The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 4, 1903, Page 6

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8 TWO RECITALS GIVE PLEASURE TO AUDITORS There were two recitals last evening, Ardrew Bogart's song recital at Maple #Hadll and the piano recital of Miss Cecil Cowles at Steinway Hall. Fortunately for myself I decided to take in Mr. Bogart's first or there would have been nane to take in. The barytone’'s pro- gramme was a minlaturé affair. It began at §:25 and ended at 9 o'clock. it was Mr. Bogart's first appearance | here for a goodly span of years and thére were many people to greet him Some of them arrived late and found only three or four songs awaiting them. Still, the average song recital is a bore by means of its length, and one should perhaps welcome this departure recedent Of thetr pertect sentiment, delightfu smooth, finished, flexible fashion, ds singer and songs were Delicate were offered by the singer. His voice, a | sweet barytone, lent itself ad-) fiber. The programme s on dramatic capac but its daint were most ad- deeps yety, by Mr. Bogart. His of songs included “The ver Lacia il dir” and a Song,” all of the seventeenth A quartet of Schumann songs, Lay T Hand,” “'Twas in f M ‘“When Through Row, Gently Row,” and programme closed with »ers by Amer Metcalf's T g “Absent,” also in- sistently encored, and “An_ Open Se- Huntington Woodman. f Schumann when I ar- up that I heard arrived at the I'm glad I 1 WS un- ius. There itermezzo understanding, Papillons tainable Linding was comically E minor waltz vet impossible 1 in consequence everl Mr a ye 1 € for ich clean and is well on the takable evi- A Chopin and the pro- t inm ended from | ican composers: : Again to Me” (N. Clifford | | s redemanded; John W. | ss Cowles had reached the| nway Hall. The hall was this clever youngster as a bank of flowers. a the D minor S Fan- y after » home- op. 5,| cluded abeske” (CHARITABLE OPEN B {1 | THE SAN FRAl\{CISCO CALL, FRIDAY, D}CEMBER 4, 1903. THEIR PURSES 70 ASSIST AILING LITTLE ONES Throng Attends Reception at Will H. Crocker Home | and Ladies in Charge of the Affair Gather in ' Many Dollars for Children’s Hospital Auxiliary x3 | | ADVERTISEMENTS. TAEY ACTUALLY DO THE WORK Food Eaten Is Worthless Unless Digested ~—Some Stomachs Must Have Help. which, od the con- not ‘digested, This is a it goes and a ptics' go only this far They 2 ir stomachs mselves that be do tk be er dg, they not s work; starved in other It would t be » be just as sensible f business man who-is unable to do all his own work tq cut down his business to his own ca- | pacity as it is 1 B h elf” 1« his stomach. The sible business man employs dnd goes forward with his business. | {p. Likewite the sensible -dyspeptic will employ help for his hody pror Stuart’s D; his stomach and give r nourishment. Tablets actually repsis lieve weak and o ,of a great Their component with those of the secretions of parts are identical he stomach and they sim- the work just the same és a strong, healthy stomach would do it. On this aceount Tablets action and eflecy are tke stomach or bowels. i | | +| SCENE AT THE RECEPTION AND SALE AT THE W. H. CROCKER | F IDENCE YESTERDAY FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CHIL- ; DREN'S HOSPITAL FUND. [ - — | Society and others charitably inclined | thronged the Will H. Crocleer residence yesterday afternoon and evening, and a handsome sum was netted for Auxili- ary No. 1 to the Children's Hospital. It a most worthy object and deserved the patronage accorded it. The entire lower portion of the spacious residence was open to the public. Between the reception hours of 3 to 6 o’clock in the afternoon and 8 to 11 in the -evening there was a constant gue with | Stream of patrons, and several hundred people wandered about the rooms and | k given them, they | gladly opened their purses for charity. | Very little was_ done by way of deco- j ration, but: the ifloors were carefully covered.to avoid;any damage. Owing to the gbsence of Mrs. Crocker to starve|in the East some of the more delicate | Mrs. Breeze: case of champagne, won of the hangings had been removed, but | help | otherwise. the different apartments in palatial homie were intact. The rich carvings of the woodwork, the magnificent ifurnishings and wall deco- | rations, the'rare old paintings and the o the work assigned to them. They re. | 8rticles of ¥irtu ahd bric-a-brac all rhurdened stomachs | came in for a great share of attention tion of digestive action. | and admiration. ¥ In thie main hall ‘were long tables of digestive fluids and | magnificent chrysanthemums, roses and vivlets, which were disposed of for take up the grind and carry on | handsome sums by Mrs. McNear, Mrs. good, | Lawrence Scott-and Miss Mary Joss- {lyn. In the library was the raffle table, Stuart’s Dyspepsia | in #harge of