The evening world. Newspaper, February 14, 1907, Page 2

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he “Exaggerated Ego’ Likely to Become Epidemic Among the Principal Figures in in THE EVENING WORLD, ’’ Introduced in the Thaw Trial by Dr. Evans THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1907.- + preven: gas to the Integrity of this fury, but, It was deemed best that thie: if be confined together. “But in view-of the emergency which has_arisen, we agree- that_the $ should not be further kept from their avocations and their homes. on both sides unite in the motion that the jurors be discharged ‘service and allowed to- separate until next Monday morning.” ‘As Jerome sat down, Mr. Hartridge arose. “We ‘consent to all he District-Attorney-has asked,” said Hartridge. STICE FITZGERALD'S SYMPATHY. ; judge-Fitzgerald,-addressing the ten remaining jurors, said; “Gene aie Keeping the jurors together was not taken upon the tive of the Court, nor was it framed upon. the separate recom- IS of counsel: on either. sidé. It was a recommendation” in both sides united, The-teasons-givett by counsel were-Sufficient sides “most “excellent: and the Court'held these reasons. to: be materidily ny to-the‘interest-of both the psople and to the défendaat. tat Un- inhuman‘ to compel: ydur grief-stricken fellow-juror to remain under urveiliance during hours of -his ‘sorrow,- which must naturally weigh o hea pon him and ir in which he has the sympathy of all of us. ~“f will allow you to return tq your homes until next Monday mom- at 10.30., I trust tat you will be free from any annoyances, and | not anything in the papers about this case Pnot to speak of it nor allow’any one else to speak of it to you. beg of you to guard yourselves from outside ESHE, of any: sort, and I invoke your own vigilance to this end. é “However, 1am amply satisfied from what 1 nae seen of you dur- the early étages of this trial to feel satisfied that you will do your duty. rail now demiss you until Mo ymoring, believing we will then be fable to-go on with this case." 'URORS SCATTER TO THEIR HOMES. visible sense of new and added responsibility was resting upon EA the ten mén as they went out.” Separating at the door and freed e first th i in weeks of police guardianship, they hurried to the 0% iJ, the place of their_conInement, to gather together their rdrobes and scatter to their homes in the various parts of Manhattan Just before court adjourned) Mr. Jerome made this statement: “Your (22 MHtonor’ the defense has here-at present two worthy.and. reputable physi. ssurmred at 2 recalled to the stand. Mr. Delmas. “1 did.” examined him. ly--the-sad-ogétirrence trhiely “has—been-Se-fedlingly-altided toy a3-catssed-a-condition-of -affairs-which-must-be-cortfronted. —H_woukl— ~ HIS of what was coming. o'clock. “The prospect of his wife being competed to £0 on. the stand and répeat her story is almost more than Thaw can stand. EXPERT AGAIN ON THE STAND. At the opening of court Dr. Evans, the New Belisey alienist, was “During your first three visits to Mr. Thaw, “did you ‘base opinion of his mental condition in part upon his gral statements aia The answer was permitted to go in’without objection by Jerome. This. was a substantial victory” for the defense. fought against the admission of Thaw's statements to the expert who But over night the Distriet-Attorney had receded from this position, ‘and now he gave the defense: full swing. That was Wich) Evans had been brought back to-the stand. ~ “Did:you base your scientific opinion on 1 Mr. Thaw’ 's unsoundness| ments?” Statements were of- ‘material ee in assisting us in-making “up our-minds,” BAD NEWS FROM MRS, BOLTON. ‘|: As Dr. Evans started to answer, Mr. Jerome arose to object. “He was just.unreefing the first sentence of his’ argument when Capt. Rick- etts, of the Court Police Squad, hurried in from a side door and whis- pered-something to Justice Fitzgerald. Juror_Bolton -watched-Ricketts | | intently. His face paled perceptibly. Evidently he had a ieee), All along Jerome had Justice Fitzgerald announced ‘an adjournment ‘of the case until! 