The evening world. Newspaper, February 10, 1900, Page 2

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| “WEIGH THE FACTS,” _ “f ADVISE AND INSTRUCT YOU AS T) THE LAW.” “BASE VERDICT ON MERITS OF CASE.” “Without 3 Them, ‘ ‘The Evening World : 0 submit to you this case, to be cov bear facts ana the Court will not unde bln the case or express any views con them. ift} aHF i FO were selecied i ly chosen by the de: and honest ton the question of hi ¥ f lil yt iz bee! nearly three i iE i % t il i : i gathering. every detall and circumstance! have read to you from the solid mass of proof reste upon tne Prosecution. Ms convincing force—of the proba- prosecution—it must be recognized, and Hf is but proper that the Court should expression to that recognition, that ‘the preperation and presentation of the HEAT OF COUNSEL. Contentions of counsel, however, even though intemperate, were and are of @inor consideration in presence of these @upremely important questions to be as- eertained and determined by you, and @f the necessity of affording to the full and fair opportunity We prove if it could its charge that, by @tealth and cunning, which have made @etection almost impossible, a murder @efendant every fair and reasonaye unity to meet that charge and contest, inch by Inch—which the de- ofemse has done—and to show the wea Meares, If they existed, in the case o the prosecution before you; and to be gure at your hands, without passion or ‘or @istraction of thought, St a and impartial trial upon the of the case, RULES OF EVIDENCE. Before dealing with the particulars of the case 1 will instruct you on tie @eneral rules which you must ovserv ioe which you must be guided in consideration of the evidence. Aud lavite your close atiention to thas fe that in your consultation you fefer to them and be guided uyon ay question to which thy may p-operly the presumption of S fe overthrown. Fee defendant to net called upon i? Be reesived ie his faver. te avail himectt of that met be taken to hic “a0 of each Witness myst Lio considered other The Evening World herewith | presents a stenographic, verbatim) testimony, You may discard the whole} _ Gentlemen of the jury: I will proceed by the rules of law which you | in mind, You have listened | mise the contentions of counsel or allow in the case very thoroughly Abily presented by both the counsel | your attention from that teewe which the people and the counsel for the | must be determined by you upon the "gay clreumstances comment on the facts Femeine with you and you alone you end instruct you upon of law which must apply to fm the case, and upon them your consideration of these & Very oxhaustive examination . to the people and to } @ach ant every one of nm unusually jong and calendar it intermission, except & y by the fines , you have been during that time ninety- have been examined, not +] Adame against the form of the statute, fm such cases made and provided, and! this case, and my desire is to have the reading of the rules imprinted upon in an brief and concise terms as possible, so that you wil) not of CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE. Baad been committed; and to secure to | 824 | of another, Passion ‘Decide.” Not compelled to reject the whole of hie of ft and any part of It, and you may e give credit to any portion of it which report of Recorder Goff's charg ‘to the Jury, made by reporters for| commends iteelt to your belief. | GUILT OR INNOCENCE. | | The true iseue and the only isnue in =| thin trial is the muilt or innocence of thin defendant. and you must net compro- them to enthuse your mind of distract tl evidence and the evidence alone, ‘The indictment found by the Grand «| Jury of this County charged the de- fendant, Roland B. Molineux, with mur- der in the firm degree. ‘The first count in the Indictment charges that on the twenty-elghtn day of December, 196-1 simply, gentiemen. give to you the substance of the Indtct- ment and the counts—that cm the day I have just named the defendant, Roland B. Molin contriving and intendsi« wilfully and feloniously to Katherine J, Adame, ¢ weight of a certain deadly polacn | cyanide of mercury with intent that she should take the same, well knowing that *]the cyanide of mercury was a deadly Polson; that the same Katherine J Adams did take and swallow the said deadly poison #0 given and admiilstered by the said Ronald B. Mol x, and by means of which she became mortally sick, and of which mortal sickness she @id then and there die; and that the said Ronald BR. Molineux in the manner