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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1895. 1 Z ago a Polish exile set- nks of a bright, deep river of the vast unpeopled plains o i The old exile and patriot seems to have been something more than an exile and Jover of his native land in the usual superf me of Poland’s last ver, and there took up . on the banks of the the 1 for he gave ria often ask why ve the old Indian names and mountains. The eak and half-witted h preserving. River had a and at the at the at the mouth ndian Yreka or Modocs amento st side, one by the Sa and so on. Sacramento River had about as HEARTFTHE LA icial way of exiles, so called, | T — | Mediterranean Sea in still weather. Run | your eye up the long, wooded and wide street toward the east—all is as level and clean and white as a newly sanded floor. Turn your back on the marble fountain in 1e public square and look the other way; e same serene, restful level of rich, soft nd tul the vision melts away in the misty horizon, where the sapphire heavens and | the thousand square miles of green wheat | |and stubble meet and mingle together. Turn to the west, the same shoreless sea of level harvest-fields, silence, serenity, rest. The world is too big here to make a noise of it. The boys are still; the very | birds are still. The large, lazy sun in the | soft haze of Indian summer goes down magnificently here, closing the heavens | and the earth together as a book that is read. But turn the other way as the moon | comes up, large, lone, full bosomed as a golden barvest fierd of Stanislaus. The aze setties down, down, in obeisance to the might t moon, and suddenly | is a sea of silver. Then, as_suddenly, | from out of ana beyond this silver sea o! haze and mist shoot up the sentry tower: of snow, above the black Sierras.” To see the California Sierras or the Oregon Si- ! erras, or indeed any great snow peakson ANDS HE/\ET) wheat, and now it is paying less than ever. The owners might rent'out these lands to small farmers, who would raise all sorts of small truck. But, “No, sir! we are wheat-growers!” A good many years ago I was the guest ot a far-off cousin of my own blood and name, near New Orleans. “Look at that damned niggah, sah! Makes more money off thatone acre of sweet potatoes than I make from eighty acres in cotton!” “Then why don’t vou cut up?’our plan- tation and raise sweet potatoes ?”’ “What, me! Me raise sweet potatoes, sah? No, sah; by gad, sah, 'm a cotton- planter, sah!" 5 9 And that is the spirit that is abroad in the broad brown fields of Stanislaus, and indeed in all the San Joaquin, from one end to the other. No one seems to see or know about the shiploads of plows that have been going, for years and years, from Lonisville to India.” Russia is annually redeeming more wild land to the plow | than we are. And then the Argentine! Last winter I climbed over a wall where a Hawatian was plowing with s little blne cow fastened by a rope to what seemed to be an American plow, and turn- ing up the moldboard I found this, “Avery Bros.,, Louisville, Ky.” 8o, you see, the whole world is plow- ing, and we are furnishing the plows, but not the corn for the hungry world. | The Russian peasant can live on 5 cents, | the Chinaman on 7. 8o it is true that | whether we will or no, the American 1aborer is face to face in competition with the Russian and Chinese laborer; and nei- ther free trade nor restriction is going to make a mite of difference with this fact. My Southern cousin, after hovering | about on the verge of hankruptcy for | yéars, finally leased his plantation to blac! ble. And when our big landuolders get wise enough through experience to let who will work have land to work, then | will the sun rise big and bright for Cali- fornia. Unhappily for this marvelous center of PEAKS OF THE SIERRAS FROM THE BANKS OF THE STANISLAUS. ma; banks. And so the str: r can see that the Sy ests, Captain Sutter, the old Polish exile referred to, and the rest of us had no other course