2 o'clock. Aa the twelve jurors left-the box Bolton seemed to fall. ing and ‘unclasping his hands: mechanically. Hurorand-Court-Oficer Kavanagh—he st He was clasp- In company with’ another Bronx on the Lenox avenue Jine of the Subway. . The full weight of the news hed ‘not been broken to him. He was simply told that bis wife's condition had grown worse since he saw her last night, AS-A-MATYER- OF FACT, “DR. TINKER,- THE FAMILY PHYST- 1 _CIAN, HAD TELEPHONED TO. THE-CRIMINAL COURTS-BUILDING THAT MR8. BOLTON WAS DYING. HE WAS KEBPING HER ALIVE WITH OXYGEN, HE SAID, UNTIL HER HUSBAND COULD REACH — HER SIDE. THAW WORRIED BY THENEWS. — Thaw bad come into court {n apparent good humor with hjmself and his case: He had grinned anally upon his lawyers and had set himsoit $, ‘Dr. Deemar, and Dr. Bingamon, .of Pennsylvania. There is still question in my mind as to the admissibility of certain evidence t -tawyers upon the other side desire them to give. It would a hardship upon these practitioners to compel them to remain here th the tag Of opaiiliig-a pile-ot stters—imnany of them-containing valentines when there came the taterruption which may mean so much to hia trial, Now he was led away, scowling and plucking at the ends of his hair. A minute or two later, word came tricklinb back across the Bridge truded Itself Into the “Send for Evelyn,” keeper; Her presence served t furjously. OVER: AGAIN; After the Court hi Thaw's will {n°the eve! he, sald, whether that seriously 111 with pnei ] STILL, OPPOS The following is t “Whereas, The pu \ New-York, and which ‘bauchery of girlish “vi izing influence on the “Resolysd—by_the- assembled, th: hood of America, the all publications cotain | trial for him and = repetition of the heart- breaking ordeal which he end his_have—weathered_so—well-thus far. “I must see he PRISONER RAVES IN HIS.CELL, Guarded by Lawyers O'Reilly and Peabody and followed by a huge | pushing crowd, Mrs. Thaw hurried from the court building to the prison. danced a devil's tattoo, and he rayed and ranted about his little Iron cell SORRY FOR AUR. BOLTON,” HE EXCLAIMED OVER- AND “BUT, “IT's MY-LUCK—1_ ALWAYS-GET THE WORST OF-1T! no dec!sion had heen reached by the lawyers ay-to the admission of Harry. Mr. Jerome, while insisting that he wished-only-to-serve the exact-ends-of justice, was atiit doubtful, |” ‘-gtrange-codiella-in-which Harry ‘Thaw, provided-one fund to prosecute: his } slayer incase he should be caring for alleged victims of S ~Dr. Carlos F. MacDonald, the eminent allenist, chief of , +ney—Jerome's—insanity— MacDonald becamo_jll' in Judge ‘Rosaleky's-court-on- Monday while: tedtiry="| ing as an-expert im the trial for murder of Arnron-Tashijian- developed that night and his condition ts quite serious. however, that he would be able to atend both trials ina few days. _WASHINGTON, Feb. 14—Represénative Wharton, of Hino!s—titro~ { duced a resolution in the House to-day authorizing the President to exclude from the mails any and all publications “containing the revolting details” of thé Thaw case-and other cases of s!milar nature. outraged by the publication in -detal jed-at-ence-tor his home-tn-the| evidence of the trial of Harry K: Thaw, now in progress in the City of j degeneracy on the part of Stanford White unequalled in the annals of our criminal ‘history; and, “Whereas, The publication in deta!l of the loathesome and_)icentious acts of the said Stanford White ina long and uninterrupted career of de- e protection 1 to the honor and good name of the woman- and empowered to exclude from the mails of the United States any and {tet tragedy “of the cottage In the Broix which had“so"unexpectedly ob- more draniatic tragedy of his life might mean a mis- 6 shouted through the bars of his cage to hw} o.calm. ber husband somewhat, but his nerves still OH, WHY DID