Show THA UI TESTIfiES IHA T THE HE U THREATENED TO 10 i ll t Harry Thaw Also Told Her fier lie fie Was f as Not Crazy When lIe He Shot White Evelyn Answers Questions Reluctantly 1 I White WhIle Plains July Nes Nesbit es esit bit it TIm Thaw tool took the stand at the noon session today In the hearing or of HarD K Thaws mental condition Mrs Thaw appeared as a witness fou fol the state which Is opposing the tho re release release lease of her husband from rom the tho Mat tea wan Justice Mills ruled that Mrs Irs Thaw could answer anser the tho Questions the state desired to ask her regarding an al alleged alleged threat to kill her made by Harry Thaw during a conversation at Mat Mrs Thaw asked it If she could not noE claim a privilege in refusing to Lo answer on the ground that to reply would tend to incriminate herself Tue court titled she could not and Mrs Thaw when asked if had haj mado such n a threat said Yes ho he did didI The question Evelyn Thaw I was requested to answer was Dill DimI Harn K Thaw say sar this to Lo you or this In substance 1 shah sha have to kill you ou I when I get out of here hore Turning to the tho court with tears in her eyes eos Mrs Irs Thaw said saidI I dont want to that ques question ion tion It places me in a terrible posh lion tion My Iy husband will refuse to sup support support port me the minute I answer it antI and I 1 i will Incur his everlasting enmity I 1 know lenow It I am erY much afraId to answer it itI itI I dont care how ho has bas treated me she continued I 1 amp am still married to hint him and I do not want to answer n it Justice Mills quietly instructed the witness to lo answer and amI she said with wItha I a sl sigh h hYes Yes lie he did Mr Clark asked her to give Mr Thaws exact words Ho He said saidi OIL i suppose I shall have to kill you whon 1 get et out of here she replied Mrs Irs Thaw further testified that dur durin during in ing the same conversation Harry Harn Thaw told her lie ho was not crazy on the night he be shot Stanford White I missed him b by a minute on the night the wItness said her husband told her herTha Thaw Tha sat with his eyes eres intently up upon upOn on his wife as she testified and shook his head when she told or of the treat treatOn On Mr Mors causer had the witness identify n a num her bel of letters either written b by Thaw or herself Mrs Tha Thaw was Vas almost as she answered the question of her husbands lawyer As one lot let letter tel ter was handed to her she read it smiled broadly then blushed percept perceptibly and hid her face behind her palm paim palmleaf leaf fan She caught her husbands eyo at this time and he smiled back and then hastily looked awa away Mrs Irs was excused and Anthony AnthonyD D Comstock was as called White Whito Plains July Tul 16 D r Otto Meyer of New York was the first firel wit witness witness ness In the Thaw hearing toda Mr Ir that ho he saw Thaw four I times In the White Plains jail on Oc S 8 1908 an and discussed with him the episodes included In a hypothetical Question which the wItness had pre pic pared on which to base an opinion of the tho prisoners sanity On subsequent visits to the White Plains jaIl and In iii Inthe the asylum the physician talked freely with Thaw ho said and got gol him to tell the stor story of his boyhood days dars Dr Moyer eer related a con conversa versa lion tien when Thaw told him he feared fearell he was going to have typhoid fever anti and suggested that his rooms nt at the jail should be cooled of Ott with twenty tons of ice Dr Di Meyer said ho discussed music art sociology and politics with Thaw i and in regard to the latter subject Thaw laughingly ly remarked I holD hOIPo cd ad to elect Jerome The Tho witness said he approached the tho subject of InsanIty with ith Thaw anti and in this connection re referred referred to crime I II II I asked him what the tho motives whIch prompted him to shoot Stanford White and he said there thero were wele no Im Improper I proper motives I In answer to a Question as to what the effect or oi result of Whites death LL had bach been Thaw haw replied that th there re was less danger now than before I and most people thought he had acted properly under the tho circumstances |