The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 23, 1903, Page 11

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fHE S/ FR NCISCO CALL, WED VESDAY DECEMBER 23, 1903. 1 FORTY THOUSAND SCHOOL CHILDREN IN ONE PICTURE Committee to Gather San Rrancisco Exhibit for St. Louis Meets To-Day and May Adopt Plans for Elaborate and Novel Panoramic Effects are entertained by the | parade of fine equipages was seen in ttee charged with the |large proportions, with the Key monu- ng that San Francisco ment in the background. As a winter v Pictured for exhibition inthe | “Ce0€ this will appeal to the fancy of the people of the East. . State builé e Si - = ding at the St1 The daily moving spectacle near the tion next year. The com corner of Third and Market streets was sembled vesterday in the Or- | thrown on the screen. Cable cars came n itation of W. H. Mills {5 | and went. The motley procession of a screen Wwhat jctures the | Vehicles of every description that is a rn Pacific Comr has as a | f2miliar sight during all daylight hours | ey .. |©on secular days passed along with the nucleus for a collection that | e 0 men and women and children of the San Francisco. The | getting through the breaks be- f some of th The he enth s brought | tween the carts and wagons and cross- ing Market street as best they cculd. A traveler could not see Market street any better by standing on the spot in- | dicated. There were views of the flight of the | Bunset Limited for the committee to see; of staging upon the mountain grades in California: of fruit picking; of the hop fields at Pleasanton dur- ing the gathering of the crop; of har- vesting on California ranches with great machines drawn either by trac- tion engines or by multitudes of mules; of hydraulic mining in Placer County, etc. These had no necessary relation to San Francisco. All the views were general effebt was usiasm in behalf of chance to put t St. Louis. evening that the e views ans in this it would be res of Golden street king in charactér 1y out to intel- of the Fran- might be omobile to carry | t axmera rations on the Pacific Coast there' ap- , desires to have | peared one that is )1 chiidren | of its sort in the world. It showed a aber of at K modern lumber mill at work determine what there was in sight that could be used, the parts of San mittee. h a picture diameter, went through the mill sing of 40.000 hours. It ing saws set that they cut both ways—when the log was going and also when it was coming toward the spec- Heretofore the darkness in mills e it impossible to make satis- interior pictures for the bio- Even in mills where there were and only the overhang- roofing to interfere with the Some Mr. Mills learned that a mill of construction, owned by ter and located at just across the so require . talk about this. t the picture tory aph sides ing Park POLICE AND ight the biograph has failed agc tim in ¢ J. R P in Oregon, State FIREMEN. may of the California nd Police departmer e Chi Govern- nent he mt an | t jeck of he riv- i was providing ding lumber to ¢ r itself. s secured there the effective use of graph. Several leading lumber- men of California were present with the x committee in the Or- vesterday, They admired this view. a fact, it of rom up t e ferry-boats he city at Ch unique LARGE TREES FALLING. ! cutting down cf great mber was witnessed by the There were exclamations as ywering trunks' fell to the ground sent up clouds of dust. Then there w 3 traction . engines drawing trains of logs to the mill through the | clearings in the forest and down moun- in this eity aring & s tain grades and trains of cars drawn | or by locomotives piled up with logs sawed lumber. lumbering were pictured, from the cut- ing of the trees to starting the pr duct to market by rail. pictures that were exhibited that be- contras Ur n the by will exhibit of California at St. Louis. Something more ple as el passed by the committee inspecting the engrossing in se agement of the | moving pictures and alsc ing free use of the au- | some stationary views on the screen. GRAMMAR SCHOOL CLOSES. The closing exercises of the Irving the committee to To-day the com- | may decide upon ded. To M. v yesterday. The programme, in charge Christmas mar- | o "p 1 tinal Miss M. M. Murphy, was se- mpt action will be | as follow .,.,.,. 3 Ciass song, “‘Fairy Song: recitation, ‘" 014 Man Goes to Town,” Nellie Stevens: Soing On an Errand,” Betty and the Bar,” lass song, “Flag of the Brave ertaining Big Sister's Beau, tation, *‘Poppy Land ha McKeand: recitat es projected on the ¥ depicted the review of the San Fran- | It was clean cut. ildren at least were dren ¢ r American flags. The ie Schulz; class SONg, f President Roosevelt up and : recitation, “Be True,” Evang e - a Siho oul: recitation,« ““The Dressed Turkey.’ ¥ ing ranks of patrioti nor McKinley; recitation, “Kris Kringle's 1 in array on counterfeit | re ppening as it was half million peo- of that parade was | itpouring of the en- n Ness avenue, so ellent for the biograph. ARMY PASSES. Marguerite Boyd; class song ag of Our Nation,” Edna . “Foreign Views of the Marguerite Mulville; recitation, of Boys,” Frithiof Anderson; song, dows Gray™: recitation Mary Drady; original poem, * Ora Prentice; re * Adele Milan McVey: dialogue, Frank Keohane, John Keily; recitation, *“The Minuet recitation, “I'm Ge! Irene Timby: song, ° a fine o an ward i Wi je Kaunitz; nees_Doherty GRAND Big Be_ Kissed,” Ar king scene that has keen | % oo Rosary May Daly; recitation, ulated to at- Born in a Day,” George McKeand tre illions from Birthday of the i’vrn'rr and F'rh‘w}l‘ al e T | Cabe; recitation, ““The American Fla - who will visit | i T ealute to the flag, class: class song, ch of the Grand » Market street mpment week In array of the veter- nd the ntation he Alstribution of i as and medals by Hon, 'W_ H. Spangled Banner”; Common Schools;; A. Kaunitz, Alma E. al, Oliver Strahan. ndent ansen, Sedie Kaunitz, Alma Lewis, Mulville, Evangeline Rintoul a Sargent, Nellie Stevens, Lilllan Toner, g as either of the two lie Traut SUPREME Sunday ere the Sunday | s Seadi B rsnaa it AL g ADVERTISEMENTS. COURT PUTS AN END TO DISPUTES Trustees of Visalia Win One Case and i Supervisors of Shasta County | Lose Another. | In a suit involving the validity of | the tax levy for high school purposes made by the Board of Trustees of Visalia, the Supreme Court declared | yesterday that separate levies for com.- mon schools and for high schools must be made in municipalities where the population is greater than 1000. Thie is in accordance with the pro- visions of the Polftical Code. 8. C. Brown, who brought the suit, claimed the law was special legislation and therefore unconstitutional. The | | general in its operation and is special only in making a classification of schools. The court also decided yesterday that a fende is a building. F. M. Swasey brought. suit agatnst the Supervisors of Shasta County for awarding a contract for the construc- tion of a fepce d the court- house because the had not given the job to the lowest bidder. The Supervisors maintained that the law applied only to buildings and the Su- preme Court agrees but says. that a fence is a building. run through that the committee might | understanding be- | ing that the Southern Pacific Company | would do what it could to aid the com- | Among the views of industrial ope- | the only example | A huge log, more than five feet in| ! and | was cut into planks by a machine hav- | Pokegama, | was sawing lumber in the | the | Mr. |} The successive steps in | The lumbering | be | shown in connection with the forestry | than an hour was | Scott Grammar School were held | | other branch of a tribe enti s illustra of the | Nellie Traut, Mary Toohig, Eva Walsh, Emma f San Franciseo, was a mov- | Winter, William Lotzin, George McKeand, Oli- ture. of Golen GiLS Tt | ver strahan. Homoraries—Alma Lewis, 'Sara e of Golden Gate Park on| o xgaunitz, Oliver Strahan, Mary Toohig, Nel- | Supreme Court says that the law is - BARK OLIVEBANK COMES IN SIGHT OF GOLDEN GATE ALMOST HELPLESS Sails From Shanghai for Royal Roads, B. C., and After Losing Masts in Gales Wanders in Crippled State Over Waters and Finally Reaches This Coast TELLS STORY OF INTENSE MISERY DURING MARRIAGE Mrs. Christina Anthony Continues Her Tale of Suffering While Wedded to Dr. Richard S. An- thony, the Man 8he Raised to a Higher Plane —— Mrs. Christina Anthony occupied the witness#stand in Judge Hebbard's lishing anything about the divoree When I told him what I had done he became very angry and spoke meanly | g -} | courtroom all day yesterday and con- | tinued her story of the torture she al- [ {0 me. | leges she experienced at the hands of WANTED HER TO CONFESS. ber husband, Dr. Richard S. Anthony. “He wanted me {o confess my guil i w"‘ The tale of her sufferings has been pub- | and he said some awfully narsh things. \ Ao M4 (@ lished at various times, yet those who |1 Was 8o worked up, being away from ’ 1tenad fo ihe wlofy-told by thé Wwom- | rffh(!