Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / Feb. 9, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE ASHEYILLE CITIZEN , . jl . .4 . , . , . ,ll Jl t . . Jl 1 lie reml-r nlxi want hII the . imm of i Ih- world AniiM It In Tlx li Im-ii h fart which make It rii) for tin' adtfribvr who uu lo mu ll nil Im rcadcre. 4 . . .11 ,4 , J -4 -4 J J) Ji Jt I THE WEATHEB. Fair and Warmer. ; J j VOL. XXII, NO. 79. ASHEVILLE, N. C, SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 9, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. The Only Associated Press Newspaper in Western North Carolina EVELYN NESBIT THAW RESUMES STORY OF HER RELATIONS WITH WHITE PETITION FOR KEFORMATORY IS. PRESENTED Wife of Accused Murderer of Millionaire Architect Tells of Pre-Nuptial Treatment. SAYS HE FOLLOWED HER ON THE STREET Husband Got Excited and Acted Strangely When She Complained to Him. (Bjr Associated Preea.) NKW YORK, Feb. 8. Evelyn Nes blt Thaw again today was the central figure at her husband's trial. She was till on the stand her direct exami ritlon unfinished when the usual week-end adjournment until Monday morning was taken. Picking; up the threads of her life's story where she had dropped them the evening; before, the girl wife if the defendant always, she declared, telling her story Just as she had re lated It to Harry- Thaw, from time to time brought the narrative down to her wedding in Pittsburg on April 4, 105, and their return to New York following a honeymoon trip In the west. She declared that she had heard White call to her on the mrect In a cab, she noticed his cab turn around and follow her in the direction of a doctor's office where she was going to have her throat treated. Mrs. Thaw had taken up the story at the time of her return from Europe In 1903, following her refusal of Thaw's offer of marriage on the grounds which she related yesterday. On Monday she may be called upon to llnlnh the relation of the events which, it Is claimed by the defense brought the pressure on the diseased brain of the defendant and led to the kill ing of Stanford White. While today's testimony was lark ing In the personal quality which made yesterday's recital so dramatic, m Impelling, enthralling and pathetic, it served to clear away some of the doubtH and inferences which remain ed from the Incomplete details as to the full extent of the revelations she claims to have made to her hus Iwnd. There were repetitions, too. at the suggestion of counsel and Incident which had not been gone over in the tlrst years of Mrs. Thaw's acquaint ance with Stanford White, were brought out In completion of the life story, Jerome Breaks Loom. District Attorney Je rome, who had throughout silently listened to the1 voting wife's statements. Bent a thrill WANAM AREB'H HOME DESTROYED. PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 8. Lyndhurst. the handsome country home of Former Postmaster General John Wanamaker, at Cheltcn Hills, near Jenklntown, was destroyed by lire tonight, entailing a loss estimated at $1,600,000. Mr. Wanamaker's home was considered one of the most artistic and valuable of Philadelphia suburban properties. The Wnnamaker art gallery contained some of the rarest prints and moHt valuable paintings In existence. The fire made rapid progress, a few valuable paintings being about the only things saved. Among these were "Christ Before Pilate," and "Christ on Calvary" by Munkacsy. These two paint ing are valued at $250,000. Mrs. Thaw declared today that Stanford White, In the year which fol lowed her experience In the room with mirrored walls, sought to have her visit him alone. "I told Harry that Mr. White had pleaded with me, had cried and scolded and had done everything tp make me visit him alone. Mr. White told me I was cruel that I was aa cold aa a fish and not a human being. I told Mr. White that I could not sue him alone, I was afraid to trust him. "After my return from Europe and during the months that I would not see Harry Thaw because of the dread ful things Mr. White