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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1898. McINTOSH CUILTY OF CONTEMPT Sentence of Five Days in Jail and to Pay a Fine. Disbarment Proceedings| Recommended Against Two Lawyers. Journals That Have Put Commercial Value on a Confessions. HAYMOND STILL IN HIDING ait of Irresponsible Journalists Secure Statements and De- feat Justice. The evidence before the court taken on this proceed- ing shows a remarkable and heretofore unheard of transac- ion. It would seem from such evidence that a practice of purchasing ‘confessions’” from persons accused of erime has become a feature of mod- ern journalism; that jourmals desiring to cater to the modern public in their demand for sen- sations have establisheda com- rcial value for such “con- fessions. This value is held out as a bait for the criminal to make a so-cailed confession, which, from the manner of its procurement, he, as well as the journalist, knows could not be used against him on his trial. By making such a ‘“‘confession’” he is led to be- lieve that means can be se- cured to enable him to defend himseif or to defeat justice without other injury than to create public opinion against him. It further appears that the defendant Hoff, now on trial in tkis court, is a man without means, and that coun- sel defending him are render- 000000000000 0000000000000000000000O00000000 [ [} [} S (] Q o o [+ o [} [} o Q © [+ Q 0 [x] o ing their services gratui- tously. Attorney B. W. McIntosh was ad- | iged guilty of contempt of court yes- terday by Judse Cook, and he was sen- tenced to five days in the County Jail and to pay a fine of $500. The charge st the attorney was that he was btiating to sell a confession pur- jrted to have been made by his client, >rt Hoff, who is on trial for his life > Judge Cook. Attorney E. B. ond who was associated with Mec- 1 in an attempt to dispose of the \fession they alleged to have secured the accused murderer was con- d equally guilty with McIntosh ntempt charge, but as he can- found he has so far escaped the ment of the court, but proceedings and if he does not suffer for con- »t he will in all probability be pro- bited from practicing his profession in this State. Mr. altogether escane with the punishment of imprisonment and the payment cf a i but his conduct will be called to ttention of the Bar Association, e will join Haymond in being i from the practice of law in Cali- nia. Judge Cook in giving his judgment said: The respondent in this proceeding has been acting as one of Hoff's attorneys. The evidence shows that some suygzestion of & confession was made to Hoff by a fi the | ing thereto had not McIntosh told Con- | ners that he, instead of Haymond, then | had the conf | that Haymond and McIntosh were acting | { From private advices received in this ecity last night it is learned that Mrs. Antonio Terry, the wife of the millionaire Cuban planter, who is better known | beigg secured from citizens among whom | State, and officers of this court, one of | | them 'being at the time actually engaged | the man whose | for | there barment will be instituted against.| MelIntosh will not | | neys, | tered into a conspiracy to commit such | | R newspaper reporter, and that he informed his counsel thereof, he suggesting to them that he could obtain a large sum of money by consenting to make such a “confession.” Thereupon his counsel con- sulted relative to the proposition. It ap- ears that one of his counsel, W. H. Schooler, immediately rejected the propo- sition and suggested to his associates the impropriety of it and the injury which it might work to their client. It further appears that R. L. Simpson, another of defendant’s counsel, concurred with the | views of Mr. Schooler, and it is clear to the court that neither Mr. Schooler nor Mr. Simpson were in any way implicated in the transactions which form the basis of this proceeding, and the court fully exonerates them from any complicity therein. Not so, however, as to Mr. Mc- Intosh, the respondent here. He (Mcln- tosh) undoubtedly did not dismiss the matter from his mind. On the contrary, on several occasions he mentioned the | subject to his associate, Mr. Mclntosh suggesting on such occas s that should the defendant make such confession