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CONCLUSION
The “Swanhilda” cast off from the docks at Port Costa two days after Presley had left Bonneville and the ranches and made her way up to San Francisco, anchoring in the stream off the City front. A few hours after her arrival, Presley, waiting at his club, received a despatch from Cedarquist to the effect that she would clear early the next morning and that he must be aboard of her before midnight.

He sent his trunks aboard and at once hurried to Cedarquist\'s office to say good-bye. He found the manufacturer in excellent spirits.

“What do you think of Lyman Derrick now, Presley?” he said, when Presley had sat down. “He\'s in the new politics with a vengeance, isn\'t he? And our own dear Railroad openly acknowledges him as their candidate. You\'ve heard of his canvass.”

“Yes, yes,” answered Presley. “Well, he knows his business best.”

But Cedarquist was full of another idea: his new venture—the organizing of a line of clipper wheat ships for Pacific and Oriental trade—was prospering.

“The \'Swanhilda\' is the mother of the fleet, Pres. I had to buy HER, but the keel of her sister ship will be laid by the time she discharges at Calcutta. We\'ll carry our wheat into Asia yet. The Anglo-Saxon started from there at the beginning of everything and it\'s manifest destiny that he must circle the globe and fetch up where he began his march. You are up with procession, Pres, going to India this way in a wheat ship that flies American colours. By the way, do you know where the money is to come from to build the sister ship of the \'Swanhilda\'? From the sale of the plant and scrap iron of the Atlas Works. Yes, I\'ve given it up definitely, that business. The people here would not back me up. But I\'m working off on this new line now. It may break me, but we\'ll try it on. You know the \'Million Dollar Fair\' was formally opened yesterday. There is,” he added with a wink, “a Midway Pleasance in connection with the thing. Mrs. Cedarquist and our friend Hartrath \'got up a subscription\' to construct a figure of California—heroic size—out of dried apricots. I assure you,” he remarked With prodigious gravity, “it is a real work of art and quite a \'feature\' of the Fair. Well, good luck to you, Pres. Write to me from Honolulu, and bon voyage. My respects to the hungry Hindoo. Tell him \'we\'re coming, Father Abraham, a hundred thousand more.\' Tell the men of the East to look out for the men of the West. The irrepressible Yank is knocking at the doors of their temples and he will want to sell \'em carpet-sweepers for their harems and electric light plants for their temple shrines. Good-bye to you.”

“Good-bye, sir.”

“Get fat yourself while you\'re about it, Presley,” he observed, as the two stood up and shook hands.

“There shouldn\'t be any lack of food on a wheat ship. Bread enough, surely.”

“Little monotonous, though. \'Man cannot live by bread alone.\' Well, you\'re really off. Good-bye.”

“Good-bye, sir.”

And as Presley issued from the building and stepped out into the street, he was abruptly aware of a great wagon shrouded in white cloth, inside of which a bass drum was being furiously beaten. On the cloth, in great letters, were the words:

“Vote for Lyman Derrick, Regular Republican Nominee for Governor of California.”

The “Swanhilda” lifted and rolled slowly, majestically on the ground swell of the Pacific, the water hissing and boiling under her forefoot, her cordage vibrating and droning in the steady rush of the trade winds. It was drawing towards evening and her lights had just been set. The master passed Presley, who was leaning over the rail smoking a cigarette, and paused long enough to remark:

“The land yonder, if you can make it out, is Point Gordo, and if you were to draw a line from our position now through that point and carry it on about a hundred miles further, it would just about cross Tulare County not very far from where you used to live.”

“I see,” answered Presley, “I see. Thanks. I am glad to know that.”

The master passed on, and Presley, going up to the quarter deck, looked long and earnestly at the faint line of mountains that showed vague and bluish above the waste of tumbling water.

Those were the mountains of the Coast range and beyond them was what once had been his home. Bo............
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