and his friends told me about him" she declared that Thaw accused her of having! Improper relations with the architect. "I told him that It was a lie and that I had not" she testified with an emphatic show of feeling. Barrymore's PropoHAl. The defense had Mrs. Thaw tell of another incident which has been cited In her life. Her acquaintance with Jack Barrymore, the actor. Mr. Bar rymore was In the court room on day during t he early part of the trial at the instuncc of the district attor ney. It was said. Mr. Delmas asked Mrs. Thaw today to tell what she had told Mr. Thaw of her acquaint ance with the actor. She said she had tlrst met Barrymore at a party given by Stanford White the year following her Introduction to the architect "I thought him very nice." she franklv said today, "and one day at Mr. White's studio he said: 'Evelyn will you marry me'." 1 said: 'I don't know' He asked me a second time and again I said I don't know and every laxly UiUKhed. Mr. White told be 1 would be very foolish to marry Mr Barrymore, and my mother said so too, and we all quarrelled, and the upshot of the whole thing was that Mr. White said I ought to be sent awuv to school, and I was sent to New Jersey.'" After leading the witness to tell "f excitement through the court room in chronological order of the Incidents late In the day by jumping to his feet of Jier wedding with Thaw In PlttH whether, or not Harry Thaw had at, bell and the maid came to the door any time told her about "other girls and then I got so nervous and flust- who had met a fate similar to yours! ered I told her I would come back at the hands of this man?." j again and I ran down the steps, got "What man?" snapped Mr. Je- Into the cab and drove to the hotel, rome. where I told Harry what had happen "Stanford White" replied Mr. Del- j ed. He got very excited and bit his mas with the coolness of voice and I nails. manner characteristic of him; and' These were the only two Instances, then added still In the same low tone1 Mrs. Thaw said that she told her "who else?" husband that Stanford White "had .1.1,1 With Jerome. approached or attempted to speak" 1 to her Justice Fitzgerald held that the dls- j trict attorney's suggestion was a good 1 Court Crowded. one and he thought the defense. There was another great crowd In should lay a broader foundation to the court room today, every available show Insanity before proceeding along; bit of space being occupied by persons the lines suggested by Mr. Delmas sitting In the regular court benches question. ' and other who were fortunate "We will proceed to do this as soon ! enough to have chairs brought for as possible." announced Mr. Delmas. , their use. The dramatic thrills of the and vigorously protesting against this defamation of tin- dead." "Is there no limit'.'" he exclaimed, "to the aspersions that an- to be cat 'Pon this man? Your honor well Knows I cannot, under tin- law, con trovert any statements this witness "light make agaln.-t the memory of Stanford White." In tones bitterly sarcastic, Mr. Je rome spoke of "this tattle of the Ten--d-rl.iln" and declared that the court had the right to limit such testimony until competent evidence had been Idueed here to show that this man or was. of unsound mind. We don't snow whether this defendant ever w as insane.'- he concluded. rhe question which called out the moustache "hement protest from the district at- street off is i irn. v a, addressed to Mrs. Thaw alighted by Mr. Delmas and its porport was Stanford burg. Mr. Delmas asked her If she had seen Stanford White after her re turn to New York from the honey moon trip. While Called Her. "I passed Stanford White one day on Fifth Avenue. I was in a call und he saw me and I heard him say 'Eve lyn' Just like that" end Mrs. Thaw raised her voice as if to call some one. "I went back to oor hotel and told Harry and he said: 'The dirty blackguard. He had no righ to speak to yon.' The next time I saw him 1 was driving to Dr. Delevan's office t have mv throat treated. Stanford White was also in a rah He Just star ed at me this time and stroked his I turned into Thirty-third Fifth avenue, and as J it the doctur'.