\'“ and friends and knowing I ‘ an_under oath, forced to belleve her | 1*% NO7eSt b my heart. (het T Bekan | ‘and believing, sympathize with her. T D™ Al - I DAV W | The story she told on the witness| g,me whisky and then I lay duwn. The | stand yesterday and, last week is the | doctor then went up to my daughter | strangest ever heard in a icourtroom. | Lillie's room and started to tell her She is a native of*South Africa and | that I was a bad woman. T could not cemes of one of the leading Boer fami- | stand it. I'went up to Lillie’s room and lies of that distant country. While liv- | said: ‘Lillie, I am innocent. and if he | ing therée she met Antheny, who was | were guiltless it would be different.” | engaged in missionary work. It was|He rushed me off into a little Toom. 11 ! a love match and she hegan to use her | There was a cot there. He threw me | | influence to raise him to a higher sphere | on the cot and heid me down. Mr. ‘r | i {In life. With her money she gave him | Sjverson tried to hold my feet, but I | | a bettar education and brought him to | kicked him. I called for nelp and my | Michigan in order that he might pre- | jjttle girls came and he sent them out | pare for the study of medicine. Subse- | o¢ tne room. Later on I went to his | | quently the couple came to this city and | -4 oine choet and took some poison | Anthony entered the Cooper Medical out of it: I think it fvas morghine. I College, from which he graduated. They | ..\ .q 5 jjttle while and I told him I | returned to South Africa and through | “1'¢% 2 2 o et | | her influence the husband was given | N2d taken poizon ¥ Wan Sralur Sa00s: charge of a big sanitarium owned by | °d- I Was 5o far away from my friends | her relatives. Subsequently the Boer |and the doctor was so cruel to me, and | | war broke out and Dr. Anthony was ar- | I could not stand it/ T had a glass of | | rested by the British Government on a | Water-in my hand and he knocked it { charge of treason, and through the no- | on the floor and said, ‘This is another | ble efforts of the woman who now: sues | of your lies’ He sent for Dr. Stowe | {to have the decree of divorce he ob-|and they saved me.” | | tained annulled he was saved from LETTER TO DAUGHTER. | | 1owBa by him. He, immediately upon | bard granted the doctor a divorce on 55k atrron: kst fepos infidelity and | the Sround of desertion on July 15, 1003. | tried to deprive her of her two chil- | The following letter was sent by him ! | dren. . to his daughter Estelle subsequently: S NGELI - May 19, 1903 [ FAILED TO KEEP PROMISE. | y, oS AX0R Fiesie: Fapa has nes- From the evidence adduced yester- Ign};l n:”a”nf x; g_:“rn:’r::;)_ln:;lr::\:m‘lv::.n | day, it was shown that even after the | jow I wish I could see your swest face’ My | doctor had obtained the decree of di- | heart just breaks when I think of my darling, | ! vorce he lived with his wife and cor- [ agocent littie gich i | | responded with her. He had promised | piain everyt . . Rer that at-the end of six months, if | does your mother ihat T am Innocent ho | | she was a good woman and bad chas- | Y116 Sguel charges that Have Deen B Papa | { tened her soul, he would remarry her. [ has all the ¢ and if the | | |Instead of keeping his promise, the doc- | 2ftending parties pers s | | tor and a woman who had nursed the | but will be very sorry to bring you innocent | | first wife journeyed to Yuma, Ariz., |little darlings fto the court. [ would rather | and were marriea. O fon see gt papa Daw Deem abused in the The sufferings the wife alleges she | papers, and absolute lies told on me. But, | underwent affected her health. She ac- | rather than have your sweet names brought | | cuses the doctor of having obtained the | » ot sotalivte. Bt aP 1§ | | separation from her while she was in papa will be obliged to | | a sanitarium and incapable of making | &XP0se, everything —leiters and all. You both % AR A SR e ELRPs AZe ~ % |a defense. She charges that her hus- | when ehe took poison. h [ band had compelled her to write let- ,;M‘g::»rm!‘»n;:; e, that S | DISMASTED BRITISH BARK OLIVEBANK., WHICH WAS SIGHTED OFF THE FARALLONES YESTERDAY ters to various people admitting that | parq o get money for you and so far have MORNING IN A DISABLED CONDITION, THE RESULT OF BATTLES WITH THE ELEMENTS DURING | |she had been guilty of misconduct as | receipts of mon for ten months, over A VOYAGE FROM SHANGHAI, WHICH PORT SHE LEFT ON OCTOBER 26. |a wife. She stated that the afdavit |70, & Rave - " * L introduced by her husband's counsel, | loving and broken-hearted PAPA | AR R T R A AN o TEER < | in which she asks the court to grant| rpe witness testified that the doctor THEFT BREAKS [P GIPSY BAND Mitehell { Louis Is Arrested at Charging Him With Larceny | Sand i H ecial Dispatch to The Call 1 KANSAS CITY, Mo., Dec. 22.