and form aforesaid and by the means aforesaid wilfully, feloniously and of his Malice of forethought did paleon, kill agains! the peace of the people of the State of New York and their digdity THE OTHER COUNTS. @econd coumt charges the killing or ' Prejudice,” He Tells falsely in any part of the case you are | your memory be subject to possible confusion ideas regarding them. Adama through a deliberate and design th effect the death of Katharine J, Adams by administering no matter what your opinion may|@ quantity of poleon and then foliows| It te necessary ¢ substantially the same desbription, and force of the case made out by the} the fourth count charger that the de>/¢imetion between fendant, with intent to kill Katharine J. Adams, did giv> and administer to her the same dose of polson referred to, and the fifth count charges that the defendant, with the intent effect the death of Harry 8. Cornish, did give and administer the poison, The sixth coum charges that the de fendant felontourly and with malice aforethught did make an assault upon Katharine J. Adams and did give and administer to her the po In criminal pleading it.» the province of the pleader to charge the offense | jf different forma, al mind the main question, and various counts In the ledictment could all be condensed inte the charge which 1 first read to you—that is, that this defendant, with malice aforethought, did give and administer to Katharine J Adams a dose of cyanide of mercury, | which he knew to be a deadly potson. And the other principal feature of the | Indictment I# that he, with intent to kill | Harry 8. Cornish, did give and admin- inter this dose of poison to Mrs. Adams. |, HOMICIDE DEFINED. | 1 will Invite your attention to the very clear and concise definition given by the statute. Homicide, as defined by the law, is the killing of one human heing by the act, procurement of omls- sion of another—the act, procurement or omission of another, Homlelde ts either murder, manslaughter, excuse able of Justiflable homicide, From the evidence tn, thie case T am | of opinion that the acts plural charged to have been committed by the de- fendant would not if committed by him come within the statutory definition euther of manslaughter in the first or second degree or of excusable or jus- \fable homicide. ‘The learned counsel for the defendant in his argument to you qubstanttally id, and if he ts of the same opinion | he expressed on that point. and | pecially requested by him, 1 will charge you ae to the degrees as to manslaughter or as (0 excusable or justifiable homicite. The Court—Has counsel fer th defendant a jing to cay? Mr. Weeks—Ne, air, ner de we desire murder in the second de- ree to be charged. It to im the firet degree or nothing. The Court—I shall confine myself to! murder, Of courve | should say in general terms that the selection of de-| fendant'e counsel of any particular de-| pres of murder to be charged to you le not binding upon the Court or jury. MURDER IN THE FIRST. Murder in the fire degree, with whieh this defendant is charged, is the killing of a human being when committed from a deliberate and premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed or 1 do not charge other subdivisions of that rection. gentlemen, which, in my ———_—_ IP * beerer ” Ze aS sel | Hons com MURDER IN THE SECOND. Harry 8. Cornish, and then oub-/ Murder In the second degree is the) repeats the language which I | kilting of « human being when commit- firet count. | ted with a design to effect the death ‘The third count charges an assault of] of the person killed of of another, but) the sworn knowled: Without deliberation « premeditation. beer tm mind very ol and degrees of murd: THE WORLD: 8: PRISONER CONSOLING HIS pinion, do not have any application to charged OR ehoald | patisfaction Hy the dia | doubt before a verdict of gutity against rat and see- In the frat degree there must be a deliberate ‘RDAY EVBNING, FEBRUARY 10, 19 AYS GOFF TO THE JURY; q ! | brough came to tive jon this date, On Koch received Peop! with envelope bearing Jan. 31, 1.90 1M, 18M. The Recorder read the exhibit let- ters sent to medical companies and accurately described the measure- ments of the real H. C. Barnet for comparison with those given in the famous diagnosis letter, ’ HEILES’S PART. In August of the same year Mamie Melando first saw similar 4 Ne ‘nibits Db, oe nnd td thePSe. room in Newark. I presume WIFE. Dr. Hitchcock was At the same time ¥ that Cornish was ik, ‘ornieh gave Dr, Hitchoock the bettie {out of which (he bromovseltaer bad taken, the voitie-no der and ihe original Wrapper. Mrs, Rogers placed the glass And spoon on the top shelf of the china closet In the dining-room and locked the door of the closet, and the glass and taken out until Jan. 6 deiivered to Detective with Mra. Belli fet, silver bottle-holder was not the de- ne 4 18, J fen . joseph . Exhibit 41 Prime,! On the same oy (Deg, 2) Molineux the postmark went on his way from Newark, that is) the usual time for his leaving for New York was about 4 or 4.9) o'clock In the afternoon, were two trains, It a Newark at 4 he could get to New York at 4.9. If he left at 4.90 he would get to New York at & It Is onl; 4 few minutes’ walk from the Cortlandt Mreet ferry to the Bixth avenue station. The defendant's whereabouts would be he same on that day except Friday and lay. HIRING LETTER-BOX. On Friday he would go over to the office on Pearl street and make up the y roll, and on Saturday ha would eave @ little earlier. Dee. 21, about 5.45 On the same day, or 6 P. M. a man called on Joseph Koch, at 16 Broadway and rented a letter-box in the name of “H. Cornish,” and was box 10. On Dec. Exhibit D, written on egg blue paper with three interlaced creacents was received at the office of Kutnow Bros. #13 Broadway. ‘This ie the letter: nae & sample o! and oblige, Yours, “Gente—Please send salts to 1690 Broadway H, Cornish.” The prosecution contends that the renting of the letter-box on Dee. 21, at 1080 Broadwi by the man under the ind that on the Ash, later on that day, Dec, 28, saw MelIntyre at the Criminal Cours and 19 o'clock. Mr | Building vecween 1 Later on Cornish visited the office of |Jobn H. Yooum at 2 ard ® erry «tee! about 2 o'clock in the afteraogn, Then Corniah called oy Lows i. Coffin at [es ce. He was very pale. Later on. at about 4) A. M.. Howard Adams, the son of the d womal saw on the sideboard of the dining- room a spoon, and {na glass was some- thing resembling sails, The giass and spoon wereput In the closet and we: taken away by eer Cary three four days later. CORNISH ILL IN BED. OMcer John H. Palmer went to Dz. saeroneie house and got exhibit A, which ts the polson pac! » the bottle and the bottle-holder, gave it to Dr. Weston, the Deputy Coroner. Abo 6 o'clock on the evening of this «i Mr. Yocum saw Cornish in bed sick, Yocum's voom at the Knickerbocker | Athietic Henry A. King also saw | Cornish in bed in Yocum's room in the club-house. Patrick J. Finneran also saw Cornish sick in bed in Yocum’s reom in the club-house and sat,up wid | bim thet night and the following night, Dr. Wendell C. Phillips attended Cor- nish at the Knickerbocker Athietlc Club, He says that Cornish was suffering 2 fendant's you will remember that refers to the “blue paper with the tei-erescent. e Bummer of the same year the defendant studied singing with’ Htussell {in Newark. In the same season, June, July and August, Mrw. Bellinger and Miss Moneces ib went away together. Up to that Ume Miss Chesebrough had occupied the seoond-story room. James J. Hudson test thee a package came addressed to H. C. Bar- het, at Barnet's office in the Produce Exchauge, with the colored wrapper, three or four inches long and an inch or two wide. And Hudson saw Bai open the package, and it contained @n nner box with Some cotton ‘end pink and red capsules in one of the | In September of the sine neux became endayed to MI name of “H. mim, next day exhibit D. which has just been read to you, written on -blue Paper. with crescents, was recelved at boxes. | the office of Kutnow Hros., 813 Broad. [eer Moll-| way. And remember that the letter of jos Chese- request that a sample of salts be sent to the box mentioned in the name of “H. Cornish,” i ober af the same year Mamie | Melando testified that she saw half a! Cornish way downtown from 3% until dozen sheets of the creseent paper in! nearly 6 on that day. Molineux's room in the factory. RECEIVING THE POISON. 8 took three sheets, leaving three sheets. | From Oct. 1 to Oet, 5 of the same year from an irritant poison. On the same ited Molineux at the New York, On Dec. 2% Cornish received a pack-| ay Dr. Louis A, Coffin treated Cornish ‘ub and had @ conversation | age-the patson pgyckage—through the| at the Knickerbocker Athletic Club. Harpeter, People's ,Exhth!c 4 mati, On that day, and after recelving|that day John F, Molntyre saw a /it, Cornish showed It to Patrick J. Fin- | identified the dead’ body of Mrs, Adame | That ts the Jacobs letter which was| nin his office, and you wit re- at 61 Weat ele dag street, On the written at the request of the defendant | member what he said when he rceived | same Andrew Bustanob by Helles and wigned by Charles Jacobs. | {t the Knickerbocker Remember that Jacobs letier, gentlemen Athi defendant's 13, a fac-aimile “tL wonder what this can by? Seas erties 01 A re “Mewra Brod, Stearns & Co., 41g Cormiah's roo Doltie-naliee whieh | WHR ERDtbit 12 f the por Mich Corntan had just received by mail, ary |*0 package. You remember that. \ We are about to employ|aien the wrapper On the: same. day] Then be went to John D. Adams, bs your former salesmen, Mr. A. J.