OCR Text |
Show TO TITNISH President REUS" wish to God that there were a lot of others Just such men in this country." Cabinet Decides Tafe Step. Ths cabinet sitting at Buffalo baa decided upon the cbaractar and scope of the bill tot the punishment of none who to the future may attempt to assassinate a President of the United eutaa. It will make such attempts treason, punishable by death. The bill will be drawn so that not only, the President but the Vice President and members of the cabinet shall be Included ln the protection guaranteed by the measure, i Federal courts will he ..vested with authority and power to deal with the offenders. eral grand Juries may Indict them. If they should be apprehended, and arrested by tbe State authorttlea ot the county and diatrlct in wblcb tbe crime happened to be committed tbe United menace of anarchs? Bawden was speaking from his wagon on the campus. He led up to hla incriminating remark by saying: "This jinan who attempted to assasmen have been laid before them that he sinate McKinley, like many other are believed the oppressthat people acted entirely without consultation Powith a single person. Nevertheless ed." After- hla utterance Bupt of cease Bawden to lice ordered Downey these two astute lawyers of ths cabinet are encouraging the work of the talking, and on hla refusal arrested him on the charge of disorderly conpolice departments of the country In duct and Inciting trouble. Police Comrunning down every clew, every missioner Andrews declares that all and every suspicious report advocates of anarchistic doctrines will that la brought to their attention. be driven out of town police, by They are encouraged not so much in a Detroit dispatch. says the belief that actual confederates of Cxolgoex will be brought to Justice as because they are confident that ratlfl-eatloSI KK ASSASSIN HAD AID. of the crime will be found In Cleveland Certain the groups that exist throughout the Fart of Rld(Ii of of Flo. country and that perhaps some men In Public Cleveland, the opinion and women who furnished Caolgoas with a motive for attempting the life former home ot Csolgoss, Is divided on of the President without actually en- - the Question as to whether Cleveland anarchists .were concerned In the attempted assassination of the President The police have utterly failed In their search for evidence of a plot and are convinced that pone existed, at least In the-- Immediate circle of Leon Csol-gosfriends and relatives. There la still a widespread belief that such a plot extsted, says a dispatch from that . city. Residents of the New burg district particularly the workmen who are with the brought into dally eon-aforeign element ot the population, are unanimous in ths opinion that the responsibility for the crime does pot rest upon one person. The meeting placet and the homes of the foreigners are said to be the breeding places for anarchistic propaganda. They are stolid, uncommunicative people and tt is little wonder that the city police have been unable to find evidence of a plot. te ss A GROUP OF CHICAGO ANARCHISTS, AND THEIR RESIDENCE AT 615 CARROLL AVENUE. The mia Czolgosx who attempted to implacable enemy of the master, al- nesa. In its blind fury It would throw assamlnate the President at Buffalo ways free to assail bis Interests and down and trample upon every monuandf; succeeded In wounding him so wantonly destroy bis property. Is tbe ment of civilisation and scatter and dangerously, may or may not fee the prolific mother of that savage spirit burn up the accumulations of treasure emissary of a particular group of An- of anarchy which Inspired the attempt and beauty civilisation baa made and archists; but he is unquestionably the to assassinate one of the moat beloved la making, . , There can be no doubt but that ths representative and acted aa ths instrupresidents this Republic baa ever bad. ment of g spirit of anarchy which is This attempt at assassination, how- crime at Buffalo wfli result In the . present ia modern society and menaces ever, was not made because ot any stamping out of anarchy, and of every the ctvlllatlott of the world. Its vio- enmity against Mr. McKinley individ- other propaganda that leads to social , lence Is kot directed against any Inually, for such enmity does not exist; restlessness. It, win mark the decline dividual ruler or executive head of a hla character makes it impossible. The ot tbe agitator who Uvea by ranting state, good of bad,, beloved or hated, impulse that fired the shot came from against class, la Chicago already. tbe by