- door I saw White (onune I rang the WIFE-MURDERER AND BURGLAR PAY PENALTIES ON THE 0 ALLOWS Nw-UI to Tins Cilixcn.) ''li.HAJI, Feb. S. John Hodges. " nvicter f wjfe nlur(jrr, an() free- rn"n J"nes, a negro convicted of bur Sury and attmi.tu,: twin in,! b.-.i-.ti nangea here within an hour s ere to die. and warned nun naint mis trcating their wle? and drinking whiskey The drop fell at 10 2 o'clock, and he wa pronounced dead in twenty minutes Fret man Jones, the m iir... confess ed on the h -affold that he entered the home of Mrs Jack Barker and that he Hodges knrtt Hncvn on ih. err,il,l nttemmed . criminal assault upon her. almost on the anniversary of the foul but said that he did not accomplish Time he committed on the :4th of th. He a detected shortly after February, io, when he broke into the crime by Mrs Barkers hair on h' lfe' bed room at midnight and the buttons of his coat. He died In murdered her while she pleaded for nineteen minutes after the drop fell. m'fr. He made short statement on Neither showed any signs of fear and " gallowa saying that ha was ready met death bravely. day before were not there, however, und the crowd did not seem loath to leave when adjournment was taken, more than an hour earlier than usual. More Letters Bead. The day began with a continuance of the reading of the letters from Harry ThVw to Mr. Longfellow, writ ten after Evelyn Nesbtt's revelations to her suitor, while in Paris. There were others too, vv.ilch Thaw had sent the attorney to deliver to Miss Nesblt, who at the time would not Me him. Mrs. Thaw followed these wltn a relation of her experiences with Stanford White and Abraham Hum mel, concerning the alleged affidavit which she fnadc, charging Harry Thaw with having taken her from her mother against her will, and with gross cruelty. Mrs. Thaw told how she had been Induced to answer some questions about herself and Mr. Thaw at the time, and had been told the stories about his "cruelties to girls.' While "Hammered" Tliaw. Staniord White had told her, she declared, that It was necessary to take drastic measures to protect her from such a person and that Harry Thaw must be kept out of New York She denied that she had ever signed any papers for Mr. White In "his of flees" the contents of which she did not know. When she got frightened at the papers and demanded to see them, she said, Mr. White took her to Humntel's office and there they burned paper w .ich ad her name at the bottom of it. She was not allowed to see what the paper contuined be fore it was destroyed. Tills feature of Mrs. Thaw s story was made amusing at times by her Interjections of the names which Har ry Thaw had applied to the lawyer and Mr. White's agitated questioning as to what she had told Hummel about him. She declared she had told the lawyer nothing. Sell" Mr White said to me, she went on. 'there is something wrong somewhere. He lias Just nqueezed a thousand dollars out of me and the Lord only knows how soon he will squeeze another. I then remember ed having told ...r Hummel, when he threatned things about Mr. Thaw, that he hail better be careful for Mr. "haw knew a lot of terrible things about Stanford White." Wills Were Barred. lie defense endeavored to get Into cidence today the wills of Harry Thaw and Evelyn Nesblt Thaw, exe- uted the night of their wedding in Pittsburg. There were so many ad ditions and erasures, that Justice Fitzgerald declared the documents not ad niissi b!e until the changes were proved. Mr. Delmas said he would later endeavor to do this, as the wills and the Interlineations and a codicil by Harry Thaw bad to do with the proof tending to show the Insanity of the defendant. It i-anvr out in the discussions of the wills that the name of Stanford White oi.