ESTABLISHED SEPTEMBER 19,1878 DEFENSE BEGAN TESTIMONY IN LAWRENCE CASE THURSDAY Defendant with Slashed throat Grimly Sits Throough Ses sions—Eight Days Gone— End Not Yet In Sight—Mo tion for Dismissal Denied, j STATE’S CASE STRONG BUT EVIDENCE ALL CIRCUMSTANTIAL Defense Attempting Alibi—! Presence in Durham Easily! Accounted for Till 9:20 P.| M. Evening of Murder Pittsboro has gone through possi bly the most thrilling ter. days of its long history. Expectation of crowds and thrills has been raised, but the reality has exceeded the ex pected. The attempt of the defend- j ant to kili himself right in the midst j of the trial introduced a thrill that | has had few precedents. The progress has been slow but. steady, despite several long delays j on the part of the state. The first appeared right in the beginning, when an important witness could not be reached, and the last when an- i other was kept away by illness. The j defense in the latter case woud not j consent, it is understood, to proceed j with its case till ail the state's evi- j denee was in, as it would seek a dis-; missal of the case on account of in sufficiency of evidence. Thousands have attended the trial from this and other counties. Dur ham has furnished the greatest num-; ber. but they come from considera- i bly more distant points. For a week; the court house has been densely j crowded. Thursday was the first ; day when there were empty seats. ! The ladies of Pittsboro take un- j usual interest in the case, and pro- j bably f protest on the part of the defense, r who took exception. Jailer Burns l told of finding the man lying in a - pool of his own blood and of his re l quest for a pistol. Dr. Cahpin told s of his experience and the request on - the part of the defendant that the * doctor finish the job for him. Al ! together the impression was made VOLUME 50, NUMBER 36. I that Lawrence nad been determined to kill himself and that it was no pretense on.his part. The note writ ten before the attempt to his frienda was brought into evidence and read to the jury, which stated he could no longer stand the framing and lies against him. Mr. A. T. Ward was the first man to reach the wounded man after the discovery of his plight by Mr. Burns. He added nothing- of importance. It seeras that no one heard him say that he was not guilty, nor did any one hear a suggestion that guilt was the cause of the attempt. Mr. Jack Womble, who works a& the Mann filling station at Merry Oaks, was an important witness. He saw a man and a woman in a car similar to the Lawrence car about 10:15 the night of the murder. It stopped at the filling station and the couple got a drink. The man like Lawrence, he swore, but he would not state definitely that it was Lawrence. The woman was no girl, but a mature woman. He did not talk with them. And this was the extent of the work of Tuesday. But Lee and Chatham are rich and, to Dr. Gage, the Carolina Coal Mine? chemist, are to omuch richer, and they can foot the bill for a sum mer’s session of court and let Ben Dixon Mac Neill have a chance to make the watermelon patch he con templated when he, as correspond ent of the News and Observer, saw the trial stretch out into weeks. Another Day Dawdled Away Wednesday was largely dawdled away in the case and the expense kept piling up. In this case, thus far the delays have almost altogeth er due to the state and not the de fense. Dr. Shore, whose illness had | kept him Iway the day before with l the loss of much time to the court, j made a late arrival Wednesday i morning and gave his testimony i about the blood in the blood-stained i car. He testified that the blood on ! the inside of the car was that of a | mammal, but that he ; could not de ; termine whether it was the blood of i a human. Thus the state was little I further than it was before the ar j rival of the doctor. It may as eas j ily be a rabbit’s blood as that of ; Mrs. Terry. Robert Terry came back to the stand and told of watching his mo ther on a former occasion similar to that of the tragic evening, and that she entered a car similar to that of the Lawrence car. He could nofc tell who was driving the car. He could not be shaken in the assertion that the car was of the Lawrence car type. His mother got in the car about four blocks from the Law rence apartment. Mrs. Yandle returns to the stand and states that she did not know pf any communication from Law rence to the fami’y after the death of her mother. Co ui'L then recess ed till two, when Messrs. Fuller and Pou argues a motion to dismiss the case on tne ground of lack_of,. sufficient evidence to send the case to the jury. It was a strong presentaion made by Mr. Pou, in which many cases dealing with cir cumstantial evidence were recited. Judge Nunn, however, dismissed the motion, and that mount that he acL judged the evidence if not rebutted strong enough to need the jury’s de cision, and as there is little ques tion of the validity of what evidence there is, the defense must win the jury where they could not win the Judge or must offset the evidence with an alibi. The Defense Begins Evidence After the dismissal of the motion to dismiss the case Wedesday even ing, the court adjourned till 9:3ft Thursday, when the defense began its testimony, depending chiefly up on an alibi. As the Record, which has been delayed two days in order to secure at least the defense’s side !of the case, had to go to presa j Thursday night, it is impossible for j it to give the full case’ of the state, j And here a correction may be made iof testimony produced as to the i glove in the Lawrence car. The gen eral impression and the impression of the correspondents of at least two of the state’s papers, was that the witness* Mr. Brooks, did not state the kind of glove found, but the Record is now inforomed that the witness did state that it was a man’s glove, though it is not known whether the defendant got that point ior missed it, as did the newspaper | men and others. The defense began with the cail i ing- of an impressive list of about i seventy witnesses, including Dr. j Manning, mayor of Durham, and ! many other gentlemen of more or less prominence from Durham and | practically the mature male popuia ! tion of the Avent’s bridge commun i ity, where the defendant was reared. 1 A number of these men were call !ed and gave favorable character ! testimony. Then began the evidence l of an alibi. Jesse Kennedy fir.-it | swore that he saw Lawrence the ! evening of the tragedy between 8 | and 9 o’clock. J. W. Long, a eon i tractor, saw him at the Trust build i ing near nine o’clock. He also rode I oijjt to Duke University the ne:r; - ; j morning with him and other gentle men. The defendant appeared in ! usual condition on the morning af ter the murder. He was questioned by the Solicitor as to the fixing of ; the date. His wife had declared i that that was not the Saturday night he had seen Lawrence. He had told her he could check it up, as it was at the time of the railroad wreck at Haw river, as he went out there after going to the University o (Please turn to page eighty