THIS HAVE TO HAPPE? ad taken ‘Its recess, it was definitely Saar i that nt.that the trial goes on. weird will was a proper plece, of evidence, with ‘its salnated, and another fund to. be used tn ford White's lirés. experts for-thn prosecution in ie Thaw case, umonta at'his home, No. 353 Riveralde ‘Drive. Is Dr. Pneumonia His wife thought, ED TO THAW TESTIMONY, consciousness of having contributed he ‘text of the resolution:' iblic sense of decency and morality has been grossly “of the most revolting toatures of the reveals a depth of moral depravity, degradation and tue and chastity must of wecesaily have a demoral- youth of the Jand; therefore, be {t Benate—and—House-of Representatives fn Congress President of the United States is hereby authorized ing the revolting celalls) of this Sane. and | others ofa. similar native —— Tombs had gone to pieces with vexation and alarm. He feared that the the Thaw trial.” until this trial is resumed. We may be able to examine these gentlemen ‘this afternoon’ and reach some agreement as to their testi- ‘order that it. may be-embodied in swom statements and in order ‘Giso that they may be permitted to return to their homes at once.” —— Justice Fitzgerald nodded an assent and: ‘declared an adjournment. The conference at District-Attorney/Jerome’s office over the admis- the testimony_of the wo Pennsylvania physicians-tasted-only-a minutes: It'was mutually agreed that Dr, Deemar and 'Dr. Bein- here-whenever their testimony may be needed. “Harry Thaw hunched his overcoat about him and stalked-out with- a word to any one. HAW IS RECONCILED. ON HIS WAY BACK TO THE: TOMBS HE HALTED ONG-ENOUGH-TO.SAY-THIS: “ITS -AN-ACT-OF PROVI-— DENCE AND CANNOT BE HELPED. 1 AM SORRY FOR MR. + BOLTON,--1-AM-VERY-GLAD, HOWEVER, PHAT-THE TRIAL — “I$ NOT TO BE BROKEN OFF ALTOGETHER AND THAT IT GAN BE RESUMED NEXT MONDAY. 1 THINK IT WOULD SPRIVE-ME-DESPERAFE1F-MY- WIFE SHOULD -HAVE ALE THIS TO. GO THROUGH AGAIN.” CY wan and all of Thaw’s lawyers went upstairs to the District-Attorney's avast Heowas-stated thatthe inquisition woult- probably pon. both: sides—the -atlarneys “expressed: themselves-as-being- tone “had-seen-of Mr. Bolton's bearing that he would be mentally and =phiysically capable of “giving his entre-attention to the evidence, BBuilding within a few minutes after the opening of the trial to-day. Mr. had spent asleeptess night and was almoston the edge of collapse |, Worry, HE grew whites he-saw—Capt, “Ricketts-hurry-into-the+ and whisper to Justice Filzgerald= : Ricketts brought: ~~~ - {00 LATE TO SEE HER ALIVE. _~ gnediately, and, accompanied by two coyrt ee Mr.Bolton started sae _the Jong trip to his home. "MRS. BOLTON DIED AT 11.40 O'CLOCK, HEN SON OHARI.DS, AGED TWENTY-SEVEN, AND HBR DAUGHTHK ‘AMY, AGE TWENTY-FOUR, STANDING AT HER EBDSIDE HEARD MR. BOL- __ PON'S FOOTSTEPS ON THE STAIRWAY—AS-HE-HURRIED_UP— ROM THE FRONT BOOK. THE WIFE, WHO WAS CONSCIOUS, GLANCHD IN THE DIRECTION OF THE DOORWAY, SANK BAC AND EXPIRED JUST AS TILE HVSBAND STEPPED INTO 7 + i —-NEWS-OF ‘THE DEATH OF MIS. BOLTON WAS SUP- {PRESSED FOR ONE WOUR. There was‘a feeling of unrest among counsel for both sides when} Uustice Fitzgerald took his seat. Early morning reports from Mrs, Bol- Broadway Central Hotel withthe other jurors fo the Criminal Courts uilding, her case took a seer ny for ie worse. i sank so’ a + Mrs. Bolton was fi rst taken ill on miMendey) Feb. the Broadway Central Hotel with some clothing for her husband. She | ¢ ‘caught cold at that time and it poveloned into pneumonia, She was fifty | years old. ~ Undertaker George W. Howie, of Fordham, is in charge of the Funeral arrangements, but so far they have not been completed. She “will be buried :probably_on Saturday. Thaw. was not told of the death of Mrs. Bolton until the news aguas Snipa He fully expected that his trial would be “gffice to examine the two family physicians of the Thaws from Pennsyl-|aers, at > be “conducted jatreet? ent that the trial would zo on next Monday. They felt certain that what }ge “News that Mrs, Bolianvas dying—reached fhe—Criminal-Couris4te-crame. Intuition _told him the message {te It was that Mrs, Bolton was dying. An adjournment was taken im-! ton’s bedside were encouraging, but about the time her husband left the} 4, when she went | GIRL SURRENDERS |OIL EXPLOSION CAUSES ST, REIS ROBBER, n should be permitted to go back tp thelr-homes.