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LI DAN FIADNUIDUO CALL, JOHN D. SPRECK ELS, Proprietor, Communica ions to W, S. LEAKE, Manazer ..Telephone Press 204 kda-ess A MANAGER'S OFFICE. FUBLICATION "FICE. Market and Third, 8. F, lephoae Press 201. EDITORIAL ROOMS Telephone Press 202. Deltvered hy Carrie Single Cop! Terms by Mail, . inciuding FPoxtage: 1, Gncinding Sunday), one vear... ncluding Senday), § mont ding Sund: 3 mon’ CALL—By Sincle Month A¥ CALL One Yeer... KLY CALL One Y postmasters subseriptions. Sample ccples will be forwaided when requested. OAKLAND 9OFFICE ..1118 Broadway NESS, Building, Chicago. “'Central 2613.) ESPONDENT* .. Hernid Square GFORG Menager gn Advertising, Ma (ong Distance Telephone NEW YORK CORI C. C. CARLTON.., NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH. ... . .30 Tribune Building ETANDS: : P. O. News Co.; Great Nortbern Hotel; Hcuse, Auditorium Hotei Ererman Hous Fremcnt NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waldort-Astoria Hotel; A Brentans, § Union Square; Muiray deill Hotel. HINGTON c_:D‘_flcc MORTON E. CRAN — = WAS D ..Wailington Hotel Correspondant y streets—Speel: eater—Vaudeville every afte: »on and flie. Baseball SALES. at 11 Tuesday, August 14 I~This day, Horses and Mules, at THE PRESIDENT TO CHINA. [ \ n the su- with China, Fn ief reliance ry rescue a war upon of ire ation betwee: t G s was the d t I r, and now, in his last com:u: e hinese escort: “We 1 re urg e imperial Government that it s se suggested in the third clause < exter to his Majesty the Emperor , 1900, 2!1/1 enter into communica- expedition etween th so that co-operation m for the liberation of foreigners and the res- Such action of the imperial Gov- be a satisfactory demonstration 1 and desire to attain these ends.” hina promptly responded to his first' request faith, as he has, it is only reasonable to ed 15, the protection o of order. Id wo! of kept t a like response to this. will be observed that President McKinley has 4 4 o in effect dictated the purpose of the ce of the relief column. He has made it not pedition for conquest or looting, but for one . the relief of the legations, in effect co- perating with the expressed purpose of China to se- cure their safety against her disorderly and rebellious 2 ot o ' and with a just estimate of the power his Government to set the pace for the other powers. They might trifie with China, but dare not trifle with the United States. The world owes much to the nice discretion and wisdom of President McKinley in the most difficult and dangerous situa- tion that has ever confronted it, and his own coun- trymen will not easily forget what they owe to him for it If, as now appears, Germany and Russia concede to him abstention from territorial designs, he has ac- complished for China what she could not do for her- self There are evidences that Great Britain has mot acted in good faith. Her stubborn and selfish assertion of exclusive action in the Yangtsekiang has justified the suspicion that she has cherished secret designs of ter- ritorial aggrandizement and that her grabbing spirit is unquenched. Fortunately she is, by President Mec- Kinley’s wisdom, to be met by a hostile concert of the powers under the leadership of the United States that will defeat her sinister ambitions. According to a recent report thete are in Germany 861 schools and institutes giving instruction in man- wal training, and they have under their control as many as 1514 workshops. Such figures explain the wonderful success Germany has had of recent years in competing for the world’s commerce, and show other people what they will have to-do in order to keep up with the procession. Despite the fact that Senator Wellington has de- serted the Republican party and gone over to the Bryanites, ex-Mayor Latrobe of Baltimore, a sound money Democrat. declares Maryland safe for the publican ticket by 40.000 majority. Wellington is evidently one of the fellows who never will be missed. Another serious blow has been struck at the cam- paign principles of the Bryanites.