11 Leon F Czolgosz the anarchist as sassin of President McKinley Tues day was found guilty of murder in the first degree after one of the most rapid yet dignified trials in the history of jurisprudence Despite the eminence of the prisoners counsel it was appar ent Tuesday when the alienists decided that Czolgosz was sane that no de fense was possible and consequently that any delay in the trial would be vain In a period of eight hours and twenty six minutes the assassin of President McKinley had been found guilty and Judge Truman C White ihad announced that he would pass sen tence on Thursday afternoon Remark table as the trial had been throughout for its dignity equally with its ab sence of delay not the least engrossing feature of the day was the address to ithe jury made by Loren L Lewis counsel for the prisoner The vener able jurist explained the necessity of a defense for the prisoner even though LEON CZOLGOSZ ibis guilt could scarce be questioned and made his address tne occasion for a criticism of lynch law which in all probability will go down in the an nals of history as the most masterly vindication of the jury system and con demnation of mob violence ever ut tered Prisoner Knows Chicago Anarchists Superintendent of Police Bull was asked Were you present at headquarters when the prisoner was brought there on the night of the murder Yes Were any threats made against ihim No Tell us what Czolgosz said He said he knew President McKin ley He knew that he was shooting President McKinley when he fired The reason he gave was that he believed that he was doing his duty He said that on the day President McKinley spoke at the exposition grounds the day previous to the assassination he stood near the stand on the esplanade No favorable opportunity presented it self He followed the president to Niag ara Falls and back to Buffalo again He got in line while the reception was in progress and when he reached the president fired the fatal shots Czol gosz told me ii detail the plans he alone had worked out so that there would be no slip in his arrangements I asked him why he killed the presi dent and he replied that he did so be cause it was his duty Did he say he was an anarchist Yes Did he say any more on the sub ject asked the district attorney Yes He said that he had made a study of the beliefs of anarchists and he was a firm believer in their prin ciples The prisoner also stated that he had received much information on the subject in the city of Cleveland He said that he knew a man in Chi cago named Isaak The Free Society was the name of the organ mentioned by the prisoner Said Rulers Should Die Did he ever say anything about his motives in committing the murder asked the district attorney Yes was the reply He said that he went to the exposition grounds for the express purpose of murdering Pres ident McKinley He knew he was aim ing at President McKinley when the fatal shots were fired Czolgosz said tiat all kings emperors and presidents should die Superintendent Bull was cross-examined by Lawyer Titus and said the defendant had on his person some memoranda and 151 in money There was also a piece of paper orange-colored with an address upon it a mem orandum book and a letter of identifi cation card from the Order of The Golden Eagle Did 3ou ask him if he was an an archist Judge Titus asked Yes And he said he was Yes At the conclusion of Superintendent Bulls testimony District Attorney Penny announced that the case for the prosecution was closed Lewis Gives Up Dofense Then Mr Lewis arose slowly and addressing the court said We are embarrassed by the sudden closing of the case of the prosecution We had not expected them to close so JWB i mwwwtwwwmiww abruptly We have no witnesses to call for the defense but I ask the court that my colleague and myself be al lowed to address the jury Permission was granted by the court and Judge Titus began his address at 245 Gentlemen of the jury he began a calamity has fallen uppn this na tion through the act of this man but the question is whether his act was the act of an insane man If an in sane man it is not murder and he should be acquitted of that charge He would then of course be transferred to an asylum Much discussion has occurred in our midst and has been called to my attention as to the propriety of any defense being interposed in this case Many letters have been received by me since I was assigned with my associate to defend this man questioning the propriety of a defense being attempt ed You gentlemen know perhaps how Judge Titus and myself came in to this case The position was not sought by us but we appear here In performance of a duty which we thought devolved upon us notwith standing it was an exceedingly dis agreeable one Gentlemen when they become members of the legal profession be come members ofthe court They are compelledif assignedto defend a crim inal or rather the one who is charged with a crime They are compelled to respond and accept the duty unless they can present some reasonable ex cuse and if they refusa to perform that duty they are guilty of a mis demeanor and are liable to punishment