The evening world. Newspaper, February 11, 1907, Page 2

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Sourt Stops, made by Thaw to his wife. The Court also cautioned Mr. Dol | questions were too leading. “Honor,” replied the prisoners: “chiet attorney, In that care it M1 be necessary for me to frame a different lino of examination for. the now on the stand aud {!kewlse to introduce more oxpert avidence “Evelyn: Thaw. left the stand. still pouting and evidently bewildered by i thane of technical arguments that had gone on about her, The prin- been biting bis pails nervously, and when he got up to leave the b he was stil chewing })19 fingers. It was stated in. the ecurt-room after the question concernini “ple dinner’. was ruied out that this pacchanalian feast e1 “Jimmy” Breese, one of Stanford White's society pals. White as fone of the diners who witaensed the spectacle of a girl Dreaking thro he pls trust. “It is stated on authority: that tha irl: wey 6 Mise, Jobnaon, i that sho tet, the sante fate at White's hands that (yrmed the crux of ‘Thaw's testimony last Thursday. ‘The girl tn dead. - to io ran a boarding-honee-at No. 208 West Firty-fourth street. haw’s Will the Issue _ at Morning Session. ‘The first witness cafied when the Thaw trial was resuned to-day was - fobn D. Lyons, of Pittsburg, a banker. He testified tha he received the kage’ containing the he defendant's, ‘ill from Thaw and bat. kept it con- r...Delmas argued that through the thatthe defendant's will wnae os existence peters the willing of me contended ‘that, ax no evidence so far had been introduced to ee- the unsoundness of the prisoner’s mind, the will wouid not be ad- when evidence of mental incapacity had gone on record the document ald. go in for the purpose of corroboration. mheretore said. che Court, he clined to sustain the ‘prosecutor. ‘To pte, Thaw's ‘chief counsel replied that, in his opinion, test!mony ready been. presented as proof of. the defendant's mental weakness for Present, feline Jumps of his, <fiaw's own handwriting, ‘Alienist on Stand — et inet, Dr. Wagner, a handsome, steady-oyed, square-jawed man of forty-five maid ho lived in Binghamton, Ho wade his anzwers ina full, clear votve, speaking omphatically. “I om the superintendent, of tho State Asylum at Binghamton. On an g tho] @verage there’ are 1,400 patients under my care. I deve been connected with | had been that asylum since 1892. In addition I have visited many asylums in this apd other-countries, T have lectured on inaanity at Cornell University for igh five. years. I um families with the Hteteture on the subject of mental dle- orders. I have teatified ad an expert in various trials {np this Btate, having deen ‘called officially by the Governor of ‘New, Yor to examine men under: sentence of death in Sing Sing. : “When did you frat meet Harry K, Thaw?" “On August” 21 of Jast yenr In the ‘Ton‘ps prison. ‘prison on Oct.8—In the theanwhlle—Y-yjatted him - several:_times— anid! examined ‘his mental and phystcal condition.” THAW WAS SUSPICIOUS. d “What did you obrerve’ his condition to be?” “On the first visit ¢.talked with him in a general way, but made, no to Thaw in Murderers’ Row. His English vocabulary \s Mmitod. For thfa I noticed that he was nervous and suspicious. scomodtearful-of—belng- declared insane and seai—to an seylum Oa a’ gene:n! o) nervations. second visit, which was on September if, na to the Tombs with Dr. Evans and two of Mr, ‘and Mr. .