™ It is reported that Nebraska and South Dakota are exceptionally pros- perous and that this is an off season for calamity howlers. It is said Bryan will do most of his campaigning in the East as he did before, and it is a safe prediction the result will be as it was before. . BRYAN ON EXPANSION, ~~ OLONEL BRYAN shunted silver in his ac- ceptance speech, and, aiter some generally damnatory remarks about “plutocracy,” to which we have already referred, devoted the rest of his dc ent to his prize issue of imperialism. In the main it consists of a restatement of fundamental pie it are as old as Magna Charta. No one in opposition to them; they are settled parts of our polity and in no more danger of disturbance than are the Rocky Mountains in danger of a change in_their But Bryan presents them as offsprings of his n and himseli as their only efficient cham- d defender, and his election as necessary to their preservation. It will be observed that he cries pplication to the external people with whom 1happily involved as a miserable legacy of the h war. at war he urged on the ground that i be good politics, and of course he is now to get what politics he can out of its results, foreseen and feared by wiser men than he. ids comment upon the denial of the guar- es of the constitution to people at home. He is b upon the defiant violation by his own party AX1s pion ve are u Spanis av ion of freedom. He quotes Lincoln supposed to quote Scripture, the known principles of Lin- gs of own party south of Mason and Dixon’. His leading manager, Tillman of South Carolina, declared in the Senate that when roes exercised their constitutional right to were murdered by the Bryan men of the 1en they risked their lives to get in a was nullified fi The anti-expansior 1 Bry They know that the trouble 1 the ratification of the treaty of Paris. The n to that treaty was so strong enid on Republicans for success v had it beaten, and proposed to it the puichase of the Philippines. That « more nor less than the ac- { It was vacant of any other f It was paying for a title that had al- ready been extinguished by conquest On June 25, 1808, just after his appointment coln to the line. the vote the nd w sted Color ) com hment of a zonquest iture. as 1 of the Nebraska regiment for the Spanish war, Colonel B d and belly-banded in his spick 1 form, made a speech at the dedi- : of the Nebraska building at the Omaha Ex- position. in which he “If a contest undertaken for the sake of hum r degenerates into a war of n, bediz an )an new un uest, we shall find it difficult to meet the charge aving added hypocrisy to greed. Our guns de- stroyed a Spanish fleet, but can they destroy that vident truth that governments™derive thdir just powers, not from superior force, but from the con- | sent of the governed?” That was applicable and unusually sane for him. But he went down South and into camp with his regi- ment, where it dallied with dysentery for a few months, when he resigned and, according to his suc- cessor in the colonelcy, declared his purpose of going tc Wachington to help secure the ratification of the Paris treaty. Aswe have said, the treaty was then beaten by the Republicans, under the leadership of Senato- Hoar, because it proposed to confirm the conquest of the P! Bryan induced seventeen Democratic hilippines. He has | Senators to come to its support and ratifigd. it. . Flisy lobbying completed the conquest of the Philippines. as leader of his party has not been He andoned the theory of his Omaha speech. He forgot all about consent of the He added “hypocrisy to greed” in a e, and Ic the confidence of the anti- Now ke seeks to reinstate himself, be- cause he wants votes, while it is a fact of public knowledge that his supporters, who will him 120 electoral votes, are practically unani- s for holding the Philippines. He sees with un- al clearness, for him, that his support of the treaty is his weak point, and in his acceptance speech. tries to avoid its consequences. This is his excuse: “If the treaty had been reiected considerable time would y have elapsed before a new treaty could re been agreed upon and ratified, and during that question would have been agitatiig the pub- lic mind.” i This timid politician was afraid of agitation! That was the very time to agitate the public mind. Spain was powerless to reopen hostilities. The pro- tocol ratified for her by Cambon dominated the situ- ation. If the great principles which no man disputes were put in peril by the treaty, as he now charges, no tin®® was too long to spend in their vindication. That was the time to agitate the public mind. He does not scruple to agitate it now on that same sub- | ject, when its agitation may mean the votes which will give him the power to overthrow our financial sys- | tem, destroy our credit and bring on another whirl- wind of panic and pinch of distress. Measuring the ! man as we are justifiad in doing, he did not want the | agitation then, for it would not help his ambition to be President. It would not forward his ultérior pur- pose to put the country on a silver standard, It would | not push the policy of the Chicago platform for the overthrow of the courts, the denial of the freedom of | contract, the abolition of the legislative