by the court There are in our country individu als not I hope in very large numbers but we know they are scattered all over the country who think in a case like this or even in charges of much less degree that it is entirely proper that the case should be disposed of by lynch or mob law We can hardly take up a paper without we learn that in some part of this free and inde pendent country some man has been murdered on the suspicion or belief that he was gulity of somq crime This state of things does not exist in our community but it does in some parts of our state as every intelligent man knows Gentlemen of the jury while I be lieve firmly in that f do not believe it creates a danger to this court equal to the belief becoming so common that men who are charged witn crime shall not be permitted to go through the form of a trial in a court of jus tice but that lynch law shall take the place of the calm and dignified ad ministration -of the law in our courts of justice When that doctrine be comes sufficiently prevalent in this 7 ifi m JUDGE WHITE country if it ever does our institu tions will be set aside and overthrown Trial an Object Lesson This trial here is a great object les son to the world Here is a case where a man has stricken down the beloved President of this country in broad day light in the presence of thousands of spectators If there was ever a case that would excite the anger the wrath of those who saw it this was one and yet under the advice of the President Let no man hurt him he was taken confined in our prison indicted put upon trial here and the case is soon to be submitted to you as to whether he is guilty of the crime charged against him That gentlemen speaks volumes in favor of the orderly con duct of the people of the city of Buf falo Here was a man occupying an ex alted position a man qf irreproacha ble character he was a man who had come here to assist us in promoting the prosperity of our great exposition And he was shot down while holding a reception His death has touched every heart in this community and in the whole world and yet we sit here and quietly consider whether the man was re sponsible for the act he committed That question is one you are called to decide Judge Lewis was crying when he finished and the eyes of many of those in the courtroom were filled with tears Judge Titus then arose and said that Judge Lewis had so completely covered the ground that it seemed entirely un necessary for him to reiterate it and he would therefore rest gTgesry rteCigVJ District Attorney Sums Up At 310 District Attorney Penney be gan summing up He spoke in a clear well modulated voice and every word could be heard in any part of the room He said in part It i3 hardly possible for any man to stand up and talk about this case without the deepest emotion It was the most awful tragedy that ever came upon the world We have shown you how this defendant stood in the temple of music that afternoon and shot down our beloved President We have shown you how he deliberated on and planned this awful crime We have shown you how he attended anarchistic and so cialistic meetings at which were sown in his heart the seeds of his terrible act This is no time for oratorical dis play Counsel for the prisoner and myself have endeavored to eliminate all sensationalism from this case It is not my intention to indulge in ex tended remarks You understand the responsibility resting upon you National Heart Is IJrokon It is a great lesson that so great a man can stoop so low that he was so great he could forgive his own as sassin He was the noblest man I believe that God ever created A man JUDGE TITUS One of Counsel for Defense who stood near him in the temple of music said to me I have traveled in all parts of the world and have seen people assembled to greet their rulers but when I saw people stand in the railroad stations and along the coun try through which the funeral train passed that they might get a look at the casket of this great man I was convinced as never before that there is such a thing as a national heart That national heart was broken and it will take Gods way and time to heal it It was broken by a class of people who are coming to our country in in creased numbers and while harbored by our laws they are propagating their malicious views a class of people that must be taught that we have no place for them on our shores a class of peo ple that must be taught that they can not take the life of anyone irrespective of consequences Judge Whites Charge Justice Wnite began his charge to the jury at 329 oclock He arose from his seat and stepped to the side of the bench nearest the jury box He said Gentlemen of tne jury In this case the defendant has acknowledged his guilt Such an acknowledgment under such circumstances cannot go to the jury or the court The law re quires that the defendant charged with such a crime must be tried The law says that all the facts must be ob served and reviewed by you The law guarantees that the defendant shall have a fair trial by twelve men im partial and fair capable of taking the testimony of the trial and giving