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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1901. NO EVIDENGE YET SECURED TO CONNECT EMMA GOLDMAN WITH PLOT TO KILL PRESIDEN P g TR ACCUSED WOMAN IS IN LUCK Buffalo Authorities Are Not Yet Ready to Ask for Her Requisition i Officers Hope toGet All Ac- complices by Tracing Czolgosz's Movements P SIS UFFALO, Sept. 12—The District Attorney here announced pub- licly this afternoon that he had no evidence against Emma Gold- man and that unless some turned up no requisition upon the State of Illinois would be made for her. This does not mean that the bottom has dropped out of the con- spiracy theory. It simply means that no | evidefice has yet been secured to connect | her with the crime. . If she is released | she will be kept under the closest surveil- lence, and it will be easy for the authori- | ties to place their hands upon her if she | is wanted later. | There is a hope here, however, that | some way will be found to hold her, at Jeast until investigations now in progress by the secret service people in all the principal cities where anarchist organiza- tions exist are completed. She was ar- rested wholly upon the responsibility of the Chicago police under the general or- der sent out by Superintendent Bull to ap- rehend all persoms who might have nowledge of the attempted assassination. While no evidence has been found against the Goldman woman, the official is satis- fied that Caolgosz crossed her path and in due time, it is believed, whatever connec- tion, if any, there was between them will be discovered. The secret service men vill trace Czolgosz's whereabouts back by Step. One of the things which is | s a complete report of the lec- | President’'s assailant said in- | him to commit the deed. - CONDITION AT CLOSE | OF THE SIXTH DA‘.’! Early in the Evening the Reports Are Not Grave. BUFFALO, Sept. 12—Six days have ¢ elapsed e the President was shot this afternoen he complained some- of fatigne. That was the only dis- ing word which came from sick room _during the day. d the beef juice which the doctors gaye | last night had' been relished so | Iy that this morning he was given 5 food for the first time. He was then bathed and enjoved a bowl of chicken broth, toast and coffee. He felt | so good after this somewhat substantial meal that he asked for a mild cigar. Dr. McBurney, the head of the corps of ~ attending physicians and _surgeons. was thoroughly satisfied with the pa- | tlent's condition and went to New York k to look after some urgent pri- rs. His intention is to return | in days. Meanwhile he will keep in constant touch with the Milburn house and be prepared to come back at a mo- nent’s notice Secretary Root left on the same train. Secretaries Are Anxious. Se. jes Wilson and Hitchcock reached the Milburn house at 9:35 p. m. Cont}.uued on Page Three. ° B spoke of the President’s fatigue. Mr. McKinley, already weak from the ordeal of the tragedy and suffering, complained of an| increasing feeling of fatigue. He | had theretofore been so buovant | and cheerful that his comp]a’\‘ntsl were regarded seriously. The pulse was abnormally high, 126 beats to the mmute. With temperature of 100.2 it should | have been thirty beats lower. The weakness of the heart began to arouse concern. In- stead of growing better the con- dition was steadily worse. The staff of physicians, aug- mented by Dr. Stockton, who had temporarily taken the place of Dr. McBurney, was summon- ed early in the evening and there was a conterence. At 8:30 o'clock Jast night the physicians announced officially that the President’s condition was not so good. The prob- lem of disposing of the food in the stomach was becoming a seri- ous one and the danger of heart failure increased. As midnight approached the situation was growing critical. Calomel and oil were given to flush the bowels and digitalis to quiet the heart However, just before mid- night, the President had two operations of the bowels, which relieved him very much and the midnight bulletin was more fa- vorable. It was believed then that the opening of the bowels would have the effect of allaying the wild pulsations of the heart. His pulse did drop to 120 and the prospect was slightly brighter. Bpt 6\\'ing to the President’s extreme weakness and fatigue, no attempt was made to conceal the serious ap- prehension which was felt. The al serious feeling of depression increased in s # W ¢ & URNAL] 4 7 e — N TWO VENOMOUS