ffeto. Three Cents the Copy. VOL XII. COLUMBUS, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1907. NO. 42. INDEPENDENCE IN ALL THINGS. Subscription PrtaeTsToOPer Year in Advan! " r EVELYN NESB1T MWw TELLS HER STOW Gives Motive For Husband's Al leged Insane Act. LIFE LAID BARE IN COURT Left in Stanford White's Care by Her Mother, She Says He Induced w Her to Irink Wine, Then All Became Black. New York City. Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, the wife of Harry K. Thaw, laid bare in the Crimina Branch of the Supreme fJourt the story of her life, the recital of which was expected by the defense to convince the jury that h'er husband was justified when he shot down Stanford White, the man who, she declared, first drugged and then ruined her. As the former chorus girl answered readily the questions put to her by Delphin M. Delmas, chief counsel for the prisoner, every one in the court room leaned eagerly forward, so as not to miss a word that dropped from her lips. The pitiful story she told moved every one in the room. Men wiped the tears from their eyes, while women sobbed aloud. It was one of the most dramatic recitals ever heard in any court. Never before had the grim court room held a bigger crowd or one wrought up to such a pitch of excite ment. The defense had put forward its star witness. A more girlish figure that that which answered when Clerk Penney called Evelyn Nesbit Thaw could scarcely be imagined. She wore a loose jacket of dark blue, such as many a schoolgirl wears, and a dark hat of childish cut decorated with a bunch of violets. About her neck she wore a wide turndown collar of a modified Little Lord Fauntleroy de sign and a soft lawn tie of black tied in a bow. Her hair, while not hang ing loosely down her back, was half caught up and tied with a black rib bon jn a sort of pug at the back of her neck. The court room saw her without a veil for the first time since the trial began. There was disclosed a pretty face, small of feature, but regular in cut, a pair of large black eyes, very soft and very pleading, a pair of straight eyebrows of heaviest black, a mouth large but not unpleasing. whose lips parted to disclose two rows of very white teeth. Mrs. Thaw was called by the de fense to supply the testimony needed to support its contention that the. de fendant had learned something about the architect's treatment of Evelyn Nesbit that had caused an insane idea to form ir his brain that grew with the years until it culminated in the impulse that caused him to shoot White on Madison Square roof gar den. In her story Mrs. Thaw gave a mo tive for the shooting by laying her ruin to Stanford White. She had first been led by Mr. Delmas to tell of the dinner at the Cafe Martin, the shooting on the roof garden and of her marriage to Thaw on April 4, 1905. Then the examining lawyer jumped back to the summer of 1903, when she and Thaw were in Paris. It was at this time, she said, that Thaw first proposed marriage to her and she had refused him. "In stating the reasons to Mr. Thaw why you had refused him, did you state a reason based on an event of your life with which Stanford White was connected?" Mr. Delmas sis If 6(3 "Yes," said Mrs. Thaw. Then, in the form of a relation of the confession she made to Thaw, the witness told of meeting WThite, through a girl friend, in August, 1901, when s3, was only sixteen years old. She went to a luncheon party given by White at a house in West Twenty-fourth street, she said, and after that met the architect sev eral times, always with the knowl edge and consent of her mother. Sometimes the parties were in the Twenty-fourth street house and some times in White's apartments in the tower of Madison Square Garden. After the acquaintance had been continued for some time, she said, White asked her mother if she didn't want to go to her home in Pittsburg. Mrs. Nesbit objected that she did not like to leave her daughter, but White promised to look out for her, and Mrs. Nesbit left town, the witness said. Two days afterward White sent her a note to come to a party at the Twenty-fourth street house, and she went there after the. theatre. Only White was present, she said. After supper, White invited her to inspect a part of the house she hadn't seen, and they went upstairs to "a strange room" filled with cabinets, paintings, etc. Adjoining was a bedroom, with a "tiny little table" in the centre, on which was a bottle of champagne and one glass. At White's urgent solici tation, she said, she drank a lass