left than to name at objects of nature de novo. And while on the subject of names let us recall a little bit of local ory that somehow has alw had a bit ¢f pathos out it, a touch of tenderness in it to me. When the railroad was about to pierce this great hot heart of the State they J ed a name for the capital of the ban- nerwheat county of California. So they drove their stakes in the heart of the broad, level land of Stanislaus, wheat to the left, wheat to the right, wheat to the rear and front, and named the new town This coming to the ears of the great and generous Ralston, he promptly protested and would have none of such honor. And then the railroad men, meaning to com- pliment the modest banker, gave the town the insignificant name, Modesto. One cannot help wishing Ralston had not been so modest. For as time surges forward ntinue to gather an increased interest abont this man’s name. Cali- fornians have a brave habit of betting on the beatén horse, the bottom doz, of vot- ing for the unpopular man if he only has a heart ir One evening in 1872 when calling on Miss Coolbrith Pren- tice Mulford came, and he was in such radiant spirits that Miss Coolbrith asked what good fortune had befallen him. At which he drew out a fuli hanaful of gold. “That,” said he brightly. “I told you 1 was going to see Ralston, and that he would help me to go to Europe, and now I am going!” We were of course very glad, and were eager to &now how he had managed it, for Mulford was the most timid and gentle of all men. “Well,” said he. “I first wrote him; next day I walked past the bank and took a good ook at it. The nextday I went inside, and was not the least bit afraid. The third day, that was this a right straig Raiston sat behind the big counterin a corner by himself, and before I knew it he just dashed all this gold down before me, wished me a pleasant tour,and then be- fore T-could pick it all up was again busy with his work, and I expect by this time he has forgotten all about it.” ‘When Charley Stoddard came in a few minutes later we told the whole happy little story over ugain and we bohemians haif decided to makea *‘run on thebank.” | But we did not and I never saw Ralston, vet I can’t help loving the very name of him. ‘This town of Ralston is as pretty as the vink flower that grows on the green plains of Oregon, and it is &s level as the tideless “Ralston.” | B ernoon, I went | hi in and right up to where | { out of and over a mighty mobiles bank of clouds. And the stronger the movement | and the denser the cloud pack {only so that it be broken enough tolet the light through | at sudden and short intervals) the grander the spectacle and the deeper the thrill of adoration. From the plain is the place to | see all mountains; only so that you are sure of the clond wrack, the curtain to the divine drama. No, you can’t see great mountains close at hand. Yon may touch the hem of their garments if close at hand, vou may breathe their perfume and listen to their harmonies, but you cannot reaily see them. Great mountains, like great { men, can only be seen at a distance. The prevailing and almost painful silence here in the heart of this vast and seemingly shoreless sea of wheat isonly emphasized by the innumerable teams of almost innumerable horses far away to right and left and front and rear. One is accustomed to hear at least some noise with so much action. Not a word, not a movement, save the strong, steady, mar- tial step of the great horses, with arched necks and glittering harness and champ- ing bits, that are dashing white with foam. | Now and then the one man managing al- 1 most enough horses to make up a regiment | of cavalry lifts his face to the sun or the | Sierra; but that is all. The horses’ necks are truly *‘clothed with thunder.” These | California horses are as lions in strength |and as lambs in gentle obedience. The | driver has nor thong nor whip; his voice is | all, and bis voice is rather the voice of & | lover than that of a masterordriver. I | bad rather drive