@leason.” "Did -you talk with Mfr, Thaw on your second visit to tho prison?". eatery eee objected to the testimony -of the witness, whero-|®8ked Mr, Delmas after a brisk dispute with Jerome. Theee little tiffs oc- the beginning of the week to-day. Wilbur Steele, who suffered from a cold Kern evidence {t could be curred to-day on an average of every three minutes, “Yeu,-atd the big, -brewny witness, ~l-tied-20-talk with-hins when” Courts Butiding fromthe Bronéway_Centrat Hotel with hts cleyen-fintes: suddenly he turned on his heel-and-jeft the-reom-—very abruptly.” ~~ “What was the cause of his sudden deperturo?” “Something that wes said actuated him,” TILT undéretaiid,”- sata or, Delmas's ignorance og expert’ testimony and by sugestion in the testimony of Evelyn ne mr ah Nn a nett Hn ~ i ie expert evidence ‘oferrad towns the testtmony of Dr. Charles H. SMr, Delmas ran on to eay that he hed an abundance of expert evidence serve and would procuco {t at what he considered a time more f° for duction than at t ¢ present stage of the proceedings. i Distr: .t-Attorney replied that he did not consider that the test!- trom the lips of Evelyn Thaw was good proof or even a good basis 94. the ‘Insanity alleged. Mr. Jerome considered both the will and "that should n jed_to..bean expert bad} to the ostabiishment of the Insanity allezed. oR ROME WITHDKAWS OBJECTION, arguments over the technical admissibility of the will as evidence ina three-cornored dobate betwoen tho Justice,’ the prosecttor oo: ‘Lyons.waa then allowed to say that he had known, Anis majority, (He is now thirty-six.) Somé timo prior to April 1,|‘ the young m"Uonaire had handed to him an envelope containing hia S Will aad testament. The witness hed long been familiar with young 's handwriting. He now fdentified the prisoner's writing on the —Tas-hanker=yetput the-witt-tn-a-safetepostt-vauit-—where-tt d-until last November, and he had turned It over tb his eenoe spe Sgave the document toMy. Gleeson. - = Fo ait this-‘Thew hnd listened with his dig, glass ‘raarble eyes set ina hypnotized stare, Occasionally, the glazed eyes ran over the court- nf oataloptic unseeing stare—n stare that might have belonged to a Saled figure in the Eden Musee. Once he glanced-back to the seat dehind td hoping to see his sisters, the Countess of Yarmouth and Mrs. =the-others-of his-kith-#nd—kin— at him from ie bie row OF halts 4 ~So- for the mke Ph phyateal contact. with some.fricndly presence tha Scprisoner_nestied closer to Dr, Evans, the mental expert, and Peabody, the | fingers as tf he had never seen them before. W's ALFENISTS THERE. Resides rans. Thaw's-two ae allemisis, Wagner and Hammond—were proue’s tite Sxperte, were notin they chatrs- wefthin, the railing. ‘ley: adgone upstairs to testify in the case of the Syrian who cut up ther ot i The “IHMouse of Troubic;*~ Aways, heretofore, tiey had sai hour , SolGblooded atid scientific, hold héir own on Harry Thaw’'e physical characteristics’as viewed fr aifwav—acrossthecourt-chamber. It was one of thedé ‘AMenists for Lhe | | Btrte who had declared, Evelyn Thaw was acting a part when she jeft the|t stand ot Thursday with the lookin ‘bor tace of ote who bad been drug.ed }‘ through the nethermost mit. 1. ~The Uttle lawyer from ‘Frisco hud kept pushing the District-Attorney GUE OF Wis Path Vuring the examination of the-banker,--fPwice when-Jerome ‘objected to the line of questioning, Delmus, with a temper as sweet as maple | rip and a voice like clover honey, made answers that caught his opponent Siso effectually that Jerome had nothing with which to come buck. “The District-Attorney asked Mr. Lyons if he had in his possession any | Vetiors of the prisoner. ‘There were some, the witness thought, in his bank | Pitteburg. The prosecutor sald he wanted the letters to produce them | evidence of the health or ill-health of the defendant's mind, © (Mr, Delmas objected that he had not questioned the banker concerning | i client's sanity, LETTERS MAY PROVE HIM CRAZY. “In my cross-exam{nation of tho. wilieess,’ said tie peop cou feudant ts crazy. The letters he has may belp us.’ Thaw's attorney did not object to the production C) York immediate ty upppn hia return to Pittsburg. The banker was oxen excused, ~— John B. Gleavon, the famous “bridge whist” attorney, who is now the ito the Thaw itn or Miwyers, was reqiested to stop on the stand “He swore that the will in issue had been delivered to him by Mr. ‘6 stenographer, 7) Mr, Gleagon further identified the will as the same which he nc from two sealed envelopes on Dec. 11, 1906, He tu:tifed that the|T Outer Wrappers. were tightly fastened at the e. He sald ithe papers! ‘fmd been in his possession ever since, untill he turned them g to the it officers as exhibits tn the case. He recognized’ the signature of one of the subscribing Bi t. haa | Jerome constantly on hook. veacent state of temper. ¥rom_the time Dr.-Waguer took: the stand, -Thaw had been huddled in his seat with his eyes down and hia sullen face flushed. like an overgrown | schoalboy—eaught at some forbidden prank. “Now at the clash of battle between jth? skirmishing lawyers, he raised hia head with a sheepishness mhich accentuated the look of a Iubberly lad, which. he often wears. DELMAS IN DEEP WATER. M opinion ~~ Jawyer, sometimes gnawing at his blunted nafls, sometimes staring at nis? tu Hong-the Mnes_of admission to the Thaw trial. in Mt Mr insanity apd “Then, ime of the shooting. JEROME VS. JEROME. Finally Mr. .Delmag took fromm Mr. Jerome an authority ho (the Dis- O'Reilly, one of the prisoner's counsel, was summoned from the court-room trict-Attorney) had quoted in the course of his objections, and interpreted and he Cats Mr. carneels through a private entrance to the court-room. the rulnginsuch.@manner agli turn. Mr. JSrOmnea: palut against the anise weeseen tiet=Attorney-nimeEe]f, The Atde Calfornien-made a eplendid rapress’ jug where the sympathy of the uasemblage lay, Delman was at Inst permitted to go “CiOHE jon by ‘What did you observe on the second visit?” asked Delmas. “fold on!” sald the Judge. Jd lat -what-you saw. think 60,” sald the keen-looking allenist, pol! “Thay-abcuptiz-departed,”” sting?" persisted Delmas. ‘Ooject!*-antd Jerome: Objection-susteined- seld-the iudge— Wo will stand bythe que as, stjll showing no heat. Observe) in my cent on the third yinit?™ “Tsay him this-time fa a room where a good Neht could fal ae bim! ng dbaloled me Mm the examination, Thera sue 16 phystea! GIRL-ON- RAMPAGE rE Na hie face Dr n_questions and answere. ation at thart-time." did you next see him?’ "Ow ime, we took up the physical elde of the inquiry, We examined the shape this head, contour of his head, the condition of hie lungs, the fon of the exes, the strength of lis hands and by other customary tests, he whole lastiug-for_over_an_hour, NION IS BARRED, “I heartily agree with the suggestion,” said His Honor, suet coulde't help it, Judge,” ata} ef Proteus and Anselm. Dozens of The Court then ordered a five miinutes' recess to ventilate the room. |Annie, vo tale with a prosouneed.ac- | ober craft participated tn the parade. || t defendant and the attorneys left the room, where | cont nea from St. ,| The King was escorted by » military i eee Bene! sep renee {Fla t main the insane ‘ward | parade to the Clty sia, where Martin 7 and then they put me In the alcohol nenraee handed over the keys of the AY 2 yard, an’ al) never took-a anne in petty Women Are Barred Besliae uaiestentnay Miss Smith, tho’ probatlor hero bore out the «irl's from the Court To-Day Terrible indeed was the disappointment encou frailbirds who assembled at the Criminal Courts Building ‘to- They