—Theé | troubles of a band of gypsies, which | has been camped in the west bottoms, | | is one of the most peculiar and compli cated that has been brought to the at- tention of the police for several years. | The band came during the latter part | of November. Repeated requests have been made by the police of San Fran- | cisco, on complaint of the head of an- there, for the arrest of Louis Mitchell, the chief of this branch. Warrants were issued in (& California court for the arrest of Mitchell, and were received here to- | day. Mitchell was arrested and taken before Justice Hicks, but released un- der a $500 bond. The charge against Mitchell is that he stole $4000 from John Joe, the head | of a clan of gypsies now in San Fran- cisco. Until last summer, according to peaceably together in San Francisco. | Louis Mitchell, whose gypsy name is Groffo Zerka, was the head of one tribe and John Joe the head of another. All of the members of the tribes are wealthy. It is said that Zerka has $15,000 in gold in his possession. Joe claims that last summer Zerka entered his tent and stole $3000 in American | gold coins and $1000 in French and Spanish coins. Thg clan of which Zerka is chief then came to Kansas City. John Joe's branch remained in San Francisco. Zerka had been here but a few days when he learned that he had been fol- lowed by John Doe and his two broth- ers, Nicholine and George. The three brothers did not go into the Zerka camp for some time, but apparently prowled about, watching Zerka and his people from a distance. Finally the three brothers ventured into the camp in Kansas City and made friends with | the members. After they had been there | several days they took $450 from Zerka by stealth and were arrested the fol- lowing day. When taken before Judge Hicks the three Joe brothers admitted the theft and offéred to refund the money. This was done, and Zerka re- fused to prosecute. Zerka then feared he was in danger of bodily harm at the hands of the Joe brothers and ask- ed protection from the police. The Joe brothers went to Denver soon after and there made attempts to get war- | rants to have Zerka arrested. From there they went back to San Francisco and succeeded in getting out warrants for Zerka. Joe was robbed of $3000 while his bend was encamped on the San Bruno road in this city last August. A great deal of mystery surrounded the case, but the thieves were never brought to justice. At the time the robbery hap- pened Joe accused two young men of the neighborhood of having stolen the money out of a tent. They were ar- rested, but as no evidence could be col- lected, their dismissal soon followed. Many of the gypsies insinuated, at the time, that some person or percons con- nected with the band stole the money, but no more arrests followed, as the gypsies left this city soon after. Kansas City on a Warrant | Mitchell, the two tribes of gypsies lived | With three masts gone and depend- ent upon jury sails and the canvas on her one remaining stick to keep her from drifting to- destruction, the Brit- ish bark Olivebank was twelve miles northeast of the Farallon Islands late last night, endeavoring to hfat her way into this harbor without the assistance of the tug Defiance, which ran to her sistance. The bark, which sailed from Shang- hai on October 26 in ballast for Royal Roads, B. C., ran into a succession of terrific gales after being out one month and for the last thirty days has been drifting helplessly at the mercy of the sea, with only a few jury sails to keep her nose to the wind. Word was received in this city from the Weather Bureau lookout at the Farallones yvesterday morningfthat a four-masted bark was in distress off the islands. “he Spreckels tug Deil- ance was immediately dispatched for the scene and is still standing by to render whatever assistance may, be necessary. The lookout was unable to decipher the vessel's name and there was much speculation among shipping folks as to.the identity, of the craft. Word was received last evening that the weather-beaten vessel is the Brit- ish Dbpark Olivebank, bound fromn Shanghai to Royal Roads. Captain Henderson is the master of the ship and is known as a skillful navigator. Nothing but three unsightly stumps, rising several feet above the deck, ire left of three of the masts. The jigser is still intact. Three jibs have been rigged up forward and a small sail on the stump of the forward mast. This canvas, with that on the remaining mast, is all that has saved her from going to the bottom. The hull is in good condition, with the exception of a portion of the star- board side, amidsk‘ps, where one of the yards fell out and cut an ugly hole. The crew of nineteen, in addi- tion to the five officers, are safe, and no one was hurt during the terrible battle with the elements. The men say that a succession of heavy gales were encountered, and owing to the lightness and crankiness of the vessel it became neces.