Santa Fe Route OVERLAND EXPRESS Every day in the year. Pullman Palace and Upholstered Tourist Cars leave for Denver, Kansas City, Chicago, and the East. Take Santa Fe Ferry, foot of Market St., 9 A. M. Personally Conducted Tourist Excursions leave three times each week in Pullman Vestibuled Tourist Cars, and are exceedingly popular with the traveling public. The principal cities of the East are reached by them and the service in all that counts for comfort and convenience is almost equal to the Parlor Cars. The cars are finished in mahogany, lighted with Pintsch gas, and a Porter is in charge to attend to the wants of passengers. Plenty of clean linen is provided and the beds are very comfortable. A handsome folder, describing this service in detail, may be had for the asking at the Company's office, No. 641 Market St. VALLEY ROAD Between Stockton, Fresno, Hanford, Visalia, Tulare and SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE 641 Market St. Telephone Main 1531 Oakland Office, 1118 Broadway JNO. L. TRUSLOW JNO. J. BYRNE Genl. Agt. Pass. Dept. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Genl. Pass. Agt. THE Steamers sail to Honolulu twice a month, to Samoa, New Zealand and Sydney, via Honolulu, every 28 days. J. D. SPRECKELS BROS. CO. 114 Montgomery Street, San Francisco Freight, 327 Market Street Mt. Hamilton Stage Co. The Oregon Railroad and DAILY STAGES Up the Wonderful Mt. Hamilton LICK OBSERVATORY One of the Sights A TRIP THAT WILL LINGER IN Navigation Company MAGNIFICENT SHORT SEA TRIP Por Particulars, Address 630 SAN FRANCISCO General Agent W. H. HURLBURT In writing to advertisers please mention the OVERLAND "A Weekly Feast to Nourish Hungry Minds."- N. Y. Evangelist. FOUNDED BY E. LITTELL IN 1844. THE LIVING AGE A WEEKLY MAGAZINE OF FOREIGN PERIODICAL LITERATURE A Necessity To Every Reader of Intelligence and Literary Taste The publishers of THE LIVING AGE take special pleasure in announcing Three Attractive Serials. Heinrich Seidel's story THE TREASURE, translated for THE LIVING AGE by Dr. Hasket Derby, was begun in the number for October 6. It will be followed by A PARISIAN HOUSEHOLD, a clever story of Parisian high life by Paul Bourget, translated for THE LIVING AGE by Mary D. Frost; and by Edmondo de Amicis' striking autobiographical sketches, MEMORIES OF MY CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOL-DAYS, translated for THE LIVING AGE from the Nuova Antologia. These serials are copyrighted by THE LIVING AGE and will appear only in this magazine. Each Weekly Number Contains Sixty-Four Pages, In which are given, without abridgment, the most interesting and important contributions to the periodicals of Great Britain and the Continent, from the weighty articles in the quarterlies to the light literary and social essays of the weekly literary and political journals. Science, politics, biography, art, travel, public affairs. literary criticism and all other departments of knowledge and discussion which interest intelligent readers are represented in its pages. Each Number Contains A short story and an instalment of a serial story; and translations of striking articles from French, German, Italian and Spanish periodicals are made expressly for the magazine by its own staff of translators. Once a Month a Special Supplement Number Presents readings from the most important new books, editoriai notes on books and authors, and a list of books of the month. In Quantity as well as Quality, THE LIVING AGE invites comparison with other magazines, being in this regard the equal of any two literary monthly publications in the country. It gives its readers annually about 3,500 pages. THE LIVING AGE has ministered for over fifty-six years to the wants of a large class of alert and cultivated readers, and is today perhaps even more valuable than ever to those who wish to keep abreast of current thought and discussion. Published WEEKLY at $6.00 a year, postpaid. Single numbers 15 cents each. FREE! on request, the numbers of THE LIVING AGE con taining Heinrich Seidel's story, THE TREASURE, as above, to each NEW SUBSCRIBER for 1901. Address P. O. Box 5206. THE LIVING AGE COMPANY, Boston. In writing to advertisers please mention the OVERLAND. Established nearly forty years; 17,000 graduates; 25 teachers; over 300 graduates annually placed in positions with the leading firms of the coast; 102 positions filled during the 4 months ending July 31st last; 60 type-writers. DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS. Write for new 80-page Catalogue and College Journal FRONTISPIECE. The Maguey Plant and Tlachiquero........ THE NATIONAL DRINK OF MEXICO. By Clara Spaulding Brown. (Illustrated.).. THE MAKING OF A JOCKEY. By Charles Ellis Newell..... 273 274 281 282 291 A DEFENSE OF THE EXISTING LAW. By a Member of the San Francisco Bar 336 340 BOOKS TO READ OR NOT TO READ. 344 .1900 OVERLAND MONTHLY, 51 Kearny St., San Francisco: Enclosed find One Dollar, for which please send The Overland Monthly to commencing with the. Signed.......... ...number. Entered at the Post Office at San Francisco as Second-Class Matter. ...for one year |