The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 7, 1904, Page 4

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N FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE MAY TRACE REVOLVER'S NERSHIP New York Officials Believe the Weapon With Which Young Was Slain Was Pur- chased in San Francisco “NAN” PATTERSON'S HEARING DELAYED BIZOT CLAINS THI ES ARE DE, Revenue Agent C ommencesi an Action for a Large Sum | Against Southern Pacific| ions Appropriated to Reclaim Our Arid Lands. BY S. W. WALL. CALL BUREAU, HOTEL BARTON, | WASHINGTON, June 6.—The twenty- seven million dollars to be sown through the arid regions of the West by the Government in irrigation work will, it is estimated, cause a hundred million acres of the desert to turn bountiful, to give pfosperous place to fodr mil- !lion people, to warrant the building of | citigs of a population double that num- DIFFERS FROM WELLER? vs Corporation Should Be Compelled to Pay Duty on Holdings All Over Country , June 6.—Reve- A e her Woman’s Rich Admirers Are Coming to Her Aid and Southern™ Pacific vo . o) . y for back taxes on Will Provide Funds for h $90,000,000. The - ) n litigation is $3,000,- Her Fight for Freedom ok S PP the hundred upon a property for five years. tituted by Agent Weller compromise, the com- taxes to the ex- prayed the $1,000,000, while 0,000. The differ- n the difference of conception of the defendant’s liability. Bizot contends that the Sc company Kent a r good ownership of ished. he Court of Appeals decided in of the city vs. the Louisville Iway Comy that a compromise 2 tax suit ¢ y as a credit d that no taxes ompromised m except par- tially, to the extent that the amount 1id sets off the amount due.” + Y Garvan, representing the District At- an adjournment of the ex- n, the Coroner's ary for a proper the post mortem facts Levy de- body of Yo hearin but 2 statement in which ent until Fri- could have been far to the left a Young's a "ERS CONTAIN THRE u.;gml T Th c 2 h 1 of Distriet At- end he w rously He will urge that be held without n he will be r with the examination. b Patterson appeared confident. v to her cell in the Tombs ng that her release would soon STORY T 'OLD BY DOOL opinion et E. Dooley ring on the aid off last Thurs- e ship I was a with whom 35 , with a bl the weapc was , but T shot at a bird in the 1id not replace the cartridge. night was out friends and drank too much. g orning 1 had no money le a drink. I was on Broad- oung had w woman and of them th n near the corner of How- 1 ard well-dressed met a ed to the As- r , stranger, who showed that he had been sistant District ey that the re- nking. I aske: 0 o i o et e re- ! crinking. 1 asked him for the price of yelver:umed § drink and he took me into a saloon, > he offered to buy champagne. I him that wine was too rich for and that what I wanted was some- to cool my th R h“i . We had several drinks and were ectives will be Sreatly simpied. | Sbout to mey e when he said he tives will be greatly simplifiec nted Lo buy a revolver. I offered | HEARING IS ADJOURNED. owing littie the effect of the forty mine to-him and he said that it would He gave me $2 and he showed a oy e nt in the Tombs, ge roll of bl I asked him what ppeared in the Cor- he wanted with the revolver and he -day None of her said that he wanted to do up a woman re with her, but she was or that a woman was going to do him up. I don’t remember which it was, but it was to do with a woman. I saw nothing of a woman with him and | 1 saw nothing of a cab. I know that, |it was about half-past eight o'clock | S8aturday morning, or perhaps a few minutes later, when I left the man | who had purchased my revolver. I say a picture of Young this afternoon. 1 am positive he is the man who pur- chased the revolver from me.” Unger does not place too much reli- ance in what Dooley says, recognizing h that there are some points of his story These facts are all in the favor of the | which do not coincide with what has | mean or woman with weak lungs, even ' been told b. an” Patterson. when disease has a strong grip on them. FUENRAL SERVICES HELD. | l*‘i“_“)' % Pomeh | In New Rochelle funeral services | ving in hea over the body of Young were held. The | to-day has the |inicrment will take place to-morrow | lungs marked by | yorning. the healed soars John Randolph Patterson, the aged | of disense. 