—They-egreed te] (Raymond —Hitchoock Among the Victims Plundered by an Elevator “In the capture of Edward Conroy, the \| East Sixty-seventh street station police ..| believe they havo-caught-a-sitek-young hotel thief. Conroy waa home at No, 129 East Fifty-ninth street, 40-day, where alnt-of bric-a-brac, glass ware, aitversare-and- other articleswax police...belteyve. stolen from patrons of brotela whe employed. Later Con- found which the. _| prisoner bad be: roy Is gaid’ to police and told where he had pawned.a large amount of joot, }rimediately-affer the adjournment -hegan’Mr, Jerome and Mr. Gar an estinate thar he got away with not $2,000 worth of Jess than Conroy 0. the Lexington avenue; Hoventy-sccond Meg -ar-cievnter my: shirt. in which ond studs and: cuft-by Vator” boy Snide Van Twlsi Jady connected: ‘After'the young man foe the Flanders hie Lextnet fand in phig_—ret Jor the Hotel Preml Wonths the majority looted sed Conro polle the follo | Victims and losses: Mrw Sarah ‘Btelgiitz, {¥ ¢ minor articles. | three clocks, $100, police tn_r: tion of the PINE BLUFF, Ark, blockn of residences, py fre (e"42:000, John been burned to death. LANTRY TAKES A Fire Commissioner Francia J. Lantry leaves to-day for a Week's trp South with his son. bean iN and ts going South by: advice Commissions Lantry been absent - from aasumed charge In November. of his physician, ‘has AOE ined he aw i | Beotiy Commisstoner worked at the Hotel Flan- 135 West Forty~ Lexington Apartments, _ the Hotel Bt. Rexis, | s also said that the matter of the admission |ine-Beitevve-Hiraiford,—jn—Philadelpiila._ of Harry Thaw! 8 will might also be considered : further during the after. pad ios Conroy -wes-at the Hotel Pinnd uyimond Shibch=.| cock, the actor, sent him to a roum to there were dla- ty at the Hotel Premier, rays (hat Conroy told him he had given the dlamoads to u tattooed with-«-rircus: we they returned they found thelr y's capture. ng as some of the Iry, fec., G10; M At and ot! ‘erma wer, thing, britwa-brac and 00/"" Mrs. onsiderayle por- | $250,000 FIRE BI BURNS | NINE BLOCKS IN CITY. occupied by em- ploycen of the cotton belt shops; sev- ses, the Third Avenue Ho- Hiverside Sethodise Church | in salvage work, falling Walla and crushed to Beveral persons are reported as miss-| ing, and it is feared that they have Boy. taken from his The police make! plunder, venth | ots i No. wireat— ctons, The ele ay wi . worked tht During thoue o puesta were | and | ‘rhe allverware, cut mon. | r wearing 3500; Fellx | Bilverman. ‘oy aided tht Feb, 14--Nine youterday, pringer, waa ‘caught! VACATION, te tbe The his office Hugh Bonner | 0! % in charge during his) absence, | foliname, Leek toraignal i stores and: fa LOUISVILLE, Ky., County Grand Jury last night returned {ndictments against the Cincinnat! Enquirer, Loulaville Herald, Louisville Times and Evening Post for printing of Sighs that the prisoner on reaching his celt in Murderer's Row of the jand circulating in. this county the “ “offensive and pndecents proceedings of Feb, 14.