Only Afternoon Paper Between Richmond and Atlanta With Leased Wire and Full Press Dispatches LAST EDITION. ALL THIS MARKETS. THE RALEIGH EVENING TIMES- VOLUME 30. RALEIGH, N. C, THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 21, 1907. PSIC2 II MRS. BRADLEY'S THIRD Ordeal of the Cross Examination Closed at Noon Today After the Prosecuting Attorney Had Drawn Some nonmnlnn TnotSmnnit Cnnm Irtn Dnt.nnnn uuuiayiuy icouuiuuj THE INTENSE AGONY OF A WOMAN'S SOUL But the Frail Little Woman Bore Up Well Under It All ami Today 'Heemrtl Brighter Than Yesterday. This Afternoon the Remaining Witnesses for the Defense Are Be ing Examined Some, of the Let ters 'Which Passed Between Mrs. : Bradley and Senator Brown and Letter Which the Prisoner Found in the Senator's Room at the Hotel Just Before the Tragedy Who ; Was the Woman She Declared She "Must Kill .or Jo Mad?" She Tells the Prosecutor She "Didn't Know." But H Evidently Refer red to the Legal Mrs. Brown' : Other lnrblriit-4 of IntmiKo liititict. " (By. Leased Wire to The Times.) Washiiigtoa.Nov. 21. The third day of Mrs. Bradley's ordeal on the stand began this morning under a1 leaden sky. The court room was as dark and gloomy within as the wo man's soul, whosee agony was being shown forth. She looked better physically, how ever, than she has any day since the trial began and her voice was clear and musical and 'was clearly heard In the rear of the big room. Her cheeks were flushed and she held her head proudly In answer to the degrading questions asked her by the district attorney. Such ques tions that Bear the heart and stagger the finer feelings of the spectators. But the little woman In black bore it all bravely. Today District Attor ney Baker's guns were brought against every shred of her defence. Skilfully he made her declare the se cret facts of their life together. Women shuddered and men averted their eyes as she pitifully told of her own degradation. . The district attorney finished his cross-examination before recess, and the defense then put the rest of Its witnesses on the stand In Mrs. Brad ly's interests. Pistol Given Her to Protect Herself From Mrs. Brown. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Washington, D. C, Nov, 21. Her discouraged, appealing features por traying pitifully the effects of her two days upon the witness stand, and her beseeching glance toward her at torneys denoting that she realized that today she was to be questioned not by friends but by a duty bound prosecutor, Mrs. Annie M. Bradley walked unsteadily to the witness stand to conclude a story that has taken three days in its telling. She expected a gruelling cross-examination; she expected the Inmost I secrets of her liaison with Senator Brown for the long years before she shot him would be laid bare by tho searching probe of the district attor ney and his assistants. She had been told that today she faced perhaps the hardest experience, in her life and she : went to the stand resignedly, help lessly and yet hopefully that some how sho would acquit herself In a manner that would bring her both liberty and life. Prosecuting Attorney Kind to Wlt ' lies. The ordeal was shorter than Mrs. Bradley expected, for at 11:25 Dis trict Attorney Baker settled back in his chair and announced that he had completed his examination of the lit tle woman and a glad smile of re lief, almost gratitude, overspread her , face." .''.. And th-. district attorney, even in . the discharge of his duty, was in one : sense, of the word, kind to Mrs. Brad , ley. There was none of that domi- ,, peering spirit shown, no browbeating, no insinuations that the pale defend ant before him was not' telling the truth. He went over the sad tale told by Mrs. Bradley on her direct examination, picked what to him seemed to be a flaw hero and there, and questioned her about It, but there was no brutality, no harassing, be it said to Mr, Baker's credit, shown in the cross-examination. At all times he was respectful, yet insistent, duty hound, yet conservative; loyal in his desire to vindicate the law and con vict tho defendant, but never unralnd- mimvmr. hum mc 1 1 icuiict fill of the fact that it was n woman before