it | could not be used against him on the | trial, and if it could, the defense of in sanity could be manufactured; so even going far as to suggest to his assotiate, who engaged in examining jurors on their | voir dire, to ask their views g e defense of insanity. Upon each of such occasions Mr. Schooler persisted in the | views expressed by him at the first con- sultation_upon the subject. The advice of Mr. Schooler was not, however, ac- cepted by Mr. McIntosh, for the evidence shows that another attorney, named Ed gar B Haymond, occupled the same of- ice with him, and he evidently consulted | with Haymond upon the subject and the latter volunteered to act as middleman | and negotiate the sale to a public jour- | nal of the confession, if procured from his client by McIntosh. | The evidence shows beyond doubt, to my mind, that MclIntosh accepted the | offer of Haymond and the two thereafter acted in_concert, expecting to reap pe- | cuniary benefit from the sale of a so- | called confession, either obtained or to be | obtained by McIntosh from his client. It is true there is a conflict in the testimony as to whether McIntosh ever stated that | he had such confession, he swearing that he never made such statement and the witness Conners swearing that he did make it. Conners' testimony is corrob- orated, however, by the conversation had | v Mointosh with Schooler, wherein he videnced that he was contémplating ac- tion with Haymond, and further by the note which the testimonv of three wit- ne hows to have been sent by Con- ners to Garrett. There would have been no necessity for such note and no mean- on. From all the evidence I am satisfied SHE SUFFERS B together, Haymond as the agent for Mc- Intosh, [n an endeavor to sell, and that they offer to sell, to a public jour- . nal, an alleged confession of I;:vum, either | to her girlhood friends in San Fran; obtained or to be obtained from the client | famous singer, s seriously ill at of Mcintosh, who, at the time, was on trial for his life in this court, and a jury | sco riage. The facts are these: After their such journal would have been distributed. | Nice to spend their honeymoon. MclIntosh and Haymond are both of them attorneys at law, licensed and admitted to practice law in all of the courts of this in this court in the trial, for murder, of Mr. Terry is deeply grieved over his onfession’’ of the crime | which he was being here tried, the | bartering was being conducted, and that, | too, at a time when a part only of the | jury which was to try said cause had been secured and when some jurors were Sibyl nderson was well known here after achieving quite a local reputation t to be selected from cit hom it was contemplated such “‘confes- sion” should be distributed. | Had the defendant made an honest con- music-loving world. ice suffering from paraly resultant on the long period of illness that has been her fate ever since her mar- Shortly after their arrival taken sick, and the physicians who attended her had the greatest difficulty In preventing her malady from developing into brain fever, but this danger fortun- ately passed, though it left the fair singer in a very delicate condition that has finally resulted in apparently paralyzing her lower limbs. fort that love can dictate and money execute to effect her cu his wife to their home in Paris as soon as it is considered advisable. voice developed such remarkable qualities that it was car < among | some years ago, took up her residence abroad where she soon ing a name for herself that has become a household word thr AR FROM HOME, n, the beautiful and <is of the lower limbs as Sibyl Sanders Terry went to marriage, Mr. and M Mrs. Terry was wife's condition and is making every ef- ; he will remove vely woman. y cultivated, and, 1 merit, she finally, icceeded in creat- ughout the entire as a talented and as a singer of no me: fession of guilt to his counsel, it is claim- ed by many learned in the law that it would have been the duty of such counsel, | for examination as to his qualifications 28 an officer of the court, to report theé | t0 Serve as a juror therein, not only those same to the court; certainly it was a vio- | Who furnished such ‘‘confession,” but Tation: 0f his duty o T8 to the | every one connected with the