of the wine, and "I don't know whether it was a minute after or two minutes after, but a pounding began in my ears, then the whole room seemed to go around, everything got very black." ' The girl's voice broke at this point, and, although she did not break down, it was only with the greatest effort she forced back the tears. Some of the women in the courtroom sobbed openly, and more than one man used his handkerchief vigorously. "When I woke up I was In bed, she continued. "I screamed anc screamed and screamed." t. During the whole of the time his wife was on the stand Thaw had not taken his eyes from her until this portion of her testimony was reached. Then he buried his face in a hand kerchief, and his body shook with emotion. His eyes were tear stained and red when he next looked up. White's subsequent conduct, as re lated by Mrs. Thaw, was cynical in the extreme. In spite of this confes sion Thaw insisted that he would marry her if she would love him, de claring that no one could blame her for her misfortune. They quarreled, and she came back to New York. By a most adroit maneuvre of the defense all this astounding story told by Evelyn Nesbit Thaw was intro duced in the guise of information im parted by her to Thaw. As such it was admissible only as tending to demonstrate its influence upon the sane or insane condition of his mind at a later period. Just before the midday recess was reached and after Mrs. Thaw had told of the struggles of her earlier life, how she had eventually come to pose for artists and then went on the stage, Mr. Delmas tried to get into evidence a letter Thaw wrote and gave to Miss Nesbit, addressed to F. W. Longfellow, his legal adviser in I this city. After recess, by a series or adroit moves, Mr. Delmas succeeded in having the letter admitted as tend ing to show the condition of Thaw's mind after the confession the girl had made to him. It was a rambling communication, and to it was pinned another slip of paper, on which was written: "P. S. If you can't read this, don't trouble." In the third letter admitted and read, Thaw spoke of the strain he was under, and gave evidences of it in many rambling, almost incompre hensible statements. OLNEY UPHOLDS SAN FRANCISCO Says the Government Has No Right to Interfere in Japanese Question. Washington, D. C. Richard Ol ney, of Boston, who was Secretary of State under President Cleveland, in a letter to Representative McCall, of Massachusetts, discussing the San Francisco school question, takes strong ground against the interfer ence of the Federal Government in the effort to restore the Japanese children to public schools of that city. He expresses the opinion that the treaty with Japan gives the general Government no right to override the police power of the State in the man agement of its school affairs and that the President has no right to inter fere in the matter by force of arms or otherwise. v REVOLT IN ARGENTINA. Colonel Sarzento Heads Rising in San Juan and Wins in Five Hours' Fight. Buenos Ayres. A revolutionary outbreak occurred in San Juan, head ed by Colonel Sarzento. After five hours' fighting, in which explosive bombs were used, the rev olutionists were victorious. Twenty men were killed and many wounded. Numerous houses were burned and others sacked. Governor F. Godoy and other Provincial officials are re ported to beprisoners. General Sarmiento has assumed the rank of Governor of the province ad interim, with headquarters at San Juan City. When the news reached here Act ing Governor Villanueva called a meeting of the Ministers and inter vention was decided upon. PATROLMAN KILLS CAPTAIN. Shoots Superior Because He Was Tired of "Seeing Him Strutting Around.'' Jackson, Mich. Patrolman Isaac Lewis walked into the office of Police Captain Holzapfel in the station house and shot him through the heart, killing his superior almost in stantly. He then fired a shot at Chief Boyle, but missed him. Lewis, It is said, had been drinking, and it is thought he was insane. After the murder he became vio lent and fought like a madman against being locked in a cell. -In an incoherent statement he said he had shot Holzapfel because he got tired of "seeing him strutting around." SUICIDE WITH CYANIDE. Dr. William J. Cbappell, Once of New York, Takes Life in Baltimore. Baltimore, Md. Dr. William J. Chappell, a well known physician, killed himself by swallowing cyanide of potassium. Earlier in the day he had tried to suffocate himself with gas, but his housekeeper saved him. Dr. Chappell, who was