ceased to-day at daylight. | Snow lies deep in East Prussia and Po- {land, where wires are down and trains ruayed. The temperature in most parts | | | im of Germany is barely at freezing point, so that the damage to the frult crops may not be so serlous as at first supposed. The snow lies from eighteen inches to three feét deep on thé Polish plains. Tel- c¢phone and telegraph wires are down and | the trains are either not venturing to |ieave the terminals, are stalled in the ccuntry, or are arriving at their destina- | tions after great difficulty and hours late, with their passengers wretched with the cold and hunger. Many large trees in the Thiergarten here were uprooted. at the risk of their lives, sought to re- pair it, 2o as to prevent damage to the | richly decorated interior, but they were unable to continue at work. Falling chimneys and tiles made the Berlin thoroughfares perilous. Twenty- | one persons were taken to the hospitals. Count von Ballestrum, president of the | Reichstag, who is on his way to attend nowed in between here and Silesia. Shipping disasters are reported from the | Baltic: and North seas. The - German schooner Sport was stranded near Dant- zic and the Danish cutter Irene was wrecked off Swinemunde. The crews ,of Loth vessels were saved. / BODIES OF CLIFTON’S VICTIMS ARE RECOVERED Belf-Confessed Murderer Directs a Searching Party to Where Re- mains Were Buried. DENVER, April 20.—A special (o the News from Gillette, Wyo., says the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Church, the ranchman and wife, whose murder W. C. Chifton, now in jail at Newcastle, has confessed, were found to-day two and a half miles from their ranch, buried three feet deep. The searching party had been directed to the spot by Clifton in his con- fession. Threats of lynching Clifton are made. ROTE A S Funeral of Senator Hubbell, ONTARIO, April 20.—With impressive and beautifully simple ceremonies the re- mains of the late Senator Orrin Z. Hub- bell were laid away to-day. Regarding his death, Governor Pardee re-echoed the feelings of thousands of persons who knew him when he telegraphed a message of sympathy to the bereaved family, say- ing that *“‘his death removed a man whom California could ill afford to lose.” Barly morning trains brought scores of promi- nent men from all over this end of the State and from n Bernardiho came nearly all the courty officers, Riverside, Orange and Los Angeles counties were well represented, for the ability of the deceased was known and appreciated throughout those and other counties, —_— To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Al aru refund the money 1f it f; EW. Grove's signature te on ehen ber” Tt Part of the roof of the | opera-house was blown off and workmen, | { the opening of Parliament to-morrow, is | HILL GAINS CONGESSION ~ FROM COURT Dividends May Be Paid by Northern Securi- ties Company. Decree Preventing Merger Is Suspended as Regards This One Point. 2l S, Stockholders Will Not Lose Income From Shares Pending a De- cision on Jhe Ap- peal. AT S ST. PAUL, April 20.—Circuit Court Judge Sanborn to-day handed down a de- cision granting the request of the attor- neys for. the Northepr Securities to be permitted to pay Gfeat Northern and Northern Pacific dividends to the North- ern Securities Company. In the decision the Court said: It is not perceived how the payvment or the retention of these dividends during the pend- ency of this appeal ean injuriously affect any right of the United States in this litigation, and the only question here is whether these | dividends shall be piled up in the treasuries of the rallway companies or paid to the stock- holders, to whom they legally belong and which must ultimately receive them, whichever the final decision in this case may be. These divi- dende will uitimately go to the stockholders of the Northern Securities Company, whether paid as they are earped or after thé final de- cigion. b The order of the court accordingly will be that the operation of that portion of the de- cree which enjoins the railway companies from paying the dividends upon their stock which is held by the Northern Securities Company shall be suspended during the pendency of the | appeal upon giving of approved bond by or in | behalf of the defendants in the sum of $50,000. All other portfons of the decree and of the injunction It contains remain in