publication world and thereby compel the setting up | thereof, including the proprietors, pub- of a false defense, for the exception | lishers,’ editors, reporters and even made as to criminal ca to the pro- | printers who st up the type, would have vision of the statute de g the duti een gullty of a contempt, and would all have gone to jail for their oirense. The n of an attorney does not permit or author- Y the case and not the news- ize counsel to manufacture a fal court tryin fense or proceed to establish innocence | papers is the tribunal in which such a by false testimony when guilt has been | confession should ve brought to light. onfe The court is a court of record, and ons which | while a trial in which a man’s life s at stake was ement, progressing officers of the if there was none in existence or to be | court committed overt acts toward the procuced, then counsel would be en-| doing of an act which, had it been ac- deavoring to use their office as the means | complished, would have grossly inter- of obtaining money by false fered with' the administration of justice and deprived the man on trial of a fair and impartial trial. When in this court one of its officers S0 conducts himself he will be punished, as also will all persons, whetherofficers of the court ornot, should they be so regardless of the rights of a defendant and the proper and orderly y bringing the trit they are officers into contempt sening its integrity and the respect due to it. Aside from e fact that the acts com- ained of show the respondent to have olated his duty as an attorney, in main- | | taining the dignity and respe due to | administration of justice as to succeed in i ey ‘ise show @ | accomplishing any such act as that Courts, of Justice, they IKewlse O M.ex | shown to have been attempted here. interference with the proceedings | of the court and the administration of | Justice. Such acts had a direct tendency | to injure the deendant on trial and to feat the ends of justice. If counsel haye the right for the pur- pose of lining their pockets and securing e ot o miase atalta’ son: | {5 Aiconteront of COUEC I{ uEl sppdlct fession for publication and thereby either | 15 IOt & CoBtempt, The er it to Do & prejudice the minds of jurors trying, or | %o try, the question of such client's guilt or Innocence, or .o compel counsel to abandon a legitimate defense and manu- facture a spurjous one, the profes the law should be abolished. The law is an honoraw.e profession, and those ad- mitted to its ranks shouid be, and main- tain themselves as, honorable members of an honorable proféssion. Courts, not newspapers, are established | for the trial of causes, and no one should | know this better than attorneys, who are officers of the courts. Those who contempiated the act of pub- lishing the so-called confession failed to consummate their purpose. Although Such failure relieves all not officers of the court, it does not relieve the attor- who, as oficers of the court, en- gross Newspapers have no more right to com- municate with jurors sworn In a case on trial than have individuals. For the acts shown to have been done by this respondent and what was done Haymond, as his agent, the court nsid him, the said McIntosh, guilty punishment fixed by law is entirely in- adequate. The court will further direct that the testimony here taken be submitted to the Bar Association of this city and county that proceedings may be instituted by that association for the disbarment both of the attorneys who so far violatéd their oaths of office as to engage in the outrageous conduct which such evidence shows them to have been guilty of. S ORDERED TO SIT DOWN. Attorney Schooler’s Agressive Tacties Cut Short. Attorney Schooler, the leading counsel for the defense of Albert Hoff, the ac- cused murderer of Mrs. Clute, departed from his usual placid and courteous man- ner on the resumption of the trial yes- in & public journal during the progress | terday morning in Judge Cook’s court, of this trial, whether suchconfessionwere | and before he desisted he had to be ad- true or:false, ana had a copy of such | monished by the Court. Joseph Foley, newspaper reached the eve of any juror | the carpet-layer who left the house af sworn in this case or any citizen drawn | 803 Guerrero