CONFEDERATES OF WHOM AMERICA MUST BE RID | volume and intensity. Secretary Cortelyou that the truth should be n.ade public. The doctors and the bulletins themselves were telling | their unfortunate story too plain- Hy. There was still hope that the worn and weary patient would be better in the morning, and at midnight Secretary Cortelyou said it was not probable that an- other bulletin would be issued until morning. Hope came once more to the breasts of those who had waited | for hours in anxiety. The phy- sicians parted for the night and every sign was a cheering one. There had been disquieting pulse action for several hours but prac- tically all of the unfavorable symptoms had been linked with the stomach trouble, and it was thought that they would disap- pear with the removal of the cause which was supposed to create them. The unofficia! re- ports at 1 o'clock and at 1:30 o'clock were both of them of a satisfactory nature and the watchers gathered about the house prepared for an uninter- rupted night. Another thunderstorm came out of the north and a few min- utes’ play of lightning brought rain in a heavy downpour. A blustering wind blew up fipnr the west to complete the cheerless- ness of the night. Shortly after 2 o'clock the phy- | | The | Action was immediate and de- weakening of the heart action. pulse fluttered and weak- ened and the President sank toward collapse. ~ The end ap- peared to be at-hand., Restora- tives were speedily applied . and the physicians fought the battle with all the reserve of science. cisive. , Digitalis and strychnine were admipistered and as a last resort saline solution was in- jected into'the veins. A general alarm went speed- ing to the consulting physicians and trained nurses as fast as mes- sengers, the telegraph and’ tele- | phone could carry it. The re- I storatives did not at once prove effective and it was realized that the President was in an extreme- ly critical condijtion. That reali- zation, with the shadow "o_f:deathJ behind it, led to another call and ] that a summons to thie--Cabinet, relatives and close - personal] friends of the President.* The messengers who returned with the doctors and nurses were hurried off afterathose within reach, and to those who were ab- sent from the city telégrams con- veying the painful tidings were quickly transmitted by telegraph. The scene about the house and in the storm-sweptstreet was dra- matic in its action and setting and the spirit of the tragedy was {on those who looked upon it. A messenger who darted into the rain and was whisked away in an| |sicians and nurses detected ajelectric cab gave the outside watchers the. first intimation of the ill news from within. = At the same moment new lights burned within the windows of the Mli- burn residence. Soon the word was passed out that the President had partially collapsed and was critically ill. It 'was a confirmation that was hardly needed, for the fact had been establishied by action that needed no words. The newspaper correspondents who had already sent warning of !a ‘serious change in the Presi- dent’s conditions rushed to the improvised telegraph offices with the first bulletins. ‘BUFFALO, Sept. 13. 7:10 a. m.—Daylight brought a crowd around the Milburn residence. A servant at the door announced “No change.” . The physicians are.yet in attendance and can be observed from the street. MILBURN HOUSE, BUF- FALO, ‘Sept. 13, 6:50 a. m.— Shortly before 7 o’clock Abner McKinley left the Milburn house for a short time.. He says that the President was then sleeping and had been for some time. 'WASHINGTON, ~ Sept. 13, 715 a. me~A telegram has just been received at the White House from Secretary Cortelyon announcing that the condition of the President is ‘somewhat im- proved. Secretary Cortelyou also telegraphs that, the next of- ficial ‘bulletin will be issued at 8 oelock, > o - CLEVELAND, Sept. 13.—A special train left for Buffalo at 5:25 o'clock ‘this morning on board - which were Senator Hanna, Colonel Herrick and Mr. McKinley's sister. The train should Buffalo about ¢ o’clock. HAS A FIGHTING ‘CHANCE FOR LIFE MILBURN HOUSE, BUF- FALO, Sept. 13.—Mr. Milburn, at 8:40 a. m,, told W. H. Hun- gerer, a Buffalo business man, who called to see him, that they were encouraged by the develop- ments of the last half hour and that they thought the President had a fighting chance. reach @ Sttt et it @ | MOST AND DR, SAYLIN ARRESTED, Continued From Page One. poison, murder, etc., so everything should be employed against them. Most_ protested that he had committed no crime and that all that ‘had happened in his newspaper were simply opinions in a new guise that had been printed and re- printed and voiced thousands of times in the last. fifty .years. & - - Saylin in the Toils. BUFFALO, Sept. 12.