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\ w ( } j ~ { ne OF THE’ TRIAL OF THE Seeeeccnne ASSASSIN TO-MORROW’S WORLD. NIGHT EDITION. VERBATIM REPORT che “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ Sia PFD ZEA EN a lid 19) RACING-BASEBALL VERBATIM REPORT OF THE TRIAL OF THE PRESIDENT’S ASSASSIN IN. TO-MORROW’S WORLD: ees ONE CENT. NEW YORK, MOND. AY, | ‘ EPTEMBER 23, 1901. = PRICE ‘ONE CENT, “JURY NAMED, PROSECUTION OPENS CASE _ASSASSIN'S SWIFT TRIAL “SCHLEY OBEYED SAMPSON’S ORDERS AND IS NOT SUBJECT TO CENSURE. The Admiral’s Counsel | Reveals One of the Probable Lines of De- fense. Commander Heilner|’ Tells the Story of Brooklyn’s | Famous Loop. At the Schley inquiry to-day Lieut.- Commander Heilner, of the Texas, } was the prigcipal witness. He testified that the official chart describing the Brooklyn's famous loop at the batle of Santiago was inaccu- rate, Mr. Rayner, of counsel for Admiral Schley, said that, notwithstanding the strenuous efforts of Capt. Lemly to keep Admiral Sampson out of the con- troversy, he would inevitabl: be brought into it, not for. the purpose of criticism, but ‘for the purpose of showing that Admiral Schley had merely obeyed the orders of his supe- rior officer, Admiral Sampson, in do- ing what he had done. re "Ipdge: Wilson sald: “We propose té"show ‘that*Admiral Sampson was never in the fight off Saritiago at all, and. on that account Admiral’ Schley had the responsibility of command _ thrust upon him.” mander Hellner, of the Texas, in his tes- tirony at the afternoon seasion of the Schley Inquiry, sald that the oficial chart made the Brookiyn go half a mile out to sea in making Its famous loop. Ife sald the crart was not accurate on that point ‘At the time, he suid, the Texas was cing at the rate of about twelve knots an hour. ‘The witness stated that he had not in his examination In chief meant to ssy that the stip had lost three miles fm as many minutes, but that In all, that much time had been lost A Slap at Rayner. “I saw a bright smile on your face added the witness io nd thought you misun- when T said Mr. Rayner, erstood.”” ‘Thereupon all laughed, @f the Court Ir-cluded. ‘The witness was asked by Mr. Rayner concerning the stoppage of the Texas when the Brooklyn appeared in front rhe signals.” witnessed an- red, to ‘slow, ‘stop’ and Shack,’ one right on top of the other, before 1 could say a word In between.’ ‘Does anything appear? in your log about that?” asked Mr. Rarnor:i “Nothing,” answered the w! @as not on the log. I can ta youl hy Qt was not—because Capt. Philip said he did not Iike to have anything in it. I swore to the Judge-Advocate of tiie court that I would not bring up a dead | man to substantiate anything I sald and | that I would not bring up this point, | and‘I am sorry I brought {t up, but Capt. Philip sald he would not put it in his ‘official report. I hope I can get gome one to substantiate me on that point, because therc was another gentle- man In the cabin when he made his| oficial report.” Danger of Co § you brought up \¢ “hilip, the state. ment he made about the danger of col- the members WASHINGTON, Sept. : st ae IE “Do you recollect, . Hé spoke to me hundreds of times about it." lere are his own words, ir. President, we object to reading from magazines. Mr, Rayner—I am not going to read from it. I do not Intend to read from the magazine except for my own In- formation, Here is what Capt. Philip says. Do you recollect Capt. Philip ever aaying that ‘the collision which seemed to be! Inents even if {t was-not, was averted?" “No, Ido not pecollact it," witness. 4 Impeded the Fleet, ‘Referring again-to the cruise to San- tlago, the witness sald he knew that the Eagle had impeded the speed on- that ttip. He also ‘recalled that that vessel had been sent away the next day, He replied the , Temembered also that the collfer:Merri- mac had broken down after the tour to the westward from Santiago on May 27, On redirect examination Commander. msi ipee caald achat the aquadron had SEDISLOMIIASEL SO ISLOOATS: OEOCOSs REAR-. ADMIRAL BENHAM TAKING NOTES AT OETA i PUPOTADOBITSLOTIOTSE EET: TROOPS, ASKED T QUELL MINERS ARMED KENTUCKY STRIKERS SHOT AT GUARDS. Riddied a House with Ballets and Terrorized NX Men. MADISONVILLE, Ky., Sept. 23.