force and are unaffected by this order. APPEAL IS PERFECTED. After the reading of the decision the appeal was perfected and the bond was filed this afternoon, Thirty-four points of error are alleged by the counsel for the Northern Securities Company and other defendants in their appeal from the decis- ion of the Circuit Court. Exceptions are noted ‘to every paragraph in the decree and the court is declared to be in error in rendering any decree save one for a dis- missal of the petition and proceedings. { Among the points are the following: |, The court erred in finding and declding that | the Northern Securities scheme, as aforesald | erroneously found by it to have been devised | and consummated, placed the control of the | railroad companies in the hands of the North- | ern Securities Company and destroyed every motive for competition between said two raii- ways by pooling their earnings for the com- mon benefit of the stockhoiders of both raflway | companies; and erred in finding and deciding thet eny such scheme or any pooling of earn- ings was ever contemplated or has been made. | The court erred in holding and deeiding that all contracts and combinations which merely tend to restrain interstate commerce, whether on of competition or otherwise, are | ves, although such tendency 'does | not result in any such restraint, violations of the act of Congress of July 2, 1800, known as the_anti-trust act. The court erred in holding and deciding that all contracte and eombinations which merely confer the power tp restrain Interstate com- merce, whether byJauppression of competition or otherwise, are @vasive coptgiets or combi- nations, in restraifit of such commerce and de- clared 'filegal by the anti-trust act, though such power i3 not intended 'to be exercised. POWER TO END COMPETITION. The court erred in holding and deciding that every combination whereby the power s ac- quired to suppress competition between two parallel and competing lines of rallroad ope- rating under State charters and engaged in In- terftate commerce is a combination in viola- tion of said anti-trust act, whether such power | is exercised or intended to be exercised or not. | The court erred in holding and declding that | it would have been a violation of said anti- trust act had the individual defendants, in pur- | suance of a previous agreement 50 to do, sold their shares of stock in the defendant railway companies to another person and had induced their fellow-shareholders o do the same, with the resulting acquisition, by such individuals, of a majority of the stock of each railway | company. | The ourt erred in holding and deciding that | erstate commerce of ¢ach defendant rail- mpany is controlled by its sharehold- | the way ers and not by its hoard of directors The court erred in holding and deciding that | the Northern Securities Company controls the commerce of both ths defendant rallway com- | | panfes, though by the charter of each company the management of its business is vested in its board of direcfors. and the companies have, and must have, separate and distinct bgards of directors. | The court erred in holding and decidifig that the consolidation and composition of railway. companies chartered by States or organized un- der Btate laws, but -carrying on interstate commerce, are themselves matters of interstate commerce, and, as such, subject to regulation Dby Congress, and In holding and deciding that | under the commerce clause of the constitution Congress has power to prescribe who may and who shall not be shareholders In such compa- nies, and how much stock any one stockholder or combination of stockholders may own in euch company, and to authorize and forbid the consolidat of such corporations or any of | them. And erred in holding and deciding that | the acquisition and holding of such stock in raflway companies and all matters of their in- ternal “constitution and composition are not matters over which the State incorporating such company has exclusive power of regula- tion. And erred in holding that\the authoriz- { ing or forbidding of the consolidation of any two such rallway companjes is not within the exclusive power of the State or States by or under which they have been Incorporated. BISHOP CONATY INTENDS TG TAKE A SHORT REST Expects to Assume His New Duties in Los Angeles in the Latter | Part of May. ; WASHINGTON, April 20.