
Parts of the trial were what you might call “colorful” and these clippings were reports from some of the weirder days in court. The weirdness was only intensified by the reporting. New York at this time had a lot of newspapers and all of them covered the Rice murder extensively, competing for the people’s entertainment dollars with garish headlines and illustrations and some wild speculation. The term “media circus” hadn’t been invented yet, but that’s what it was. Think “Nancy Grace.”
For a while, a lot of the testimony revolved around the valet Jones and his alleged ability to hypnotize, the speculation being that he had somehow hypnotized Old Man Rice and then gotten him to change his will, etc. It was wild.
He was said to have taken lessons in hypnotism, as illustrated below. I wonder what our social scientists would say about this.
Sorry about the first lesson being cut off–it wasn’t me, it was the clipping service, which apparently got carried away with the scissors. There may be enough there for you to figure it out and give it a try at home. Let me know if it works.
Bonus: Speaking of the clipping service, they attached a small tag to each clipping that identified the source. I looked at it closely, but it took me a moment to register the quotation from Robert Burns’s “To A Louse.” How perfectly apt for a clipping service and yet how absolutely ghastly. Very clever advertising, though.