—The Governor has been appealed to for troopa to hold in check the turbulent} coal mine strikers. As the result of an armed atigck by a nquad of strikers! to-day, Judge J. Nunn ha# wired Gov. Beckham as follows: “It Is my opinion that the troops are | ©" needed here at once to preverve the) peace.” At an early, hour, tHe strikers opened | five on Relnécke Mines from a-grove sO yards off, and gradualif came nearer, terrorizing the non-union mén. One squad of twenty-fye or thirty strikers stood within fifty yards of the main road and shot at a guard who Wan pa- trolling in, front of a row of miners’ houses. The house nearest the ‘strikers was riddled with bullets The reniatance by the strikers to-day was the most determined yet offered, WEATHER FORECAST. + Worecant-for the thirty-vic York Uily and viclaliy: Fate ¢ ‘POWERS TO PUT. | BROOKLYN YS. C VS. CINCINNATI DOWN ANARCHISM RUSSIA AND GERMANY LEAD |lyns his He for five runs. IN THE MOVEMENT. Common Mensares W Re Taken COPENHAGEN, Sept, thoritatively announced that the Rus- sian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Count | Lamsdorf, and the German Imperial | Chancellor, Count ven Buelow, at their ponfererces agreed upon common es to be taken wgainwt Anar- and that they are now communt- the powers on the subject. lorf€ and Count von Hue- 1 to completely suppress —Otto Pauyr, the "e Leben, the Anarch- reappeared Saturday for some time, has been arrested, ar the Issue of the paper, which was de- sted chiefly to articles In connection As been confiscated, Neues Leben, Saturday, NEITHER JUMPS NOR DROPS, but daily, regularly, month In and month out, in New York City ‘circu- lation The World maintains a lead. of tens. of thousands over any other ‘ paper. 23—It is aue on had been suspended INQUIRY. CINCINNATI, Sept. 23.—In the fifth inning the Brooklyns enjoyed a batting bee, and before three men had been put out they had scored eleven runs. the box and Sudhoff went mitonaten In the sixth the Brook- Bon en tcrnsing anabie valor in Broo! nm an jueens. BROOKLYN ....... 0700611 520 025 When the underground in Manhat- INCINNATI Soba Hee v4 At Chicago—End fifth i inning: Chicago, 1; Philadelphia, 3. At St. Louis—End of third i inning: St. Louis, 6; Boston, 2. 2oeoaace | This delegation, headed by Councilman IKIMBALL INDICTED FOR BANK WRECK. Ex-President of Seventh National Arraigned, Together with Receiving Teller and Frank | Poor—Under Heavy Bonds. for cone | Wiliam 1 Kimball, Frank 8. Poor firm of Henry Marquamt & Co )und Gamaliel 8, Rose were arraigned! spiracy agalnat the United States, under before Jus Adams, In the United | section 0, Revised Statutes, States District Court, tn the Federal, ‘The second Indictment was against Bullding, at 2.30 this afternoon to plead) W. H. Kimball. President, and € jto indletmenta which had bee: 8 se, receiving teller, of ¢ against them on Sept. 11 in enth National Bank, for unlawful cer with the wrecking of the Seventy Na- the checks of Henry Mar- tonal Bank Kimball wax the President the wrecked ‘bank and Rose was the recel whlle Poor was of dictment was againat W. ividually as President of recelving fictitious obll- the bank unt firm of Marquand & | gations mplicated in tie fli } Mr Baldwin asked that Mr. Poor'n onal, Vall be fixed at $10,000 and Mr. Rose's Were represented BY mball'a batt 1, while former Judge the frat in- . Oleott represented Poor. After an extended argument bul was (| fixed at $2,000 for Kimball, $10.00) for Poor and %,00 for Rone. Edward Wardwell and W. W. Pea- hody were accepted as bondemem for Kimball, Samuel Beis for Poor and John A. Sul! for Rose. Ost. ‘as fixed aw the cay for the three to plead to the indictments found, ‘@ | against them. + 5,000 on the second and $10,400 ie third. Lauterbach at first opposed the propoaition to put Mr. Kimball's bond at 320,00), but acceded later without angu- ment. Mr. Olcott, for Manager Poor, of Marquand & Co., objected to his client's bond being placed ‘at a larger figure than that of Recelving Teller Rose, who was an official of the bank. Assistant