him; a woman who had suf fered much, had lived and -loved much; had erred and yet was a wo man still. And this attitude perhaps will help Mr, Baker's cause more with the twelve men who sit in judgment than if he had taken Mrs. Bradley In hand, tossed her about on a sea of ridicule and hurled her against her already storm-beaten mind and body a torrent of abuso and brutally ex pressed disbelief. For .this is the penchant . of some attorneys, and it argued well for his cause and for his manhood that District Attorney Baker is not of that sort, for the woman had for many years had enough of this, and better natures would have revolt ed at a recurrence of it today. Life On the Senator's Farm. Mr. Baker first began to examine Airs. Bradley with regard to her life ou Senator Brown's farm,' bringing out nothing especially new or detri mental to the defendant. Next he came to that period in her life when she and Brown had been arrested on account of their relations, and to his i questions as to how many times the pair had suffered arrest, she replied, wearily, "Oh, three or four times. I don't remember exactly." Next he questioned her as to the visit of the Rev; David Utter to her while she was living at the senator's farm, at which time he had tried to persuade her to leave the senator. I want to explain something here, judge," Mrs. Bradley interposed. "Mr. Utter had been sent by Mrs. Brown, and then sho and a friend went to the senator and told him that I had planned to go with Rev. Utter on a fishing trip. The senator called me up over ih& telephone and raved and told me" never to speak to him again. Then I went up to Salt Lake to see him, and when I explained the true situation he was so sorry that he had abused me and told me to go on hack to the farm and stay there again." Q. When did you last talk with Rev. Mr. Utter? A. About two years ago. Q. And did you not, in speaking of your relations with Brown on that occasion tell Rev. Mr. Utter that you intended to make Senator Brown mar ry you, and he asked you, "How," and did you not say to him, "Arthur Brc ivn is a coward at heart, and u he refuses to marry me I will press a revolver against his head and tell him that I will kill if he does not?" A. I did not. Senator Said Mrs. Bwwn Might Kill Her. . - Mrs. Bradley was then questioned about a conference which was held at Pocatello between herself, Mr. Brown and a Mr. ChrJstensen. Dur ing this long conference she said that her recollection was that Mrs. Brown had agreed to comromlse and said that they would get a divorce if the senator would give her (Mrs. Brown) the Brigham street house and Max Brown the'farm. "I said, 'Do it, do it.' " Then the next day I understood that the senator gave you a pistol. Why did you take that pistol? A. Oh, the senator said that I had better take it. That Mrs. Brown was a very vicious woman and would stop at nothing, and that I might need it to defend myself. I nearly always carried it in my satchel after that, for he Insisted that I should. Q. Did you not carry It for Mrs. Brown? A. No, I did not fear Mrs. Brown l never sought Mrs. Brown, I never InCerferrcd with Mrs. Brown. U. Were no men b names meu - tloned during that conversation? Brown Insanely Jealous, A. Oh, there might have been. Men's names were mentioned per haps a thousand times by Senator Brown. He was so Insanely jealous all the time. He would become furi ous at times and was the most Jeal ouB person in the world. Q. I show exhibit 33, a letter written you, say in the early summer of 1901. In this letter you say "In stead of wasting breath on Schroe der, Evans, McGuire, the priest and anybody else, we should sip life's sweetest nectar from each other." I will ask - you what you mean by that? A. I do not think I need explain that. .' Q. Do you remember the time that you struck Senator Brown with an umbrella during a quarrel and knocked out some- of his teeth? the (Continued on Second Page.) BRYAN ARRIVES WASHINGTON Will Address Same Meeting v Gov. Glenn Does IN FOR STRENUOUS TIME Social and Political Appointments AVill Kee-i Kim Busy lor a Week. Speaks in Alexandria Tomorrow nud On Saturday Night 'Addressed Students Or ' G. W." Colics Saturday Afternoon He Will Speak in Oyn Air to V. M. C. A. Gath ering. '.' (By Leased Wire to The Times.) .'