street only a few minutes act and who were guilty of overt acts in furtherance thereof. Had the contem- lated act been consummated and a confession” of the defendant published the | gross contempt and one for which the | of | | et her death at the , was on the wi before Mrs, Clute hands of the ass: He told ness stand. ome rooms of the flat, ished his work he with him. He house about 4:55 D. n the day of the murder and going to £33 Schrader street | to do some work, but when he got there | it was too dark to do much and he went home to 27 Rail avenue, walking over the hills. Schooler, in cross- examining the wi as particular as | to how he left the and how he car- | ried his bundle o . hoping to make | 1t appear that Ho several of the prece | Foley. |~ Bchooler asked t | any feeling in the was that he had none ‘Don’t you want the defendant to be found guilty?” asked the attorney. “No, sir; I do not think s0.” “Don’t you know that if he is found guilty it would . divert you?" “No, sir."” “Don't You know that there is suspi- clon against you?” “No, sir, not a bit.” when he had fin- | | case?” T ness b, sir; not in the le: e questions were fired at the wit- the attorney, roaring at the top | and shaking a th: | It had not the I | the t effect in worrying ordered to de coming way. Judge Cook directed the attorney take his seat. “Do I understand that 'the court rules ‘?H[d{ cuflnnos oxam;ng this witness while standing?” demanded Schooler. I no right to stand?” Ak Haye “The court has the power to order you to take your seat whenever the court sees fit to do so. I think this cross-ex- amination has gone far enough. Still, if to you may proceed.” ““We except to the action of the court in ordering me to take my seat,” said Schooler, ?umplng from his chair as soon as the court had ceased speaking. ‘Take your seat, sIr,” ordered the court, “and proceed Jn 4 proper man- | ner. | “Schooler asked a few more questions as to the witness’ feelings in ?he cno;:a, and Foley was allowed to go. William Hayen, a carpet layer who had put down the carpet in the front room of the flat the day before the mur- der took place, testified that while he was at work in the house he saw no coupling pin in any of the rooms. C. W. Mark, vice-principal of the Ev- erett Grammar school, testified to hav- ing summoned a physician when he was notified by Mr., Legg that a woman had been injured in the residence at 803 Guerrero street. Mark was engaged in telephoning to 8an Jose when he was toid of the tragedy, and several opera- tors of the telephone company were sum- moned to fix the time at which he was at the telephone so as to better estab- lish the time at which the crime was committed. Henry Niemeyer, the clerk of the Lin- dell House, where Hoff roomed, testified to Hoff having arrived at the house at about 5:45 on the afternoon of the mur- der with his bag of tools and after put- ting it in his room went out. He showed the witness a cut in the g}\lm of one of his hands, which he said he got from a tack that afternoon. Policeman Feeney testified to finding the coupling pin in one of the rooms.of the flat where the murder took place, and said it was smeared with blood when he picked it up. The blood was not quite dry on it when he took it up, and he_got some of it on his hand. Dr. T. G. Inman, who responded to the call of C. W. Mark, told of the position of the body when he arrived at the house and described some of the wounds 1) 3 L If i UYL} DESIGN FOR THE L. . BRIGGS BLOCK T0 BE EREGTED IN OAKLAND., Oakland for the last five or six years has had a restl was Broadway; then the merchants got tired of that and unrest has attacked them again and they are moving to Clay street. From time to time many business buildings have bobbed up on this Brothers, and now it has been made public that right across the street 1 beautiful building on his premises on the corner of T It is thought that if Clay street becomes a b between Twelfth and Thirteenth, will hve to move building have been designed by Cunningham Bros., The plans for Mr. Briggs’ new ‘Bank in that city. The building is purely a Californ It is thought t in readiness to begin work on the new structure, - Briggs will occupy one of the stores. ess streak. First, the only street for business purposes they moved to