-urred In Tnaw's testament. Mrx. Tluro on Monday. Mr Hart ridge, of Thaw'a counsel. said, after court adjourned today, that Mrs Thaw would go on with her direr examination Monday mornini Jus! wha will be the nature of Mritt Attorney Jerome' ,-rot ex amination when he take tne witness Is mi re conjecture It Is said he may in some way to attack her cred ibility, probably as to her ability to remcniU-rs other things as well as she has the Morles she has declared she told Harry Thaw from time to time. time of each other this morning House Receives Proposition From "the citizens of Buncombe County. MANNING pilE BILL 'COMESjUP WEDNESDAY CITY ABATTOIR DISCHARGE NOT STATE RIGHTS MAY BE RESULT SATISFACTORY INVOLVED SAYS OF AMENDMENT TO THE TROOPS SEN. FRAZIER BoardofAldermen Passes Res-; Quartermaster Sergeant Says; Japanese School Question Is olutlons With Joint Board Character of Dismissal Was j the Subject or Address of Health. Unfair to Well-Behaved. Before Senate. Measure to Equalize Number i of Challenges In Criminal Cases Is Defeated. INSPECTION OF MEAT AND MILK REQUIRED! GOOD SOLDIERS AND BAD PUNISHED ALIKE i EVERY STATE HAS THE SAME RIGHT FRANK BOHANNON PAYS PENALTY (By AsMnrtoled Press.) RALEIGH. Feb. I. Frank Bohan- non, a negro, convicted of murder. was hanged at Greensboro today. (Special lo The Cltlsen) JIALXIOH, Feb. . In the iegislu lure to4ay, the house debated through the entire session, except the time qvotet to tha Introduction of lulls, on tho bill by Parson to eyuall.e the number of Challenges by tho state and the defendant in criminal cases, nod finally killed the bill by a roll call bul lot of 44 to (I. In the house today u peiftion wiia presented from cltlsens of ilun -oinla.' county relative to a reformatory. The Manning railroad rat hill pre pared for the house commutes o; public service corporations since the hearing of the .railroad men and the fuilure of the Joint committee lo agree on rates to recommend, w:u reported and set as special order for Wednes day of next week. Among other bills reported from the committed were a substitute "Jim Crow" street car bill and the bill to limit the hour of work for railroad employes. Just before the adjournment In both tho house and senate notable bills pre pared by Speaker Justice of the hous, were introduced, entitled an act to prevent unfair and unjust discrimina tion in freight rates and to correct abuses to. the hjtodlin of freight. Thti Mil was Introduced in the House by Speaker Justice in person and la the senate by Senator Holt, who is his col league from tiullford. Decidedly the feature In the senate was the flglii made by lfuxton of For ayth and others agulnst the llurton bill to make public drunkenness misdemeanor, punishable by :lne and Imprisonment, Including sentence to the roads. Kuxton declared that the Democratic purty had enacted the Watts und Ward bills In the direction of temperan and voted special tem perance legislation for many loeallHeB The bill did not pasa, being referred to the committee on propositions and grievances, uhern It will doubtless te main. New County. The new county of Lee. which the senate vot J to creute today, out of Portions of Moore and Chatham with Sanford as the county seal, la to com- prise an in u of 107, K(lf acres, will have l.l'i'i oti-8 and t'i.t'JV.i 3 1 tax valuation- The bill paxxed second reading with only four votea agalnit It, und fin;i! vote will be tomorrow at 11.30. In the m nate a bill wan Introduced by Webb i" amend l'J.'iK revlsal, rela tive to Jurors In llunconibo county Btillenger. for relief of tremuri r of Henderson Hurleson, to amend char ter of Mi'- h' II county bank HOUSE MAKES A NEW HIGH RECORD County Representatives Asked Members of Dismissed Negro to Amend Charter of Co. Give Interesting Testl Clty of Ashevllle. 