‘s.ary to cut away some of the rigging.® Their lives were con- tinually in danger from falling yards, and on several occasions it looked as if the vessel would go to thg bottom. The Olivebank is a r-masted steel bark and is owned by Andrew Wier of Glasgow. She was built in 1892 by Mackie & Thomson at Port Glasgow. Her net tonnage is 2200 and her dimensions are: Length, 326 feet; beam, 434; and depth, 245 feet. She cost $90,000. The Olivebank is a sister ship to the Gifford that was lost on the night of Sepntember 26 last on Mussel Rock, five miles below/the Gliff House. The Gif- ford was laden with coal en route from Australia to this port. Ill luck seems to have pursued thé owners of these vessels. ‘Ten years ago the ship Gos- ford, owned by the same company, went ashore below Point Conception. s darkness closed in on the vessel last night the Deflance was still lying alongside and 4 price will undoubtedly be agreed upon to tow the disabled craft into port. A pilot from the pilot- boat America is aboard the Olivebank and in the event that Captain Hender- son refuses a tow it is thought the ves- sel may make port to-day with a good breeze. The captain and officers refuse to talk and the only information that can be gleaned comes from the crew. The ship presents a battered appearance, but it appears that the upper works have not been badly damaged. A peculiar feature of the entire af- OCEAN VESSELS MEET DISASTER | | Two Steamships of the Nippon Are Ashore Yusen Kaisha her husband a divorce and making cer- tain admissions, was sworn to under duress, menace and trickery. She testi- fied yesterday that at her husband’s instigation she went to various news- paper offices to stop the publication of articles that were detrimental to him and upon reporting her failure to sup- press the publication of stories of the divorce he upbraided her and told their children that their mother was a bad woman, and while suffering from this further humiliation she took poi- }to use a more affection was broken-hearted because she an- swered his letters and closed with “yours truly,” whereas he wanted her ate term. She was subjected to a very close cross- examination by Attorney Savage, who introduced letters to prove that she had signed an affidavit at her own free will. She said she did so because she feared the doctor would have her committed to an asylum, as he always claimed she was insane. on the Coast of Japan|son with suicidal intent and was saved | The case will go on this morning. | from death by her husband and an- . — | s —_————— other physician. KOBE, Dec. 22.—The Nippon Yusen STORY OF SUFFERING. o?fi?fedmml:fl:: :'.::in“&"d‘m ::-3‘. Hpnts, G Japanesn, seRaRip conr: | 1903, ana January 1, 1904, the Southern Pacific pany) steamships Mutsu and Shinagwa are ashore. It is feared that the latter will be a total loss. ANTWERP, Dec. 22.—Another large steamer has gone ashore near where the Red Star liner Finland grounded | on Saturday last. In consequence of | the fog which prevails the observers | ashore up to the present have been un- | able to ascertain the vessel's name.| The Finland went ashore at Nieuwer- | stuis, near Flushing, Holland. | ARl L e e Mrs. Anthony told her story without | any attempt to be dramatic or sen- sational. Her voice was seldom raised above a whisper, as if she keenly felt the disgrace. At times the statements of the witness were so remarkable that the spectators marveled that she could have gone through all she had and lived. Her condition is very bad and during the present trial she has faint- ed a number of times. Judge Hebbard was exceedingly kind sterday and whenever the witness sflowed signs of | tatigue he called a halt. “When we were living*at %4 Webster I | information at will sell at rediced rates special round-trip tickets between all local points in California where regular one-way, first-class fare does not exceed $10. Returning, tickets will be good till December 28 and January 4, respectively. Full farket . el oottt MAKES REMARKABLE TRIP ACROSS THE CONTINENT Robert L. Gerry of Newport, son of Commodore Elbridge T. Gerry of New York, arrived at the Palace last even- ing from the North after a remark- able trip across the continent. Last week the news reached New York that o o £ street,” testified Mrs. Anthony, “the | Peter Gerry, a brother of Robert and bl e SO doctor keot his eye on me. If I at-|a guest of E. H. Harriman on his tempted to go out he would stop me.