|jarer on in the Knlekeroockur Athietie| Secretary. of the. club, and~ ident 4 Harpster in a very reapmatble position | Club Ge 0 Many writings ax made by Moline where tt wil be necediar: q lub George A, Salmon testtiied Cornish de by Molineux, andie cash for him to) showed him and friends a silver lott'c.| On Dec. 2 the resemblance betw ws he refers us to you! hoider and bottle which he aald he hee) Exhibit 12 and the defendant's writ! der it a t favor If| just received by mail. | fi ck John D, Adams, He hi # what Information you!” Henry H Watherepoon, fr. tertile’ then seen the original poison pac ean 4 him. You may rest agsured! that between 10 and | he rame idress, Exnibit A. Give me defe: Hhat it will be kept strictly confidential. | date, Dee. Zl. he saw, Je-holder Exhibit 12 ‘This t# a cut from & Thanking you in advance for your reply. | and hottle 1a Corn! n at the aper which I have just referred e CHAB. JACOBB & CO, Ir ls a ¢ of the address on the never the opportunity offers | to reciprocate pees command us On May 18—Chor. Jacobs testified that on that day he signed People's Exhibit wat read to you at the request of elles “0 On the same day, Dec. 2 Frederick | Stearns & Co, of ‘Detfroit,” Mich. re-| | ceived People’s Exhibit 5 Prime fot ex- ; amination. This letier, gentlemen, war r. | received by. Frederick Btearns & Co. : “Gentlemen: Mr. A. A. Harpster ha poison packs, M’CLUSKY SEES CORNISH. On Dec. 2, the day following, Capt. MeClusky and a stenographer went to applied to me for 4 position as collector,|see Cornish and took his x WENT TO MOLINEU: | He did, ugt refer to you. but, he men-|On the sume date Officer Palmer gave toned having beer employed by Dr. Weston Exhibit A. the poison pact k- ee addrers, and also the bottle holder nd that smell blue bromo seltzer bot- The bottle was then nearly filled On th esame date the just been read tearnn & “A line from you will be con confidential and “Yours truly, Sterns & “160 Broadway, N.Y. with a whilish powder. On the same the malls Both this exhibit and People's Ex-|day Dr, ‘on gave Capt. McClusky een Sere 06 oe cae sain ewer hibit 8 for identification, the Jacobe let- | the poison addres« and the bottle holder. | {Regan Chasten cAsota fer. were anewered. Heople's Wixhiblt ¢/ On the name day De Weston per. mast mot gee that! pravity and disregard of human life, or > the fet lor. cation war rent in answer {0 | for an autopry on Mrs, Adame ant a “Inet Keep it form containing 3 | power e Judietousty or adble| while in tne commission of felony, but | Just Nevt ‘a boat tibwee to Ranier’ E yu remecnber Me oneane tc'Bt Wear Finy-thind © trartly, Whatever verdict th: | in elther of those cases an intent to take | ton bust. these letters, gentlemen. street nnd placed them in's refrigerator Ot. Dr, Wendell C. calle¢ to nee Heat ¢: Krickerbueker Athletic Ci controlling quea- | Dr. las was called same day wy bis ts fred 7 Nov. Ellison, « nome powter t |there and the refrigerator was sealed. In Dr. Weston's opinion Mra, Adams's {death resulted in polson from hydrocye ante acid. or one of ite salts, TAKEN TO WITTHAUS, = be Im aecordance with the) 4 life is not though murder proof of the case and with thele| may be commit belief of ite force, | There is one great | ten upon which hinges this whole case. FOUR PROPOSITIONS. KEY TO THE CASE, Before proceeding to a consideration the defendant direct and send of any of the testimony, and in onder 2 package to Cornish? to avold contuston of ideas, it ls neces- ry, THE VON MOHL LETTER. On was received from i Oe Ras eto Dae wi On the rame day Weston sam Corniah men remember the 1 in Yocum's room. Later on same which wan received and afterward given | day f he. Did the to the police. If he did not, that disposes of all other bec Bi Cornish first spoke to Mrs, find r- | nary that you should have the definite questions, and he should be acquitted; ® Dr. te me a sre, about a present | chased, and cn the aame day Capt. Mo- of