one of those big teams, sit up there in the careless silence all day, | the lord of all the land about me, and | smell the sweet breath of Mother Earth, | than sit in Budd’s place at the capital and | be Governor of California. Twenty-five years ago when passing this way to Yosemite I was shown a fieid where the furrow was more than twenty miles long! And this sort of land monop- ofy is stiil only partially broken up. Men { hold on to land and hold on and on till |either death or mortgage shakes their heands loose. Oh, this lust for land that isin us! Let us bear in mind thata man may be a miser in the matter of land as well as in the matter of money. But we came by it legitimately, through good old Saxon blood. “Shall I tell you,” cried the. English statesman, ‘‘how_to maintain the bound- less domain of England and let the sun never go down on her empire? Get land! get land! get land! and never let go of a | single handful of sand.” And that is what the Union Jack is flul.ter'mf to the four winds to-day. The great islands of the populous seas want land and will not “let go a single handful of sand.” And that is why I prophesy to a certainty, al- most, that we'are on ‘the eve of a terrific war with bold old England. od If these great wheat-growers would only cut up their vast fields ‘and let the light of civilization shine through Stanislaus in the form of farms, cottages and school- houases, what a province this heart of the I heart of California might become? ‘Wheat! wheat] wheat! nothing but 4 7 names as it had nomad tribes on its | the globe, you must see them above and | Eden trouble has grown out of a brave and stupendous attempt to bring in water. It reminds one of the piteous war that pre- vailed vears ago between the farmers and | the miners, resulting in the victory of the | farmer. And the farmer might well say | to-day with the King of Epirus, when his | generals came to congratulate him on his | victory over the Romans, “Another such victory and I am ruined.” Alas, and alas, that so “many of us are | born with and_go about with chips on our shoulders!” If California had only had some good manto go to the farmers and the miners and make them listen to the fable of the bell{ and the legs, and make them heed as well as hear the lesson, we need never to have made a single halt in our forward march. And now here are men in Modesto, and all up and down indeed, fighting to the death for water and against water. I know nothing about the merits or de- merits of the troubie now in the ultimate court. But “‘Oh, the pity of it, Iago! the pity ofit!” Thus far quite half a million as been spent here in Stanislaus on a single water dam; and how much in lawsuits? The dam is the largest in the world and it is to be there on the day of judgment. It is certainly a great honor to this rich section. It is higher than the highest church steeple in the land and is about 100 feet wide at the bottom and 20 feet wide at the top; and let the deplorable | lawsuits result as they may, the work is and will remain a marvel of bold engineer- ing and a great monument to not only Stanislaus, but the State. The truth is no man has seen California or her great works at all who has not gone to the heart of her, seen the color, breathed the perfume and dreamed dreams in the vast, still levels of Stanislaus. , e Shecte YRy htpnac- CaC. and is now comparatively comforta- | NEW TO-DAY. \ ~=Or-G= Our basement salesroom filled with them. The entire Toy Stocktobe closed out Monday and Tuesday--prices made accordingly. Look us through before you conclude your holiday purchases. It means money saved. Come early in the forenoon before the crowds. e MILLINERY! ‘We've reduced every Pattern Hat in onr stock to prices that will send them out a-flying. Think of a Pattern Hat for $5. Our $30 patterns down to $19 50, our $20 Pattern Hats to $12 50, and $8, $10 and $12 50 Hats down to $5. They must all go. DRESS GOODS! Fancy Boucles, $1. Fancy Plaids—25¢, 50¢, $1. Fancy Dress Patterns—$3 50 up. A chance to