Washington street; and now the fever of street, the last being that of Abrahamson rom it L. H. Briggs intends to put up a hirteenth and Clay. usiness street the First Congregational Church, which is on Clay, to less valuable property and more congenial church surroundings. who designed the Central a design, and all the rooms will be well lighted and airy. Mr. hat it will be a matter of a few weeks before Mr. Briggs will be he saw on it. He was on the stand when the court adjourned. SIGNED WITH DALY. Blanche Bates Severs Her Connection With the Frawley Company. Blanche Bates, who has already won 8o many laurels as the charming leading lady of the Frawley company, will be seen on the boards in San Francisco no more—at least for some time to come. An announcement was received In this city yesterday by Miss Bates’ mother, rs. F. M. Bates, that Blanche had signed with Mr. Daly. She will join Mr. Daly's company in New York and will make her first appearance there. It is stated that Miss Bates will play seconds to Ada Rehan, and on certain occasions will fill the role of that well- known actress. This in itself is a state- ment of great importance regarding one whose talents were first recognized in San Francisco. Miss Bates was born in Oregon, but was brought to this city when so young that she really looks upon it as her home, and always has a tender spot in her heart . for ovel'fihlni Californian. She s well pleased with her new ‘open- ing, as she has always been a great ad- mirer of Miss Rehan. As Mr. Daly does not intend sending any companies out here this year, Miss Bates will not be seen in San Francisco for some time. Mn:u{er Frawley is now in New York, ‘whe e will en a new leading {fl to fill Bates, e 1 the place vacant by | watches and rings belonging to Mr. | of putting down | at once notified, but notwithstanding | ting on the floor of one of the | tnat two detectives were detailed to ap- . carrying his tools | Pre’ to having left the | rest, nad been mistaken by | assortment ding witnesses for | rings, diamonds and witness if he had | been anxiously searching for him. se, and the reply | suspicion from | trance o “Haven't you been uneasy about this| were several Chinamen in the room at of his Voice and standing over the witness | tening finger at Nim. | witness, but Prosecuting Attorney | P! Hosmer objected to the manner of the | ed blow upon the jaw. attorney and he asked that Schooler be | handcuffed and taken port himself in ‘a more be- | Prison, where his name was registered | i Colored, Spots, Aches, Qld | Sores. Ulcers upon the small book. EDY CO., 2i MASONIC TEMPLE, CH | AN OPERATION AVOIDED, there are any more questions to be asked | | ed he has succeeded in robbing several ARREST OF A CHINESE BURGLAR Landed 1in the City Prison After a Des- perate Struggle. is Nc one. Unaffected by extgeme cold or heat. for 148-page is free. Attempted to Injure Detee- tives Wren and Gibson. Accused of Stealing Several | Thousand Dollars’ Worth of Jewelry. FOUND IN AN OPIUM JOINT | He Has Already Served a Term of Two Years in San Quentin. Do you want to read a weekly paper with opinions fully, freely Detectives Wren and Gibson last| and forcefully expressed? Then night arrested a Chinese burglar for read whom the police have been searching | for a long time. His name is Ah Loon. Some years ago Loon hired out as a | servant and rewarded his employer by stealing his wife’s diamonds, valued at several hundred dollars. Evidently fearing arrest he went to San Jose, where hé was arrested from a dispatch sent by Chief Lees. He was charged with grand larceny, and was convicted | by a jury in the Superior Court. Not- withstanding that he protested his in- nocence he was sentenced to two years in San Quentin. He was released about a month ago and since then it is claim- The Sta EDITOR JAMES H. BARRY. Its editorials are unbiased, with no pretensions to infallibility. |THE STAR'S Leading Articles To-Day are: «ADMINISTRATIVE TREASON.” AN UPRIGHT JUDGE. HIS CONSCIENCE FOUND. EMPLOYMENT SWINDLE. GET AT THE COST. LOOKS LIKE A LIE. GREAT TAX SHIRKERS. A FAMILY COMPACT. | AIl the Live Issues of the Day Intelli- gently and Fearlessly Considered. Sl'l?S(‘l?IPTfi $1 50 Per Year. * FIVE CENTS PER COPY. OFFICE 429 MONTGOMERY ST. | housewives of jewelry