—Right Rev. | Bishop Conaty was notified this after- noon by the Papal Delegate that the brief appointing him Bishop of Los An- geles has been received here to-day. He will remain in charge of the university until the meeting of the trustees cn Wednesday next, when he will make his | final report and turn over the administra- tion of the university to his successor, the Right Rev. Mgr. O'Connéll. Bishop £ Conaty intends to go East for a short rest | before preparing to go to the Pacific Coast. He expects to be in Los Angeles toward the end of May. . sttt e TR Heavy Damages for a Death. NEW YORK, April 2.—A verdict for $75,000 damages was awarded by a jury in the Supreme Court to-day in the suit brought against the New York Central by the heirs of Alfred M. Perrin of New Rochelle, former president of the United States Paper Bag Company, who was killed in Park-avenue tunnel recently, e e PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT WILL SOON RESUME TRIP He Is Expected to Complete Tour of Yellowstone Park Next Thursday. CINNABAR, Mont., April 20.—President Roosevelt has about completed his tour of the Yellowstone¢ Park. To-day he was at Fire Hole Basin. ~“To-morrow he will return to the Norris Geyser Basin and go from there to the Grand Canyon, where the upper and lower falls are situated. He exvects to return here Wednesday and remain till Friday, when he will re- sume his trip. The members of the Presi- dent’s party who having been living on the train at Cinnabar since April 8 will robably joint the President in the Park ursday morning, - 1903. OIL MAGNATE UNDER KNIFE OF SURGEON EIGHT LIVES ARE LOST IN A GOLLISION Passenger Train Crashes Into a Freight on a Siding. L3 Wreck Takes Fire and Bodies of Seven Victims Are Incinerated. | Disaster Is Due to Operator in Tower | Displaying a Signal Indicating | That the Track Was i Clear. | — JAMESTOWN, N. Y., Aprl] 20.—Eight| persons are dead and ten injured, three of | them seriously, as the result of a collision between a passenger train and a frelsht train on the Erle Railroad early to-day | near Redhouse, N. Y. i Of the dead only one, Robert N. Hoteh- | kiss of Meadville, a brakeman, has been | identified. Seven bodies, apparently those | of three men, three women and a child, | were burned beyond recognition in the fire which followed the wreck. The wom- { en are said to have boarded the train at Ycungstown and to have come from Pitts- burg. i | R. S. McCready, a mail weigher of | Meadville, Pa., and Frank Barrett of | Jamestown, a traveling salesman, ave | missing, and it is likely two of the uni- | dentified bodies are those of the two me; | Among the injured are H. Pulsifer, Ne York City, badly bruised; C. W. Mesic Chicago, back badly injured; Anna Sten- zel, Brooklyn, shocked and very sick; H. F. Cleminger, mail clerk, Gerry, N. Y., ! ribs fractured and body bruised; John | Drougouan, Duluth, bruised and badly cut; Mrs. Foote, 80 years old, St. Paul, Minn., bruised and shocked; E. C. Gable express messenger, Marion, Ohlo, leg cut off, probably fatally injured. | Mrs. Foote and E. C. Gabler are in the hospital at Salamanca. The others wers | able to proceed to their destination. ! The wrecked passenger train was known as No. 4, running from Chicago to New York. The engine was in charge of Er- gineer Samuel Cook and Fireman Fred Bell of Meadville. The train was made up of one combination car, two day coaches, three sleepers and two private cars, The train was derailed by striking a freight which was taking a siding at Redhouse. The wreck took fire and the combination car, .two day coaches and two sleepers, together with several freight cars, were consumed. The passenger train was running east, and the freight, which was west-bound, had orders to go on the siding at Redhouse'and wait for the pas- scnger train to go by. The siding is about a mile and a half long, and there is a block system tower near the west end. The freight was drawn by two engines. Some ‘trouble Was experienced in entering the siding, and the foremost engine of the Footman Brown Must Stand Trial in | freight was sent in along the siding with a flagman to hold the express. It is al- English Courts for Posing s Prinis | legod that the operator in the tower, | Lawrence Vale, a boy 17 years old, saw LONDON, April 2.