.Washington, Nov. I!!. William Jennings Bryan, democracy's "peer less leader,'' 'arrived in Washington at ti o'clock thla morning. 1 le.'.wiui i driven Immediately to the residence of his personal friend. Cotter T. Bride, where he will remain throug'.i oiit his stay in Washington. Mr. Bryan's arrival marks the be ginning of one of lii.-i ino.'U : renfioiiK weeks, and for the next ...nix or seven days he will bo busy attending wed- dings, delivering addresses on poli tics, citizenship, Y. M. C. A. 'work, a.id attending a great banquet to be given in his honor next Tuesday evening. ' . Mr. Bryan came to .Washington primarily to attend the wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Bride's daughter, at which Mrs. Ruth Leavilt, Mrs. Bryan's daughter, will be maid of honor. Tomorrow evening Mr. -.Bryan will deliver an address in Alexandria, Va. The address will be given In the in terest of tho George R. Hill memo rial. .. ; ;''-,'.;' :,.. ' '.'.'- . On Saturday afternoon at 4:3i o'clock Mr. Bryan will deliver nil address under Y. M. U. A. auspices from the steps at the south front of the treasury building. Saturday night the; students of political science of George Washing ton University will hear Mr. Bryan's address on "Good Citizenship," On Monday night Mr. Bryan will deliver, an address on a subject not yet chosen, at the Y. M. C. A. STUDENT OFF HIS BASE COMMITS SUICIDE (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Chicago, Ills., Nov. 21, Seeming ly as lacking in worries as anyone In the careless, curious throng about him, Henry Toppen, a Chicago stu dent, said to be the son of wealthy French parents in Switzerland, wan dered aloiig before the various cages In Lincoln Park animal house, lie paused beforo tho lions' quarters, drew a revolver from his overcoat pocket, placed it to his mouth and shot himself. He died a few min utes after Keeper Devry carried him to his oflice. He was 21 years old and had been attending a private school on the southside and was re joicing In the prospect of returning soon to his Swiss home. WKSTlXCiHOl'SK COMPANY MAY KUCOVKU ITS VKKT. (Hy Leased Wire to The Times.) Pittsburg, Pa., Nov. 21. If plans at present being considered are car ried out it Is expected that the West- Inghouso Electric Company will be taken 'out; of the hands of receivers i witiun two months or ns soon thero after as the clerical work can be per formed. Some of the largest creditors are also said to approve and It Is expect ed that a letter will soon bo directed to the smaller creditors. WIFE'SOREAMREVEALED DEAD BODY OF HUSBAND (By Leased Wire to Tho Times.) Purkersburg, W, Va., Nov. 21. The body of Vas Sherwood, who sud denly disappeared from his home sev eral days ago, has been found flout ing In the Little Kanawha River. It was picked up at a spot on the river where his wife dreamed on the night of Sherwood's disappearance that she saw it sinking in the river. FIVE CHILDREN ROASTED ALIVE And the Ears Burned Off ttie Head of Another PARENTS LIVES SAVED A Fire, in the Home' of a Pennsyl vania Family -Nearly' Wipes Out the Household The. CoiiUugrulion CjiusetlTiy Over-pressure of Gas Mother tt:;d .Father - Jump From Upstairs Window and Willi Two Children Out of ili-lit Are Saved. (By Leased Wire to The Tines.) Titusville, l'ii., Nov! a l'.-r Five children ranging i:i aires from 2 to "5 were burned l; death near here ibis morning; In i.'ieii- lionie. Thomas .'mil', and wife, llui .ptireiita," escaped, - f ngpther-''with ' M.w.o,- ''older eh ildren One of froiu an upstairs window. the;' children it'i a boy of 17, was perhaps: fatally- burned. His ears were almost' burned'-, off .while his hair was singed.. .'