make a holiday present you don’t get every day. See the piles of Dress Stuffs we cut every day. It's the style and the price that do it. UMBRELLAS, $1.25 1o $10, Tight-rolling walking-cane shapes, handsome handles; elegant gifts. An immense assortment and better value than ever offered. %&3@;%“9@: @\)im. HANDKERCHIEFS! | The Hembusger Gopay DRUGS and PERFUMERIES! An elegant assortment—every well- known maker—at lower prices than anywhere. “La Cirale,” the greatest extract known, 50c an ounce; put up in one, two, four, eight and sixteen ounce bottles. Elegant Cut Bottles and Novelty Perfumeries. SILVER AND SHELL! All sorts of Novelties made of silver | and shell at ordinary dry-goods store | prices. No extra hohday tariff to pay. | CELLULOID NOVELTIES! Hand-painted, the latest and most serviceable, from 25¢ up. Handker- cchief, Glove, Photo, Match &nd Card ases. - Everything in silk and cotton, for the pocket or the neck, for man, woman and child—at the right of the entrance to store. | | | | | /r | | BLOVES-$1.00 and §1.50. If you don’t know the size we issue a certificate. You can send her in after the holidays. Few carry as good a glove for the money; none any better. Every pair fitted to the hand. NEGKWEAR FOR MEN. NECKWEAR FOR LADIES. Men’s Teck Searfs at 25e, 50¢, 75e. Ladies’ Fancy Collarettes, made of lace and ribbon, in a hundred styles. Ladies’ Fur or Feather Collarettes; Ladies’ Jet and Fur Collars; Chil- dren’s Fur Sets, muff and boas. We have an immense line that will vlease. HOSTERY! A box is a suitable present—$1 50, $2, $3. They’ll perform a double service. %ofl@m&m}u@w& ) CLOAKS, 85, 87.50, $10.50. CAPES--$5 1o 965, CHILDREN'S JACKETS, $2.50 to $20. You can’t give a thing that will please better than a Wrap. These $5, $750 and $10 50 garments are wonders in value and vou’ll say so. We have Jackets at $25 and $35 that are not matchable within $10 of our price. This is true. FUR CAPES! ‘We have a big stock of them, and you can buy them for less than you coulda month ago. Look at them and com- pare with furriers’ prices. We guaran- tee every one we sell. Dregsts, Suits, Wrapoers. Waists, Skirts. Thisis the cheapest place in the city to buy them, for we're manufacturers. The Honrger Gmpos M W) (ARKET &TAYLOR s 7. MARKET &Tarior sys (RKET &TAYLOR 575 KET &TAYLOR s75° M SHN FRENQIBCO. SENERANQISCS. 'Mfl SEN ERANQISCO. AR SN ERANGISCO. MISCELLANEOUS. MISCELLANEOUS. RAILROAD TRAVEL! RAILROAD TRAVEL : SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY. STATEMENT g e SANFRANCISCO & NORTH PA- Tratae leave aud are due to arrive as ki S CIFIC RAILWAY (0 CONDITION AND AFFAIRS | “oi i o I — _sracre Koty 4 30, il | Way Stations.. 10:13, o sig:: fimmfi%}:fi%fil}ddcy‘u‘?‘km 8;‘5; les. n Fe: ‘ ‘Foot of Market St. : OF THE A Beoicia, Vacaville, Rumsey. n Francisco to San Rafael. mepts, snd Bedding via Davia.... 7113 tlan . Mariines Napa, Caiis- WEEK DAYS—7:40, 9:20,"11:00 A. M.; 13 Gifts ONION CASUALTY AND SURETY | soe il 2o un | “ERINTIY i e (7 . )\ i\ 8:30A Niles, San Jose, Stockton, Tone, 8t 11:30 P. M. Saturdays—Extra trips at 1:! S mento, Marysville, Red Bluft o !m@'x')d.séé?_asv'éo"'n-ao 1100 a5 1130, 3 COMPANY #8:30 Pobers andh Bilionh s AT 5:00, 620 p 2. 0 4 1:30. 334 9:004 San Haywards & 111454 San Rafael to San Franelsco. F ST. LOUIS, IN THESTATE OF MISSOURI, | 9:00A L?;MAWH nf;iv'gfl““gy“d- WEEK DAYS—6:25, 5, 9:30, 11:10 A, a.: You can make a first-class, on l.!m 31st day of December, A. D. 1894, nm'! and Los Angelos.. 4:435p 12: 4-l 8:40, 6:10 p. M. Saturdays—Extra trips for the year ending on that day, as made to the [n- B 24 at 5 P. and 6:35 . M. tasty Xmas gift and never surance Commissioner of the Siae of California, | < S804 Martinez and Stockten,.......cco..