—W. M. Brown, a|the light engine of the freight and sup- fcotman, was remanded to-day at Ports- | posed the freight was on the siding be- mouth on the charge of making a false | hind it. Vale then displayed a white sig- entry at the registry office there in the | Na) toward the passenger train, indicating middle of December last, when under the to the engineer that he had a clear track. T " s name of “Prince Athrobald Stuart de Mo- | L ¢ N8ineer of the passenger train failed dena” he married Countess Russell, who to'see the flagman sent out from the for- ward engine of the freight train, and saw obtained a divorce from her husband, Earl Russell, on the ground of the Earl's lonly the clearance | The train ran toward the eas end of the pigamy in marrying Mrs. Somerville in the United States. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF- FICIAL WHO MAY NOT SUR- VIVE OPERATION. s H.H. Rogers s VeryLow After Operation for Appendicitis. EW YORK, April 20.—H. H. Rog- ers, the Standard Oil millionaire, was operated upon. to-day for appendicitis. He withstood the operation well, but on aceount of the patient’'s age—60 years—his conditlon is considered grave. Dr. Andrew J. Mec- Cesh on leaving Mr. Rogers’ house to- night eald: “Mr. Rogers’ condition is, T should say, somewhat improved. He will certaiuly pull through this night. Whether he will recover ultimately it is too early to say. There is no immediate danger.” L e e e e e HUSBAND OF COUNTESS RUSSELL I8 REMANDED | 8iding at high speed and collided with the | second engine of the freight train just as it was abowt to clear the main line. The passenger engine and some of the coacies Countess Russell ‘was the first wife of | cyaghed into s small wooden structure Earl Russell. On March 28, 1901, she ob- | talnéd a decree of divorce against the Earl on the ground of his bigamy in mar- rying Mrs. Mollie Somerville at Rena, Nev., the Earl having previously obtaired a divorce from the Countess in the United States on the ground of desertion. The Earl subsequently was arrested in Eng- | land on the charge of bigamy, was tried at the bar of the House of Lords, plea“ed guilty and was sentenced to three months® imprisonment as a first-class misdemean- ant. The Countess’ decree of divorce was made absolute October 28, 1901, and the J2ar]l again married Mrs. Somerville Octo- ber 31, 1901. Countess Russell's maiden name was Mabel Edith Scott, She is the youngest | daughter of the late Sir Claude Edward Scott. first half-dozen cars of the frelght were | wiecked. They were loaded with coal. Fire ' quickly broke out among the wreckage, creating an Intense heat. All but thre. of the cars of the express followed ti engine, and the whole mass of wreckage was soon in flames. ———— | Supreme Court Decision Wanted. | SACRAMENTO, April 2. — Attorney General Webb to-day filed in the Superior Court notices of appeal to the Supreme Court in the case of Charles Bickerdike and several other coyote scalp claimant The money has heen appropriated to pa the judgments rendered by the Superior | Court in their favor, but it was agreed | that a Supreme Court decision in the Bickerdike case should be obtained to de- termine finally the legality of all the claims of this character. | | — ROME, April 20.—The Tribuna says that Forelgn Minister Prinetti sent his resignation to Premier Zanardelli this afternoon, and that the name of the successor in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs soon will be announced. ADVERTISEMENTS. The Agony of Death and the Agony of Life “The drunkard was dying alone and unmourned. Al- though but thirty-four, he seemed like fifty at least. He panted, paler than the sheets, shaken by dreadful shuddbrings, his face convulsed, his blood-shot eyes wide open and fearful, as if he were bein'g menaced by some horrible thing.” This man had given up home, friends, honor, ambition, to live a life of misery and die a death .of horror—for what? Al- cohol! This man was a gentleman, honored, respected, educated. He began by drinking moderately. He¥ended in a horrid de- lirium in a wretched garret. Men are very much the same the world over. Liquor is always liquor, and conscignceless—it seeks to destroy. Even the moderate use of alcohol will eventually cripple the entire system, and it requires scientific treatment to re- store the victim's shattered .health. We have made an extended study of the disease of alco- holism. We treat it scientifically and use only internal reme- dies, taken