entowhtered two insuperable obstacles, | One was a new rule, promulgated by Capt. Ricketts, of the Court Squad, Aplomat, There was no particular diMculty in spotting one of the femalo rallbirds, cor to the The women who attend criminal triats Jn order to hear the testimony and ely. we, nterod | oe es STnvab ite at Afternoon Session. Dr, Charles G, Wagner, tho alleniat, was tho firat witnoon of the after- | torney was agreeable to an adjournment, and o recess Beoh to be «lled by Mr, Delmas, The duy of the experts wae beginning 1 mw him last tt I diatinctly remember, T went jury, received word yesterday that, his wife had sustained a paralytic stroke. Dues evauyeres Mr. gaara Her condition is serious. Delis, "HE Tistice riled that ae cannot™ even state what Mr, Thaw sald on that occasion?” “No,;-no;—protested-Mtr- Jerome, Retting-on-hin-feet with one-of those “The record doesn’t show any such ‘thing."’ JUSTICE FITZGERALD RUFFLED, “I_eannot_help what counsel says,"' snapped Justice Fitzgerald, with! a sharp look at the bland and placid Delmas, “tlie Court only knows what- the Court itself has ruled. The record will speak for itself.’” orms of procedure in the State courts of New York, whether real or pretended, had the effect of keeping Occasionally His Honor also showed an effer- imas said he was merely seecking to find out tho condition of Chief Ricketts, of ¢ Thuw's mind at the time of his examination, and had not, as the Dis- his method of throttling and ubusing those wh trict-Attomaey assumed, maintained that the defendant wis sane or insane. ‘Thaw‘s counsel wanted merely an opinion based on Dr. Wagner’s observa- clergyman who had-to collect matter for a Purity tion_on the fact_of sanity_or. sanity or Thinity,— Justice Fitzgerald interrupted. He sald thet he “understood the defense wa to contend that the prisoner- was insane-when-the-murder-was-committed. Therefore, in his mind, the Court did not consider it pertinent to establish the condition of Thaw's mind after the tragedy at the time the witness examined him. Mr. Delmas answered that ty Dr. “Wagner he wished- merely to_show a score-of- petty_politicians of his own What Thaw’s mental condition was when Dr. Wagner talked with him, zsaild Mr. Delmas, “I shall ask the witness for a scientific hat he believed way the reatth ot the prisoner's mind at the fhot_an_opinion on the quality of 80 that the slender minister collapsed ina half-swoon. sha pilcig or his ARRUINENG Bhd soverat tes when he siattered the” fibrit samara of the prosecutor's logic a laugh rippied through the-court-room. {ndmicat-! L s _ The District-Attorney waa - using cvery advantage of Almost microscopic Tegal technicality to block the | srlcanee of the defense, ahead with his examination Th Ae amooth way he had "suceeded ii dn batte: ing the District, Attor “None of t ney_pretty-effeetually,—_— ALIENIST’S. OBSERVATIONS, “Mr, Witness, you aro not to say what was Do you-understand- the meaning -of-the word ‘op: “T observed thai” he-continued; -answerlns ‘Detmes's: tai tastoqn jon, “What-was sald by Thaw, always omitting anything hee may have said/ his condition, relative to hs state of mind at the thme of the Roosevelt, but he declines to discuss the matter or to indicate what, if any, on_and wil except to the niling,” chanteq Ment fora legal opinion. I will pass along to the next visit. What Post-Office Department will expedite the matter, aud that if action ts tobe ember 28th—seyeral days later, On that ccension, for the first framing the question Mr, Delmas asked for a five minutes’ recess In order that the close, foul air of the room might be purified. the female ay to secure but went on the polles force because there is more m seettors in | gloat over the witnesses invariably array themselyes in Qpparel that can bo heard as well as seen. A woman wearlng a green gown, a yellow bonnet _..