—Dr. Isaac Saylin, Emma _Goldman's friend and associate of Leon Czolgosz, was arrested in Chicago to-night. Dr. Saylin is known to have been the adviser of the man who acted as an agent of anarchists. Dr, Saylin in turn took his inspiration from the “prophetess of anarchy,” Emma Gold- man. - It is in Fast Buffalo wherc an- archy thrives as it does nowhere else in America, save perhaps in Chicago, that a trace was found of Dr. Saylin by the correspondent of The Call. At Broadway and Mills street Charles Zawadski has a drug store and a branch of the American Express Company. There Dr. Saylin went three weeks ago last Sat- urday, and by means of the long-distance telepinne‘ which has a branch at the drug store. talked to Emma Goldman. who was The conversation last- ed fifteen minutes, but of course it is im- possible to learn what subjects were un- der discussion. After using the telephone Dr. Saylin asked Zawadski to make out an express money order for $6, the amount to be paid to Emma Goldman in Rochester. His Check Refused. After the order was made out Dr. Say- then in Roghester. i lin offered his check for the amount. This check was refused by the druggist and the order was destroved. Saylin then went to a friend named Pindrass, in whose place of business there is a sub- station of the Buffalo Postoffice. Pin- drass-cashed his check, and Dr. Saylin then purchased a postal money order for 345, which was made payable to Emma Goldman and which was cashed by her in Rochester. MOST’S TURBULENT LIFE. Career of the Notorious Anarchist in Many Countries, Johann Most, Who was arrested in New York yesterday, was born in Augsburg, Germany, February 5, 1846. According to his own account, he has been at war with society ever since he was a boy, and an inmate of more prisons than any one else on whe criminal records of any country in the world. His father was a small court official, and the boy was given as good an educa- tion as he would take, but he early be- came ‘“stage struck™ and would run off, neglecting everything to attend the plays. A surgical operation on his jawbone when he was about 10 years old gave him the peculiar swollen jawed appearance that :so disfigures him and marred his prospects of becoming an actor. He says that his trend toward anarchy began when he was a Ettle over 10 years old, and blames his stepmother therefor. He learned the trade of bookbinder and availed himself of the opportunity thus afforded of reading everything that came in his way against religion and law. In 1864, when 18 years old, he started out to see the world and “tramped” through Germany, Austria, Hungary, Switzerland and Italy, beins locked up at Gliessen as a vagrant. In 1867 he stopped at Zurich, where he found work -at his trade, and began the study of anarchistic works. In 1868 he went to Vienna, where at a great gather- ing in the Funfhaus suburb he made a speech that drew upon him the denuncia- tions of the press. His employer dis- charged him and he at once left the city for a time. On his return four months later he was arrested and sentenced to a term in prison. There he formed the ac- quaintance of Oberwinder, Berka, Scheu, Pabst and others of the kind. He thece started his_first paper. a jail bulletin called the Nutcracker, ‘writtén in cipher and circulated among his confreres. On final trial he was sentenced to Luben prison for five years #t hard labor. On his release he was selected as “‘missionary” by the socialistic leaders and traveled about making speeches and distributing literature. On his return to | anarchist. MODERN SURGERY _ MARVEL Dr. Shrady Writes of the Successful Operation Performed by Doctors Location of Bullet the Greatest Danger Now Confronting Patient Spécial Dispatch to The Call, EW YORK, Sept. 12—Dr. Georgs F.