- 19:484 SUNDAYE_8:10, 9:40, 11:10 4. .; 1:40, 3:40, miss the money. A little down and a little each pay- day. ONYX TABLES, FANCY ROCKERS AND CHAIRS, PAI!LOR\TKABIZ: 3 MB CASES. BOO! flBOUR%TTES. TEA TABLES, ETC. Fancy pieces of furniture are fashionable gifts. Our prices are never bigher, gen- erally lower, than those of exclusive cash bouses. M. FRIEDMAN & CO., 24 to 230 and 306 Stockton and 237 Post Street. Free packing and delivery, city and suburbs. USEFUL PRESENTS JUST RECEIVED From A. H. ANDREWS & 0., Chicago, BANKRUPT STOCK. Office and Library Desks and Chairs Piano and Stenographers’ Chairs, Globes, Maps, Blackboards, Ete., Ete. ALSO—CLOSING-OUT SALE OF ANDREWS’ FOLDING-BEDS. Open Evenings untll Christmas. C. F. WEBER & CO,, 300 to 306 Post St., Cor. Stockton. Henderson Sentenced. C. B. Henderson, charged with murder and convicted of manslaughter for the killing of Clarence Barr in the Baldwin Hotel saloon, has been sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment by Jundge Belcher. "This is the full term for the crime of man- slaughter. ‘Where Iz Charles Amus? Chief Crowley has received a letter from J. C. Bentley, an attorney of O%uli'lkl, 111, ask. ing for information about Charles Amus, Englishman, who left England about eight years ago and came to this City. He is sup- posed to be a miner. His wife and four chil- dren are now in this country peuniless, and the wife is heartbroken at not having heard from him for years. Amugis 55 years of age, six feet tall and has sandy beard and gray oyes. Books of all kinds—history, religion, poetry, standard fiction, art works, children’s books, etc. Closing out for storage charges atless than cost of manufacture. Open evenings. 747 Market street. 4.8 ‘Telephone—Black—35. ENICKERBOCKER COAL CO., 522 Howard Street, Near First. 6 4 4 ‘'he most certain and safe Pain Remedy. Instantly Ielieves and soon cures all Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Toroat, Brouchitis, Congestions and Infamma- #lons. 50c per bottle, Sold by Druggists. pursuant to the provisions of sections 610 and 811 of the Folitical Code, condensed as per blank fur- nished by the Commissioner. . CAPITAL. Amount of Cepital Stock, paid up in Cash... " $250,000 00 : ASSETS. Loans on Bond and Mortgage.......... $172,000 00 Cash Market Value of ail Stocks and Bouds owned by Company ........... Amount of Loans secured by pledge of Bonds, Stocks and other marketable BecuriLies as collateral Cash in Company’s Offi Cash in Banks. Interest due an Premiums in due Course 25,000 60 Total Assets............ 600,506 65 LIABILITIES. Losses in process of Adjustment or in Susp ense. . $38,726 65 Losses resisted, incinding expenses.... 768 87 Gross premiums on Riska running one year or less, $688,236 71; relnsur- ance 60 per cent.. ... 344,118 35 All other demands against the Com- pany... . 51383 dro, Haywards and N 12:00x San Leaudro, Hoywards & Way S’ 1:30r Niles, San Jose and Livermors, *#1:08p Sacrameato River Steamers. #1:30P Port Costa and Way Stations ::::gr Sln hrmmxm. lalxyw\rlll z y“v,-y gfi_ 8 :00p Ean Leandro, Heywards & WaySt'ns 43008 Merifoez, San Tamon, Ve Nayay Oalistoga, L Versuo aod 055 Santa 4:00r Benleis, Eapay i * Koights Landing, Marysvill Oroville and Sacrainento ... 4:30r Niles, San Jose, Livermore and Stackton ....... 5:00r San Loandro, Hoywards & WayStns 8:43p 3:30r New Orleans Expross, I'resno, Bakers- feld, Santa Barbara,].os Augeles, Deming, El¥aso, New Orlear 8:30P Santa o Tonio, Afianii for Mojave aud East. §:00r Turopoau Mail, Oplen aid iast :00p Haywards, Niles Express 0P Oregoni Kxpross, vilie, Redding, Portland, Sound and Lins .. 10:45a 7:002 San Leandro, Haywardsk Way Stns 10:502 9:00p San Leandro, Haywardst Way St ns t112:00a 10:05p “Sunset Limited,” Fresno, Loa eles, El Paso, New Orleans and East s1mdoe ##11:157 San Lean F:184 SANTA CRUZ DIVISION (Narrow Gaage). Total Liabilitfes.. INCOME. Net Cash actually recelved for pre- miums... Recelved for 18,551 36 $587,317 41 Total Income. .. EXPENDITURES. Net amount paid for Losses $213,512 50 Paid_or allowed for Com: r . 179,982 34 Brokerags : Paid for 14 charges for officers, clerks, etc. 82,885 26 Paid for State, National and local taxes....... aeoo... 12,423 20 All other payments and expenditures. 64,318 06 Total EXpenditures.............. ...