{srith purple feathers and o sufMictent quantity of dinamondn to fll a plug hat!’ ic on her way to the Thaw trial 1f sho 1s discovered within five blocks in any direction of the Criminal Courts Building, STEERED TO THE BASEMENT. | Buch ns these wore gently but firmly stopped at tho entrances to-day and:Juformed that thoy wo: ld uot be allowed to enter the rocin where larry Thaw {8 on trial, By judicious _placing-o hfls men Sorg:, Kelleher anagod to foreo all these women {to the basement. They didn’t know hero they were going, and whon thoy finu!iy janded in the gl omy re joesson at te Lcitom of tho slovator shatts they were marprined tnd tn- dignact. 4 Possibly two hundred of then wore assembled there when court: opened. Their shrill notes of protest could be heard to the roof. In solid ranks they charged the stairways loading to the main floor, but thoy couldn't get above the firat step. fome of the elderly women wept in. their angry > Sieappot neat The few young women clintbed up on the bootblack stands and had their shoaa! Sore ‘White ee Whi ch It Is Alleged Were Told Thaw and Drove Him to Kill Architect igning of the will in Pittsburg and picked out varios {ute=t! EVELYN THAW NOT ALLOWED TO TELL ALL OF HER STORY Court Halts Repetition of Scandals polished. Next to Justice Pitegerald's court-room the basement of the building ‘was the most toteresting section within the four. walls, THAW. IN, GOOD SPIRITS, Thow-wnr in’ good-share to-day. ‘benoficial:— Walle taking= his regular exércise-th— the corridor he passed some joking remarks to Rafaallo Cascona, who was sentenced to the electric chair three years ago, spent over two years in the Sing Sing death-house and then, got a new trial. Cascona occiiples the cell next to that aasigned He) reason Thaw talks to him. Cnscona cannot talk back. Capt Lynch, -wholas-had-dharge-of-the-court-attendants. guarding sel Capt. Ricketts was shifted from the, Appellate . Division to take the place of Capt. Lynch, All the Jurors-reported (hat they were fn fine bealth and spirits for | yesterday, broke up his ailment over night end walked down to the Criminal MRS. THAW ESCAPES THE MOB. in antl ip tion of Eve yu Nesolt Thaw’s ordcal on cross-exam:ni'ion, Lawyer Delmas met. her by uppointment at 8 o'clock at the Hotel Lor- ralne to-day nc had a long talk with her. ‘hey rode together from the hotel to thé Crimint] Tourts Bullding in an electric cab and ent re the tourtheuse from the W ite street-side.- Because of the excellent potter are Tangements there they were nct hothred by the crowds, May McKenzie and Mrs. J. J. Caine, who rode from the hotel to tho Criminal Courts Bulldlig in the same cab, were not so_ fortunate._They entered the court-house from the Franklin street side, where there was no | police guard. In the basement they ran into a mob of women. who hnd ; bee barred from “the eourt-room.- ere she Is. There's Evelyn raflbirds. Mra. Caine was rushed off her feet. May McKenzlo retained her self- possession_and managed to conyince the sensation-seeking women closest to her that Mrs. Catne was not Mrs. Thaw. Half a dozen policemen ran | i rcreamed | halt a dozen of the female - Fane eerie et eee ‘defense before going on with Evelyn evidence, and that Mr. finish his examination of Evelyn Thaw Involving Stanford White Which, Told to Thaw, Finally Led = =Him-to- Murder. eS pte Stenseraite Report of the’ Evidence Taken xt the Thaw Trial, John Denntaton_ Lyon, of Pittsburg, | sce rpnoserexhlbl ts? A, On the uth day. forty-five yenrs old callad aa a witness | 0%,D6 <4 