branch of our | system and the destruction of representative govern- | ment. | Agitation then would have presented the one ques- | tion of conquest and would have settled it against the purchase of the Philippines. It would have involved no other consequences, and would have endangered no interests. Therefore he did not want agitation then, but he wants it now. He turned his back upon his Omaha speech, lobbied for the treaty, accom- plished the conquest, violated every principle which | he now asserts, and asks to be trusted to rid the coun- | try of the consequences of a treaty for which he alone | is responsible. | We believe the American people will prefer the gold | standard, two per cent interest on the public debt, | the continuance of good times, the employment of all | our working people, plenty of food for their table ! and clothing for their bodies, and will trust to the | sober second thought of the people, manifested in | orderly reaction, to extricate the country from the difficulties into which this lobbyist plunged it when he procured the ratification of the conquest of the Philippines. s responsit governed expansionists Soathern éi W | | A CHANCE FOR PRUNE-GROV{ERS. ! NCE more a chance is given to the prune- ! O growers of the State who have not yet joined | the Cured Fruit Association to ally themselves | with it and profit by its advantages. Tt is proposed | to hold in the prune-growing districts of the State a | series of mass-meetings, beginning Saturday night and continuing through next week, with the object | of getting the outsiders to come into the combina- tion. At these meetings full explanations will he made of the benefits to be derived from co-operation, and an opportunity afforded for all growers to come in and share them. J_ At the present time not more than 10 or 15 per in the South of every principle he asserts as necessary | ts ‘of the country have never | lcent of the growers are outside the association. | Those men of course cannot fix a price for their fruit | higher than that of the association. All they can do | is to sell cheaper and thereby compel the association | tc some extent to reduce prices to meet the outside | competition. The only effect of such tactics would | be to unsettle the market. The injury resulting would of course be felt more by the growers than any one else, and certainly the outsiders could not profit any- thing by it. any considerable number of growers will hold out against it. The association has now been fairly es- tablished. It is under the control of able and re- liable business men, and there is no longer any doubt of the practicability of co-operation along the lines proposed. Consequently those growers who have hitherto remained outside by reason of one form continuing to do so. The co-operation of all growers will be better than the co-operation of 9o per cent, successful in bringing all the outsiders into the asso- ciation and thus strengthen it in the wofk it has un- dertaken for the general welfare. T — BUSINESS AND POLITICS. | -2 ROM Atlanta comes a story that strikingly illus- | F!rales the confusion produced in the minds of | the Southern people by the conflict between | their politics and their industries. At the recent con- vention in that city of the Southern Industrial League 4 committee ‘was appointed to draw up for publica- | in the Southern States. When the report was read | the politicians in the corlvention arose at once to pro- | test. They declared it to be in the nature of a Re- publican campaign document. Publish that report of prosperity, they said, and you will put a club in the bands of Mark Hanna to beat us over the head on every stump in the Union. Another committee ap- pointed to revise the report struggled with the issue for some time and then came back with a recommen- | datien that no report be made until after the election. Such a stbry hardly seems credible, and yet it comes as straight as any other news of the day. The inci- dent could have happened only in the South, where business men are forced into an unnatural alliance with Bryanism. It shows how absurd 1s Southern politics, and goes far to confirm the truth of a state- ment attributed to Senator Money of Alabama, that | | i Bryan by the Democrats as the surest way of bring- ing it about. year from the Southern Industrial League, the condi- tions in that section may be inferred from the fact that the Chattanooga Tradesman reports that during the week ending July 28 there were established a $10,000 basket and crate factory in the Fort Valley, Ga., fruit district; a broom factory in Mitidle Geor- gia; a cigar factory in Florida; coal