[322] United States Pacific Railway Commission, pp. 35-36, testimony C. P. Huntington.
[323] Ibid., p. 3869, testimony I. E. Gates.
[324] Ibid., p. 3697, testimony C. P. Huntington.
[325] Ibid., pp. 2995-99, testimony C. F. Crocker; p. 3200, testimony Leland Stanford.
[326] Ibid., pp. 4174-75, testimony Leland Stanford.
[327] Most of the so-called “Dear Pard letters” from which the above is taken, appeared in the San Francisco Daily Report after November, 1892. In the majority of cases the letters were printed in the Saturday edition. The correspondence continued with varying frequency until Bassett’s death in 1903. It was credited with a considerable share in preventing the refunding of the Central Pacific indebtedness to the United States government on terms favorable to the corporation, and Bassett himself believed that his “exposures” had seriously injured Southern Pacific credit in the financial markets.
[328] Colton case, p. 1661, Huntington to Colton, May 1, 1875.
[329] United States Pacific Railway Commission, p. 3721, testimony C. P. Huntington.
[330] Colton case, pp. 1726-27, Huntington to Colton, June 7, 1876.
[331] Ibid., pp. 1740-41, Huntington to Colton, November 11, 1876.