it thorough consideration If when all the circumstances of the case are considered by you there still exists in your minds a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty you cannot find this man guilty The peo ple have submitted evidence tending to show that this defendant committed this crime they have given evidence tending to show that there was design and premeditation and if in accord ance with that premeditation and de sign these shots were fired then the defendant is guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree You must consider all this evidence that the people have submitted to you You must consider it fairly and with out prejudice You are the sole judges of facts in this case When the trial was ended and the verdict rendered Judge Titus at the request of District Attorney Penney admitted that the defense had no sug gestion to make as to the time when the final judgment should be pro nounced Justice White then said that as it was the custom to give the guilty murderer two days between the find ing of the verdict and the sentence he would adjourn court till 2 oclock Thursday when judgment will be pro nounced The prisoner wras then handcuffed to his guards and led back through the tunnel to jail Length of trial Eight hours and tvrenty five minutes Number of witnesses For the prose cution seventeen for the defense none Actual time of taking testimony Four and one quarter hours Time of the state in arguing for con viction Fourteen minutes Time occupied by the judge in charging jury Twelve minutes sfw CZQLGOSZ IS GXTILTy Jtixy ot Buffalo Convict Mint of Pfurder in Firt Degree Tima occupied by the jury in deliber ation Thirty four minutes Cm in a Goldman Out Anarchy took its high priestess from the prison to the hearthstone Tuesday morning at Chicago With smiles and kind words for all Emma Goldman be came a free woman shortly after nine oclock Prosecutor John Owens said there had been an agreement with the attorneys for the defense that both sides would abide in the Goldman case by the decision in the cases of the men who were released yesterday He therefore would state that he would interpose no objection to her release Dismissed for want of prosecution said Justice Prindiville Then the woman with the stern blue eyes was taken through the crowd and a few moments later escorted to a cab which was driven to the home of the Isaaks FOR A PACIFICTCABLE Company to Lay a Line From California to Philippines Articles of incorporation were filed at Albany having in view the laying of a cable from the Pacific coast to Ha waii and the Philippine islands The company wul be affiliated with the Commercial Cable company and all its incorporators are officials of that cor poration The length of the cable will be about 8500 miles The part first laid will be from California to the Ha waiian islands a distance of about 2 200 miles It is expected tnat this por tion will be laid and in operation with in nine months The time required for the laying of the remainder of the cable from -lie Hawaiian islands to the Philippine islands will depend upon how quickly the cable can be manu factured but may be completed in two years According to the articles of in corporation the companys lines are to begin in New York city auhough from that point to the Pacific coast the line of other companies may be used The capital stock of the company is to be 5100000 divided into shares of 100 crin The term of existence of the company is fixed at l00o years Poisoned by Mosquito liite Mrs Thomas Eaves living at Fourth and Walnut streets Gloucester N Y was bitten on a finger of her right hand several weeks ago by a mo squito Her hand became swollen and she visited the Cooper Hospital Cam den where physicians found it neces sary to amputate the finger It is sup posed that the mosquito which bit her had been on some poisonous weed TH E SULTANS PALAC E It Is Proof Against Assassins Bombs and Fires According to a writer in the Worlds Work the sultans Yildiz palace at Constantinople is a monument to fear It is assassin proof bomb proof earthquake-proof fire proof microbe proof Architects and engineers are building and rebuilding incessantly Some new secret retreat is always under way The entire domain is surrounded by an immense wall thirty feet high and the choicest troops of the empire stand guard around it An inner wall twelve feet thick with gates of iron incloses the private residence itself The walls of the sultans dwellings are filled with armor plate to resist pro jectiles It is said that a mysterious passage connects with ten secret bed chambers forming an intricate laby rinth No one but his body attendant knows where the sultan may sleep dur ing any particular night He has elec tric lights and telephones in his own apartments but forbids them in Con stantinople Telephones might prove handjr for conspirators and he be lieves that a dynamite cartridge could be sent over a wire into the palace He fears electric explosions so Con stantinople gets along with gas light He hates the word dynamo because it sounds like dynamite Balloons are tabooed lest one should