District-Attorney Ba'dwin He mid that a jury might be influ- 4 oie) that the Indictments were: enced by this fact, although the oniy One for conspiracy sgainst Kimball! grime that Mr. Poor appeared to he and Poor. { wUNty, of sam borniwlog all ‘the. money: One for overcertificatton of checks} qe could, ogainst. Kimball and Rose. S Attorney Lauter refused to One for neglect of duty In permitting “mitsals ipllpitd> tocmaxe a statement fraud agalnet Kimball individually...) the newsnapete, to} Mr, Baldwin addressing thé Cour: We don't kriow yat what the ‘inal te said there were thr indictments. | ment- charg he sald, “and-until we The first was againet W. H. Kimball, | do, there {@ nothing we have to say of the bank. and /abour the Seventh Nattonal Bank uf- partner of the fairs." former Préatdent Frank P. Poor, junior VAN WYCK TALKS ON PUBLIC NEEDS. “When the Tunnel and New Bridges .Are Completed the City Will Have Spent $80,000,000." Mayor Van Wyck found time thi Miraberu L. ‘Towns and Karl to speak quite extendediy on th | President of the Schwaben lon of the city's Indebtedness an@ im-|Sirging Soc aaked that the plot st provements at a hearing he granted a|Knickersockor avenue, Myrtle avenue delegation of residents of the Twenty-| and, Bleecker street be made a public elghth Ward, in Brooklyn. Bp is pince is now a rubbish heap, and 7 the delegation told the Mayor that it cculd be made presentable and a de- clded improvement for 1.ot over $7,000. The Mayor acid he telleved it would benefit the neighborhocd, and then satd: “We've got to provide $45,000,000 to complete the subway to Brooklyn and the three bridges now bu'lding over the Eant River. These are the improve- ments necessary to Brooklyn's develop- ment, and it is my hope that there Stimmel was then taken out of 1 wit be completed. The only hope for tan‘ and the Bronx {8 completed and we have the tunnel to Brooklyn and the 3 open to traMc, the clty | spent $50,000,000 for better cilities. “This {8 a great burden 0001003 06 AMERICAN LEAGUE GAMES. Fifth Race—Cambrian 1, Sixth Race—Aladdin 1, Stella:Perkins 2, Lysbeth 3. ¢$e—__-_ AT DELMAR. Fourth Race—Kindred 1, At Baltimore—First Game—Milwaukee, 4; Baltimore, 5. Second Game—Milwaukee, 5; Baltimore, 4. At Boston—First Game—Detroit, 5; eee 4. Second Game—Detroit, 9; Boston, 2. At Washington—First Game—Cleveland, 6; Washington, 3 Second Game—End seventh: Washington, 3; Cleveland, 7. At Philadtiphia—Chicago. —eee LATE RESULTS AT GRAVESEND. Sixth Race—Belle of Troy. 1,/McAddie 2, Agnes D. 3. ——— + 0 AT HAWTHORNE. economizing supply money for these great undertak. The vridge to Broadway would in ready for uso now had tt nN we were unable to provide eeesee money promptly at one \ BETTOR WAS ROBBED. Brooklyn MM Lost Money Vivced on Hie Bulldog. Jacob Mauze, of No. 3% South Second street, Brooklyn, anxious to back the| Pedigree of his brindle bulldog, pro- + [duced % when challenged by strangers Be met at Ainsley and Keap atreets, and was knocked down and robbed of the money. Inthe Tae Avenue Court he charged John ey, old, of No, 174 Hoj » 3 Philadelphia, 5. > to-day, twenty: years street, and James | Physicians Testify to the Nature of the Wounds per-? jcourt during the morning session, | but was restrained by the detectives Ws; on either side of him. The tacident heck E. Everett, was so slight that ft did not attract Sanyo general attention. Benjamin C. Ralph, After the twelfth ‘uror had been|@ Sank cashier. ‘chesen Justice White asked the Dis- Samuel P. Waldo. Murderer oh prone McKinley. Listens Unmoved to. His Accusation. and a Crowd Lingers Outeide the Court- Wouse Until Court Is Adjourned. In the trial of President McKinley's assassin at Buffalo today, the jury was chosen-in two hours, and before an adjournment was taken at 4 o'clock this afternoon the State had almost presented alk of its case, Drs, Gaylord, Mynter and: Mann gave interesting testis mony regarding the autopsy and the bullet.wonnds. ‘ The assassin maimains his stolid, indifferent de rmeanor, but showed the trrst indication of interest when the tirst witnesses testi- fied. i It was his intention to make some sort of speech to the Court this