1d decrepit father of “Nan,” is in Dr. Pierce’s ew York battling for the freedom of Golden Medical | his daughter. “Nan” had been es- Discovery makes 'tranged from her parents, but when the weak lungs Ppresent trouble came upon her, her It cures | ©ld father, whose home is in Washing- a ton, forgot the differences of the past oo co“;h'?"' and brought with him to his daughter ehitis bieed, | the blessing of her mother and assur- b‘, on! b anece that his last dollar would be spent ing lungs and |j; per gefense. ! other conditions, = parterson is not a man of wealth, | which, if neglect- | put it now appears there is to be no lack of mo: for the defense of his | daughter. an” Patterson had other | admirers than “Caesar” Young and | funds will be ready to meet any emer- | gency. It may be that real estate bail | will be refused to-morrow, in which | event $5000 cash will be forthcoming. el v st become | TOLD CABMAN TO HURRY. | Young’s Order Indicates That He Did | Not Contemplate Suicide. NEW YORK, June 6—"Hurry up {and get to the Fulton-street pier as ickly as you can. I'm afraid I'm by her counsel, “Abe” Levy. dings In court were brief. DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. ONE LUNG May be gone and yet the remaining Iimg will be amply sufficient to sustain 2 vigor- ousvitality. As a general thing few peo- ple make more use of both lungs than is equivalent to a hezlthy use of one lung. | fatal termination in consumption. *1 had been troub- Jed with lung dis- ecase lenrisy That remark made by “Caesar” | Young to Frederick Michaels, the cab- man who drove the horseman down- . | town with “Nan” Patterson, throws | Those who suffer from chronic dis- | strong light on the.mental condition of | eases are imvited to comsult Dr. Pierce, the man, who, it is asserted by the by letter, free All wm{ngs ‘[w&z-nnl:'..efiommnud suicide a few min- Pl NY. pe l It s taken by District Attorney Gar. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets assist the | Yo" 10 Show clear S LI S0k of . uicide had entered Young's mind at sction of the * Discovery.” LAt tima. oy j [} ber. And the works upon which this money is to be expended are expected to be compieted within four years as the outer limit. Some of them will be completed within two years. It-is a very moving picture, therefore, that is présented to the mind with this ener- getlic work in progress in the West. The value of this vast area of land is now nil. With the work completed and the water turned on, a value will have been created averaging $43 an or $4,300,000,000. As for the cost vdst improvements making all ossib the first crop *aken from the land will match it. But the four millions placed upen - farming lands and the other ions in the towns or ¢ ult form .a part of the There is in the first place the mpulse given to manufac- supplying tools and equip- there is the impulse to railroad ng in the development of the ry and in the distribution of the product of these fruitful fields. With the extension of railroads a thousand mining enterpriges that wait upon will come into being. of the irrigation projects Government contemplates the the generation of electric power far beyond its own needs or the needs of the farm- This will aid the mirier and the manufacturer. 8o it will be seen that the “Reclamation Service,” which came into being only two years ago, is en- gaged in a big and beneficent work. The $27,000,000—the first cost of the work now under way—is the govern- mental loan to prosecute the work as planned in twelve States and Territo- ries. This money, so it is arranged by law, will be paid back to the Govern- ment by tho who take up the land under the provisions of the law and then the Government will straightway spend it again on other reclamation undertakings, for which reconnoissance already being made. And when e other works are completed and money they cost returned it will be spept again on still other works. And the reclamation service will con- tinue widening the area of bloom in the desert until there is no desert, or at east no further waters with which to reclaim it. A PLEASING VIEW. So the more you look at this enter- prise of the Government the more leasing and inspiring it is. Moved by it, the question at once occurs, “How are lands to be secured under the law that is to work this charm?