pause over him long enough to drop a chunk of explosive As to the real luxury of the Yildiz that is a matter of course The do main is a small world in itself Five thousand people live within the outer wall not counting a small army of workmen and the 7000 imperial guardsmen There are shops factor ies arsenals stables a library mu seum picture gallery theater and even a menagerie The monarch loves trees but he keeps their branches well lopped off so that he can see to the farthest corner of his grounds Chicago News The Girl ot Today Little does the girl of the present day realize how much better off she is than the girl in the early part of the nineteenth century Then she had to submit to social restrictions too nu merous to mention she was treated with scorn and contempt if she once expressed any desire to work or do anything for herself and attempts to think out a subject for herself was deemed almost a sign of ill breeding and lack of refinement Her life was spent in a narrow groove and her mind was not allowed to develop to its full extent Intercourse with the other sex was carried on under the rigid surveillance of an austere and elderly chaperon Nowadays a woman has almost perfect freedom in what ever she cares to do Chaperons are getting rarer and rarer and social in timacy with men is allowed without one thinking it means aught beyond a pleasant and natural friendship New York Weekly In the bakeries of La Rochefoucauld in France it is said that women en ter the ovens when they are 301 de grees The least guarded of the monarchs of Europe is the old King of Denmark He is said to walk about the streets I absolutely unattended Llw J MfflHf WILL IS IAD Widow Hears the Last Testament of Hei Devoted Husband RECEIVES ALL HIS REAL ESTATE Also An Incomo on Fersonal Property During Her Life Next Caro is for Mother and Sister Document Signed In 1807 CANTON Sept 28 Secretary Cor telyou came here yesterday to assist Mrs McKinley in disposing of mat ters connected with the late presi dents estate He arrived at 10 in the morning and was at once driven to the McKinley home After meeting Mrs McKinley the question of filing the will was taken up The trying task of reading it to her was undertaken by the faithful secretary Mrs McKinley made a heroic effort to bear up and succeeded in doing isot although he brdeal was hard for her Last night she rested well All le gal formalities necessary for her to subscribe to were disposed of At 3 oclock this afternoon Judge Day and Secretary Cortelyou went to the office of the probate judge and off ered the will of President McKinley for probate They carried with them the following I Ida S McKinley widow of Wil liam McKinley deceased hereby de cline the administration of his estate and recommend the appointment of William R Day and George B Cor telyou as administrators with the will annexed The recommendation bears the date of September 27 1901 Following is the text of President McKinley s will TEXT OF THE WILL EXECUTIVE MANSION WASH INGTON D C I publish the follow ing as my latest will and testament hereby revoking all former wills To my beloved wife Ida S McKin ley I bequeath all of my real estate wherever situated and the income of any personal property of which I may be possessed at death during her nat ural life I make the following charge upon all of my property both real and personal To pay my mother during her life one thousand 1000 dollars a year and at her death said sum to be paid to my sister Helen McKin ley If the income from the property be insufficient to keep my wife in great comfort and pay the annuity above provided then I direct that such of my property be sold as to make a sum adequate for both pur poses Whatever property remains at the death of my wife I give to my brothers and sisters share and share anke My chief concern is that my wife from my estate shall have all she requires for her comfort and pleasure and that my mother shall be provid ed with whatever money she requires to make her old age comfortable and happy Witness my hand and seal this 22d day of October 1897 to my last will and testament made at the city of Washington District of Cojumbia Seal WILLIAM MKINLEY The foregoing will was witnessed by us this the 22d day of October 1897 at the request of the testator and his name signed thereto in our presence and our signatures hereunto in his presence G B CORTELYOU CHARLES LOEFFLER It is given out on authority that the McKinley estate will total 225 000 to 250000 including life insur ance of 67000 Aside from the G7 000 mentioned the estate consists of real estate here and in contiguous towns and deposits in Washington banks Monday morning has been fixed by the probate court for a hear ing prior to probating the will Then it is expected Secretary Cortelyou and Judge Day will be finally appoint ed administrators of the estate with will annexed and will give bond War Declared on Colombia WILLEMSTADT Via Haytien Ca ble Sept 28 It is again asserted in well informed cables at Caracas that President Castro will declare war jon Colombia at the end of the month The Venezuelan government is with out