mines in Arkan- sas and West Virginia; electric light and power plants in Georgia, Kentucky and Texas; a palmetto supply companies in Georgia and Texas; a $50,000 barness and saddlery works at Dallas, Tex.; an ice Arkansas, Mississippi, South Carolina and Tennessee; | & $600,000 mining and development company in Ar- | kansas; a 850,000 novelty works at Wheeling, W. Va,; natural gas and oil companies in the Eastern Ken- tucky and West Virginia fields: an elevator manufac- turing company in Tennessee; a $10,000 shirt factory in Atlanta, Ga.; a soap factory in Kentucky; telephone companies in the Carolinas ‘and Texas, and a tobacco factory in Kentucky. It is to be borne in mind that the week covered by the report was a week'of the hot midsummer, when enterprise is not very active in any part of the East- ern States. Such progress in the direction of new | manufacturing enterprises made in a single week of sweltering July goes far to explain why the Demo- | crats of the Southern Industrial League object to any report before 2lection. It would have been indeed a Republican eampaign document, for it would have borne witness to the fact that in the South itself the fruits of Republican legislation have been those of in- dustry, progress and prosperity. A DUTY CF REPUBLICANS. VERY Republican in this city worthy of the E repute of a good citizen should at this time bear in mind that he has to perform in the coming election a duty to the State not less impdrtant than that to the nation. The Legislature to be clected in November will have to reapportion all the As- sembly, the Senatorial and the Congressional dis- tricts. Moreover, the State Senators chosen this year will hold over and have a vote for the election of a United States Senator to succeed Perkirfs. By reason of those facts the railroad and the combined Demo- cratic and Republican bosses are making strenuous efforts to control the Legislature. The only power that can prevent them from achieving that object is that of the better elements of the Republican party. Unless that force be cxerted by united and vigorous action, the outlook for California politics will be gloomy indeed. % The issue is not one of merely partisan importance. For the election of good men to the Legislature honest Republicans can rightly ask all independent and public-spirited citizens to unite with them. They can also count upon receiving the support of no in- considerable number of the better class of Demo- crats, if upon the Republican State ticket there be placed candidates who deserve the confidence and the respect of their fellow-citizens. There will be victory for the party and for the people if such candidates be nominated. There will be defeat if men of the’type of Dibble and Wolfe are set before the voters as representatives of San Francisco Republicanism. To elect a good Legislature it will be necessary that every good citizen do his whole political duty. talking of honest politics on the streets or in the clubs, but by getting out and working for it. In every Assembly and every Senatorial district the railroad and the bosses will have their candidates and their workers. Decent Republicans must meet these men at every point. Not a single seat should be tamely surrendered to the corrupt gang. e ——— The Philadelphia Press says: “You can buy a baby in Philadelphia just as easily as you can provide your- wares of the world, are advertised and traded off for money. and the baby traffic flourishes briskly in these days of prosperity.” And yet there are people who call Philadelphia a slow to 3 2 ' ! SATUKRDAX, This argument is so self-evident it is hardly likely | of doubt or another can have no good excuse for | and it is therefore to be hoped the meetings will be | tion a report of the conditions of trade and industry | the business men of the South wish the re-election of | & McKinley and therefore favored the renomination of | In the absence of ay comprehensive report for the | fiber factory at Gainesville, Fla; a flouring mill and | grain elevator at Clarksburg, W. Va.; hardware and factory in Virginia; an irrigation company in Texas; | a knitting mill in North Carolina; lumber mills in | AUGUNST 11, 1300, [ e e e - P T A FAMILY DINNER. : * ® b & . : L 4 * L 4 1 ® 3 . ® 3 © * L 4 b k-4 i .