—A special from Lebanon, Ky., saya: caked Haye ong after the verdict of the Tha ____There 1s, for Instance, tho exagserated-ego—which Evelyn Thaw Wilat “rm tetng mobbed by thé curlous, and that there js no woman ‘altve, how= © e FRE PAILROAD TO Jefe The windows of stores wers com~ pletely shattered. and in the residence sections thousands of pancs of Lia wgre shaken out of their casings. The belief was generai along both shores ‘of the Kill Von Kull that a disastrous earthquake had ocourred until s great yolume of smoke, shot with lighteinings | ‘of flame, spread out over the oll works and completely enveloped It. Richmond Terrace, Staten Island, aut- fered more severely than any other town across the Kill Von Kull. Alang math “bualarss alresy e— windows: andthe peopte-atrigken with-a- panto of fear, Great crowds rushed out into the streeta-of-all-the-townahardering 7 pbout Bayonne, and along the north shore section off Staten Isiand, and throughout Greater New York the tin- pression spread that there had been an earthquake, All tive boroughs of the greater city Were alarmed by the shudder of the from encription thirty-story scrapers In the fnancial district to-tiny} frume bulldings in the Bronx und Will- damaburg.————--——-—+--- Until it: was learned~thar-there” tind been a dlaaatrous = thousandn of people all’ over the city! Tearou Wit” GuUtuer disaster was in reported thie the could not ment. but it diakopea 4 bendln: teeth goon atta Te en could not fx The shock was felt at 10.28. AM dis- | { tremor was perceived at_Potice! Forrwers ee ervesnrere oe 09 telegraph operator. Witnin shai an hour-arterward more than onp hundred lephone jnquirkes-were-mady DY plioie | Volice Headquarters. STi Tha owntwi-sectlon of the city urEnente apd the Bt ites thousands of man-and“Wwonien ran out} And-Aunuat che went: then Into. the atrest from atofer and oftices, returning in the early In all of the big ake, 4 Edie Ly a AUWUOl he Was the cuMbor xpresd rap $6 un In the country or at’ the seashore, Deaticdines yp that-there-had been an earthquake, Inquiries Were ‘made at all of the wr power shes Staridard Vil depot at Bayonne, N. J., | kre) PANIC, SHAKES CITY, “(Continued from First Page.) evolved | setarala det: aun leghent Observatory coward electrical action pantie! eee In a BI t ther pensation. mds who: elghth floor o! pos 0. 17 fhe wasn panic the twei andthe tenants of ~t {Met was entertained—in shat there had deena the alarm was neral t} (be another shock. | _Workers Ruth fro Ferry house were ate Gio Under iver “tunnel the street, fearing that downtown Subway Six men who were {1 the KN Von Kult_wet The- water and caught. In that “a¥ept “them into mt Btapleton. ‘on-- Staten thinking @n earthauake was off Stavkton att The rocking Wait the sane of the Te Hudiich caught th: [while om Wobbin‘s diner. Savoie, wnton Pine pay ae the tine, necuth Jicarned of the exolosion aftr reaching tne dock. "HAD A WIFE WHEN HE _ WED DELLA HINCHEY, | Young Woman Drove McCaw Out When She Heard of It—Wife_ Gets Divorce, Norah MoCaw {!# a comely woman of fine figure, and {€ James McCaw'a picture does not flatter, he is a fine Jooking specimen of athletl: young man- hood. Thise two were married in the First Place Methodist Episcopal Church, Brooklyn, ten years ago, but efter a litte boy was born to them they vepuraied six years seo, Mrs, McCaw Lea laundry on the wos aide, had been hive ing with Della Hinchey at No. 48 Weat ‘Twenty-Atth street, ‘The wife sued. for a divoree, “Your Honor, it js all true,” sighed Mra, Mary Hinchey in ey sorgay told ehter “Dut when MoCaw AP bang “my dae married, it broke poor ihe" heart and she drove him out of* the now ‘Then came Della Hinchey, a small, delicate-looking woman. ‘L never learned unUl last August that Mr, sala ge was already o myoaiice n,"” he faintly, ee rear told Ly ie Ly baby tel now. owe im tats ee uaxatiye Saya anos aS para iarete Seale ‘our ekg ral ts, New Rule of Magi: George Smith, of No. sixth street, is the bate: Jail Tora Year, even If | dence to connect them for pocket-pickt| On some of the pockets are ao. thick in sengera are crowded made a jumped’ He found that wes ass mlasing: dl fround Tuirtyefourdy wtreet and avenue for a wot on another Btanding on ihe ten ~oM@ces, and the theory was rat there had cither been a chscrved 9 ye storday at the Al- was creating un- erect Potthe Bl offices a “Battery Pl vorid “omer and rita nethe -builting. Aguses werd blown Wy been shaken from foundation to