1 mony to Committee. Tennesseean Says No Treaty Gives Japs Right to Enter ' Public Schools. Owing to an Incorrect statement In (Ily Associated Press) an afternoon paper that (he board of; WASHINGTON, Feb. (. Walker aldermen would meet last night at McCurdy, formerly quurlermuster ser 8 o'clock (he board was not called to geant of Company II, of the battalion order for nearly half an hour lateri,,f nMro soldiers discharged for (ha than usual. The features of the meet- alleged "shooting up" of Hrownsvllle, Texas, who had chtirw uf tha iMaiiane Ing were the passagea of resolutions (lf Bmmunltlon, and former Sergeant calling on the legislators of Hun-i George Jackson of the same company. combe county lo amend the charter i as lo provide for a city abatolr and inspection of meat and milk for city uses, and of resolutions endorsing the good roads movement and coming clc lion. Alderman Btlkelenthjv FranJIii and Iiurnette were absent On motion of Alderman Rannolph, the aldermen went Into a Joint session with the board of health. DW, L. Dunn and Dr. latter board being present. Dr. Ambler stated that u move. mont was on foot all over the state looking toward proper registration of births and deaths In the etate. lie read a resolution of the Buncombe who had charge of the quarters keys to the gun racks on the night of the affray, ware witnesses today before the senate committee on military af fairs. Doth men gave clear accounts of their duties on that night and the sharpest kind of cross-examination failed to trap them In any way. Iloth Bonators Warner and Foster, who conducted the. cross-examination, remarked at the conclusion that they believed the witnesses to be honest men and frank on tho stand. "You are not satisfied with the char- of theiacter uf the discharge you received T" asked Mr, Hemingway of MoCurdy. "No. sir, I am not," he replied. "1 had done nothing to be punished for. I had never been punished before." During the examination of the wit ness as to the power of penetration of the service ammunition used In the legislation and the enforcement of the present laws. Tho board of health asked the hoard to pass similar reso lutions because they would have more weight thun the saino from privet cltlsens. Keferred to corporation counsel. Dr. Ambler, Dr. Dunn and Dr. c. V. Iteynnlds. i Dr. Ambler also stated that three' years ago, a movement was put on foot looking to the establishment of! ally inspection of all milk and meats; Snrlnvfield rifles. Hunator Forsksr County Medical Society fevering amefcf tiitdr'Tt rotia ehtwrt clear through a house, would It not?" The witness replied affirmatively. :, BRUTAL MURDER IN NORTHAMPTON CO. (By Associated Prese.) ! WASHINGTON, Feb. (.Federal encroachment on elate rights, with the Japanese school question aa tpe" principal Illustration, wae the subject of an address to the senate today bn, Senator Frasler of Tenneasee. Mr. Frasler said that this wae cot . a question that concerned California, alone, but concerned the right of ev ery elate to control Hi domestic af fairs. If the federal government, by treaty, would force Mongolians lnlat the white echoole of California, a like treaty would force the negroes of Cu ba, Manto Domingo, Hayll, and the Congo into the eehoola of Tennessee. In defiance f the etate laws. He e-. pressed admiration for the Japanese, but said the situation In California furnished no pretext for a quarrel with that nation, Tho school board simply executed a etate law providing for the separation of the white and . Japanese In schools. It had been do- elded over and over again that stats. had a perfoct right to make such ap- aratloa; that the etate of California wae but exercising- Its legal and con stitutional power. He denied with emphasis that this government had ever undertaken by treaty ta Interfere with constitutional rights of Califor nia In this respect. Quoting the language or the treaty, ho satdt "I chullengo any one lo find In It a word guaranteeing to Japan eso residents the right to enter publlo chimin uf the state at all, much less to enter them In defiance of mate law and regulation. (By Associated Press.) NOKFOI.K, Feb. H. Uy the con fession of Richard Matthew a re volting murder at Jackson, North- brought Into the city for consumption. j lrpion county. N. C. has been re- lle said the movement was almost vested and as u result at lynching may occurred before morning. Paul Kalney. a nephew of Mat thews, was killed with an axe. Mat thew has Implicated James, Honny and Menrv Itarin r, who are brothers, and all four men are under arrest. The confession says robery whs the motive for the crime. Late this afternoon great excite ment prevailed in Jackson. HTUJ ,.ffortH to get communication vtllh the place tonight have failed. Jackson Is a small place on a spur of I he Keaboard Air Uric, and Is a few miles south m the Vlrglulu border line (Ily Associated Press.) WASHINGTON. Feb. 1 -- high rv..!. in the uy of -piiKsa private e t.