hla people, bdt' against government the spirit of savage vindictiveness police stations ate full of prisoners Marlag littoml. Of Itself, against our social system as The police of Danbury, Conn., hav against the civilised government and who are accused of being accessories been informed by employes in the shop it ha developed in natural order., 'V civilised society and law and order to the shooting of the President This This spirit of savage resistance to which Mr. McKinley represents, Is radical action and some Injustice ot T. C. Mallard A Co. of that city that Albert Webber, a fellow workman, has the Forking of a law of human develThe cowardly assault was only the may be done, but tbe step will be Inextreme and concrete manifestation of dorsed. From one building at 515 stated sines the attempted assassina- opment as Inexorable and unchangeation of President McKinley that be ble as It Is benign, manifests Itself In a feeling tgf ferocious hatred of a re- Carroll avenue, 12 persons were tak- -, was an anarchist and In common with tbe beginning In futile attempts to run sistless law of v human development en whose names are as follows: Clemseveral others of the cult in Danbury counter to the irresistable current of wblcb even clergymen from tbe bfgber ens Pfuetsner, Abraham Isaak, Abrate expected tbe attempt on the life ot the human progress, and to provoke re- plafN have been making themselves ham Isaak, Jr., Alfred Schneider, Havel, Henry Travagllo, Mrs. President to take place during his visit bellion against social conditions which conspicuous of late by 'stimulating, can bs improved and uplifted by its apologising for, and coddling', and for Marie Isaak, Mlsa Marie Isaak, Julia to the exposition. An investigation baa - been " Started operation alone.- - The sentiment which which they have been aeeklng to pro- Mechanic, Morris Fox, M artla Rasner would set labor against capital and de- voke sympathy as a' reasonable re- and Michael Rosa. which has thus far .elicited the information, the police state, that there are j stroy fidelity to duty in the employed. sentment It ia a spirit of malevo? X Emma Goldman, who has been arabout twelve anarchists in the city. ' It a servile and despicable Impulse, lence, of destructiveness, of envy, hat- rested, Fas an 'associate of these as well at of Csolgoss. hlclr would turn the servant Into an red and malice and all uncharitable Offloers went to Webber's bouse, but ' be vu not therei n ct . Ncmtrjr Hitchcock. nlth. Secretary Qie. CreereUry WilNt. ftocreury Kaos. MEMBERS OF PRESIDENT MKrN LEYS CABINET SENDING AND RECEIVING TELEGRAMS AT BUFFALO. Stataa marshal and United Statea district attorney for the district would be required to assume Immediate Jurisdiction over tbe prisoner and case. He would be tried In tbe Federal district or circuit court. first Tbe cabinet ministers were indisposed to Include themselves In the cope of the proposed bill, but were persuaded to do so by senators and representatives who happened to he ia Buffalo, These members of Congress said that ths measure ought to be broad enough In Its scope and purpose tejmake It thoroughly ffectlve, ; Attoaey General Knox was authorised to make a draft of the bill, which be will submit to bis colleagues after their return to Washington. Later on tt will be submitted to the President, Senator Fairbanks of Indiana has eonsented to Introduce the bill on tbe opening day of tbe first session of tbe ' Fifty-sevenCongress. He .says he has no doubt that It will be passed. General Grosvenor of Ohio will be come sponsor for the bill In the House, and he says significantly In discussing its purpose, "I do not believe there will be much opposition to it" . it th ACCUSED : coursging him to commit murder may be enmeshed sufficiently to warrant their indictment for conspiracy. EMMA Qmw OOLDXiNl dmHyrrt WANDEKXNOS. , IIlp-poly- f the AaMvkSU is As fa wltk The much sought for Emma Goldman Is now In custody in Chicago, to await such action as the authoritiea may decide to take against her aa accessory to tbe crime - committed by Tbe etory of her moveCsolgoas. ments during tbe last six weeks shows that on the 12th of July (Csolgoss says the . 