Mrs. Augustus Taylor and perfectly matural in their | Mrs. ‘Walter Martin. “They had re- They do not cause | celved liberal donations from many of any unnatural or viclent disturbance in | thé deading firms in town. They them- | Co. sent a superb cut glase bowl; the | they were sold or not'I am not able to Shreve & selves digest the food and supply the | offering from the ‘White House was a system with all the nourishment con- | fine 1fmp; from Sioane-&Co. came a tained in what is eaten and carry out | large Turkish rug; the Nathan-Dohr- Nature’s plans for the sustenance and | mann Company contributed a” beauti- | | ful vase; B. Schonwasser & Co. gave | maintenance of the body. How much more sensible is this method than that employed by many sufferers from weak stomachs. 2 gorgeous-baby basket; 1. Magnin & To. sent spme baby coats; Ned Green- By | way's offering ;Was a case of Mumm this means body and brain gét all the | champagne, and A. M.- Robertson sent good, nutritious food they need and the | up a Jot of valuable books. The ladies man is properly nourished and equipped | did a thriving business with this raf- to carry on his work and perform hi¢ | fiing department and the results ‘were | duties. He ¢tould not possibly be in|more than satisfactory. proper working condition by starving! In the dining-room, from a richly himself or employing some new fangled, | jecked table, light refreshments were .insufficlent food that d®es not contain | perved, while in .the reception-room énough nutriment for & year-old baby. | dainty punches and Ices were grace- A strong man doing sfrong work must | fully dispensed by Miss Carolan and be properly fed and this apptes to-the brain as well as the body. Stuart's Dyspepsis Tablets, by re- lieving the stomach of its work; enable it to recuperate and regain its normat health and strength. Nature repairs the worn and wasfed tissues just as she heals and knits the bone of a broken limb, which-1s 6f course not used dur- ing the propess of repair. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are for sale by all:druggists at 50 cents a box and they are the one article that the druggist does not try to sell something in the place of that's “just as good.” Their unqualified merit and success and Miss Kittle. fiegn During both afternoon and. evening the Presidio band, which had_yolun- | teered its services,*rendered delightful | selections of music in the back draw- | ing-rcom. | The visitors were received in the | front” hall by the henorary president of auxiliaries, Mrs. John F. Merrill, charmingly gowned in white etamine. Those assisting her were the presidents cf the hospital board auxiliaries. { Mijss Bernie Drown, president of Aux- iliary No. 1, wore white etamine. Miss Painter, acting president of Auxiary No. 2, or Chrysanthemum the universal demand for them has | Auxiliary, as it is generally called, wore placed them within the reach of every | a dainty gown of pale blue. one. . Miss Edna Davis, president of the arguerite Aux | No. 3, E\\Hh white lace. > Members of the different auxiliaries | | mingled with the crowd and manifested | a spirit of helpfulness throughout the | entire affair. { The ladies who had charge jof the arrangements were handsomely ond | elaborately arrayed in gowns of delicate { light fabrics and presented a very at- | tractive picture. The results of the raffles were as fol- {lows: Cut glass bowl, with fork and | | spoon, won by Mrs. George Lent; vase, | won by Mr. Phelan; rug, won by Mrs. | William H. Taylor; lamp, won by Mrs. | Fred W. McNear; lamp shade, won by | Mrs. Austin Tubbs; child’s coat, won by Mrs. Walter Dean; baby's basket, won by Mrs. Zefle; two books, won by ry, correctly termed | wore a pink and white silk gown | by J. D. Crockett. E Miss Drown in speaking of the affair said: “We all feel under very great| | obligations to Mr. Crocker, who came | to us with the offer of hiw home. We | also want to thank the band from the Presidio, which gave its services gratu- itously, and we alzo wish to thank the ten officers of the police force who so very kindly volunteered their services, We have done very well financially— far better than we expected. In. the | afternoon we. took in ‘something :like | $300, 'and T think this evening’s receipts | will be as great. “The raffle table was a surprise to us, and we Teel under many obligations | to the different friends who gave us| | the materials for that table. There are | many tickets outstanding, and whether | say now. We thank-our friends and the public for-the kind support they hnv&j given the cause we are working for.” * ——————— A No charge for lettering your.name’ in.: gold on pocketbooks, card cases, cameras, traveling sets, trunks, valises, dress sult. cases or any other fine leather gou ur- s chased at our store. Sanborn Vail & Co —_———— Priest Sues