.'Qverr-preteiHiro. of Kh;; is to have started the lire. . . BANK CASHIER AND PRESSDENT ARE AHRESTEO C'.y Leased. Wir to The Times.) f New York," '''Nov. 21. William Maxwell, president, and Arthur D. Campbell, cashier of tho Borough Bank of' Brooklyn, were placed under arrest at their homes today, and. guarded by detectives, taken to the county court house to await the re turn of the indictments found by the grand jury as a result of that body's investigation of tho affairs of the bank. William Cow, of the firm of Ward & Gow, who was one of the principal stockholders in the Institution, was also at the court house. Although not under arrest, he was closely watched by detectives, who had or ders to see that he did not get out of sight. -'' It was learned that five indict ments in all have been found. POUR KILLED EXPLOSION NEAR NORFOLK (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Norfolk, Va., Nov. 21. Four men lost their lives and another was prob ably fatally injured, the result of a boiler explosion, at planing mill No, 2 of the John L. Roper Lumber Company, at (iilmerton, several miles from here. Tho dead: S. E. Terrell, (white), carpenter. It. It. Sorry, (white,) planter. Scott Wilson, (colored), carpenter. It. K. Frank, (colored), fireman. Tho explosion.- shook the entire neighborhood and the pinning mill Is a wreck. DF.ATH OF ItltKJ.-GKN'. GEORGE E. POXl, U, S. A. iHy Leased Wire to The Times.) ' Winston-Salem, N. C., Nov. 21. Brigadier General George E. Pond, IT. S. A., retired, was stricken with apo plexy here last night and died within a few hours. General Pond hi ISC 3 enlisted as a private In a Connecticut company and served until the conclusion of the civil war. In 1868 he entered the military academy nt West Point, and at the outbreak of the Spanish war was a major. During the war he act ed as colonel In the quartermaster's department of the volunteer service. Ho was rcently retired with the rank of brigadier general. He was born in 1847. BO DEMAND FOR SCHOOLS State Board of Education in Session Today MONEY IS APPORTIONED Of the Sum of $I.,OMO Appropriated hy Last Legislature All Has Been Devoted to Public 'High Schools 15(1 in the Siate and Demands for .More How Counties Secure -the Schools, The. state board of 'education met today in the ollb e of (iovernor Glenn and finislii d apportioning to the public high schools (lie .-appropriation made for tills purpose., by the last legisla ture:' There are 150 public high sehools in. si counties and the sum of $-!!. (Mil- lias been apportioned to these, The total appropriations by the leg islature was $4fi,00!. .'There' were'. applications oil file to day for at- least $".U0O inore than could lie met out of the appropriation o! $ tr,.0(in. ;'-.' lii order to get a part of this Kppio SUpposed. ni'iation eaeh school ..district was v- ipiii ed to raise !) priv.ite wubsci ip tlin iir by local taxation for'hiJta school instruction an amount equal to that appropriated by the .si He. In counties having more than a four months' school teim in every dh'trie: without aid on the 'second hundred of l,0t;0 appropriation.! . for four , months" term, an c.iuiil amount must also b.i appropriated to each high school-'by the county hoard of education fro u the general county- school, fund. 'There has 'been a great demand for oulilic high schools mid every school made 'available' by : the appropriation has been. .established." every cent has been appropriated and applications are on file fur at least 3.000 more for ; oilier schools. '.Exactly 81 of tile 97 counties are repreaeuted -In the list containing high schools, or about 84 per cent of the counties. M HS, HAHT.IK AGAIX V WIN'S IX DIVORCE Sl IT. (By Leased Wire; to The Times.) Philadelphia; Nov. '21 The superior court 'today decided the Hartje .. di vorce appeal in favor of Mrs. Ilartje. Harlje had sought to re-open the case. . CAT WRECKED HOUSE AND THEN CAME BACK (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Greensburg. Pa.', Nov. 2L: George Doheney, aged 1G, who lives In a miners' boarding house at. the No. 3 plant of the Jaminon Coke Com pany, was awakened early this morn ing by a scratching under the bed. Doheney got up, lighted the lamp and looked under the lied and found the house cat, but the more George coaxed it. to come out the farther under the bed the cat retreated. George crawled under the bed with the lamp still in his hand, lie made a pass at the cat and forgot about the lamp. It fell out of his hand and exploded. A few seconds later there was a more"; terrific' ex plosion, which completely