roof, Tushed out into the hallway, The be- The Barge Office and Staten, Island an explosion somewhere In the | earth. .thatshook buildings of every | The shock was<also mepycmnits tet: in atations: *ky- by-in- Battery Park felt themselven per- coptbly htted trom thelr feet, where-thev were reseed try the weer ‘The hotels St. George and Cas| Intend reseed i whicy startled -thetr” guests whom, came running from thelr + Island. The revenue cutter Man! ; ‘The action of ih NO PROOF OF THEFT, BUT HE GETS A YEAR. |teiiu"s George Smith Punished Under. the cerning Pickpockets,— new rule of the City Magistrates that all persons arreated am suspicious per- sons on street cara shall be aent to olfic robbery, but If there Is evidence to show that they were ever arrested ‘face lines the pic! And ‘after the theatre that roswar Bendix, a guest at Reisenweber'a Hotel, raturning to hia stopping place after the opera at the Manhattan Tuesday Bienes boarded such a ci As yushing hi 0 pinttorm and r bound ran was the tor no bed sided him Follcerat ‘Sonnily, of 2 ph TAKE OF TRAIN Some Commuters Will Have to Do -with Fewer Accom- modations in Future. The Erle Railroad announced to-day {ts intention to take off all suburban traing which are run at a lous, ap the new In the atmos- ig Bullding. raat he /ahocke an officer of the road, ‘hae reference to | the handling of freight, During the pant two-weeke-we “have hint to conn our entire-attention ‘to the suburban buni- ness, and —aag—reaitlt-the-shippers-have : suffered severe losses. 69 many trains that structure | are being operated a-to sertoumly inter- Re Ane tere -with-our freight trains, , "Owing (> the Jack of facilities at Serney City and the fact that the Ber- gen (innel is up to its limit. there ts Lut one way out of a bad condition— take off some trains, “It has been decided to annul all su- burban passenger trains which are run At a loss, but. the great masority of the commiutors will not be aflected. Nearly all of the ruah-hour trains show # profit but—there-are-many- two-and-thres-car locals which do not. n = Is-hag nu omees had m Tunnels. Workers in sVrugeg up. to there hhd ben bore. Passcrs in a rowboat “While the company regrets the ste BpaKeel GUT tt{s forced to tmke action, if the freight ha tomar: shippers arg to have reasonably” g000 lower kervice, ‘The new. acl set be! ane | DEPUTIES ARMED FOR WAR ON DOGS, | = had stra tye thins {Apecial to The Erening Wortd:) WHITE PLAINS, N- ¥5-Febk— De ont + wane coming up ce a are..ailost now on-the quarantine against dogs that 110. roam about the sirocts ve-atrietiy-entoreed: “He declured that | patience has ceased to he a virtue, and from_now-on the owners of dogs, whether rh or poor, mi Jmanalg thelr animals or the animals wil be shot on slight. a Here —armedt—with— sl start out:to-morrow wit! una Tents ‘a view of ex Hi—eninate theatre not muzzled, MULDOON MUST PAY ~BOY-FOR BITE OF DOG. (Boeelal to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, Under a verdict handed down by « jury id the Supreme Court Tuatice Morseohauser presiding, William Muldoon, ex-champion wrestler and roprictor of the health sanitarium a Mite Plains, -will have to pay $1, to William R. King, a alxteoncyearcold boy of this place, who was ditten by! Sr aeeas alleged to ‘have been owned by| a ‘Muldoon endeavored to prove that h aia not own the dog, but the verdict |~ went against him, strates Con- 22 West Thirty- st victim of tha shy there is no @vi- will any ape- the rush . hou Qiex for room, i& way on two ond of the me sg YOUMANS S| Spring Styles minutes, tow Eninaieas hen une Seltn did not have ON SALE: fn” TO-DAY Setar dts Santi fhe Work:| 458 Brosdway, 1107 Broadway, 5365 Ave “The most Important reason,"’= sald |” te “the Disirict-Attorney haw had n0 opportunity to shake jt, and the reeds of .