into the system through natyral channels, and cure the disease by natural methods. We not only destroy the desire for drink, but restore the run-down econstitution to its normal condition. We do not use hypodermic injections. If interested in our treatment, or in behalf of kinsman or friend, we ask you to investigate cur treatment. Full information cheerfully furnished to all who call or address THREE-DAY L QUOR CURE INSTITUTE, 295 GEARY STREET, SE, Cor. Powell, San Francisco, TELEPHONE—MAIN 126, gnal from the tower. | used as a feedstore and schoolhouse. The | ADVERTISEMENTS. There are GHEATS sold for ANTASOT The imitations look like Pantasote, but their surfaces become hard and brittle, crack, scale and crumble, are dangerously inflammable, and gener- ally worthless. Pantasote Is Always Satisfactory. It is always flexible, grows hand- somer as it grows older, nevercracks, peelsorrots; hasa fireproof, water- proof, greaseproof and stainproof surface and can be easily cleansed with soap and water. It looks exactly like morocco, wears longer and costs half as much. J Adopted by the U. S. Government and used for ten years by ieading Railways, Steam- ship lines, and Furniture and Carrtage Uphoi- sterers. The name * Pantasote” s stamped on selvage edge of goods in the plece. Insist on getting the genuine and let us know if you dou’t. Samples free on application. Pantasofe Co., 11 Broadway, N. Y. Cify. SOLD BY W. J. SLOANE & CO. CUTLERY BLADE And Carpet Your World withVelvet STATEMENT OF THBE CONDITION AND AFFAIRS OF THB Connecticut Mutua! LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY F HARTFORD, IN THE STATE OF CON | NECTICUT. on the 3ist day of December, D., 1002, and for the year ending on that day, made to the Insurance CommissioBer of the State of California, pursuant to the re- _ quirements of section 613 of the Political Cods if sald State, ASSETS. Net value of Real Estate OW by the Company ......- Amount of Loans secured Bond and Mortgage on BOLME -oovvoncocnson ossvanss Amount of Loans secured by pledge of Bonds, Stocks, and | other marketable securities as $11.982,83¢ so 24,250,739 50 | form taken in payment of pre- miums on policies now in force Cash market value of all Stocks ard Bonds owned by the Com- Rents due and accrued Net amount of premiums in cess of collection and of d | ferred premiums ......... Total Assets LIABILITIES. Cisims for death losses and | “matured endowme: ue un; eeaeaes 54,384 50 € | Claims for death losses and o\ matured endimments I _sves cers of adjustment, or adju 218,198 00 8,000 v Net present value of all the oul , computed ac- cording to_the Combined Ex- perience Tables of Mortail With 4 per cent interest....... 54,349,381 00 mount of all unpaid dtvidends to policy holders. . 1,223,257 o9 Premiums paid {n advance 20,741 51 Liability on lapsed policies which may be surrendered........... 153,840 00 Total Liabilities INCOME. Cash received for premiums om new policies during the year... $399,933 03 Cash received for renewal of pre- ums during the year....... 4,818,420 52 Cash received for sale of am- nuitles ...... v 53,318 35 Cash received for interest 2,427,408 30 Cash recefved for rents.. 462,484 13 Cash received from all other sources P Total Income EXPENDITURES. Cash paid for losses and ma. ured endowments. Cash paid to annuitaats Paid for surrendered policies. dividends to policy 38161660 Salaries and other compensation of officers and employes ex- cept agents and medical ex salaries ..o Cash o p.ld for remt: er cash pa Total Expenditures during the year $7.028.452 10 3 —_— PREMIUM-NOTE ACCOUN Premium notes and other premium 0b- ligations at begin- ning of the year... Premjum notes -and other premium 0b- ligations received during the year. $607,082 o1 38 00 Deductions during the year, as follows: ooy Amount of n:)ut;l- :26 rem! - e weed I ons ligatior . payment of and claims.. Amount of not other premium ob- ligations used in prrchase of yendered policies... Amount of notes and other premium 07' n 318,077 04 2,871 00 Premium: Note Account.. $55,234 13 —_— Balance, note assets at end of the year..... JACOB L. GREENE, an.= mt HERBERF H. WHITE, See. bacribed and swoen Yo Befors. me: this 23a of _February, 1903, NATHAN 7. PECK, Notary Publte. A. K. P. HARMON, Distr ot Superi of Agenei Agencies, CALIFORNIA AND PACIFIC COAST, ROOMS 30-31-32 MILL3 San Francisco, Cal. Sul day A= Py