17) she was In Chicago, where Isaak A she had been stopping with-thThat night she was to leave for Rochester with Mis Isaak, and on tha way to the jtattoirrihe met Ctolgoss, who taTked with her tor some tlmob Miss Isaak says. Miss Goldman 'and her friend left that night and stopped at Buffalo en route. ' Three weeks later they were- in Buffalo again, and went to the expogttloh. and Mlss laaak says they visited the Temple of Music. Miss Goldman Is not heard of again until Sept 1, although the Buffalo chief of police says she wae in Czol- e - ' CkNkwtMk S, . ' T never felt so cheap in . ali. rny n busilife," declared the- ness man, . I am a great stickler for honesty and will not have - anyone around me of whom 1 have the least suspicion; and when I find a man that X know I can trust I regard his honesty ns a valuable asset and pay him accordingly. The result has been that I have gathered around me a force of whom I am Justly proud,-frothe Janitor up to the cashier. The other day my old office boy left me, and I was obliged to hire a new one. Out well-know- OF KNOWING FCOT. Whe Offered to Bet Freal-- 1 dent Woald Be Kill A - On the theory held by United States secret service agents that the city of Camden, N, J., contained one or more persons to whom the plot to aSSaasl ante President McKinley Fas kfiown, Ethelbert Stone,' an employs of the New York 8blpbuldlng Company in South Camden, has been arrested by County Detective John Paintef. The direct cause of Stones arrest was a remark he made while engaged In a heated discussion with Oscar Hansen and Andrew Peterson, fellow employes. Just previous to the receipt of news from Buffalo. Stone concluded hla ar- -. guroent with these words: "I will bet 5 that McKinley will bs killed before 8 oclock - When the news of the attempted aa- sasslnatton was received s few hours later the remark was remembered ana on Monday the employes told General Manager May about the matter. He asked tbe Camden police to InvestiA treated gate It When taken before Prosecutor Lloyd after his arrest Stone admitted having made the offer to bet, but Insisted that tt was a Joke. This story, however, is not. believed by tbe detectives. A search was made of Stones bouse At Ferry road and Seventh street and Incriminating evidence, It IS said, was secured. - ( . . FnOOF HAKD TO FIND. 'Attnrrlv Fell . Aa t Irolr Other events and circumstances Ai-,nhl- begin to shape themselves tbe police of Buffalo and tbe men ot the United Statee secret service who are there are being forced to the conclusion that Csolgoss . - . . with acted without prearrangemeht any .living person when he shot president McKinley in the Temple of Music on the exposition grounds last Friday, aays a Buffalo telegram. This, too, is tne opinion of Secretary Root and Attorney General Knox, who bars beard accurate accounts of what Csolgoss has said to the police and the district attorney in the several Interviews be has bad with those officials. While they believe that be was encouraged to Attempt the Presidents life by Incendiaij writings and tatter-- ances of anarchists possessed of greater Intellectual resources than himself, they have been forced to the conclusion In the light of all the facta that JOHN THREE of OF ASSASSINS flrfct ' quesflon''so far ' al lbi American Presidents are concerned, la certain to be answered affirmatively. Llnooln was approached by Booth without the (lightest hindrance; he was sitting In a theatre box absolutely unguarded. Garfield was shot down as he was walking arm ia arm with Blaine through a railway station, unattended by a single guard, just as any eltlsen might do. , And now McKinley bas been shot at point blank range by one of an immense throng TbeTarcntsofCzoioss. DRS. PARK AND RIXEY AT THE BEDSIDE OF THE PRESIDENT. goal's company In' ChIcagobnAug.il. At the former date she was in Pittsburg. visiting one Gordon, an and attending an meeting, accompanied by a Young man, said to resemble Csolgoss. FEoar'Plttsburg she went to Cincinnati. where she staid until Sept . 6, when she went to 8t Louis and . attended several conferences with anarchists. On the next day the attempted assassination occurred, and the following morning she went to Chicago to be near Isaak, she says, to his trouble. j-- ' ' ..j- This is all that la known to the public. What evidence the authorities may have is another matter. v Meanwhile In hla - confession ths wretch Csolgoss has acknowledged meeting her here In July, and the poUce have some reason to believe be bad been with her in other places.. ,, lat j FRIEND OF CZOLGOBZ JAILED. Stiwt IpMkM la Detroit AimM far a Sedition ItltnaM. Tom Bawden, a Detroit single tax advocate and street speaker, whose defiance of the police brought on the riot In tbe Campus. Martins last May, baa been arrested. Just after be bad declared, speaking of Leon Csolgoss: "I a ' of the numerous applicants I selected a bright and honest appearing boy and put