Physician.” - Rev. P. J. Gray in a suit filled yester- day against Dr. Thomas F. Brennah'l asks the court tordeclare the physician to be holding in trust for him'"the su of $40,000 in deposit in the Hibernia Bank. He alleges that within the last. three years, whife he was sick and dis- | abled, he gave the money to the doc- tor- with the understanding that when he demanded its return it was to ‘be given to him. He says that November 30, 1903, ‘he askéd Bremnan for the money and that the latter refused to give it 'up. - P v s aigal “THE NEW CATACOMB.” e | route. -to the question as to the correctness 'of the people of this coast and the H . ;:mna Peter Gerry of New York. :tpp’fsmhern Paclfic GVES MO HOPE FOR DNIDENDS Harriman Says Subject Is Not Proper One to Discuss. Railroad Magnate Is Proud of Achievements of His Engineers. BB o 3 E. H. Harriman, president of the Southern Pacific Company, accompa- nied by a party of friends, arrived from Southern California in his private car at an early hour yesterday morning, and during his short stay in San Fran- cisco will, make his home at the Pacific- Union Cldb. Yesterday the railroad magnate spent the greater part of the day in the company’s office conferring with General Manager Kruttschnitt, Chief Engineer Hood, Chief Counsel Herrin and other. prominent officials of the corporation. How long President Harriman expects to remain in this city he would not state, and he ap- peared equally diffident in furnishing other information that the general pub- lic might be concerned in. At a 420-words-a-minute rate he dis- cussed the engineering achievement which is to be known in railroad his- tory as the Lucin cut-off, and prefaced his remarks on other subjects with a | statement that he and his financial as- soclates in the big railroad enterprise had accomplished a great deal during the last two years, and purposed now to enjoy a breathing spell. “When one stops for a moment,” he remarked, ““to consider that this great piece of engineering work across the Salt Lake was accomplished within eighteen months at a cost of many millions of dollars he certainly will con- cede that we performed a remarkable feat and have cause to pause in our plans for the further betterment of the Southern Pacific Company’s overland In twenty-four months we have left behind us not only the Lucin cut- .off, but all the important wofk of re- construction east of Reno. We will now bide our time to determine the ex- tent of the benefits that will accrue from these successful engineering un- dertakings.” MAGNATE'S FUTURE PLANS. Asked whether the company would soon take up the work -of building a tunnel through- the Sierras, Mr. Harri- man replied that the proposition to tunnel had: been under consideration, but no definite action had been taken. “I have not yet seen the plans for the proposed tunmel,” he said, “and I have not had time Xo even give the serious thought it probably deserves.” A query regarding the proposed bridging of Carquinez Straits received a similar answer from the railroad president, who, however, added that both the tunnel and the bridge were probabilities. He maintained, as he did on the occasfon of his former visit to| | this city, that ke knew nothing about the plans for a connecting line with Eureka, and refused to discuss the company's trouble across the bay rela- tive to the renewal of its Alameda fran- chise, explaining that the matter had not been looked into by him, but woeuld | probably be taken up by him during his stay in the city. CONCERNING DIVIDENDS.: When the interviewer .grew a bit personal by guarded inquiry wheth- er any definite date had been set for holding the long deferred meeting of | the Southern Pacific directors and as to the possibility of there being made | the | a change in the presidency of { company, Mr. Harriman answered the first query with a serious “I haven't given it a thought”” and then taking up the other relative to the selection of a new head of the corporation he | exhibited one of his best smiles as he replied: “That I can't say. the good of the road. think of it?” Since President Harriman started on his Western trip New York finan- ciers, among them James K. Edmond- son, ,a stockholder in the company, have been publicly discussing the probability of the Southern Pacific Company paying no dividends for It might be for ‘What do you some time to come and Edmundson‘ only recently volunteered the proph- ecy that none would be paid until 1905 and that one would be paid dur- ing that year. It has been intimated ‘that it is the plan of the Southern Pa- cific Company, when it refunds. its high rate bonds, the heavy expendi- tures made by the company in the way of improvements during the last two years and which have been charg- ed to earnings, will be adjusted in the issuing of refunding bonds and that in the end these