wrecked the house. Under the bed. In addition to the cat were two cans of blasting pow- der, which the exploding lamp caus- ed to explode-also. Doheney and his ronm-niato, Karl Ororos, Were blown completely out of the wrecked house, seriously in- jured. At the Greensburg hospital, where, they were taken, it is t.aid they. cannot recover, Hair an hour after the explosion the cat came limping back toward the wrecked houso. DEATH IN TUNNEL; OVERCOME BY OAS 03v Leased Wire to The Times. ) Chicago, Ills., Nov, 21. Death lay In wait 150 feet below the sui face of State treet today for eight workmen on the Southwestern Land & Tunne-I Compnny. It closed ou James Lana- han, of Rock port. Ills., but the others were snatched from Its grasp. The' urm'1tvin l,,i,l Itunn lifilnur li'ilf an . , , , .. . .. hour before comrades on the surface began to worry because no dirt was sent to the top. Rescuers found all eight stretched out In tho tuunel, overcome by gas. BREWER J , HANDS OUT A RED-HOT CRITICISM Supreme Court Justice Scores President Roosevelt's Ad ministration and Punches the Judiciary With Live Wire.-Praise for Governor Hughes A SPECIAL TO NORFOLK Hundreds of Cadets and Friends Will See Game l;y Maiiiilieeiit Work Again-t All-: Stars,. A. and M. Stock Has Again ! Ascended and Confidence of Vic- j lory Thanksgiving; is Strengthened, j Every Convenience lor Trip. j The great work done by the . A. j and M'. t--.i:n1-.'-yo6tsrday afternoon, j. with three ?: nv.1 . men, out of the ganio.' -has '.made the supporters of , the .cadeis Mir-.'-confident-than even of their ability to beat Virginia at i Norfolk one (veek r-om ioday. Not ftnre;; t'lit; smij:i have the cadets been ' bou'en. and ' their supporters-' fee! t hat the only probable obstacle i in-their way lo victory is over-conli- dciiic. Their bat tie yesterday was against men who had - played' on many a gridiron and who and,, in negie Hall at. which Governor Hughes Cieir day. made fo.it ball history. To jus,lce Davld A, Brewer of the get the better of a team such as met..,. . , them last evening is no small task. 1 .States supreme court made ad and this is why today the supporters dresses. of A. and M. are banking on ending; Governor Hughes devoted much of the season ..without losing a game, his speech to amplifying the Idea that If a good team and pleniy of root- ,,, ,,.,,,, . " , . era' and hundreds of the fair sex are I 1,ubUo mcm must work for the calculated to wiii, then the cadets '!fi0')le onl-v and not to satisfy his own stand head. A special train will be ambitions. run over the Seaboard next Thurs-i day for Norfolk, .-and it will carry omce ln reiatiou t o publt c o pi nl on." bands, ladies and young men who . , .... ,. will all cheer the cadets. The spe- : and s,lr"rl8ed hts audience by severe cial will : leave Raleigh at 7 in the ; CI'itlcism and arraignment of Presl morning and ample accommodations ! dent Roosevelt. wilt be' provided .for all. The ath-j Justice Brewer not only reflected letic 'association proposes to pay the on the president openly but by in entire expenses of chaperones who nuedo. He contrasted openly Roose carry parties of more thaa eight velt and Hughes. The governor es young women, and Major Gattis has caped embarrassment by leaving promised that the Seaboard will do early. It is said that he had no its part. On the return, trip Pull- knowledge of what Justice Brewer mans will be at the service of those Intended to say. desiring them. The price for the; "In this country we elect political round trip is but $3. j officers generally for short and specl- - - - ;;' . I fic terms. For the term elected, rul I'OACHIXG FISHFR.MKX ! ing, of course, in accordance with CAPTCItEl) BY PATHOL. ! constitutional provisions, the one s- lected is a ruler. He may be impul- (By Leased Wire to The Times.) sive, enthusiastic, strenuous, exhib-Pnt-in-Bay, O., Nov. 21. The Ca-!itlnB a spectacular and dramatic life, nadian patrol Vigilant fired a shot at'01' calm and self-poised in adminlstra American "fishermen' yesterday after- j tlon. No one doubts that President noon and captured the.m and their : Roosevelt or Governor Hughes Is a boats after a hard chase. jruler., Neither