FULL TEXT: Little Novella May Belknap, or Dollie Sarver; as
she is perhaps better known, has been taken to the Indiana Reform School
For Females, there to remain until she is 21 years old; Dollie is the child
murderess whose crime, that of poisoning her stepfather, Fleming Sarver, at
Brownstown, Ind., some time ago, startled the world. Dollie is now 13 years
old. Six years ago she was adopted by Sarver and his wife, a childless, well to
do couple. Their own only child had just died, and having nobody to inherit
their property they adopted the pretty child with the determination to give
her a good home with its comforts and finally to leave all their property to
her.
It was this determination; no doubt, so frequently impressed
on; the child’s mind by her doting foster parents, that led to the tragedy
which Dollie is now expiating. They had told her so often that they would leave
her their property that her childish mind could not understand why they did not
do it. She conned the m atter over, dwelling on the advantages as a great lady
she must enjoy with all the property of the old couple until life seemed the
delightful time would never come. Why not hasten matters was the thought that
broke like a gleam of light on her imagination and solved the problem. Yes,
hurry them up. If they’re sick, they’ll make their will. Make them sick! So her
girl companion advised her, and so she decided.
One day she wont to town to sell some eggs and then bought
some rat poison, saying that she wanted to kill a cat.
The story of how she administered the poison and the
incidents that resulted were told by the youthful prisoner herself as seated a
t the barred door of her cell, with a huge paper cigarette between her teeth,
she chatted with a Cincinnati Enquirer correspondent. She said that she had
learned to smoke since her confinement in jail.
In answer to the question as to what impelled her to put
poison into the coffeepot she said that she had never thought of such a thing
until an associate of hers, whose name she gave, asked her why she didn’t give
Mr. and Mrs. Sarver something to make them sick, so that they would think they
might die and then Would make a will and leave her all their property.
A t first she repelled the suggestion. But the prospect was
alluring, and she made up her mind to try it. On the 12th day of July, 1895,
she concluded to try “just a little bit of it,” as she expressed it. “Taking a
little pinch between my thumb and forefinger, I dropped it into, the coffeepot,
which contained some grounds, knowing that
the next morning Mrs. Sarver would make coffee without rinsing the coffee pot,
as her custom was to throw away the grounds every other day, and that she had
done the day before.”
Next morning the coffee was made, and as Mr. and Mrs. Sarver
were taking their breakfast they drank freely of the coffee. Leaning back in
his chair. Mr. Sarver said he felt a burning sensation in his throat and stomach.
Mrs. Sarver complained of similar pains. Novella was sitting at the table with
them, but drank none of the coffee, as she never used it. Mr. Sarver becoming
worse, the girl was dispatched to a neighbor’s to request him to hasten for a
doctor. By drinking freely of milk Mrs. Sarver saved her life. Mr. Sarver
continued to grow worse, and the child became alarmed, realizing for the first
time she had done a terrible deed. About this time it was learned that she had
bought poison a few days before, and upon being confronted with the fact she
finally acknowledged that she had put some of the poison in the coffeepot and
hid the balance between two stumps in the pasture field. She took parties to
the spot, and it was found at the place indicated.
A few hours later Mrs. Sarver breathed his last. After the
death of Mr. Sarver Dollie walked to the town of Crothersville, four miles
distant, and surrounded herself to J. W. Hamacher, a justice of the peace.
Dollie insists that she did not know the deadly nature of
rough on rats. “I knew the stuff would kill rats, but I did not think it would
kill rats, but I did not think it would have any effect upon human beings more
than to make them sick, and I thought I would try a very little of it to see
what effect it would have. Why,” she added, “I wouldn’t have been afraid to
take it myself, even a whole spoonful of it.”
Dollie insists that she did know the deadly nature of rough
on rats. “I knew the stuff would kill rats, but I did not think it would have
any effect upon human beings more than to make them sick, and I thought I would
try a very little of it to see what effect it would have. Why,” she added, “I
wouldn’t have been afraid to take it myself, even a whole spoonful of it.”
Altogether it Is a most remarkable case. She manifests no
contrition, and seems as merry and lighthearted as though her path was strewn
with roses. She has no dread whatever of. the long term before her in the
reform school. On the contrary, she speaks of her going as if it was like unto
a pleasure trip. She says she will act nicely there, and by so doing hopes to
shorten her term and perhaps secure pardon after the lapse of a few years. If she
realizes the enormity of her crime, she does not evince it in her demeanor.
[“A Merry Mistress – Little Novella Belknap Manifests No
Contrition For Her Crime. - Poisoned Her Foster Parents. – Sought to Hasten the
Inheritance They Had Promised Her – Goes Gayly to Prison Without Seeming to Realize
the Enormity of Her Offence.” On the St. Lawrence (Clayton, N. Y.), Oct. 18,
1895, p. 2]
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More cases: Youthful Borgias: Girls Who Commit Murder
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[123-1/23/21]
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