imprevements will be capitalized as a means of reim- bursing the company’s treasury. By capitalizing ‘ the: improvements,, which are to be classed as permanent, they become cliargeable to the capital ac- count. : g " PRESIDENT IS EVASIVE. ' ‘Had an interviewer presented such a proposition to the late President. “Huntington for a suggestive answer, ‘that great financier would have im- mediately entered upon a discussion of mathematical problems that would have readily bewildered the average mtinental line. Mr. Harriman, hbyever, has an entirely different|. magnne: - of disposing ot,‘l\lch matters, &_wn shown yesterday in his reply ot the reports from the East and es- fiédzily as to, the Edmondéon predic- 0] "‘T_"_jfl,‘ike it a practice,” said ' he, *never .to reply to published state- ments or criticisms, and as regards the future payment of dlvidends I believe that it.is to the best interests ‘stockholders of the Southern Pacgflc Company that the subject should not be. ussed in print.” 2 nt Harriman was accom- parlied up the coast from Los Angeles by Chief el Herrin, David Wil- ‘cox, presfdent ‘of the Delaware and ‘River Raflréad; Harry Kern- expected that the president of ‘Company will - week, duning 1 over here at I he will J erties and carefully look into thm erson interested in' the affairs of the{ WHITTELL STORY TOLD BY PAPERS Missing Documents Are Returned to Judge Troutt. Hanlon’s Clerk Surrenders Misy Boyere’s Marriage Contract. ? The judgment roll in the case of George Whittell Jr. against Florence Boyere, the suit which was so care- fully manipulated by the attorneys in the case, particularly Charles Hanlon, attorney for the plaintiff, that ali knowledge of it was suppressed for days, is at last complete, The missing papers, namely, the deposition of Miss Boyere and her answer and cross-com- plaint, which mysteriously dlsappearedi from the Qounty Clerk’s office the day the case was trled, were returned late | yesterday afternoon. The man who| brought them back was William G.| Cousins, Attorney Hanlon’s man-of-all | work, the man who repeatedly denied having any knowledge of the case jor | the papers connected with it the day | the fact that they were missing was discovered. He walked into Judge Troutt’s courtroom yesterday after- noon, deposited the papers with the | Judge, coolly informed his Honor that j they were the papers in the Whittell case and walked out, vouchsafing no explanation as’ to their whereabouts since November 9, the day th& action| was surreptitiously tried and adjudi-| | guilty he is to be reported to the fac- cated. = <4 | STORY IS REVEALED. | The character of the papers make | | plain the attorney’s reason for keeping | them out of sight. Had they been seen | { it would have been impossible to keep | { from the public the story of the con-| | tract marriage of young Whittell, the| grandson of Nicholas Luning, the fam- | ous money-lender, and beautiful Flor- ence Boyere, the divorced wife of Ho-| | mer Selby, the brother of “Kid” Mec- Coy, the pugilist. At present she is the sister-in-law of Selby, for a short time | after the erstwhile Mrs. Selby got her| divorce on the ground of infidelity he married her pretty sister, Rosalie Boyere, The papers would also have revealed | that Attorney Hanlon's suit over “ad- verse claims” (for such was the type of action he brought at the request of Whittell's father to determine the va- | lidity\of the contract marriage) was a suit in which not only was the contract itself involved, but the property of voung Whittell and also his honor, For Miss Boyere in her cross-complaint al- | leges that Whittell betrayed her under | [ promise of marriage. For this she| | asked for $100,000 damages, but waived | | her right to monetary balm in the event | | that" the evidence adduced would show | | that she was the lawful wife of Whit- tell. | CONTRACT IN EVIDENCE. Miss Boyére's deposition showed that | the alleged marriage took place in New York December 2, 1902, at the home of Charles ‘T. Henshall. Previous to that time she held a written agreement of Whittell’s to make her his wife, but this she surrendered to his father, and | it was destroyed. The contract mar- |'riage, however, she held, and it was made part of the evidence in the case. | It reéads as follows: December 2, 1902. 1 hereby agree to and have married George IWhitteglt Jr, to-night. f FLORENCE M. BOYERE. 