him to work,. Then the old Question arose. Was he honest? I am old enough to realise that appear tacee are oftentimes deceitful, and 1 resolved to test the boy in a mild way. So one night when I departed fof home I left a trickle prominently displayed on ,my desk. After reachlnf home I felt sorry for what I had dona I realised that by my act I had bee placing temptation In the boys path, and that there was little to excuse my plan; so I was very much relieved the following morning to find the nickel where f had left it,- - Then I saw that there was something there thM I had not left,, and that was s bit of paper upon which the money lay, and upon Paul Cxolgoex, father ot tbe anarwhich was written in the new boy's chist assassin, lives with his family band the Inscription: To be left until 105 Fleet street, Cleveland, and durat called for. Ive got a smart lad In that new boy, Too smart. Im afraid." ing hla residence there has always had the respect of his neighbors. Mrs. kind. The elder Csolgoss ba little Wife There Is a burglar "down In sympathy for his revolutionary son, the cellar, Henry. Husband Well, and openly expresses the conviction my dear, we ought to be thankful that that he should be hanged ' for his we are upstairs. Wife But hell com crime. Tbe anarchist's father does up here. Husband Then well go down the assassin's stepmother, Cxolgoex, In the cellar, my dear. Surely a who la now in Buffalo, la a quiet womhouse ought to be big enough to an, neat and cleanly In appearance, hold three people without crowding. but not possessed of much education. , -- m CHARLES GWTEAt) OUR PRESIDENTS. ' " The fVffv)en (on "JLiSfujihation . Tbe practical questions that civilisation mnst answer, in view of the frequent recurrence In all lands and tnder all forma of government of anarchistic attempts to murder the leads of states,, are these: - 1. Can the person of the chief executive be more successfully guarded (gainst auch attacks? , f S. Can the assassin be so dealt with ia more effectually to discourage Others? : WHKEi 600TM bf vlsltors to an exposition who were allowed to pour in promtscously to shake his hand, without tickets or restrictions of any sort, Just as It there were no such characters as anarchists or cranks. Clearly it U possible to ' make it much leu easy than It Is tor unknown persona to get so dose as this to the President It will be sentimentally objected that this wofild destroy the old American custom of Presidential handshakings free to all comers. But old customs must bo ' changed to meet new condiUona To the second question the answer Is more difflcult. Tbe penalty of d ea thTi these ve rest lb a t can Tefnr Dieted, though it might reasonably bo extended to all attempta to kill tbe President, whether successful or not. There Is, however, much plausibility i In the suggestion made by many eml- nent ortmldologlsts that every assas- sin should, so far as possible, have his Identity effaced. If even his name were suppressed In tbe reports of the ; crime, and he waa hurried to trial and execution without having any personal prominence in the public eye, so that he would cut no figure at all either at the time or In history evident that the stlmulona of notor-le- ty would be taken away. Aad that . men of the B reset and Csolgoss type love notoriety and public ' posing : above all things, Is believed by nearly all the scientists wbo bare studied them. New York World. trie' The entire family, It would appear, with the exception of the anarchist, haa had little use for books of any not believe that hla son Is craxy, although he has no hesitation In saying The assasthat he la sins father used to live ,0a a farm near Alpena, Mich., before be came to Detroit He has eight sons all of them by a first wife, now dead, and five of whom reside in Michigan. Mrs. Czolgosx agrees with her husband In the opinion that her stepson must have been set on by older and abler minds. weak-minde- d. Senator James K. Jones and former Governor James P, Clark, of Arkan- sas, rival candidates for the senator ship, have agreed to urge the calling; of a primary election by which the choice ot the democrats of the state can be determined by popular vote. They have also agreed upon a Joint speaking campaign to cover the entire state. A'v if n Charles M. Schwab, president of the United States Steel Corporation, haa approved of the . plana for a school building at Weatherly, Pa., for which he will provide tbe funds. The contract has been awarded. The building will represent an outlay of about 1100.000., . I ; , . ' |