$508,071 36 Losses incurred during the year........$253,002 02 C. P. ELLERBE, President. 0. E. CLARDY, Secretary, Subscribed ®nd 'sworn to before me, this Z4th day ot January, 1895, WILLIAM D. MURRAY, Notary Public. TARPEY & KRIGBAUM, GENERAL AGENTS, 208 Sansome Street, San Franmcisco, Cal. WALL PAPER! JAS. DUFFY & CO. Have REMOVED to No. 20 Geary Street. GREAT REDUCTION TO CLOSE OUT LAST SEASON’S PATTERNS TO MAKE ROOM FOR THE NEW. WINDOW SHADES! Any Color, Size or Kind. WHOLESALE-—AND—RETAIL. “#:154 Newark,Centarvilio,San Jose, Folton, Boulder Creek, Santa Cruzand Way SLatOns. . v rresiaesess g *2:15r Newark, Gentervile, San Joso, Now Almaden, Folton, Boulder Creek, Principal Wi *11:204 4:13r Newark, Sa 9:50a4 {11:457 Hunters' Bxcorsion. San Jose Way Stations. 17:300 COAST DIVISION (Third & Townsend Sts.) ©:454 San Jgio and Way Stations (Ne dden Wedoesda: $:154 Ban Luis Obispo, Guadalupe cipal Way SHations vorees Cruz, Grovo . *8:30r BanJos ipal *4:30¢ San Joseand Way Statiovs..... 5:30P San Jose and Way Stations. :30p San Jose aud Way Stations, 43P San Joas and Way Statio CREEK ROUTE FERRY. From SAN FRABCISCO--Foot of Market Streat (5lip §)~ 716 9:00 11:00AM. 3100 *2:00 16:00 *6:00r.x. From OAKEAND—Foot of Broadway,— lg:om.-. 11200 *100 4300 *3:00r.m, $3:00 00 8:00 *3:00 3400 P for Afternoon. 1 Saturdays only. Sundays only. i ‘Monday, Thursday and Saturday nights only. AT odags ani Betardare 8 Buadass and Toiadars NORTH PACIFIC COAST RATLROAD From A for Moming. * Sundays excepted, (Via Sausslito Ferry). San Francisco, beginning October 27, 1895, WEEKDAYS. o lgd:fllg lzu“:)el—‘hsfl, 9:15, 11:00 o M3 1 , 5:15, 6:50 p. M. san Qnenu‘nbl 9:154. M.; 1:45, 5:16 P. M. Extra trips for San Hatxel on_Mondays, Wi ‘days aud Saturdays at 11:30 ¢. 3. SUNDA YS. For Ml Valley, San Ratael and San s 800, ), 11:80 A K Quentin- 10:00, e -3?‘- 4:30, 6:18 M. *U0es Dot run to San Quentin. e THROUGH TRAINS. . 130 A. M. Weekdays—Cazadero and way stations, ’:fi ¥.3 Saturdays—Tomajes snd way staiions. 200 A. . Sundays—Point Reyes ana way NOTARY PUBLIC. H. Public, m‘l&m& % PHILLIPS, ATTORNEY-AT :00, 6:25 3 Between San Franclsco and Schuetzen Park same schedule as above. Leave Artive Ban Frascisco. [ IBMt | san Francisco. WEEK | SUN- |4, 1595, WxER Davs. | navs. | Destination. Dav: 0AM|8:00 ax| Novaio, 0 7 (0:30 Ax | Petaluma, 110 Px|5:00 P |Santa Rosa: Fulton, T:40 ax| ‘Windsor, Healdsburg, Geyserville, 8:30 Px|8:00 Ax| Cloverdale, | 7:30 pu| 6:15 rx Pleta, 7:40 Al} HD?’lnd & 18:00 x| Ukiah. | 7:30 pu| 6:15 e T:40 x| ) 110:30 ax 8:00 ax|Guerneville. | 7:30 x 3:30 7| | 7:40 AM B:00 AM| Sonoms |10:40 AN| 6:10Px5:00 px| and | | | Glen Eiten. | | ;gg;:zg;gg::j Sebastopol, |10:40 A¥ 10:30 Ax Stages connect at San Rad 11 inas. Stages connect at Cloverdale for the Ge{ser‘. Stages connect at Pleta for Higl Springs, Kelseyville, Lakeport. ‘Stages connect at Uklah for Vichy Springs, Blas Lakes, Laurel Dell, Upper Laie, Boonevilie, Green- &ood, Mendocino City. Fort Brage, Usal, Wesipory Cahto, Willetts, Calpella, Pomo, Potter Valley, John m'i, Lively’s, Gravelly Valley, Harris, Scotls urexa. Saturday to Monday round-trip tickets st reduced | _On Bundays round-trtp ticketa to sll polnts be: yond San Rafael 18t half rates. Offices, 650 Market st., Chronicle buflding, ‘Tioket o8, AT As, ‘Gen. Manager. Gen. Pass. Atlafitic AND Pacific RAILROAD Tralas leave from and arrive at Market-Street Ferry. SANTA FE EXPRESS To Chicago via A. & P. Direct Line oA il R Vis Kansas City without change. Annex cars Denver and St. Louls. Prio - CHICAGO LIMITED, From Los Angeles to Chicago. Bolld Vestibule Train Daily, with Dinin, under_Harvey's management, Connectine oy leave San Francisco at 9 A. . and 3:30 F. X, dally. The best rallway from California to the East. New ralls, new ties; no dust: futeresting scenery} good meals in Harvey's dining-room or.dinings cars. -+ Ticket (@llce—644 Market Street, . Chronicle Buil RIGGS HOUSE, wn-h.incton. D. C. The Hotel ¢ Pl;hf‘xcnlle'ncn" e B hevigal me: lan, and foas merican plan, §3 per day