one is absolute. Each The Canadian patrol came upon 1 ls subject to limitation. The range two fishing boats and a gasoline of llis Power is prescribed, yet within launch near Old Hen Island. There tllat range each is most emphatically were lour men in the boats. The,11 ruler. fishermen - wero ordered to surren- j "The president is the chief magls der, but instead of giving themscdves trate of this nation, not for his glory, ui to I ho Cantulian "patrol, tho men ,)llt for our good. Indeed, his great hurried aboard the launch and set est Rtory should be in accomplishing out f..r American water as fast as the most for our welfare, they could go. j. "It may not be generally known j The Canadian government's ves- that, the convention that framed the sel gave chase. It was a lively run f,)r time, but 'when the Vigilant cent it shot after tho '.'Americans, ' prohibition.- on re-election. In the Which ( time dangerously near them, Judgment of some men, among whom the. .men in the fishing boat sr.rren- I am one, there Is a mistake in chang dered. The men were taken n'toard 'ng the seven year term, with prohl- th Vi;,ilant and kept iirisoners for sonn time. They were finally taken l0 other bouts, fishing on Hi;! Amerl- .! Can side and set at liberty. T.ie fish- jug boats, .however, 'wore retained by tho Canadians, . , ' : spectacle of a strenuous president A $.-.0,0110 I'll": playing a game of hide and seek with IX CiliC.VGO TODAY, the American people." I When Justice Brewer intimated '' (P.v Lea'sod Wire to Tho Times.) . that seven years of Roosevelt was C.ma.40. JHm..' Tv. 21.--iFire de- enough, the audience fairly gasped, ftro ed the I. .iltirr.civ ii. Ohio freight The justice paused a moment and ;rlKds at. 86th street and Erie Avenue then the applause began. It soon i th Ir. mom!;);;. swept, through the auditorium and Fight fr.'l.'.hv cars, loaded with i was the most prolonged and the loud inr: bandit o. 'were burned und the to- estt of the evening. Justice Brewer t;yl lo.-s was $; ".0,000. ! then said that a ruler should not yield Three trainmen risked their lives to local popular clamor, and added: in saving many cases filled with incr-1 "It Is disgraceful for him to adopt thandise. Engineer Frank Kdwards the politicians' trick of being for the and Fireman Alvin Thompson, with law, but against Its enforcement." 'their engine, pulled out. four loaded Justice Brewer then passed to the -trains and hauled tho burning curs to a place where the firemen could throw a stream upon them. i i judges introduce the spectacular In The Sugar Market.' their Judicial proceedings for the (By Leased Wire to The Times.) j suk of temporary popular applause." New York. Nov. SK-Domcstlc re- j He quoted Lora Mansfield as say fltuul mi gar murket today was steady ;,n. and unchanged. Tho local raw sugar t ,., .",,,,,. ,,,,, T , RUKar market Ulrtay was firm and 1 wnlch ,s run after; It is that popu- ruther dearer with November 8-4d!,ur1ty which sooner or later hevr higher at !s 4 l-2d and December 1 1 falls to do justice to the pursuit of 1-2 up at 9s 4 l-2d, j noble ends by noble minds." HE HOPES GOD WILL PITY THE REPUBLIC He Says When Judges Introduce the Spectacular Into Their Judicial Proceedings This Country is in a "'Had Way Praise for Gov. Hughes Who Leaves to Escape Embarrass ment Oov. Hughes Also a Speaker at Meeting But He Escapes In Time Xot to Be Embarrassed by the Compliments the Judge Pays Him Speech Before the Newljr Organized Civic Forum in New ' York. (By Leased Wire to Tho Times.) New York, Nov. 21. The newly formed civic forum, an outcome of the peace conference of last year, be gan its' public career as a lyceum for the discussion of national and Inter- national topics by a meeting in Car- Justice Brewer suoka on "Puhllr constitution at first prescribed a pres- iilential term of seven years with a bition on re-election to the present four year term. In the light of hls- tory 1 think it would have been bet tor to have left the presidential ter seven year. If that were the provis ion, wo should not now have the ' consideration of tho conduct of Judges -and said: "God pity the republic when our "I wish popularity, but not that