forty-nine years old. was the son of the late James Chappell, who is said to have been one of the wealthiest men in New York. He left his son consider able money, but Dr. Chappell spent it freely. Railways to Recoup. It was said in Chicago that a plan of Eastern railroads to increase freight rates by increasing the mini mum allowance for carloads was "a plan to recover the amount granted employes in wage concessions. Steel and Cotton Increase. Forward business is most exten sive in the iron and steel manufac ture and the cotton industry Creamery Butter Needed. Supplies of fresh cieamery do not increase in proportion to the demand. A JUSTICE BLOWN UP ,BY INFERNAL MACHINE - - n - m i Robert Cortez, of Paterson, Killed by Package Sent by Express. HiS SON ROBERT IS INJURED He Was Active Against Italian Crim inals -Almost Torn to Pieces When He Opened the Deadly Bx Sent From Newark. Paterson, N. J, Robert Cortez, Justice of the Peace and one of the best known Italians in this city, was literally blown to pieces in his office at 23 Passaic street by an infernal machine. He was carried to St. Joseph's Hospital with broken and badly lacerated arms and legs and with long gashes in his back. His face and head were torn in many places. His ante-mortem statement was taken before he died. He leaves a wife and eight children. Cortez left a friend in Ellison street and went directly to his office, where his twelve-year-old aon, Rob ert, gave him an express package that had arrived from Newark by the American Express Company. The package was about ten inches square and about tour inches thick. It was simply addressed "Robert Cortes, Justice of the Peace, Passaic street, Paterson, N. J." The second wrapper was fastened by a buckled strap. Cortex had some difficulty in loosening the buckle. The package exploded just when the buckle pin became unfast ened. The action of the explosion was downward. A large hole six feet square was blown through the floor, and the office desk tumbled into the cellar. Cortez was blown about four feet toward the door. He was covered by plaster and the debris of the office furniture. Cortez's son was fonly slightly in jured from the explosion, mostly powder burns over his face and hands. He was near the office door when the explosion occurred, and was blown into a corner. H was unconscious when found, but sus tained 'no serious injury. The front of the place was blown out, and the ceiling and sides of the office were shorn of their plaster. The only thing that withstood the force of the explosion was the safe. Cortez had been active against the thieves of late, and it is supposed that one of them sent an infernal ma chine to him. WANAMAKER MANSION BURNED. Two Famous Paintings Saved Loss May Be $1,500,000. Jenkintown, Pa. Lyndenhurst, the country home of John Wana maker, was destroyed by fire, only a few of the larger and more valuable paintings being saved. The loss will exceed $500,000 and may reach $1, 500,000. The estate covers more than thirty acres xn the old York road east of the line dividing Abington and Chelten ham townships. The house, partly English in architecture, was back about 350 yards from the York road and was reached by wide driveways. John Wanamaker, at his city home, said his loss would be fully $1,500, 000. His two finest paintings, "Christ Before Pilate" and "The Crucifixion," valued at $150,000, were saved. They were cut from their frames. JAPS HONOR RUSSIAN DEAD. Building Monument For Men Who Fell in Siege of Port Arthur. St. Petersburg, Russia. A dis patch from Harbin, Manchuria, says that the Japanese are putting up two monuments on Peropelochny Hill, Port Arthur, to the memory of the Russian and Japanese soldiers who fell in the siege. In proximity to the monument to the Russians a Russian chapel will be built, bearing the fol lowing inscription: "In memory of the heroes who met their death in the defense of Port Arthur." Killed and Hurt in Collision. Frederick Holland, a railroad em ploye, was killed and twelve persons were hurt, none seriously when train No. 5 on the Chicago, Milwau kee and St. Paul Railroad was in col lision in Chicago with a switch en gine drawing a train of empty pas senger cars. Terrorist Kills Governor. M. Alexaudrovsky, Governor of Penza, Russia, was shot and killed by a young man,who, in trying to escape, killed two policemen and wounded the manager of the theatre where the tragedy occurred, after ward killing himself. Coal Land Purchase Extended. The House Committee on Public Lands agreed upon