* The an- swer is simply “the homestead law"— the homestead law modified. The num- acres that may be taken up by duals varies according to cli- soil and other conditions. The ary of the Interior fixes the unit each project upon reports made to him as to these conditions. They run from 160 acres to forty acres. For it will be seen that forty acres of irri- gated land in California, for instance, is more attractive to a settler than 160 acres would be in some remote part of Arizona. The settler must agree to pay t cost of the improvement. The Government agents assess this propor- tionately over all the land benefited. It is to be paid in ten annual payments. This assessment represents the exact cost and with no interest. Of course, the cost is not the same in any two cases, nor is the area benefited the all of which raises interesting ons that must be met by the in- lual and that make no part of this story. This story is of the magnificent enterprise and much more magnificent results in bulk. Seeing that the Gov- ernment s put to it to reclaim the des- ert for the reason that there is need of it, there will be little disposition to quibble among the beneficiaries. In truth the.anxiety is on the other hand. It no sooner becomes known that an irrigation district is to be formed than settlers rush in and file upon the land, thereby taking every chance of throw- ing away their rights. For the law requires that water must be put upon the land within one year from the date of filing and in no instance can.the Government do this. Government agents are continually warning settlers of the conditions and of the risk they take in making filings or settling upon lands prematurely. The Secretary of the Interior will give due notice when entries may be made with safety. The works now determined upon are as fol- lows: Arizona — Salt River project, where $3.000.000 is to be expended. California — So-called Yuma project, on the Colorado River, to cost $8,000,000. Colorado — Uncompahgre project, to cost $2,000,000. Idaho — Minidoka project, for which $2,600,000 is allotted. lt-n&;fla—hfllk River project, to cost Nevada — Truckee - Carson project, now under construction, to cost about $2,000,000, New Mexico—Hondo project, to cost $350,000. North Dakota—Fort Bedford project, taking water from Yellowstone River in Montana, cost $1,200,000. Oregon — Malheur “project, 2,000,000. Utah-—Conservation of water in Utah Lake at cost of about *1.000,000. Washington — Reclamation of land near Posco. cost about $1,000,000. Wy ming — Storage and diversion of Shoshone River near Cody, for which $2,250,000 is allotted. The law ereating the reclamation service providing for these great irri- gation enterprises, which are designed to cover the entire arid regions so far as that is possible, was passed June 17, 1902, and is due to President Roosevelt and his interest and knowledge of the situation more than to any other man or instrumentality. The whole Western country was thrilled with the possibili- ties as presented at that time. The costing | average layman, however, viewed the undertakings as a matter of decades rather than years before they could be expected to bear fruit. They did not know that for twenty-six years the Geological Survey, with its hydro- graphic division. had been taking and | storing away careful notes of the face of nature with this very law in mind. T. W. Powell, at the head of that de- partment for nearly a quarter of a cen- tury, is referred to as the father of irrigation in this country. So that the very day following the passage of the act—so had vreparations been made— men were sent into the field to begin the practical work contemplated by the law. They knew just what of the parched and barren regions it was best to relleve in the first attack, and just about where the dams could be buiit to the best advantage. And this ac- eounts for the great progress that has expefis say that the value | s created | ALMOST LIKE MAGIC WILL BE GROWTH OF THE WE ST B e | | | N ———— | = J. B. LIPPINCOTT, E NEER IN | CHARGE OF RECLAMATION | WORK IN CALIFORNIA i J P —5 been made and the prospect that in a few years so much can be written down as- completed. and ,such vast areas brought under cultivation. There. is a little army or over 350 men in the field engaged in this work under the immediate direction of F. H. | Newell, chief engineer, geological sur- | vey, who is of course under the Secre- tary of the Interior. The region they work over includes an area of 1,333,000 square miles. They have for years been measuring the streams every- whera available for irrigation pur- poses, making notes of the topography of the land, investigating the water under as well as upon the earth and in every way providing the department fwith data valuable to its purpose. In the definite work since the enactment of the law there has been first a recon- water ‘in the stream. If sufficient a thorough survev follows, the location of the dam site and the location of canal lines. Then there is the study of the soil, by which is determined the size of the farm in its preparations to estimating the cost and assessment. YUMA PROJECT. As illustrating the thoroughness of the work of the survey the Yuma project is an example. The land to be irrigated is in California, but for this purpose the waters of the Grande River in Colo- rado, one of the principal tributaries of the Colorado River, is to be stored. The dam site is at Kremmling and is 1200 miles from Yuma. The waters are to be allowed to flow down this long distance during the periods of low water on the lower Colorado. This dis- trict dam site was chosen after very careful investigation had shown there was no available site on the main stream. 4 The Truckee project in Nevada will probably be the first of the several enterprises completed. It, however, is only the first in a comprehensive sys- tem by which some 3,000,000 acres will be watered. The system contemplates the div m of the Humboldt, Carson, Truckee and Walker rivers. None of these rivers now flow to the sea, but are lost in what are known as the Humboldt and Carson sinks. They will be tapped high above these sinks, turned one into the other and led out over the thirsty land. The Yuma project, in Southern Cali- fornia is one of the most important of the several projects now under way. J. B, Lippincott is supervising engineer of all the work of the department in California. Mr. Newell is now in Cali- fornia as it has progressed. It will probably be three vears before this enterprise is_completed. Each project has its own resident en- gineer. He prepares the first plans A board of consulting engineers goes over these on the ground. If approved they are submitted to the chief engineer and if accepted by him are submitted final- Iy to the Secretarv of the Interior. The reclamation service claims with some pride to be modeled upon the military service in its discipline as well as its formation and procedure, but its battles are waged chiefly in the ap- propriations committee on Capito! Hill and its victories are those of peace. ———e————————— TEXAS MAN MARRIES CUBAN BELLE BY PROXY Ceremonies Are Performed Simultan- eously in Cities of Houston and Havana, HOUSTON, Tex., June 6.—Edel more Scott of this city and a Cuban belle of Havana were united in mar. riage yvesterday by proxy. A friena of the groom represented him in Ha- vana, going through the marriage cer~ egony in his behalf with the bride. A young lady of this city represented the fair Cuban. There was the usual participation of bridesmaids and best man at each ceremony. The groom was formerly stationed in Havana and a love match, then bes gun, ripened into a matrimonial al- -liance through the medium of Uncle Sam after Scott settled in Houston. 1 His duties prevented his going for his flancee and her parents objected to her leaving without being married. The novel recourse was decided upon and arrangements made in detail by mail. Mrs. Scott is now en route to this city. R ] HARRIMAN MEETS POINTS RAISED IN MERGER CASE Files Amended Bill in Suit to Prevent Pro Rata Distribufion of Shares. TRENTON, N. Y., June 6.