valued at $2000. | His latest victim is James Hopkins, who resides at 2230 Jackson street. Shortly after being released from the | penitentiary, the Chinese thief secured the position of servant for the Hop- kins family through an employment agency. The following day he disap- peared, taking with him several gold Hopkins and his wife. The police were | hend him, he managed to elude ar- Shortly afterward he secured a place | in the family of William Cluff of 1916 | Vallejo street. He was there only a | very few days when he was suddenly | missed. An examination disclosed that during the temporary absence of the | family he had stolen a miscellaneous | of Jewels, ing ot | watches. Since then Detectives Gibson and Wren have Shortly after 7 o’clock last night they | learned that he was in a friend’s room | in Chinatown, and they proceeded to | | arrest him. | Stationing a police officer at the en- | f the house so as to prevent his escape, the detectives entered and failing to gain an entrance to the room, | they kicked in the door. Loon was ly- | ing upon a bunk smoking opium. There At Makes RENTED 4na sold ON_INSTALLMENTS. Send for Sample of Work and Prices. L. & M. ALEXANDER 110 MONTGOMERY ST., Agents Smith Premier Typewriter. L0OD POISON HAVE YOU Sore Throat, Pimples, Copper- | the time the detectives appeared, and | one of the Celestials attempted to as- sault thm, He was promptly seized and hurled through a window to the yard below. The much-wanted burglar also tried to assault the officers, but was laced hors de combat by a well direct- | He was then to the City | MCAGO, TLL. for proofs of cures. Capltal | [ $500.000. Worst cases cured in 15 to 8 days. 1 100-page book free. ADVERTISEMENTS. Mre. Rosa Gaum Writes to Mrs. | Pinkham About it. She Says: A PERMANENT CURE of the most obstinate cases of Gonorrhaa and Gleet, guaranteed in from 3 to 6 days ; no other treatment required. Sold by all draggists. | | McMUNN'S am e OPIURE The pure essential extract from the native drug. Cone tains’ nll the valuable medicial properties of Oriau ‘without !ts noxious elements. Ko Sickness cf stomarhy 20 yomiting ; no costiveness; no headchie. ALl Drugyi-isy o DEAR Mgs. PINknAM:—I take pleas- | ure in writing you a few lines toin- | form you of the good your Vegetabie | Compound has done me. I cannot | thank you enough for what your medi- cine has done for me; it has, indeed, helped me wonderfully. For years I was trou- bled with an ovarian tumor, each yeargrow- ing worse, un- til at last I was compelled to consult with a physician. He said nothing could be done for me but to go under an operation. NOTARY PUBLIC. A. J. HENRY, NOTARY PUBLIC MARKET ST., OPP. - PALACE 638 Hotel. Telephons ncis street. Telep | Weak Men and Women In speaking with @ friend of mins | GHOULR U8R PAMIANA BITESS, T3 about it, she recommended Lydia E. h to the sexual organs. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, say- ing she knew it would cure me. I then sent for your medicine, and after tak- | ing three bottles of it, the tumor dis- | appeared. Oh! you do not know how much good your medicine has 'done | me. Ishall recommend it to all suffer- ing women.—Mrs. Rosa Gauxy, 720 Wall St., Los Angeles, Cal. The great and unvarying success of Lydla E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound in relieving every derangement of the female organs, demonstrates it to be the modern safeguard of wo- man’s happiness and bodily strength. More than a million women have been benefited by it. 74 Every woman who mneeds advice about her health is invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. E A MAN A LY CURE POSITIVEL . RAILROAD TRAVEL. = CALIFORNIA NPT g LIMITED. SAN fngmscn CHICAGD. | | Leaves San Francisco at 4:30 p. m. i | MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS. ulc Carries first-class passengers only, but with- out extra charge, DINING CAR, BUFFET SMOKING CAR. Pullman ‘Palace Drawing-Room Sleepers, 314 days to Chicago, 4% days to New York. THE ATLANTIC EXPRISS Leaves daily at 4:30 p. m., carrving Pullman Palace and Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars on fast time. Direct connection in Chicago and Kansas City for all Eastern points. Trains arrive and depart from Market-street Feiry. Francisco ticket office, 644 Market street, Chronicle building. _Telephone Main 1520. Oakland office, 111§ Broadway. Sacra- mento office, J street. San Jose, 7 West MADE M o iage, | Santa Clara’street. e e s e helizpedkie (21 NORTH PACIFIC COAST RAILROAD. you, Wo. Gupfi Via Sausalito Ferry. :gam"""“'&’:. r‘ From San Francisco, Commencing September jor WEEK_DAYS. o | M e, e For sale Francisco by Leipnitz & Co., o Xeite - tor. B w58 Butser. ‘No-Bercen S8 ki, | Extra trips R ; EW WESTERN HOTEL, e MUT Valley and San Ratast 20, o1 Y Y AND WASHINGTON TS, -RE- ke * Fun T Ban Qaendn. 