the Coal Lands bill, permitting one person to buy 1280 acres, ia disregard of the Presi dent's wishes to make this land sub ject to lease only, United States Warships Sent. Rumors of impending war between Salvador and Honduras have occa sioned the sending of United States warshipB to Central America. WASHINGTON. The first annual exhibition of paint ings of American artists at the Gor coran Gallery was opened. The President has written a letter heartily approving Secretary Hitch cock s order withdrawing timber lands from allotment. Funpral t Z m were ueiQ over r the body of Dr. Jose Ignacio Rodri- uausiaior 01 the Bureau of American Republics. William J. Oliver presented to the Government his perfected bid for the isthmian Canal contract. 32 ,in!0n Pf JudSe Advocate General Davis, of the army, regarding the right oftn officer to command a soldier to attend worship was made public. President Roosevelt and Secretary Root contributed $100 each for the famine sufferers in China through the Skristian Herald. Extensive experiments with bal loons, aeroplanes and airships are to be made by the Signal Service Corns of the army. Reports by the Interstate Com-, merce Commission show a rapid in crease of railroad accidents. Charges of grave errors in the work of the. Interstate Commerce Commission, made by Charles S Hanks and George W. Harriman, were declared unfounded by Presi dent Roosevelt. OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. Out in Cuba the prevailing drought Is thought to have very seriously in jured the tobacco crop. Loans are freely made by tne Phil ippine Commission to the various provinces for the erection of public buildings in the islands. Every effort possible is being made TO llfio ntlh'vo vmnAa fi. Ma J u..n J u r . nuuuo iui uca ill uuiiu ring the railways in the Philippines. Cuba has already paid out $57, 000,000 for soldiers who were alleged to have served in the war with Spain. Andies Crosas. a member of the Executive Council at San Juan, P. R., has "resigned. The Supreme Court of Hawaii de cided that the Governor might ex change Lanai lands for other lands. DOMESTIC. Illinois has cut its Jamestown Ex position appropriation from $25,000 to $12,500. Escaping natural gas at Youngs town, Ohio, killed Mary Spawn and her infant. Sweden will send a new armored cruiser to the great naval review at Hampton Roads, Va. Unmuzzled dogs in St. Paul, Minn, will be killed without warning by or dinance of City Council. Judge Anderson, in the United States District Court in Chicago, dis missed the plea in abatement set forth by attorneys for John R. Walsh, formerly president of the Chicago National Bank. The New Haven, New York & Hartford Railroad Company Execu tive Committee propose the sale of the New England Navigation Com pany to C. W. Morse. The steamer Parker, belonging to the Dale Sand Company, was blown up on the Tennessee River near Chat tanooga, and James Thompson, the captain, dangerously injured. The steamship Seneca rammed and sank the bark Charles Loring off . Sea Girt, N. J.; the crew of the Loring was saved. The Dawes Commission has com pleted the enrollment of the five civ ilized tribes of Indians, a work that was commenced ten years ago. Howard P. Frothingham, of New York City, a wealth Wall Street op erator, committed suicide by jumping from a window. In a wreck of freight trains on the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad near Colby Station, Ky., one of the loco motives exploded, killing Engineer Edward Harp and two trainmen FOREIGN. Viscount Goschen, formerly British Chancellor of the Exchequer, is dead. Sven Hedin, the Swedish traveler, has explored 800 miles of an un known country on a journey to Tibet. The Belgian Government denies that the Bank of Belgium has sup plied the State of Sao Paulo with money for the carrying out of a cor ner in Brazilian coffee. Ambassador Leishman stirred the Turkish officials by communicating directly with the Sultan on the ques tion of the recognition of American schools. Four divisions of the Chinese army have been transferred from the com mand of Yuan Shi Kai to Feng Shan, who is said to be an incompetent Manchu general. The reconstruction committee at Kingston, Jamaica, passed a resolu tion to ask the Imperial Government to advance a twenty-year loan of $5,000,000 it a low rate of interest. Owing to the acts of terrorism on the part of anarchists in Barcelona, Spain, the Government, under the law of 1904, has suspended trial by jury in the captaincy general of Cata lonia. Mail