> Shrady, in the Medical Re- view, describing the operatior on President McKinley ““FThe illustrious pat the ether and operation pulse at its termination 130 and of good quality. being There has been at no time any symptom of peritonitis or of septic poisoning. The pistol used was, fortunately, one of slight penetrating power, and it was of small caliber, other- wise the ball would have struck the sternum- -and almost certainly thers would have been far greater damage than that which perforated the stomach, even had it not caused instant death. “A very remarkable feature of the operation was its performance so soon af- ter the infliction of the injury, and in this Tespect it‘may be looked upon as unique. Fortunately, in consequence mainly of the careful handling of the patient be- fore the operation, only a very small amount of stomach contents escaped into the peritoneal cavity. Viewed by itselt as a surgical procedure it may be ¢ sidered beyond criticism. In fact it was demonstrating to the public one of many triumphs of modern surgery. “It Is most gratifying to.state at the present writing that the distinguished patient is in a fair way to complete re- covery. The only trouble now centers in the present uncertainty as to the lo- cation of the bullet. Although believ. be lodged in the muscles of the b: somewhere in the lower dorsal or uppe lumbar region, there has been no means as yet of proving such a point. every hope now rests in the probability the muscles becoming safely encysted and consequently harmless. It is somewhat difficult to understand why, upon this writing, the X-ray, so easily and effec- tually applied, has not been brought into service. It is to be hoped that the bu let’s course behind and beyond the stc ach is in a safely-closed and aseptic c dition. This would seemingly be the only absolute guarantee against any further trouble from a secondary suppurating process. But whatever theories may be offered as to the precise nature of the injury, they can be very harmlessly ven- tilated in the face of the gratifying fact that the patient seems destined to recover and valiantly defy them al @ il @ Vienna on May 2, 1872, the authorities de- creed his banishment and he was sent across the Saxon frontier. The Saxon po- lice would not permit him to make public speeches and so he worked privately in the homes of the workingmen. Becoming editor of the Chemmnitz Firewe Presse, he made such incendiary attacks on the authorities that he was summoned to court forty-three times in one year and punished elghteen times by fine or impris- onment. : Ahout this time Most won the love of a beautiful girl and married her, soon after going to live at Mayence. He says that he had “no time for hearthstons mus- ings,” and after leading his wifeda hard lite he deliberately and cruelly saerificed his family for his party, and in 1580 gave ber up. She died in 1882, three children having died before. By 1575 Most had become an out-and-out He went to Berlin and was elected to the Reichstag. In 1877 he was again elected. He was several times in prison for various offenses. In May, when the anarchist Hoedel shot at the German Emperor, Most in a public speech applauded the act and was sent to prison for six weeks. He passed his time writ- ing anarchistic books, of which he had now published many. In 1878 the socialist law proscribing cer- tain literature was passed and Most's Dbooks headed the “index.” He was or- dered out of the country and went to Hamburg and thence to London, where in January, 1879, he began the publication of the “Freiheit,” in which on the occasion of the assassination of Czar Alexander 1L he exulted and declared that “all tyrants must soon be served in the same man- running_a deep- red border He was arrested and ner,” and around his paper. sent to Clerkenwell Prison for sixteen months. On his release he decided to curss America with his presenee and sailed for New York in December, 1882. Immediately on his arrival he began his incendiary work by lecturing and publication, which he has continued with little interruption ever since. For a speech made at the time of the Haymarket explosion in Chi- cago he was sentenced to a year on the Island, which is the worst and longest of the two terms of punishment the over- patient authorities have seen fit to accord him. though his mouth has ever been open bur to spit further curses and nvoka destruction on the country which tol- erates him—its people, its laws, its Gov< ernors and its Presidents. Centinued .on Page Three. _———— NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. STERILIZED BARBER SHOPF. A Famous Shop in the Carrollton Ho- tel, Baltimore, Maryland. The barber shop in the Carrollton Ho- tel, Baltimore, sterilizes everything i§ uses in the shop. The sterilizing is dom ‘ by heat. 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