| western trip, was dangerously ill in WITH HER THREE DOGS | Despondency, from real or fancied troubles, caused Mrs. Caroline A. Hdn- gon of 116 Taylor street to end her life | My clothes were hidden, my hat was hidden and even the door was locked. If I tried to leave the house he would Portland. Accompanied by a physi- cian Robert Gerry immediately start- ed for the West and on the way he received the report that his brother g g e into a room and throw me yesterday by the inhalation of illum- f;:)':i ::1 alm! He slept in hi ‘ml".sg was dying. Anxious to be at the lat- inating gas. Beside the lifeless body Sooes and “.m",,'wd me all day ter’s bedside he communicated with were found the remains of her insep- A;.torv;ey Grant Carpenter ther asked Harriman and with the railroad mag- arable companions, three dogs. They had also been killed by the monoxide. A. Brown, who conducts 2 store at| 118 Taylor street, noticed during the | day that the customary barking of the | dogs was not heard and detormined to | investigate. Securing a ladder Brown placed it against a rear window, and | upon looking into the sieeping apart- ment of the dead woman saw her in- | animate form lying on the bed. Patrol- men Hutchings and O'Brien were sym- moned and forced an entrance. The house was filled with gas from two open burners in the chamber of death. They were immediately turned off and the Coroner’s office notified. An investigation by Deputy Meehan brought to light several almost unin- telligible letters written in a mixture of Swedish and English. From the tenor of those that could be deciphered it ap- pears that the unfortunate woman was despondent. The crevices of doors and windows opening into the bedroom had been stuffed with towels so as to make the room practically airtight. About one week ago two of the rooms were partially destroyed by fire result- ing from the overturning of a coal oil damp and it was with difficuity that Mrs. Hanson was carried to a place of safety by a policeman. To friends she stated that ‘the insurance companies had paid her $500, but a bankbook of the Hibernia Bank, found in the roém, showed only a deposit of $10. Detectives detailed on the case made an investiga- tion and are satisfied that she com- mitted suicide. & —t fair is that Captain Henderson did not display any distress signals and was endeavoring to beat his way into the harbor unaided. Although in no im- mediate danger, the ship is in a peril- ous position, and if a stiff breeze comes up will be compelled to accept the as- sistance of a tug. S Mrs. Anthony to tell the circuinstances that led to her attempt to commit sui- cide. “It was all due to my attempt to see you, Mr. Carpenter,” replied the wit- ness. “He would not let me call on you and then he compelled me to visit the newspapers to have them stop pub- istance obtained a clear . which enabled him'to s journey .in less than 85 hours, the fastest time ever made be- tween the Atlantic seaboard and the northern city. When the young man reached Portland his brother was out of danger and Robert procesaded down the coast to this city. ADVERTISEMENTS. Holiday Fun and Folly Too much of a good thing! That's whatwe are all lia- ble to take during a holi- day season. Healthy, jolly people will do it and make themselves sick. “In tite of peace prepare for war,” and have about the house a pleasant, perfect, palatable, positive medicine for sour stomach, sick headache, colic, winds, belching, bili- ousness, furred tongue, lazy liver, constipation, bad breath, bad taste, all liable to result from holiday over- indulgence. Cascarets Candy_ Cathartic is what you want; a'tablet after a big meal will prevent sickness, or a tablet at night before going to bed, after a good time, will fix you all right for morning, and let you get up clear as a bell, ready for business or pleasure. - € The Olivebank was posted on the Y Best for the Bowels. Anb?.—.v‘sfi- Never sold in bulk. ov&fiuomtlutktmmmflwnw m.-fl--fln.“ C o—-‘-fl--—-,.— 3 ¢ Remedy hicego or New Yorks @ quoted at 35 per cent reinsurance.

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