-ion bills was mud. lo house t ed In an ! The He'. Ing !!:.. I under tie speeches Florida, Hlggln creation AppallK i : Mr. Moie) Ldmitat - and the ' i ntr.v The i i.-.i when 7::, bills ir and a half appropriation b ''0, was t alt u Mler of e.-ner.'il re made by Mr I,, flallroad rate bt, a r r y -il. und d. bale or Mr ' 'onnecth ul t.f. orliiK he "White Moun'.ili! Forest lt to rs ' of WyornifiK oc of Fedtgyil Antic drawal of coal e . at i p. m . a'ijo and ,,r, I t he i'y." from EXECUTION OF THE DECREE SUSPENDED i hi W ASHI.N Taft. a! preside!'.' . goon a' Mi for the i n rlecree t an Inert rural K' been Li from a de r. e mining forced receipt governo I,. Ma sao4iiicd I'ii'sh i TON. Feb S- a consultation n r as cabled ti.wrn. ana, authority to u-i n being the ex. i u i i 'ii of th Mly prepared pro-. ,.imr f . from f.ooo to I. .''(in of ih "f Cuba Tin- a t hi !. t in view of rt pr. -en'ii-l in 'he Cuban pattp-s tl.a' 11. ipcdlent find le f .! d-- r 'her or not it whall be en etary Taft ill a a.t th 'he written pro- 'goon has re t-u !-.! FAVROT INDICTED ON MURDER CHARGE unanlmouNly njrrped to b a (rood oin. A Mil wjih pri'pnred under the nupor- vlMion of th- corporation rounwl which u'hh rmlorflod v the board of health, t ht bouru of fildttrmun ami the Hurtoornbe County Madlcal Hi- ii'ty. Ii provided competent Iiihpm'- tlfiu for all work by th appoint rnnit of an Innpi-ctor who would draw u MHlary nt Ihh than $100. Further mop', wild tb hutch had aurccil, to pay fir t h InHpertlon w that It ; uld rout thr city nothing. , I hc bill mhm pun? !, but Ir Arnblor! mid Its wh'dc purpow , had b-4-n d" -: fHt'd by Mtriklnic out n Puwhk'j Ml-, low Iiik the butt rd of rtlb-nn-ri lo d'tnlfc'iutf w hen- all d"nvHii: cattb, 1 Mvln- or Nht'p Hhall h- t-itt mkIi't-'I t If t h-y art' b tiwd In t In city" nr oth'wiHi- to b lkn for irtnpcrtl"n Ht a rent ral p""1 1 before bflntc "dd, to a COIWI1IIKT Ir Ambh-r bad u copy -r !h- bill1 hi Mm orfKlnal form and m.l'l In- b llf.rd there wiiM be no fippoHlt ioi t. Itx uxmuk at this HPNui'.n nf the b'KlH-laturi- lb- mI' m the iMitrhrr uouM unite !- pay for th'- Inspec tion tin - j.r'-iiilHed hefor' 'in ni'Mj ii AbbTinan ;uidolpb llir hill w t i ..r.ii re forwarded to the roonf r ju " ii 1 1 1 vpm ni Ittib-ljch v.i!h r'!i'-.i rn.it H b- paH-d j n -n,r,en'. l I - Mtate.J that thlx will n.eiiri 'h "' 'ti 'f a MeolMrn bjit- j 1 ,ir v. h-re ),ij h'Tln will b done I m.'l'-r j 1 1 1 1 e r -! 1 1 i IhIo n I r I t, n i i ! . . t hat th-' iiu-nd -j n t,i- 'ir -' bill v. u d'je to n H.'lihk' b'. WtlW-fl tile rep- t !,-, . t;hr niutit r-iplt-b ul!') v. ed in .a. t nti' 'o hi.! v. ii itrnei.i tie rlt n i .t j . 1 1 it vas i ' i red t- ii..ri- r hlch . i be pre- In ' r rn i, fo- jo i nt bo. i r 1 ! b n !Mi ;.'ut t iie tioftr.I of Hlder- im en regular H-r--hn I, ..(in-riy filfl that Mr" i ; -id ompla i n-d of rtd- ,tif- r- .n hewtnuf re-t d to . " a-nKineer propertv of AT,-iM!ia s . M o'tl'Hin htreel. v .r ij.-r. -I e-.nn ' ' 1v 1 he clt. to- t-.i f, f,, ;r- .'I hain't the prop.-rt A r '.!'' liearlily ndor-inic ' ir .-.-i r -.I t rn wmrnt and eonjfrm i.:;r.r.c f'' "'it)'y "ffleii! for th-:r -.t;,r,d ;ir.d .-ff.ir'M In the ina""r v.i uri'' i"' : ft v'j" ' udopf ed rinildine IVrmlti i or per tn u were irra ntt-d hu FRISCO MEN AT THE WHITE HOUSE' (Ily Awoclatod rreee.) V VVAHHINOTON, Fidj. 8. Mayotl Hchmltz and the nchool board Ot u FranclHco, who were nutumoned her to dlxt'UMH tho Japanene achool que Hon with tho prealdenl, arrived here at f,. 