1 hereby agree to and have married Flor- ence M. Boyere to-night, GEORGE WHITTELL JR | Witnesses—Charles T. Henghall, Grace | Henshall. In her' deposition she says that the night the contract was executed she | asked, in response to Whittell's request that she become his wife, that some | one to perform the ceremony he sent for, but he suggested the contract. He then begged her not to record it on the i ground that he feared his father would learn of his becoming a benedict. He fairly cried for her to marry him, she =, agreeing that in the event of her ming his bride he would renew the | contract every six months. She also | states that she was left penniless in | Chicago, and that before coming out here she was compelled to pawn her sealskin coat and her jewelry. ——————— Says Ducks Were Drowned. Deputy Fish Commissioner M. Ault arrested P. Favordora yesterday for ! selling drowned ducks. It is alleged that the bodies of the birds had been cut for the purpose of making it ap- pear that they had been shot. Favor- dora was attempting to sell the birds in the residence portion of the West- ern Addition. —_————————— Californians in Washington. WASHINGTON, Dec. 3—The follow- ing Californians registered to-day: At the New Willard—A. Butler and G. M. Haslett of San Francisco, and Mr. and Mrs. H. Robinson of Los Angeles. At the Raleigh—Frank A. Jones of Alamo. E. { b uation across the bay, where, since ‘his last visit here, a formidable rival to the Southern Pacific’s ferry and suburban.service has been established. STUDENTS TALK OF HONOR SYSTEM Stanford Men Not All Agreed on Princeton Plans Value. Collegians in Mass Meeting Discuss Examination Cheating. e Special Dispatch to The Call STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Dec. 3. —A mass meeting of the student body was held in Assembly Hall this morn- I ing for the purpose of discussing the advisability of adopting at Stanford the so-called “honor system” as it is in vogue at Princeton. The main idea of the system is to rest the control of the punishment of 'students found cheating in examinations with the students themselves and make all of the students bound by pledge to re- port any student found cheating to the student tribunal appointed _to judge in such cases and let that be a court of last resort to determine whether or not the offense has been committed. If the accused is found ulty, who may either cancel his regis- tration or, in a flagrant case, expel him from the university. A pledge is also taken by every student that he will neither give nor receive help in an examination. The college has become thoroughly aroused over the question, which has been agitated in the college daily pa- per for several days. Editorials and communications, all in favor of the proposed system, have almost fllled the official student body organ for sev- eral issues. However, that the Daily Palo Alto has not won the entire stu- dent body to its view of the matter was evidenced by the opposition to it that appeared in the mass meeting this morning. A great many of the students quite justly feel that there is not any amount of cheating done in the uni- versity large enough to justify such a radical measure and that its adop- | tion may lead the general public to the erroneous conclusion that cheat- | ing is prevalent at Stanford; The op- | ponents of the scheme favor allowing each man being put on his individual | honor and oppose the requirement | that a man should be in duty bound | to report a fellow student. This sys- | ADVERTISEMENTS. SEE OUR WIN- Dows LADIES D0 YOU WANT A GOOD SHOE? Here is a Shoe that has just arrived from the BEast and which the creditors were com- pelled to take-—dull kid top, light box calf vamp and new style tips—military heel, welt winter weight sole. Made by water-tight process. All sizes and widths; lke illustration; also the same in kid; made to sell for $6.00; at the CRED- ITORS' SALE $3.85 Hundreds of other styles at equally as good bargains at the -CREDITORS’ SALE Kast’s Shoes " (04-1i0 GEARY STREET 8. WOLFF, Receiver. tem of each man being regarded as on his individual honor not to cheat | is practically in vogue in the law de- | partment and is proving a thorough success there, hence it is argued that | the students of the other departments | should live up to the same code, as| all the students are supposed to have | an equally high sense of honor and self-respect. The meeting this morning was al- together a student affair. President Jordan appeared at the opening of the meeting and made a few remarks, in which he stated that he regarded some sort of an honor system as in- evitable in our educational institu- tions in this country in the not very distant future. President Jordan also read a letter from Harwood Hall of the Sherman Institute at Riverside, the school that supports the Perris Indian football eleven, congratulat- ing Stanford on having an eleven | which played such clean and sports- | manlike football as that put up against the Indians on Thanksgiving | day in Los Angeles. After his few remarks President Jordan, the only faculty member present, withdrew and a discussion of the “honor sys- tem” by the students followed. O. A. Wilson, editor of the Daily Palo Alto, read an extended paper in favor of the system, covering most of | the materiai * has appeared in the college daily and also letters from | Princeton students a’.d others in re- | gard to the propose: system, includ- ing one from Dr. Farrand of the Stan- ford history department, who is the chief exponent of the system, he hav- ing seen it in operation at Princeton. Among others who took part in the discussion pro and con were Captain Bansbach of the varsity eleven, Cap- tain Ball of the varsity nine, B. P. Oakford, '02; R. C. McComich, '03; | H. A. Moran, '04; H. P. Kuhn, '03, and O. C. Ritter, "04. The matter will probably be put to a vote of the Associated Students be- fore the end of the present semester. It must first be acted upon by the ex- ecutive committee and then reported to the student body as a whole, which will probably be done next Wednes- day. e bt Cass Post Elects Officers. At a meeting of General Cass Post, G. A. R., the following were elected as officers of the post for the ensuing term: George W. Arbuckle, comman- der; A. B. Donnelly, senior vice com- mander; James Buttler, junior vice commander; Ambrose Ferrari, surgeon; James Massey, chaplain: R. E. Dow- dall, gqunartermaster; James H. Riely, officer of the day (re-elected for the fourteenth term): Edward Johnson, officer of the guard; Thomas Clifford and Ambrose Ferrari, delegates to the State encampment. ADVER' of the suffering and of all pleasant anticipa have foun time of their most critical trial. carry women safely BECOMIN A MOTHER thought in store for her, robs the expectant mmflr ons of the coming event, and casts over her a shadow oiflom which cannot be shaken off. Thousands of women “that the use of Mother’s Friend during confinement of all pain and danger, and insures safety to life of mother and child. This scientific liniment is a Is an ordeal which all women approach with indescribable fear, for nothing compares with the pfin and horror of child-birth. The pregnancy robs -send to all women at the does Mother’s child-birth, but its use Not through . w ::: flgnevmt, prevents ‘‘morniag S LEES MOTHER’S v / BOHEMIAN SOLD EVERYVWHERE. HILBERT MERCANTILE CoO., Pacific Coast Agents. UNITED STATES BRANCH. STATEMENT ——OF THE— CONDITION AND AFFAIRS —OF THE— ROYAL INSURANCE COMPANY ° F LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND, ON THE 3ist day of December, A. D. 1002, and for the year ending on that day, as made to the Insurance Commissioner of th Sta 4 California, pursuant to the provi s of Sec- tions 610 and 611 of the Political Code, com- densed as. per blank furnished by the Com. missioner, ASSETS. | Real Estate ownea by Company..$1,421,012 & Loans on Bonds and Mortgages $84,000 00 Cash Market Value of ail Stocks and Bonds owned by Company... 3,600,104 08 Cash in Company's Office e 52 Cash in Banks ... 2 Interest due and accrued on all Stocks and Loans ............ 41,678 31 Interest due and accrued on Bonds and Mortgages . Sazts 5,304 38 Premiums in due Course of Col- lection . R . + 1,084,040 01 Rents due and accrued v ¥ 4,087 62 Due from other Companies for re- insurance on losses already paid. 32,607 39 Total Assets LIABILITIES. Losses adjusted and unpaid ....... 7,500 81 Losses in process of Adjustment or in SUSDENSe .................... 266,063 99 Losses resisted, including expenses. 101,760 78 Gross premfumg on Fire Risks ru ning _one year or less, $3.304, 830 77; reinsurance 50 per cent.. 1,677,419 88 Gross premiums on Fire Risks ru . ning more than one year. $4,508 204 87; reinsurance pro rata..... 2,445,298 62 Amount reclaimable by the insured on perpetual fire insurance pok: Liability under Life Department. .. All other liabilities .... Total Liabilities . INCOME: Net cash actually received for Fire premiums $4,745,48 Received for interest on Bonds and Mortgages 21,375 00 Recelved for interest and dividends on Bonds, Stocks, Loans an from all other sources . Receivea for Rents .. Total Income Net ameant paid for Fire Losses (incluiting $669,226 02, losses previou: = 3 id_or alk Paid or allowe: s sl Paid for Salaries, Fees and other ‘“harges for officers, clerks, atc.. 283.063 81 Paid for State, National and Loeal axes ... e 127,880 14 All other payments and expendi- BUPES «.vcovernenrie vesennnseese SUT,354 889 Total Expenditures .. »e.--$4.215,628 60 o Fire. Losseés incurred during the year...$2.407.022 01 Risks and Premiums. | Fire Risks. 1 Premiums. Net amount of Risks written during the| | $787,575,602/$7.653,296 63 year 792,703,853 6,886,776 13 Net amount In f December 31, 1902..| 796,075,395 7,954,044 64 E. . BEDDALL, U. 8. Manager. and sworn to before me, this 26th day of Janua EDMU PACIFIC COAST DEPARTHMENT ROLLA V. WATT, Manager, 201 Sansome St., 8an Francisco. 1903. ND HARVEY. Notary Publia JINO, T. FOGARTY, Assistant Manager; ¥. B, KELLAM, Branch o R HILLMAN, Superintendent Depart- NON AQUA

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