+ 5 ¢ » 1 ® + @ + ‘ s ¢ ¢ + ® : + % * 14 . ® B3 @+t G060 04 0000000l States and France, on his left: once while expecting her.” The Carving Begins, (FROM LE MONDE ILLUSTRE.) Father Russia, beginning the cutting, says to Japan and Germany, on his “The mistreis has not come, my dears! She has some business with Mr. Kruger. Let us begin at Italy, standing to one side and furnishing music for the repast, will only get to the second table. MMMHMMMMWW” RS and the United right, BPr0 00000000000 000 0000000 P PPt P PPt PPt Pt Pt P P 0P 000D 000900000000 00060 0000000000000 ed PERSONAL MENTION. W. H. McClintock, a prominent mining { man of Sonora, is stopping at the Grand. | A. H. Frederick, a prominent citizen of | 8t. Louls, accompanied by his wife, is at the Grand. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Carpenter are at the Lick. Mr. Carpenter {s a well-known merchant of Yuba. H. J. Small, superintendent of construc- tion of the Southern Paclific Company, is a guest of the Palace. rs. John Hays Hammond and family arrived at the Palace from Chicago last | night. They are here to visit relatives. ! J. L. Griswold, proprietor of La Clede | Hotel of St. Louis, is a guest of the Palace. He is here for pleasure and a | rest. : Comtesse de Mountjoye of Cairo, Egypt, arrived from Canada yesterday and is registered at the Palace. She is accompanied by J. D. Armour, Chief Justice of Ontarlo. They departed for Monterey on the afternoon traln. —_—ee————— CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.—H. A. Pixley of San Francisco is at the Arlington Hotel. ———————— CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, Aug. 10.—M. Dinkelspiel of San Francisco {s at the Imperial; Robert | Losing Jr. of Los Angeles {s at the Em- pire. S FCULLED FOR .CALL READERS Bishop Charles B. Galloway reports that the Methodist churches in the South have raised nearly $1,000.000 of the $1,500,000 they promised to_contribute before January i, 11901, to the Methodists’ twentleth century educational fund, and he has no doubt the whole amount will be secured before the dawn of the new century. Mrs. Samuel Swartwood, wife of a rail- road engineer living in Wilkesbarre, Pa., has just given birth to her twenty-fifth baby, twenty of whom are living . She was married at the of 15, twenty-nine years ago. The family gets along very nicely,, the united income of father and children being $19 monthly. Automobiles have been given a trial at Hartford, Conn., for collecting mail. Th: T partment. The autos are three-wheeled vehicles and each covers a route of fifteen miles twice a daw Physicians in the State Prison at Colum- bus, Ohio, have just taken a fifth finger from the hand of Will Byers, a convict. Byers is la(rvln & !'.ertm t:‘l't r:ot&bln‘ f;h. e n, n- {::;le're:i“eu&“nm Work in the glove shop of the prison. i No | The chimes of 8t Michael's Church, man should shirk it. Those who have not registereq = Charleston, S. C., are almost as famous as should do so at once. Those who have not yet joined | :hfi.fil.fl‘;'d the Republican club of their district should attend 1},’,‘5,’; Trinity, New York. Of late ers there have taken to play- ‘rag-time” music, and not a few ns object to such tunes as not at all to that duty. The victory is not going to be won by | suitable. A team of Kansas City firemen Is now on the way to Paris t& take xgrt in the iremen:. t ere. L rained athlete and they conRienty look forward to showing foreigners some new wrinkles in fire-fighting. Some years ago it was the “Cherokee strip,” with not a white settler In all its | bounds. Now the Territory of Oklahoma, | with 300,000 inhabitants and a harvest Forth 310,000,000, seeks admission as o Proof has just been furnished fn self with a new pair of shoes. Babies, like any other Pewa Falls, Wis. that lightning does times strike more than :33 l::e. um.domc of the °c"§§-§h§§2 there having been subjected to its thira visitation. With the of the Vanderbilt De- | cal. white schools in the South have mot re- | ceived $50,000 in twenty years. | First among trans-Atlantic liners to look out for the amusement of children pas- sengers is the new racer Deutschland, which has on the upper deck a big room set apart as a playroom. Here the young- sters may romp, play and make all sorts of noise without disturbing other passen- gers. Toys of many kinds are also pro- | vided. e FASEION EINT FRON PARIS. § | [ et e e R e i [} { * { . t £} t (] i p& . : ¢ . . & * bd . Py 31 ® QMMMHHH+0+. A LACE DESHABILLE. This toilet, which- was worn by Mme. Jeanne Granier in “Le Nouveau Jeu,” is a deshablille in Alencon lace, incrusted with roses, in mousseline de sofe and trimmed with ‘pink ribbons. transparent is made by an underdress in white po|nt‘ @’esprit tulle, with flounces at the bottom. e e e S o o o o e g OIL CLAIM-D. W. E., Grafton, Cal. | If a person locates an ofl claim on Gov- ‘ ernment land he must record the same | in the office of the Recorder of the county | in which the land is located. | NORMAL SCHOOL—A. R., Crockett The Normal School in San Fran. cisco is located on Powell street, near 'Chy. It is open during the regular school | erm. NOT IN THE CALL—G., Plattsburg Barracks, Plattsburg, N. Y. The Call did not, during the month of July, 1909, ?nb- the lish a letter descriptive of t! tnnsyort Thomas p{rflm Bflnh“lndlcoo to Honolulu. —_— 1 LILLIAN BURKHARDT-W.e J. 8., City. Lilllan Burkhardt appeared at the Orpheum May 27. 