financial resources and will short ly use the method of South American dictatorships and proceed to raise funds by force Lack of confidence in the government is manifested ev erywhere in Venezuela Autos for Mail Service x WASHINGTON Sept 28 The first call for bids which directly contem plate the use of motor vehicles in the postal service except for collec tions is made in an order of the post office department today asking for bids to be opened here October 12 for furnishing five motor vehicles for ser vice at Minneapolis Minn The ve hicles are to be of not less than 1000 pounds each The service is to be from Jan 1 1902 to June 30 1903 PASSING SENTENCE ON CZOLGOSZ Words of Judge Tltns in raising Sen tence Upon ths Asbm1i BUFFALO Sept 27 Czolgosz be fore sentenco was pronounced was permitted to speak as follows Thero was no one else but me No one else told mo to do It and no one paid mo to do It Judge Titus repeated it as follows owing to the prisoners feeble voice He says no one bad anything to do with the commission of his crime but himself that his fathor and brother and no one else had anything to do with it and knew nothing about it The prisoner continued I was not told anything about the crime and I never thought anything about mur der until a couple of days before I committed the crime Judge Titug again repeated as fol lows He never told any ono about the crime and never intended to com mit It until a couple of days before its commission Then Justice Whito passed sen tence as follows In taking the life of our beloved president you committed a crime which has shocked and outraged the moral sense of the civilized world You have confessed that guilt and af ter learning all that at this time can be learned from the facts and circum stances of the case twelve good ju rors have pronounced you guilty and have found you guilty of murder in the first degree You have said according to the testimony of creditable witnesses and yourself that no other person aided or abetted you in the commission of this terrible act God grant it may be so The penalty for the crime for which you stand convicted is fixed by this statute and it now becomes my duty to pronounce this judgment against you The sentence of the court is that in the week beginning October 28 1901 at the place in the manner and means prescribed by law you suffer the punishment of death Remove the prisoner The crowd filed slowly out of the room and court adjourned at 22G SAM0ANS ARE NOT PLEASED Think Our Government is Sot Treating Them as It Should SAN FRANCISCO Sept 27 A let ter received today from Tutula Sa moa calls attention to the discontent among the natives over the manner in which the United States governs the islands under its protection The letter says The opinion here is that the au thorities at Washington must either treat this place simply as a protec torate of the United States allowing the people the right to govern them selves under that protection or they must lay down settled regulations for the government of the islands and make ample financial provision for carrying out those regulations The inhabitants want to know their real status concerning the Uni ted States Nominally the islands be long to the United States but the States do nothing and natives and whites live in a quandry not knowing which way to move or turn for fear of getting into trouble There has been delay in the pay ment for lands taken by the United States government for public pur poses and also for arms and ammuni tion turned in by the natives The Samoans contrast the alleged neglect with the liberality of the Germans at Apia who are opening up the coun try building roads and making other public improvements FORMAL WELCOME f OR KING Edward to Bo Received With All Court Ceremonies NEW YORK Sept 27 Discussing the return of King Edward the Lon don representative of the Tribune says Some formalities are required respecting Parliament but there are no arrears of public business and the king will not be detained more than two days The rumor mongers give various accounts of his health but there is nothing authoritative The king and queen will arrive at Bal moral on Saturday with Princess Vic toria and remain at least three weeks Formalities will not be dispensed with as it has been erroneously ru mored There will be a guard of honor at Ballater when the king ar rives and departs and Balmoral will witness court functions as well as family reunions Late as the season is royalty is the magnet that draws wealth and fashion to Scotland The smart sets are already moving north ward and country houses castles and shooting boxes will be filled with guests and sportsmen during October European War Imminent PARIS Sept 27 La Patrie today prints a sensational story to the ef fect that a conflict has broken out between Great Britain and Turkey saying that three British war ships have been ordered to the Persian gulf to suppress revolts at Touete in the British province of Bagdad and tha the Turkish government has dls patched a strong detachment of troons with instructions to oppose the land ing of the British forces - t V X V i v