morning, but Justice White was speaking at the time and the guards restrained him. A large crowd that thronged the streets about the Court:Hote go in the morning remained all the afternoon, but were kept back by a strong detachment of police., STATE RECITES THE STORY. OF PRESIDENT’S MURDER. Naebcial to The Ei By BUFFAIO, Sept. 23-In. less as MEN WHO WILL JUDGE ASSASSIN. Frederick V, plumber. Richard J. Garwood. sireet raé-wzy foreman Harry W. Wendt, man- ufactarer, Silas Carmer, farmers ~ Fames S. Stygall, jr» plumber. Wi.iiam Loton, farmer. to try the assassin of President Mc- | Kinley, Robert J. Adams, a con- tractor, the twelfth man, was ac- cepted at 2.45 o'clock. They are a/ grave, intelligent-looking body of men, who seem to realize fully the) greve responsibility resting upon them. The assassin wanted to address the Laver, trict-Attorney what time he deemed would be necessary to present his casc. Mr. Penney eald he believed the prosecution could present its czse by to-morrow noon. Mr. Titus in answer to a question from the presiding Judge sald that it would be absolutely !mpossible to say how much time the defense would con- Andrew F. Smith, Foachim H. Mertens, dealer in boots and shoes. Robert F. Adams, con- tractor. other and the : : welts polished shoe sume a on mans fea Ee aoc swinging negligently. mined by the turn the case migi There is something remarkable take. about the countenance of this strange mau, His face is a. youthful, al- most boyish one, His skin is smooth, healthy and rather fair. There is not the slightest mark of dissipation, The First Witness, As Chief Engineer A. J. Flelds, of the Pan-American Exposition, told of the*écenes In the Temple of Musia when he- went there’ to make the measurements from which the floor plan of the building was drawn the prisoner listened in rapt attention The strain or the temperature of the court-room was telling, for his cheeks were coming to a pronounced glow, and on a couple of occasions = he pulled a handkerchief from the side pocket of his sack coat (oa wiped his face. Prosecution Opens. Without further delay Frederick W. Haller, the Assistant District-At- terney, went before the jury and de- liberately and in low tones opened the case by reciting the story of the shooting of President McKinley; told of the gathered throng In the Temple of Music and of the approgch of the long line of people who came to shake the hand of the President. “And we wil prove to you beyond ¢ shadow of a donbt,” sald Mr. eration and preparation. “We will prove how this man sought hia place in line, how he had concealed in his hand the cove ered revolver, and how, when the dent extended bis hand in ing, the defendant fired the shot which on Se, 3 Intd Firat tigns of Interest. from which| Following the testimony of Mr, elty on the! Fields, Mr, Bliss testified to taking morning of Sept. 1 photographic pictures of the Tenipte Assassin Indiderent. of Music, and then Dr. Harvard:Gay> While Mr. Haller talked the eyes! jord, a young surgeon, was called, of many turned toward the prisoner.| Dr, Gaylord performed the autopsy, There were many in the court who) upon the body of President McKinley, > thought that the calm and deliberate} and. as he told of the wounds, the’ recital of the bloody deed would pos-} agsassin leaned forward in hig ch sibly have some effect upon him.| and showed some real interest for His eyelids fluttered once, bis throat] first time. moved as though he were swallow-! He listened to every word it! he died In Vuleain 2, Boney:Boy 3. Rygn, twenty-four, of No. 7 Devoe atreet, with being two of the men. Both were held for examination. i ee Bright people get good positions {sree through Sunday World Wants. 'f you seek help a Sunday World Went Kazan’2, Attelle 3. svill find {t for you. % } ing. Then he was calm again. When] by the young surgeon and the a map of the floor of the Temple of! spiration came out on face ani Muste was hung on a board at the/ head, A court attendant, carrying witness stand the assassin looked at] large ginss of water, passed: it with seeming absorbing interest. - prisoner. ant He sat with one leg crossed over the He mailed pe th v