n—mene mented and one —— Ii behalf of the defence, said he had] way inalde' the other. so ter envek, , faying opened. tha . been In the banking ‘business a little ot ah you nad Tnaldg thas reddtane e. over a quarter of a century, and In at bigienpeh Bavelopet Av f did oe Present vice-president'of the Lincoln that gucond envelope open Natlonal Bankeraoe Beier fOr Waa “emenled? A. It wad sealed. Q. ‘ou open It?) A. Td Q. You are acquainted with Harry'K. rn Pit Ne ‘Conjaln, some thpera? A . es, Thaw, the defendant wt the bar? AI) "0 BE ie tin hand certain ‘ ad Pete enveioha oa ‘Q- Did: you" ever transxct business tor ST eee which #t- containeatl him? AT have, —— took out after fr Those are th your ‘ou have ust taken from ere Q. For how, long? A ap Mr. Jeromée-I_ don't’ know why thi! 9AM Bave those papers—are, they witness In called. I object to thia in-| fend exhib’ T. and Defendanta terruption, and: think they should” com=| PENH KT for. ides ny ET plete with the witness they had on the| have those two ‘pa ever inc oY thortime that you had t stand unless some _epec 9 ound and, “given, IAL —TeRAON 19.) tos SM ONLY A Th ee QuArenthey ioaiy nine exasiipethe: Then followed a long argument. Mr.{ same condition they en in-at—the Delmas insisting that he was only try-| {me you took them out? A. |They are, excepting for marks upon them by the court, and excepting for the fact that this fastencr at the comer here was not nuton by me. 2 Butswas put on by the clerk here during the course of the trial? A. Dure ing =the soures of the trint-t was eat — on by some one. After a brief cross-examination Mr. Jerome admitted that the tJentifcation of the napers was sufficient and they Were offered in evidence, but not to bo read at this: time. a ing to meet the technical grounds by which the will of Harry Thaw, offered on_ Priday,had been barred, He in- sisted that this wad his legal right, nec- Sesary to complete this “point in thi ‘Thaw's evidence. Mr. Jerome, on the other hand, tn- sisted that the will _was_in. fact new Delmas ehould to hy assistance of the twu witnesses and escorted them ‘upstairs. ere wes the usual matinee stampede for admission to the a 1001 | Session, with Officer Owens stil] holding down the job of bounver es he Supreme Court squad, jo had busitiess in the tribunal “He jolted a Rochester Boclety Of hls home town e-realous- young Man was as élrenuous Owens was only obsdquious when & piss of Clerk E. F. Carroll, of Gen= eral Sessions, was flashed in his eye. Hyen tha passoa‘of the. Assistant Dis- trict-Attorneys did not go with him, -The deputy-prosecutors had to-Insin- ceedings were passed in gently_by this discriminating Cerberus, and so were bailiwick. Owens caught by the neck and slung against the wall a friend of Dan O'Reilly, one of Thaw counsel. He treated an attache of the Mayor's office who wished to see Mr. j Jerome on w matter-of-the-elty's-businoss-in.the sama manner. | George Lauder Carsegie, brother-Iu-law of ttarryThaw, the defendant, | was held up at the door by Owens, and when the former attempted to identify“himself Owens sald: “I don't care a damn’ who you are.’ Dan sealed... and. apparently contalned THE. PAPER, Bs GENs the clarity. and! | SEE LATER EDITION FOR COMPLETE TESTIMONY . OF an rr Se aes pile AR POLLO wa: HARRY THAW. ~~ ee Roosevait Would Bae WASHINGTON, Feb. 11—Thv following statement-was given out at the } White House to-day; ef “The President. has communicated. with Postmanter-¢ -General C to know whether It Js feasible to bur from tho mails the papers that give ; the full disgusting particulars of the Thaw case. —postmuaster-General Cortelyou—has_récelye) the Jatter from President faction will “he taken-by-the