The System, As Uncovered by the San Francisco Graft Prosecution

Previous

CONTENTS

PREFACE.

CHAPTER I. The Union Labor Party Movement.

CHAPTER II. The Ruef Board of Supervisors.

CHAPTER III. The San Francisco Ruef Ruled.

CHAPTER IV. San Francisco After the Fire.

CHAPTER V. Graft Prosecution Opens.

CHAPTER VI. Ruef 's Fight to Take the District Attorney's Office.

CHAPTER VII. Oliver Grand Jury Impaneled.

CHAPTER VIII. Ruef Loses the District Attorney 's Office .

CHAPTER IX. Ruef and Schmitz Indicted.

CHAPTER X. Fight to Evade Trial.

CHAPTER XI. Ruef a Fugitive.

CHAPTER XII. Trapping of the Supervisors.

CHAPTER XIII. Confessions of the Supervisors .

CHAPTER XIV. The Source of the Bribe Money.

CHAPTER XV. Ruef Pleads Guilty to Extortion. [207]

CHAPTER XVI. Schmitz Convicted of Extortion.

CHAPTER XVII. Schmitz Ousted From Office.

CHAPTER XVIII. The Real Fight Begins.

CHAPTER XIX. The Glass Trials and Conviction.

CHAPTER XX. The Ford Trials and Acquittals.

CHAPTER XXI. The San Francisco Election of 1907.

CHAPTER XXII. Higher Courts Free Schmitz and Ruef.

CHAPTER XXIII. The Defense Becomes Arrogant.

CHAPTER XXIV. Jury-Fixing Uncovered.

CHAPTER XXV. The Shooting of Heney.

CHAPTER XXVI. The Calhoun Trial.

CHAPTER XXVII. The San Francisco Election of 1909.

CHAPTER XXVIII. Dismissal of the Graft Cases.

CHAPTER XXIX. Ruef 's Last Refuge Fails.

CHAPTER XXX. Conclusion.

APPENDIX JUDGE LAWLOR'S RULING ON MOTION TO DISMISS GRAFT CASES, AUGUST 3, 1910.

Transcriber's Note

Footnotes have been gathered at the end of the text and links are provided for easy reference.

Marginal pagination follows the printed text. References to pages that contained only the continuation of footnotes are removed.

There are numerous apparent spelling or typographical errors, including those that appear in the copious quoted material. These have been corrected, and are noted in the detailed notes at the end of this text.

Corrected text appears underline, with the original viewable when one hovers over the text like this.

The cover image has been fabricated and is placed in the public domain.

“THE SYSTEM”
AS UNCOVERED BY
The San Francisco Graft Prosecution

BY

FRANKLIN HICHBORN

(Author of “The Story of the California Legislature of 1909”;
“The Story of the California Legislature of 1911”; and “The
Story of the California Legislature of 1913.”)


“It is well enough, my fellow-citizens, to meet as we do to-night, and to applaud the sentiments of patriotism, and to echo the voice of indignation uttered upon this rostrum. But another and more imperative duty devolves upon every one of us individually, and that is to give his and her moral support to the officers of the law. We must not content ourselves by merely adopting a set of resolutions, and then going home and forgetting about it, placing all responsibility upon the constituted authorities. This is not a case of the constituted authorities. It is the case of the people of San Francisco. And unless the people of San Francisco do their individual duty in supporting the prosecution, the officials of the courts and of the law must fail in their efforts.”—Walter Macarthur at the mass meeting called at the time of the attempted assassination of Heney.


COPYRIGHT, 1915
by
FRANKLIN HICHBORN

San Francisco
Press of The James H. Barry Company
1915

FRANKLIN HICHBORN’S
BOOKS ON
CALIFORNIA POLITICS

Story of the California Legislature of 1909 $1.25
Story of the California Legislature of 1911 1.50
Story of the California Legislature of 1913 1.50
“The System,” as Uncovered by the San Francisco Graft Prosecution 1.50

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Clyx.com


Top of Page
Top of Page