—Counsel for Edward H. Harriman and Winslow 8, Pierce to-day filed in the United States Circuit Court a second amend- ed bill in the suit brought by them to restrain the carrying out of the proposed pro rata plan of distribution of the assets of the Northern Securi- ties Company. The amendments are the recent argument of the case be- fore Judge Bradford. ————————— EDITOR COTTON TAKES - HIS SEAT IN COUNCIL Vancouver Journalist Becomes an Of- ficial in British Columbia Government. VICTORIA, June 6.—Francis Carter | Cotton, proprietor and editor of the Vancouver News - Advertiser, was sworn in to-day as president-of the Council of the British Columbia Gov- ernment. He was Finance Minister in the Semlin Cabinet. /i naissance survey, then a study of the | looking over the work so far| intended to meet the points raised at |. BATTLESHIP S ORDERED T0 TANGIER British Government Heeds Minister’s Request for a Strong Naval Force at the Capital of Morocco CRISIS AT HAND ON MOORISH SOIL | Reports That Spanish War Vessels Were Sent Be- cause of Distrust of Amer- ica Are Not Credited ! GIBRALTAR, June 6.—The British | battleship Prince of Wales will sail for Tangier to-morrow. The other ships of the British Mediterranean squad- ron, which were to have sailed for Italy to-day, have been ordered to re- | main here. It is reported that the) | French Mediterranean squadron is on |its way to Tangier. WASHINGTON, June 6.—Rear Ad- miral Chadwick, in a cablegram to the Navy Department to-day, said taat the | British Minister at Morocco had re-| {quested the British Government to send | ! a battleship to Tangier, and gave the | information that the Sultan of Morocco was expected to arrive at Tangier. The | admiral advised the department, fur- | ther, that the general opinion in Tan- | gier was that the naval forces in the | | harbor should not be reduced. | The feeling prevails at the State De- | | partment that yesterday marked the | crisis in Tangler, so far as it relates | to the possibility of a Moorish uprising growing out of the large foreign fleet | in_the harbor. | The Navy Department sees no oc- | casion to diminish the naval force at | Tangier, notwithstanding that several | | suggestions that such a course would be beneficial have appeared in the Eu- ropean press. However, this has been Chad- {left in the hands of Admiral | wick. | SPAIN NOT APPREHENSIVE. | LONDON, June 6—The fears ex-| | pressed at Madrid that the action of | | the United States in sending a fleet to | “The Kind You Have Always b . | health of oS a hmlu:hm c, Drops and Soo gnulnl n:i.ther Opium, substance. Its is its ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and bas been rsonal supervision for over 30 deceive you”in t:lsi Excoun"en are but Experim Children—Experieace against Experiment. “What is CASTORIA borne the signa- made under his ears. Allow no one ‘eits, Imitations and ts, and endanger the Bought has te for Castor Oil, Pare- Syrups. It is Pleasant. It orphine nor other Narcotic tee. It destroys Worms Stomach and Bears the VISITS MILLER AND IS JAILED Mrs. Bailey Calls on Man Shot in Her Apartments and Is Arrested for Crime CHICAGO, June 6.—When Mrs. Re- becca Bailey called at the Wesley Hos- pital to see her flance, Louis Miller, who had been taken to the institution, fatally wounded by a bullet, she was arrested on a charge of shoot- ing him. At the time of her arrival the man was making an ante-mortem statement, accusing her and the police ]Tangler was due to the American de- sire for a port on the west coast of | | Morocco, and the rumors at the Span- | ish capital of an exchange of notes | between the European powers, with the | view to obtaining assurance that the American action will be confined to liberating Perdicaris and Varley, are not shared and are not confirmed at the Spanish Embassy here. The Span- | ish Government appears to be acting in perfect harmony with Great Britain and the United States and no appre- hension is expressed in official circles that the United States has any designs except to insure the safety of Perdi- caris and American citizens. RUMOR IS DISCREDITED. PARIS, June 6.