+plty_and pardon {t sowed inthe hearts -of Harry Thaw's jurors tiny havo Lnch| Prestoa animsinced to-day— that from t ‘Mr; Prestoi tas a number of oie i N.Y, Feb, 15—|| the Case May McKenzie and Howard Nesbit . Are Both in Danger of an Attack, While Jerome and Delmas Are Not Inmimune. _ MRS. HARRY THAW ALMOST — CERTAIN TO BE A VICTIM. By Nixola Greeley Smith. NOTHER day of ‘the Thaw trial=a- bright day becouse the last alienist for ihe de- fense has_left_ the stand with the a néw phrase to the New York ver- necular, For it is possible that we may speak of “exaggerated eg jury has ceased to be a topic of d cussion. Looking about the court-yester- day in the brief period of the after. noon. session,. before. Justice _F. geratd’s kindly warning sent the newspaper women from the room, | was more interested in speculating as to the number of “exaggerated egos"*-at-the-Fhaw-trial-other-than the defendant's, to which-Dr-Eyans had testified, than in the actual evi: dence;-which-was—very—dreary, WOE A ORELLEY- 8/7 7z develop, whether she will or not. For this twenty-three yeur old girl knows that she stirred the world by the pitiful story she told just a week ugo. She knows that she cannot -Appear—tn—-the-streete without “danger ver—great-or high or hety, upon whom public attention is focusscd upon her. EVELYN MAY DEVELOP IT. Whatever the future may.hold for Harry Thaw, Evelyn Thaw will never be able to forget the great world-role she has played during the lant few weeks, and an authentic case of “exaggerated ego” may result, There is her brother, Howard Nesbit, playing a star role on the other side, a youth under twenty mucb exposed to Dr, Evans's malady. Though Miss McKenzie has Invariably appeared in the Criminal Courts Building in a violet gown, she cannot be sald have presented a violet demeanor, And aa her name has appeared-in-print—far-oftener of tate than that of-any prima donna of any production she ever danced in, she, too, seoms a likely victim to the new disease. There are the feline Mr. Jerome, the dramatic Mr.” ‘Delmas and his lfentenants, Messrs. Hartridge, Gleason, Peabody and McPike, all from their prominence at the trial also much exposed to the germ of “exage gerated ego”—if It has a germ. There are the special writers, who, belonging to a gulld prone to ego- tinm at all times, can only by a miracle escape. THIS WILL BE A BAD CASE, ‘There-ts-the young door-man, who exercises all the prerogatives of St.-Peter, admitting or turning away whom he will. If he does not de- yelop a malignant form of “exaggeratod ego," I. refuse ta bellove there ts any mich. thing. The only-porsons -safe— trom—the ‘sytdemie are-the- neWws-TepOrtgra: who do good- work as a matter of course at the trial and whoso maties rarely get Into print. The “ego” phrase, the catchword of the case, {s ono of the smal} hu- mors of a great tragedy, which, strange as {t may appear, baz had moments of humor even in its gloomiest phases. MRS, THAW IS STILL UNCONTRADICTED, é Evelyn Thaw's story, one of the most pitiful recituls ever made dt human lips, was nol without elements of comedy. It coutalned tears Z sobs, but, at the-very hetght of-horror,-alo-a-hint of lwughter that ao me speculate as to whether Comedy and Tragedy may_not.be twin Munsee much alike that it is diMcult to tell them apart. Bed It fo'fust a -week-to-day since that wonderful story was_tafi. AsoyeT; alae germinated ina tenderness that will eet him free, Park &Tilford. : FOUNDED 1840 Java and Mocha Coffee is “there #: rduma tor Seprave RAST =. owe “wait to know “Tt ij “29c. Ib. have tried to—maaky—it ths purest y wt the Jowest price, ‘Shere Is ‘oom, Rewevers for one more salladed customer, be Special for This qhersiay BARLEY AR. Entirely, absolutely Peifect in flavor, per- fect in aroma. — Is it necessary to pay from Ic. to 6c. Ib. more? _ Test for yourself ‘Ww. L. DOUGLAS $3.50 SHOE men Atrialwillvonvines — ‘THE BEST CHILDRENS BISCUIT EVER PRODUCED) ype tas Wi Lee ‘Soup By Youn Davoowst Aun Gaocrm: 83,50 shoes are §.: thebestinthe world. Sco in Greater Hew York way, cor. 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