1900. She played a three weeks' engagement, went to Los Angeles, played there three weeks and returned to this city, where she played for two weeks, closing July 29. CALIFORNPA HISTORICAL SOCIETY —A. L., Liddell, Cal. For information about the California Historical Societ: address a communication to Colonel A. S. | Hubbard, secretary thereof, 508 Montgom- | ery street, who will send you a circular of information, NATURALIZATION-D., Campbell, Cal. An allen who comes to the.United Stac: at the age of twenty cannot vote in t! country when he attains his majority. He must take out naturalization papers In the Tegular way, in some States: in others he can vote on declaral of intention to become a citizen after having made such declaration in form. son of | English parents, if born in the United States. though the parents were not natu- ralized, can, on at! ¥ his majority vote. hJ 0 doi Soserts hhhrlshu as a native born, ects, opt the 1p of his father by not excention citizenship o by not * * Luniversity at Nashville it is satd that the | ¢an cltisea. > O c "Shts Of an Ameri- @ | n A CHANCE TO LAUGH. Deacon—We don’t employ a regular pastor, but get different preachers to preach C. O. D. sermons for us. Visitor— *C. 0. D" What kind are ( sermons? Deacon—Collect on delivery.—De- they? | troft Free Press. “Yas, sir,” sald the colored citizen, with a wave of his hand toward the cabin; “T's done broke. I reckons I's whut dey cafls a ‘bankrup’.” ““What are your as- se “Lemme see. Dar's me an’ de an’—" You misunderstand, Your assets are what you have hopes of realizing money on.” " “Dat's what I's gettin' to. My assets ain’'t nufin but fo' Votes an’ a mule."—Washington Star. Farmer Hornbeak—Uncle Lyman Swank is the strangest old man I ever seen! Farmer Hawbuck—How's that, Ezry? Farmer Hornbeak—Why, no matter what kind of a story you tell him, it never re- minds him of anything.—Puck. Mr. E guainted with the counfry round abov ere. Do you know Glen Accron? Nativ —Aye, weel. Mr. Flyhigh (who has bought the estate)—What sort of a is it. in your opinion? you saw the de’il tether say “Puir Times. lace Native—Well, if ethered on’t ye'd just brute.” —Glasgow - Evening ““Look here, sir!” exclaimed the malden lady, “I want you to take back that par- rot you sold me. I find that it swears 1. madam,” replied the dealer, “It's a very young bird: it'll learn to swear more perfectly when it's a bit older.”"—Philadelphta Press. “The evidence,” sald the Judge that you threw a stone at t “Sure,” replied Mrs. O'Connor, looks av the man shows more than thot, yer Honor. It shows that Of hit him."— t. Louls Globe-Democrat. —_————— Brazil and walnut candy. Townsend's. * hows man." L Peanut crisps. Townsend's, 539, Palace. * Splendia mwmnd'-.- Delicious pineapples at Townsend's. ¢ Cream kisses. Townsend's, 639, Palace. ® Butter scotch, butter logs, caramels mo- lasses buttercups. Townsend's.;id Palace.® R Townsend's California glace fruits, 50c |a pound in fire-etched boxes or Jap bas- kets, 639 Market street, Palace Hotel. * ————— Special Information supplied dafly to business houses and public men ALY Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s). 519 Mont- gomery st ‘elephone Main 1042, L A young girl in Missouri was taken ¢ an ipsane asylum the other day suffering from the remarkable delusion that she is compelled to sit on a redhot stove and nd potatoes. She has been working In a tel kitchen. [ Do You Enjoy Comfort When you travel? If you do, buy your via the Northern Pacific R'y and ride “North Coast Limited " the most perfectly train in Amerfca. Solid vestibuled lighted with incandescent electrfc lights, servation car with a large parlor for lady i #E%E tourtst sleeping car finished in mahogany upholstered in olive green leather. The ouly iine selling tickets direct into Yellowstone Park. Tickets to all points north and east at the low- est rates. T. K. STATELER, Gen. age, s Market st.. S. F. ———————— The Santa Fe will sell tickets to and return on August 21 and 22 at the verv low rate of $72 50, good for sixty days. This is & very low rate and i3 open for all. They will tell you all about it at 428 Market street. INSTALLMENT PLAN. m-a-no.an-‘_.’udhu-n Loan Assciation, years; ¥ ST. > » Flyhigh—Of course, you're well -e* 3