fa ‘UPS but if, with crlminal fiftent, he dt- of eHalth that eet bee he had receiv: On . %& Joseph J.) Clusky went with Carey to Corntsh’s room and took Cornish'’s statement, over his diphtheria and Koch saw Feople Exhibit 58 prime for Barnet died. On the same day Dr. | identification in hi lace of business. Smith was called into consultation and) That ts one of the letters which he re- |of facts which must be proven to your and beyond a reasonable re. Cort nd sent the package of poison to and Mrs. Adame pirtook of It “ | Pr nd died (rom its effects, chen he should |found that Barnet had no evidence of | ceived in his place and gave to the Po- this defendant can he rendered. These be convicted. Giph eria except a soreness of the ton- | It pve) TBs uct x rected to facts are If a man with intent to kill a partiew-| On Nov. 10 Berfnet dled and on the Dec. # Cornish played billiards First, that the defendant direet- jar man fires at him and by mistake Jeath certificate wan sent | with Harry A. K in the evening until } [_—SSSSS SS ten at KnicRerbocker Ath: e4@ and sent to Cornish through the buliet strikes oad kills another per- palt-paet On the name day, later, C a preeen nate basi te hes the matie a package which he *0n agtinst whom he has no Ii will, he aetenaamt nish took’ the bottle-holder ‘to th wi \e aecon ree a | aol as wn in|ame flai, where he . aaa * | GUILT IS THE SAME. Smee my | sliver hotueharder, on'oat muon her ’ that he directed and allver bottleholder, on thal i Y. rom | |, |apartments, Cornish showed the bottle $ Le * | ment the package with | go it a man pute polaon Into frult with MADE CYANIDE OF MERCURY. |holder and the bottle that It contained | the intent that a particular person wn ys 3 < econ, toe Arther | te, ber, and per te. also showed Tf the design to kill be formed, de- inst mn he may have enmity shall La o Fase 2 Newark. ' the ai mn pe liberated upon and ite execution pre meditated. it ie murder in the fire free. But if the design be formed with: Out deliberation or premeditation and) pe, immediately carried out, it 1s murder in| gy the second degree. DESIGNED IN SECRET. A person who has « fixed purpose to commit a crime generally In the accomplishment of his purpose he may, by his own acts, reveal the hidde workings of his mind from the jnception of the design to the final act of its ac complishiment What would consittute a determined OF premeditated design? The Cou quote from the opinion of Judge John conceals it. | of eat i, and another person should eat the fruit and dle, against whom he has no enmity and whom he does not intend | to kill, the person who placed the poison that Cornish reee! subsequently 8 contents On Dec, 10 the defendant wi to orria HM an about the manufacture of enamel. we aay the firm, who manufactured cyanide of mercury Tecelved Exhibit 1, in consequence of} Wien be had fecelved by mall to MRS. ADAMS'S DEATH, — | ‘The mext day, Dec. 2, Cornish @ heaping teaspoonful from the beste packn, to Mr Cure Pain in the J, Adame. in that fruit ia guilty of marder as If he} which thelr salesman called on the de-| A uy | fend ‘at the fact ff Morris Herr-| Dr. Hitchcock called at the home of | Fourth, that Mrs, Katherine J, ltended to kill the person who actually | HA8h f) UNveral days after the re-| MPs. Stomach and Distress Adams about 93) A. M. on tet eolpt of letter, and had a conversa-| day. He found Mrs. Adgms on the sofa ton with thle defendant about the man-| breathing stertoriously, Bre (ad 4 pec re of this enamel, Here is the og pallor, rk-blue color a flick: Nd eat tt And around that which | have said the wh Adame drank | portion ao ® diluted form the . that It contained controlling question, iv After Eating. ing pulse, no vomit. He gave her a pol Molent to destroy human upon es all the es one of | Hypolermie infection and used artinetal | | tte, dled from the effects at the | Fesplration, 10cents and2s cents, Drugeists sil Later on, In about an hour, Mrs. | Of auch potson and thet her death was due to ne ether enn her drath was not due to any nmi vr radiate iF, BY HUSTLING-- advanced by }the pe . he did rend j the poleon sh. and second, that Mts. Adams took the poison and died mall order. “urine the week of Dec. 12, 1608, Mr. Koch first eaw the defendant at his place, 169 Broadway, between 9 and 10.3) S| If those four propeattions be proven | from It In (he _morni | Appeals ik quoted 28 an aULDOr ye een aen by the prusccathey Tu prove the first proposition a great] "on Dec. 21 Joseph Farrell saw Mol- must be obeyed, and it fx a