Deyartinent,—‘The-Proatéent's-tetter-awilt_be_re-}: Herred to Assistant Attorney-General Goodwin for the Post-Office Depart-| + It is expected thatthe legal division of the ~— | taken by the Department tt wit! be done soon. IN BELLEVUE WARD. Victim of Epilepsy Smashed Win- dows When Sent to, Alco- holic Section, NEW ORLEANS RULER. Mardi Gras Rex Lands from Yacht and Takes Keys of City: Raison endi~ HIS OPI ea ; q ar ¢ Powels, a rosy-cheeked, black: | yay : yf 5 . e ust admiited that hig opinion wns in part based on thincs Asians st a eesti tare || NEW) ORLEA : ca pbs 11 sont Ha wasociate in the case romriin “| EYESTRAIN Causes -s HEADACHE iia were said to him {n thy Tombs—statenrents made by Thow and others hetors “Magletrate Moss jn Yorkville Lie oe ne ernaes renee ae Gleason said he was an at- Consult our Registered Physicians. concer the prisoner's mode of Uving and habtty In the prison lo o-day, charged with breaking | ‘YS Cel oe Hit orney and counsollor-atlaw.! and one! Glasses (¢ neeted—One Dollir Upward 1 uuse of Mr, Jerome's cbjection, Thaw's counsel withd _ [COME today, charged: with UreeKINE naval procession up tehe Minsissippl| of cgunsel tor detengant ere, Harry af Met ages a ee i drew the jwindowa in Bellevue Hospit fe lRiyer. ‘The King's yncht wae the naval! K. Thaw. xth ancstior Dnrsued- ai different line, Iman Griffith, on duty at the hospital, | sresivemalis Behe Q, You hold in your hand two ex- Feat aye Ante “Doctor,” resumed Mr. Delmun, “I will nox jut to you a bypothotical|aald that Annlo camo there as a pattent | pape Ae al eet ar (CAV UTPa RECEP ER see ey 5 nadie ar hod Bee | question upon what you have heard and not upon what wab sald /last week and.that yesterday she broke | er onees: ‘ee wind the : of your visits to the Tomes. looso with a bed slat. and terrorized | Ststes revenue cutter om, United States tenders Oleander, Mag- c r three swarda {before —ha_collld atop “her) "ana! Gen Newlon, and\ the steam? glass-smashing career. Hho -recolleoted that elght mo the girl was taken into Yorkville Court Lchanged——-with—attemoted ide, She. was discharged then when it was learn: a eee Fee 11 the. ‘tet, ed-that whe had peen-in the North only! o¢ attiet. Kitmovn and Terentieva, we] > @, few months and had Jost her Job as| two women Implicated in phe plot to SENTENCED T¢ TO DEATH. @ servant because of epilepsy. Miss|piow up Premier Btolypin with bombs barkig ail women except newspaper reporters and the members of Harry {Smith secured a place for her with a Auy, 25, 1906, took place in the fortress haw’s family. ‘The other was Sergt, Barney Kelleher, who was born to bo} family in Fyushing. where she remained | 31. Poter and {t. Paul here to-day, ‘The ‘(WOMEN ASSASSINS | |. } until last week, OneY | Jertic Jeu whin she felt an epl- attack aproaching and got a Of absence to KO to the hospital, tajpiatrate Moas placed her in ‘of Miss Smith, who will arrap; for the irl, whois an orohan, to re~ tien to friends in 6t. Augustine, accused, who declined the asviatunce of counsel, were condemned to death, but | | at the request of Mule. Kitmova’s father, who #3 % councttior of the empire, th nentences were commuted to hard inbor| bor Ute, . eee LAOS Inthe Rice T ESAT OVONIE RGN SES commanded Owens to soften | ‘Me Westions again, ‘since he was twenty-one. : defendant a Exhibit “M =for identifica tion) and ask you to look at {jt care- uate their friends through locked passiges leading through the Justice's | fully, and tell me if you have eer ree: chambers. Plain-clothes policemen-with no concern whatever in the pro-| that envelope before? A. I have. seo 1t? ALI could not give the exact date. wOME Ute prior to April 1, 190. panded the condition open, or was it sealed, and did {t ap- parently contaln a package? wee Thur thar are handed to me by Mr. H. K. Thaw. naQ writing of Ho Ke ‘Thaw Trial from Malls nim, was. <a: 3p | Sate-Deposit: & ‘Trust: Company: of Pitt: ‘Fyfe does not know whether It ts faistble, Dut i IU he wishes tt -done.