4 r, o'clock thl afternoon. Their train wan 24 bourn late. The delega tion will bu received by the prenldent tomorrow afternoon. INDIAN BILL IS PASSED BY SENATE FOUR ARE KILLED IN STREET CAR WRECK oir lllitMI.MillAM. Ala . Feb M men are kuoiwt to be Head an the re. !-ult of h collision ut a crowning on the l:iil l.:ile Kb-t 1 Ii- line tonlKhl Th. tle.Hl A H hl.Vi; J KAVANAf'.ll A f.l:X A MlKI: hl.MI'HO.V. I'NKVlWN MAN -.Old -trinji of fr. iKht i!ii H'ruek i be t r.nlt r of t le t ! ' rl- on nt the 'I" .1 . II f - .'e -. I,-ll -Iftt' ' t lwtPK lth i r rl Ii-- f ,f i Tht u- .r.- pile,) in ii heap nti) pi i- b ie.ol thut rnori b ' i ' I 1 1 M .lie I-' I ! i lirid- 1 the W lit k (Ily AanrM-lalml I'lfaa.) AKIIINOTO.V, Feb. 8 Tile etM ale today pn:ed the Indian appropri ation bill which baa been the nubject of rliMt-uttHlon throughout the week. .Senator Fruiter matle uu atldrena ut tin ful, i t of mnti-H' rlRhtH, after, uhbh Ih'i army appropriation bill, carrying a total of l I.MJO.OOO, taken up The .irm uu-Hviirt? wii" partly read f..r n.proal of eom m 1 1 1 ,, amend mini und adjournnient uat tukeit boril before el o'i lot k, when It be-e.-irne .ippnitnt that eoni-lderiible de tune ",i- t', le- iii i nfloln d by an it loeiiii on nl lo pcttnlt tbi govt riitnent lo ri'oiic rediitt-ti ruti-K from flu- rail roitdt" on 'he t r aiiHpoi ta ' Ion of troop-l und "iipplli-H for the arinv, .m l to nl l iitinv offleelt. and their t.imllie l i at t Id ti tr:ini.oi!,ill'iti. ml- untie re-.e,t.,t Id 1. but. h.-r A- 'b barter 'l,e . .1 ' (' t , ) f, i in it. ! 3-1 .,i.r. men v- at, JiK A lo. near. I rat i. Si:..-1 t -i U f.i! BELIEVES "LORD DOUGLAS" AND MISS HOOD ARE IN ATLANTA i .j i-. A d .1 ,,. pi u bo n eiiher been ill hi der. -I "Lord !' iikIii. th. t 1M Who 1,11- d U f.i -I vouiik uonii-n in ii'l HH1 )'! it. .in At. Hilt, 1 I Xlllee 1 1 O. II' ,1 pp. ii till,' th- II I lioihi- le. I "1 ' Kirl h.,-. e . .1 by !. 111.- liAT'N ROUGE. Li F It 1 Democfa.ip CongTeiwmiinwIect George K. Favrot t ae today Indicted by the grand jury on a charge of murder for ahootlng Dr. Harry Aldrkh. one of the leading phrslclana of In ton I Rouge. IP foilo w A he . lie b. lit . d lo I or dt i t t .ot-.o.u. b 1 1 n '-1 1 -1 . . ' . i' c . ,:il t of Ani.-i-ieii, ' il. an l -he it man at i -tronir r. - -efril.lan.. ft, I..,., f io uk ' ha-t tonniit. I Mrx John N llo..d that h. r d-tiKh'-r arid h, r buRii- lord hit. .in I fir, In th- fiat. I'l'v A dl:' rt ttear- h ha- be.-n int-' itnt. .1 by the A'--int.i poll-i for.-e. and no k-ioii. wili It.- lift unturned it, lo, at, th. enitde if the are In Atlanta p.. trail..- 'if Mm II i. Mi Hood III. 4 had i.e. rat dreamt. . ..in .rnltig hen w ii. n ubouf. . but Itt i aii-te tif the fj-ct thnt el e has i .in ntly Pad thn crimt o' to. hftcani!"'. on her mind, ah hu.e .ai i ,., a't. anion to I,, r dreams. Sev eral ago a Granger uppeirei at the lt,od horn., on Fair mr.et. Ii Atlanta, and attk.-d for room and board for hlmwlf and wife. He en-iraK.-d btiurd anil left paving be woultl return nithln the folb ulng few daya. Afi.r 'he man nan K"n' Mrs. HrxxJ re.ar.'l hi- tttronr rtsitnblHnfl) tt ' I.rd ftttugiuit." and ulic Immediately notified the police and had a ayateni ail. -earch of the hoitpitalt begun. Ko on. Iia- lxien found u ho brara the .liKhte-t rem-mblam e to Mlaa Hoed, but until every place haa been eearch A i- aico Mrit. Hood dr-amed I-rat I S room addition on that ht r daughter wan trithally 111 -n South Ma n tenet an Atlanta rto-plial. and that "ltrd,ed the hunt will be continued. . ? f r.mk lir.mri.13 Haywood auto- Ijougla.-" wa with her Khu thought j .Mm. Hood, with tier tvto eons, mov4 mobile barn. 'her daughter waa In a dying condi- ed to Atlanta ttj montha age fromj On motion the iKiard went Into ex- lion, and that h a ery mu.n In Aahrvllle and contemplated making ectitlv wnnlon 'need of eltan' Since the diap-j that city their permanent home.'-
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 9, 1907, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75