37
Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.
29 revisions | Bree Hurt at Jun 08, 2020 10:23 PM | |
|---|---|---|
37EAGER TO HEAR THE CLOSE A MULTITUDE AT THE SHEEDY TRIAL. Three Advocates for the Defense Consume the Entire Day in Appeals to the Jury. Juror James Johnson Causes an Adjournment by Illness--Strode and Lambertson Have an Exciting Spat and the Court Interferes. To-day Will Close the Argument. Lincoln's magnificent court house has been tried and found wanting. Its large and handsome law court room was by far too small to furnish accommodations for the crowds of Indies and gentlemen who assembled there yesterday to listen to the arguments in the greatest criminal trial in point of public interest ever held in the state of Nebraska. Long ere :he opening morning hour hundreds of the choicest seats were taken, and the session had not far advanced ere every seat was taken and the aisles were full of standing people willing to forego all comforts and conveniences if only they might hear the pleas advanced for the lives of the two unfortunate and widely contrasted prisoners at the bar. A bevy of ladies were even seated in the private office of Judge Field listening to the impassioned arguments through the open door. which commanded a near and direct view of the jury, the creators and the prisoners. Bailiff Lou Franklin was at his wits' end and the perspiration steamed from his furrowed brow as he hastened hither and thither guarding the entrance to the inner circle, and at the same time gallantly endeavoring to see that the ladies were accommodated with seats as far as the seating capacity of the room would permit. Finally he gave up in despair, and instead of hunting seats for them [he?] was compelled to devote his entire energies to prevent them from overcrowding the space usually reserved to the court and attorneys, but which, during the later progress of this case, has been given up reservedly to the use of the ladies, who have encircled the august tribunal daily with banks of fair faces peering out from a varied assortment | 37EAGER TO HEAR THE CLOSE A MULTITUDE AT THE SHEEDY TRIAL. Three Advocates for the Defense Consume the Entire Day in Appeals to the Jury. Juror James Johnson Causes an Adjournment by Illness--Strode and Lambertson Have an Exciting Spat and the Court Interferes. To-day Will Close the Argument. Lincoln's magnificent court house has been tried and found wanting. Its large and handsome law court room was by far too small to furnish accommodations for the crowds of Indies and gentlemen who assembled there yesterday to listen to the arguments in the greatest criminal trial in point of public interest ever held in the state of Nebraska. Long ere :he opening morning hour hundreds of the choicest seats were taken, and the session had not far advanced ere every seat was taken and the aisles were full of standing people willing to forego all comforts and conveniences if only they might hear the pleas advanced for the lives of the two unfortunate and widely contrasted prisoners at the bar. A bevy of ladies were even seated in the private office of Judge Field listening to the impassioned arguments through the open door. which commanded a near and direct view of the jury, the creators and the prisoners. Bailiff Lou Franklin was at his wits' end and the perspiration steamed from his furrowed brow as he hastened hither and thither guarding the entrance to the inner circle, and at the same time gallantly endeavoring to see that the ladies were accommodated with seats as far as the seating capacity of the room would permit. Finally he gave up in despair, and instead of hunting seats for them [he?] was compelled to devote his entire energies to prevent them from overcrowding the space usually reserved to the court and attorneys, but which, during the later progress of this case, has been given up reservedly to the use of the ladies, who have encircled the august tribunal daily with banks of fair faces peering out from a varied assortment |