* + purg, ~ 2 box at -Pittaburg? part (of N Q-What_was_tts_conditian_ao_far ar TDeim: velar sealed and inthe same conditioi:| three or ‘hae a schon you reoalved. it? AIL was. tn the obsections to then as |warne condition as when I a: When I took it out of the safe depo company KING CARNIVAL IS ={ilgesl Be F gave (to my stenographer, and-told tructions, but {dentified a second envelope and gave the at atenographer: nana as Charles Jamiel won promising ¢ {o send all lotters: o' of, be. coune ttn before calling other witnesses.” Finally Mr, Jerome, after a consultation with Mr. Delmas, withdrew his objection. The offictal stenographer. chen read WIFE'S NOTE ON NIGHT OF KILLING IS IN EVIDENCE. elyn Nesbit ‘Thaw then resumed the! Stand_ for, direct examination hy Mc.. Delmas. Q. Did you ‘ever transact _Duainess tong? —ALWhy, . ever r Q.You. have .tesiifed...madam,. that oT hand “you ‘an envelope (marked, upon the evening of Juoe 2 last, and while you were at dinner at the Cafe Martin. after baying called for w panel you wrote something upon a alip of ind which-was gor inte your hue- band's hands. “Am “I” correct? A. Yea, it Delmas called on the District-At- jarney {ora —note_taken fram Harry | Thaw at the time of his arrest. Te was produced and marked Exhibit O- for identification, Exhibit © for (dentifcation ta now to you, — madam, — Will—you kindly te whether that ts the paper} you wrote and handed to your husband! upon that occasion? a Yes, air. “ MroDelnas—Tt 1s. 1 véTer It In evie dence, First Saw it In April, 1906. —Q. When for the first time did you ~Q. Give us approximately? A, It was Q. Was the envelope at that time in {t_{e now—that In, cut “A. It was UmieT ASIC wis Yroeo: n ré_you famMar with the hand:| A. Stanton’ White. Thaw? -A-tam. Qa Stanford wok Q,-Ja_thatiehandwrHuag?— Ae tne Q. Was that handwnting upon the word ‘A. Yes: wT, pers Act}, Q 1 take St that B was an abbrevia- as Hon of that word? A. Yes. re QO bit yor Tear Mr Thaw reTer > Q..The envelope apparently contain. direst made by Stanford White is. apprehans. oe a packuge Wits left with “you by t his hands? or_placed in your hand?~ Acti? Whnt-Gt-you do mwittritteAs + Statameit ook ft and put tt In my box In the medaty having roference to threats * heated “Nir Q.How-tong did it remain Jn your Inti the latter Tf aelf-d Wan (01; be. pleaded, then the ovidence show vember, 1! Sat athe tinea yon =peraanalis ake jt-out-of your bax? A_I-did. SRtayieeds rreenthd: You ever see a plato! In Mr: sion? A. Yea rthe first time? Ai exactly remember -the tate It recelyed It. What did-you do-with-dr-then? A. d-teoktt-to the Union Na- Bank. Meee your—bank? —A.-Ves.~ alr SEE was not allowed to repeat Lyon in released, after Mr. the ¢ He arry session to Clerk: Penney bo within: the ae needed: “Delmas then ‘called Joh. Park &Tilford Tea Facts—No. 5 | In Mued Tea, the proper proportions of two perfect rears ar Or yield the perfect flavor. CHRISTMAN PIANOS Have a tou at biped LL lasting im. ferior blending cannot accom- Pretiee” Once: Avion ear “po arebe ~plish this. Park - &—Filford’s- eet eee teucttonee Mey athe Mixed Tea the favorite ge Rte pontade far Iilvatia ted ante ipraa: exacting tastes | CHRISTMAN SONS BANUEATURERS, Warerooma, Bt. } Factory, 860-873 Kast 187th Choice No 1, 48 Ib. | The Best Quality 88c Ib. HELP. WANTED—FEMALE. ne D—GIA tor eneral ofticn wonky ia sce a) WANTE

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