advices from Shanghai, China, state that owing to an accident at the wharf, there the discovery has been made that arms and ammunition have been smuggled through Shang hai to the districts where rebellion is in progress. ROCKEFELLER S LAST GIFT BREAKS II RECORD total of $43,000,000 For Educa tion and Religion, SON CONTROLS DISTRIBUTION two-thirds of Great Amount is to Be Employed as the Rockefellers Direct, Unless They Fail to Indi cate Wishes. New York City. The bieeest eift by an individual in the history of the I v !C;UiUCU W 11C11 UU11 XJ, Rockefeller, head of Standard Oil, gave to the General Education Board $32,000,000 to be used in support of educational institutions throughout the country. He had given $11,000, 000 to the board, and this gift brings the total Rockefeller fund available for its educational promotion to the stupendous figure of $43,000,000. The General Education Board has been in existence about four years, having been chartered by Congress in 1903- The purposes of the organiza tion are "to promote education in the United States, without distinction of race, sex or creed, and especially to promote, systematize and make effec tive various forms of educational be neficence." It employs a large force of experts, who spend their time mak ing a systematic study of educational conditions in this country for the guidance of the board in making gifts to educational institutions. Be fore the board adjourned it made gifts aggregating $400,000. A review of the benefactions of Mr. Rockefeller, most of which have been educational or religious in their na ture, shows that since he accumu lated his wealth he has givruway $88,000,000. The last gift Kgyi as a surprise even to most me1 r of the General Education Boar., who had no idea such a magnificent con tribution was to be made to their fund. "This is the largest sum ever given by a man in the history of the race for any social or philanthropic pur poses," the members of the board said in a letter of thanks, which they framed and sent to Mr. Rockefeller immediately after the promise of the gift had been received. "The admin istration of this fund entails on the General Education Board the most far reaching responsibilities ever placed upon any educational organi zation in the world. As members of the board we accept this responsibil ity, conscious alike of its difficulties and its opportunities." The first $11,000000 which Mr. Rockefeller gave o? the board was to establish a trust fund to be adminis tered by the board. Two-thirds of the present gift must be applied to specific purposes under the direction of the elder Rockefeller or his son, John P. Rockefeller, Jr. The re maining one-third becomes part f the permanent endowment fund of the General Education Board, of which the elder Rockefeller is not a member. He is represented thereon by young Rockefeller. If the Rockefellers do not make the designations of the specific pur poses for which the income from two thirds of th gift is to be used, then the board has the right to distribute it according to its best judgment or of such part of it as may remain after the Rockefellers have made such des ignations as they desire to make. DR. SIMPSON ACQUITTED. Dentist Exonerated of the Charge of Murdering Father-in-Law. Riverhead, L. I. Dr. James Wen dell Simpson is again a free man. After three hours' deliberation the jury filed into the courtroom at Riv erhead bringing a verdict that exon erated the New York dentist of all blame for the killing of his father-in-law, Bradley T. Horner, on the night of December 27, 1905. Mrs. Julia Simpson, the wife, who for a year has fought hardest to send her husband to the electric chair, was not in court at the moment of his triumph. The townspeople, from the first loyal supporters of the prisoner, broke into cheers after the verdict was announced. To them Dr. Simp son is a hero. The Simpson case, from the begin-, ning to the end, has been one of the most exciting ever known on Long Island. Dr. Simpson and his wife lived with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brad ley T. Horner. On the evening of December 27 Horner was in the kitchen alone while Dr. Simpson in the dining room was amusing the two women of the family by playing with a shotgun. Finally, carrying the same gun, he went back in the kitchen to see Hor ner. A moment later there was a shot and Mrs. Simpson, rushing back into the kitchen, found her husband standing above her father. Horner lay dying on the floor with a charge of shot in