law which : bi mass of testimony has been Introduced] ineux on Market street, Newark, N. J.. te binding upon courts and juries, The| MexR? a rear Ae oe om, you ate may | clrcum-| going toward the factory between 2.9) case of the People against Conroy, 1] Pender | vert murder jo prove the sec-|and 346 P.M. In the first degree agulnst this defend: | an been given. ‘1 Emm , ier &: that she sold the silver bott Hole ran mah at h of those en is a question r and proper understanding as to non ae Pais if a be ne . oven to yates . the store of Heridegan & Co. ‘Newark: | ' be ee on | Ratiefaction and beyond a able ich you alone can answer, the man to whom to form a dena co take life. nnd to|€0ubt you are to renter x verait of] Befere pregectinng furthes, wpem thie ign put that design into execution by deg Mo: Rullty In his fay | 30a ‘about “ireumatantiad evidence. HH HHH stroying life, there te suMci o | crue’, ae BOON 80) Hee meta tary," OOFF'S HYPOTHETICAL QUES*| acai, ee mae matter whether the design i» formed at the instant of for months. follewrs immediately.” cumstances, the time ampie, adopting plan of method used and judge there-| for the purpose of taking her a deitberate or A forcible and flexible design is supplied by oup- posing the case of a man who procures | d A revolver, purchases ammunition, loads it and ies in wait to kill his vietim; or of a man Who procures polson, pre- ree it, a@apte ft to the form or sub- mtn isters it or causes it to be administered! That if the defendant sent the poison from whether here wi premeditated design to kil! ance which te deceptive and with the Intest to kilt There the juty may find in the prep- | 0. Jo Mrs. Adi PAT | aration the precautions against detec: [COMME gave the polson to Mrs. Adame evidence of delibera- vinetng ton into design to bill THE LAW ON THE CRIME. If the Jury be satisfied that murde: within its power to determine which the degrees he is guilty of eo dec! Bee by thelr verdict. they must giv: 1t, and proceed to consider the ond degree. ind tf catteied te guilty te that degree their verdict accorMiagty. Bet the Ld keew they a vordtes of wt 4 striking the fatal blow .or whether it was contemplated It i enough that the in tention precede the act, although that It fe therefore incumbent upon you, . to carefully weigh and con. nas {poison to her and bwen committed by the defendant, {i is) and it makes no difference whether Cor- If, after qlcase are sufficient to constitute the careful consideration of the evidence, | crime. a they are satisfied that he committed] The test, gentlemen, is the criminal murder in the first degree they should | intent at the time the act is dope, And they have = reasonabie| of « human being by a particular means, Aoedt ne to bie gailt im that degree|*"4 that means afterward caused the im the heneaet of | {78th of another person than the one he} tame as if the Intented vietim had TION. Here it is quite natural that you will) ask (he Question, which T will put Into] mury weeks. form for you in order that my instruce tlora will be made more clear Here'the Recorder revbewed the evs Assuming that the defendant sent the | dence of the quarrels between Coraieh, poison to Cornigh wit! the intent tO] aq Molineux, and the cireu Kil him, there is no evidence that he aj intended 1 to be given to Mra. Ad of their troubles in the Kaickerbocker Athlette Club. How MRS. MOLINEUX NAMED. then can he be held responsible for ihe In the Pall of 197, Molineux pregentes “hesebrough. the the rules of .aw whic govern tA ard by you, weeks here in It.Is a Common the death of Mr. Adame, whom he did nor intend to kill, while (he man whom se intend to kill ts living? Barnet to Mins € ame part of the ye Look a note Now, to that question, which I tnink | can fairly assume ts fn the mind of each 2 BL Weat Beventy-Oitn defendant, and ten and every one of you gentlemen, and it {9 & most important one in this case, 1 will anewer: to Cornish with intent to kill him, and in the manner described and as a re sult whe died of that potron, the de- fondant Is responsible for her death the same as ff he had originally sent the intended to kill her, AT MRS. BELL’S. Molineux had in i, club Viotly (> cals time, Ue At ts testl~ hed. that from this day to + Wiltam Williams was with the ant several times tn ihe a or Not. The intents of the | Mary Hell, 31 West Seventy- {| nish be Ih if that intent was to destroy the life intended, murder is committed the taken the potson intended or adopted

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