10 HARE'S GUIDE TO mer boarders. It is kept on the French plan, and its patrons are those whose taste is in that direction. The San Jose Hotel, on Market street, is also kept in the French style. The Continental, near the Catholic Church, on Market street, is kept by a couple of Ger man gentlemen, with whom their countrymen will find a hearty welcome. The rooms are good, the fare substantial and it is in every way a well kept house, and much patronized by others than Germans. The McCutcheon House, on San Pedro street, affords good home-like accommodations. Besides these, there are others of lesser pretentions, too many to enumer ate, where the laboring man may be entertained with plainer fare at cheaper rates; the neighborhood of the City Hall abounds with such, and others are scattered throughout the city. Like every other Cal ifornia town, restaurants and chop-houses are abund ant, where a cup of coffee or a meal, according to the length of one’s purse, may be obtained at any hour. Hacks, Carriages and Livery. The facilities for being conveyed about the city are numei-ous and excellent. The hackmen, coach and omnibus proprietors, are not as is frequently the case, “ sharpers, " but are mostly well known and respected citizens, in whose hands the stranger need fear no extortion. The customary charges of those awaiting the trains at the depot, for conveying passengers to any part of the city, are: hacks and carriages 50