his breast. Santa Fe Issues Stock. Stockholders of the Santa Fe Rail road voted almost unanimously in favor of a bond issue of $93,000,000 at Topeka. Fire Destroys Old Castle. Fire destroyed the eleventh cen tury donjon of the old feudal castle at Chateaurenault, near Tours, France. SLAIN IN OUTBREAK 1IU Officer Douglas Killed Aboard the Tennessee. FIGHT AT LEAGUE ISLAND Bluejackets Refuse to Aid Superiors They Say Abused Them Sailor's Story of 111 Treatment and Petty Persecution. Philadelpnia. Pa. Mutiny and murder on board the United States cruiser Tennessee was the climax of a long feud between the ship's blue jackets and its chief master-at-arms, James A. Douglas. Henry Burke, a sailor, shot and killed Douglas, and was at once confined in arm and leg irons at a temporary canvas prison on the ship's deck. In the desperate hand-to-hand struggle which preceded the shooting of Douglas, Burke himself was shot through the wrist, and William Mc Cool, the ship's assistant master-at-arms, suffered a glancing bullet wound on the chin and his face was burned by powder. Bluejackets and marines on the Tennessee and the other cruisers were told it would be well for them if they would follow the example of their superiors in keeping closed mouths. The enlisted men refused to take the hint, and the stories they told are all a defense of Burke and a bitter criticism of the harsh treatment to which, they say, they have been sub jected by Douglas and the other petty officers. . "Tbey trea'ed us like dogs rather than like human beings," said one of the men. "Burke felt as many others of us did, that he would just as soon be killed as live under the petty per secutions to which we have been sub jected. "The trouble commenced before the Tennessee left Hampton Roads to act as one of the ships escorting the President to Panama. Every day the exaction of the petty officers in creased, until three-fourths of the men were on the verge of desertion. "When Burke had his hand-to-hand 8mffle with Douglas, only Mc Cool of all the ship's company would go to the assistance of the master-at-arms. "As an indication of the feeling against Douglas, the words of a sea man in the ship's hospital give an in dication: 'How do you feel to-day. Jim?' I asked him. " 'Much better." he replied. 'My temperature yesterday was 103 de grees. To-day it is only 100 degrees. The satisfaction of seeing that fellow brought down here with a bullet in him broke the fever.' " Lieutenant-Commander Fields, ex- j ecutive officer of the Tennessee, de scribed the fight, saying: "Douglas was putting Burke, With two other men, into the ship's brig, or prison, because of infractions of dis cipline, when Burke drew a revolver from the bosom of his shirt and com menced firing. Douglas was wounded twice." He denied in the most em phatic terms that Burke or any other person was hurt. ILL AND FREEZING THREE DAYS. Paralyzed Man Lay Alone Horse Took Him to a Neighbor. Hartford, Conn. Suffering from temporary paralysis, Cornelius O'Meara, a farmer, lay in his house in Tariffvilie for three days without food or water, in an atmosphere that was near- zero most of the time. O'Meara was in his barn When he was stricken. After lying on the barn floor several hours he managed to drag himself to the kitchen of his house. He could go no further. On the fourth morning he was bet ter and was able to drag himself to the barn, harness a horse to a sleigh, and climb in. He was too weak to guide the horse, but the animal went without- guidance to the nearest neighbor's and stopped. Swathed in bandages and suffering intensely from rheumatism, O'Meara was re moved to St. Francis' Hospital, in Hartford. "OLD GRIMES1' HOUSE BURNED Landmark of Hubbardston, Mass., is Destroyed. Old Grinuss ic dead, that good did man, We never shall see more; He used to wear a long black coat All buttoned down before. Hubbardston, Mass. The "Old Grimes" house, one of the landmarks of Hubbardston, was destroyed by fire. Everitt M. Felton and his fam ily, who lived in the house, barely es caped death. The house was built in 1761 by Joseph Grimes, whose son, Ephraim, was made famous by Albert Gordon Greene in the song "Old Grimes is Dead." The lo3s is estimated at $2 000. LONDON TAKES NOTICE. 72 Portraits of Mrs. Thaw Printed in Papers There Since Trial Began. London. As an instance of the in terest shown by the press here in the Thaw case seventy-two different por traits of Mrs. Evelyn Thaw have been counted tn the London papers alone since the trial began. CRUISER MM