—Referring to the dis- patch from Malaga, saying that the Spanish battleships Pelaya and Nu- mancia and the armored cruiser Cis- neros had sailed for Tangier, the For- eign Office here says it received a de- nial of a similar report previously pub- lished, but is not aware whether the | warships have gone to Morocco. 1 ‘The rumors current in Madrid to-day | that the powers have exchanged notes relatfve to restricting American opera- | tions in Morocco are discredited by the | Foreign Office. B OUTLAW TEACHES BANKER ! | TO MAKE PRISON CLOTHES T'ormer Cashier Marcell Apprentice Tailor Under Emmet Dalton at Leavenworth Penitentiary. LEAVENWORTH, Kans., June 6.—| {J. E. Marcell, the former cashier of the wrecked Highland Bank, sen-| tenced to thirty-five vears in prison, | five years on each of seven counts of | forgery, which is said to have amount- ed to $200,000, has been placed at| | work as an apprentice under Emmet | Dalton, the former outlaw, in the tai- | lor shop at the Kansas penitentiary. His health is poor and he was given light work. Marcell cannot be paroled | until he has served at least eighteen | | years of his sentence. | —————— STRAWBERRY GROWERS WILL LOSE ON SEASON'S OUTPUT | Kentucky and Indiana Shippers Un- able to Handle Crop Becavse of Scarcity of Crates. LOUISVILLE, Ky., June 6.—On a sount of the scarcity of crates, straw | berry shipping from Lowsvili?, Ky | and New Albany, Ind., which has been | something enormous, probably will | | collapse after to-day. The available | supply of crates is exhausted and| strawberry growers will lose thou- | sands of dollars as a resilt. The sea- son is at its height and the crop is the most abundant ever kno — e PASADENA MAN SUES | CITY OF PROVIDENCE | Claims Damages Because He Was De« posed From Superintendency of Schools. PROVIDENCE, R. I., June 6.—For- mer Superintendent of Schools Horace S. Tarbell, who is now a resident of | Pasadena, California, brought suit for $10,000 to-day against the city of Providence for having deposed him as superintendent, and thereby, he claims, inflicted'a blow to his reputa~ tion and business. He was ousted on July 1, 1902, and.claims his term ex- pired on August 13, 1902. —————— LISBON, June 6.—The King and Queen were present_to-night at the ball given by Minister Bryan in honor of the officers of the American squadron. were searching for her. He died soon afterward. Mrs. Balley and Miller were to have been married within a week. The shooting took place apartments and it was four hours la- ter before the police were informed. ‘The theory of the police is that Mrs. Bailey shot Miller while in a jealous rage because of his failure to name a definite day for the wedding ceremony. Little is known of Mrs. Bailey's life prior to the death of her husband, Dr. S. G. Bailey, who was a member of the staff of Wesley Hospital and a lecturer at the hospital clinics. Her maiden name was Barrett. —————————— CURE” FAD TAKES AMONG BOSTONIAN 'SIC ROOT Numerous Society People of Hub Said to Believe Violin Is Better Than a Plaster. BOSTON, June 6.—The cure” has been taken up by “music Boston society and its devotees are said to be | numbered by hundreds. Its advocates assert that music has an extraordinary hour by the playing of minor key on a music piano. No particular | instrument is favored, but a violin is most frequently employed. —_———— ASSAILANTS OF CHAUFFEURS CAUGHT IN CLEVER TRAP Police in Plain Clothes Ride in Auto- mobiles and Locate Dan- gerous Gang. NEW YORK, June 6.—In an at- tempt to stop the numerous attacks upon automobilists in some sections of New York. Police Commissioner McAdoo has sent out four big cars loaded with officers in citizen's dress to decoy the hoodlums into the hands of the authorities, a dangerous matter in the past few weeks for chauffeurs to reach the fer- ries along the East River. The ruse by the police worked well. They were assailed repeatedly and several arrests were made. Most of the were half grown boys. ————— SMITH ON THE ROAD TO CALIFORNIA “BILL" Mayor of New Market Spends a Week at the Fair and His Frugality Disappoints the Pike. ST. LOUIS, June 6.