5‘ ‘modeled and ted. KING, WARD & THROUGH T! S. 138 a. m. week days for Cazadero and way sta- 'mlfl m. Baturdays (mlnflt_gh:zm ; m. and i 8 ADVERTISEM£NTS. In The Klondike as necessary as a pickaxe. » miner should be without Send name and address on a postal card It illustrated catalogue. 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G:Adp 45:30p “ Sunset Limited.” Los Angeles, Tl Paco, Fort Worth, Little , St Louis, Chicago sud East , Chi «B:3up “Supeot Li; New Ogilon a and Sau Jose. ropean ward, amento, Marys. Portland, Puget Sound and Vst .. s SAN LEANDEO AND HAYWARD: LOCAL. (Foot of Market Street.) xpress, Hi teddivg, B:15A 7 _7iba 20:45A 6:004 Melrose, Seminary Park, Fitehburg, Elmhurst, San Leandro, South Ssu eandro, Estudillo, Lorenzo, Cherry a Haywards. i Runs through to Niles. ‘rom Niles, 0P e/ msen ¢ Sauta Cruz and Principal Way Sta s 4:15 - Newark, and Los Gatos ... $11:45p Hunters' Excursion, Sap Jose and Way Stations ... 2 CREEK ROUTE FERRY. Prom SAK FRANCISCO—Foot of Market Street (Slip 8)— 050N 9:204 17:208 *T:16 9:00 11:00A. 11:00 <2:00 $3:00 +4:00 $6:00 *6:00e.. rom OAXLAND—Foot of Broadway.—*6:00 8:00 10:004.Mu $123:00 *1:00 $8:00 $4:00 “5:00r.x. COAST DIVISION (Broad Gauge). (Third and Townsend Sts.) $504 Ban Joso And Way Stations (New Almadeu Wednesdays only). N Tres Pinos, Santa Cr se, San ( o Grove, Paso Robles, )iispo, Guadalupe, Surf - 9:004 Bau Py and Way Statios a0, Redwood, Menlo' Park, nta Clara, San " Jose, Gilroy, Hollister, Sania Cruz, - Salinas, Monterey and Pacilic Grov 5p San Jose aud Principal Way § | 113:45¢ 8an Jose and Way Stat A for Morning. * Sundays excepted. 1 Sundays only. § ) RAILWAY CO. Tiburon Ferry, Foot of Market St. SAN FRANCISCO TO SAN RAFAEL. WEEK DAYS—7:30, 10:00 a. m.; 12:35, 4 6@ p m Thursdaye-Extra trip . m. Saturdays—Extra trips at 1:4 | _and 11:30 p. m. | SUNDAYS—8:00, 9:30, 11:00 a. m.; 1:30, 3:3, 6:00, 6:20 p. m. SAN RAFAEL TO SAN FRA! S—; 2, 1 Baturdays oulys Monday, Thursday and Saturdsy nights only. Mondays and Thursdays. ‘Wednesdays and Saturdays. NCISCO. : 11:10 a. m.3 5:00, 6:25 p. m. Between San Francisco and Schuetzen Park as above. | Arrive san Franclseo. Weelk days. In effest Oct. 24, sun- days. 10:408.m.| 1397, Destination Novato, Petalnma. Santa Rosa. Fulton, Windsor, Healdsburg, 10! . 10 Lytton, Geyserviile, | Cloverdale.” | Hopland and [Eoian 7:30p.m. |8:008.m. :308.m. |8-00a.m. 7 T Bam 1 | Guernevine i | 7:300.m. m.] 3:30p.m. |5:00p.m. | Sebastcpol 2p.m. Stages connect at Santa Kosa for Mark West Eprings; at Geyserville for Skaggs Springs: at overdale for Geysers; at Hopland_ for Highland Springs, Kelseyville, Soda Bay, eport and Bartlett S;fln‘l: at Ukiah tor . Saratoga Springs, Blue Lakes, Lavrel Dell Lake, Upper e, Pomo, Potter | Valley, John Day's, Riverside, Lierley’s, Buck- nell's, ‘Sanhedrin Heights, Hullville, Boonville, orr's’ Mendoeino City, Fort Brags, Westport, Usal. Saturday to Monday round-trip tickets at re- | @uced rates. On Sundays round-trip tickets to all polnts alf rates. beyond ' San Rafael at et Offices—630 Market street, Chronlcls kit Lo, 2. X. RYAN. A W, THE SAN FRANCISCO & SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY RAILWAY CLMPANY. —— ber 10, 1597, trains will rus as From fallows: 3 > Southbound. | Northbound. T | ‘pally Excp'id Excptd Datly pm. 6:45 pan. Visalla 6:40 am. 13:40 pm Stopping at intermediate po ints when require L Counectiong—Al dtockton with steamboats of Co., leaving San Francisco and : at Merced w Mari ‘with stage t:.'lnd from | MOUNT TAMALPAIS SCENIC RAILWAY (Via Sausalito Ferry). Leave San Francisco, commenc Bidaysio0, 0.0, b 115 & : a m., 1:15 p. m. Round trip from Mill Valley, THOS. K & [, Agents, 621 Markes ng ‘Novem- m., 1:46 p. m.