—“Bill” Smith expectancy awaiting the arrival of the Mayor of New Market, but he was as frugal as he was on his milk wagon. He put up at a cheap boarding-house in Mrs. Bailey's| as it has become | prisoners | and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhcea and Wind thing 'l?c:mblesi cures Constipation 22&1-‘1}1::16" #aioy ;rtoen.nmfl.ul the Food, regulates the els, giving healthy and natural sleep. 's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought - Signature of o d o In Use For Over 30 Years. THE cEnTs 77 muRRAY STRE! oW vomx CrTY. ' FROM EVERY VIEW POINT | | Our laundry work on the finest of fab- rics is a thing of beauty and a joy to | the wearer. | _We give special attention to neglige garments, wi the resuit that colors are not affected an fota and their fit and finish is as perfect as when new. We'll call for yours whenever and wherever you'll say. No saw edges. | |UNITED STATES LAUNDRY, 1004 MARKET STREET. Telephone South 430. 'SOZODONT Protty Toeth in a Good Nouth are like jewels well set. Our best men and women bave made Sozoposr the BEST +=z. TEETH ° | UNITED STATES BRANCH. | STATEMENT | power to cure many ills, especially those of a nervous origin. In one in- or TaE stance an aggravated attack of neu- | ralgia of three weeks' standing is re-| CONDITION AND AFFAIRS ported to have been cured in half an | i a OF THE ALLIANCE ASSURANCE COMPANY Limited.) F LONDON, ENGLAN day of December, A. D. r ending on that day, . pursuant to t 610 and 611 of the as per blank furnished by the ASSETS. Real Estate owned by Company Cash Market Value of Stocks and Bonds owned by Company,.. 573,750 00 Cgsh in Banks . a Isterest due and $173,170 7 accrued on all | _ Stocks and Loans A 1730 v@ Premiums in due Course of Collec- tion 5,365 03 Bills receivable. not Matured. for Fire and Marine Rigk: Rents due and accrued taken | Total Assets LIABILITIES. | Losses adjusted #nd unpaid ...... $1,702 4T | Losses in process of Adjustment or | _in Suspense cesos . 1796 T | Gross premiums on Fire Risks run- | “ning one year or less. $208,713 10: | retnsurance 50 per cemt ... 149,356 54 Gross premiums on Fire Risks run- ning_more than one year, $107.- 018 18; reinsurance pro rata 85,603 09 Due and to become due for Salaries, T S vovvason cuvssqeasieve | NI E Due and to become due for Com- missions and Brokerage 4961 62 Return premiums and reinsurance has just started for California after PICBMS ...-caee week spent at the World's Fair at an Total Liabilities outlay of less than $100. St. Louis | - | haa tirely ‘wi t “BilL” | e o ad an entirely wrong tip on “Bill.” | et cash actually received for Fire E The news came that he proposed sepa- | premiums ...... 2z = ..$382.708 50 rating himself from a considerable [ ReSriyed for fnismsst and Sividends part of his inheritance. Consequently | i other: sources o " 20673 50 the pike was in a state of delightful | Received for Rents ... .0 X Received from Home Otfice 80 Total Income EXPENDITURES. and spent an average of $20 per day } N"X lxm‘nllnt p 'dufu;' P‘!T Lnu: for the board and sightseeing of his ;,’:.“f;;:‘y,m $¥rn 3 . vc.llfl.‘i‘f “ whole fam ! Paid or allowed for Commission or —_— ee—————— | Brokerage pagy . 7 | Paid for Salaries, Fees and other Plasterer Killed by a Fall. SAN DIMAS, June 6.—C. J. Abbott, a plasterer, fell from a scaffold while at work on the Willet building here this afternoon and was instantly killed. His skull was crushed. ADVERTISEMENTS. NATURES CURE For U HALF A GLASS onn AR/ISING OF SANTA BARBARA MINERAL WATER BYTHINIA charges for officers clerks, etc... Paid for State. National and Local taxes ... All other \payme tures Total Expenditures nts and expendi- Fir Losses incurred during the year...$181,199 43 Risks and Premiums.| Fire Risks. | Premiums. { — written during the| year . $39,001.450 | 350,053 B Net amount of R expireq during lht‘ Net amount in_force| December 81, 1903..] 35,385,976 | 456.731 0 ELUAH R. KENNEDY. President, Of and for Weed & Kennedy, Mars. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 21st day of January. 1904, F. FISHBECK, Nofary Public. C. F. MULLINS, Pacific Coast Manager, 416-418 California St., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Weak Men and Women G v namans St ™23 gives health strength to sexual orgaAns. Depot, 323 Market.

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