[May 11, 1886]
STARTLING EVIDENCE NOW IN THE POSSESSION OF
STATE’S
ATTORNEY GRINNELL.
It Will Be Shown at the Trial that Conspirators with More
than Twenty
Bombs In Their Pockets Were at the Haymarket Meeting—A Charge that
Parsons
Threw the Bomb—Some of the Lesser Conspirators in Court—The Relief Fund
State’s
Attorney Grinnell was visited at his office yesterday by State’s
Attorney
Williams of Milwaukee and the two public prosecutors talked over their
duties
in prosecuting the rioters who took part in the recent outbreaks
against law
and order in the counties they represent.
Mr. Grinnell expressed an unflinching determination to prosecute
to the
utmost extent of the law the leaders who precipitated the battles on
Desplaines
and Eighteenth streets and Blue
Island Avenue. He
said the evidence against these men was strong and satisfactory, but
beyond
saying that much he did not at present feel justified to speak, for he
was not
trying their cases in the newspapers. A
policeman who has been admitted to all of the evidence-collecting
councils of
the officials confidentially informed a reporter for THE TRIBUNE
yesterday that
it was known that the Socialists in the Haymarket crowd had the night
of the
riot at least twenty bombs in their coat pockets. The
officials also had positive evidence as
to who threw the bomb, but the reporter’s informant refused to state
whether or
not the guilty person was one of the Anarchists under arrest. Another policeman said it was known that the
bomb was thrown by Parsons. Those who know Parsons say the story that
he threw
the fatal bomb is incredible, because he is too much of a coward to do
it.
The Victims.
At the County
Hospital
last night the patients were doing very nicely, all of those whose
conditions
were considered critical Sunday having improved so much that they were
considered out of danger. The funeral
services over the remains of the late Officer Flavin were held
yesterday
morning in St. Columbkill’s Church, whence carriages were taken to Calvary Cemetery, where the interment
occurred. The pall-bearers were Officers
Joseph A. Gilso, William Lohmeyer, James D. Johnson, and James Mackey
from the
Rawson Street Station, and Edmund Burke and Patrick Hannigan from the West Chicago avenue
district. There was a profusion of
floral offerings, among which was a cross of calla lilies from the
officers of
the Fourth Precinct, which tended to show the esteem in which the dead
policeman was held by his fellow-officers.
More Trouble for the Arbeiter-Zeitung.
The
Socialistic Publishing Society, which was organized to publish Spies’
Anarchist
paper, the Arbeiter-Zeitung, failed
to pay its rent in advance for May, while its editor was unavoidably
detained
away on account of his incarceration in jail, and yesterday Henry
Fientye, the
owner of the building, entered up a judgment on his lease in the
Superior Court
for the possession of his premises. In
an affidavit filed by F.A. Henshaw, Fientye’s agent, Henshaw says that
the
lease was given from May, 1886, to May, 1887, and the premises were
only to be
used as a printing-office and composing-room;
the rent being $1,300 a year, payable monthly in advance. The society, however, in violation of the
covenants of the lease, and without the knowledge of the landlord, has
kept
stored on the premises highly explosive compounds of a most dangerous
character, endangering the safety of the building and the lives of the
tenants
and injuring its reputation. With this
affidavit was also filed one by Officer Duffy to the effect that the
society
kept stored on its premises highly dangerous explosive compounds in
quantities
sufficient to utterly destroy the building, and which were kept for the
purpose
of being used by certain lawless persons in feloniously destroying the
property
of the citizens of Chicago and the lives of the police force. These compounds greatly endangered the safety
of the building and the buildings in the immediate neighborhood and
imperiled
the lives of the persons in the building.
The Police Letting Up
There was a
certain relaxation in the operations of the police yesterday who are
working
upon the cases of the Anarchists. Pointers of all kinds were numerous,
but when
a Chinaman who keeps a laundry under the Arbeiter-Zeitung
office took six officers over there to examine a mysterious room in the
basement which proved to be nothing more than the bottom of the
elevator shaft,
the police concluded that line of work was about played out. The examination and cross-examination of the
prisoners Fischer, Hirschberg, and Stange, as well as the thousand and
one
persons who were supposed to know something of their connection with
the
bomb-throwing, were finished yesterday afternoon. Lieuts.
Shea and Kipley agree that their
investigation has so far produced excellent results, and that it only
remains
to work out a few corroborative details to make the case against all
the
important prisoners a plain one. The
idea appears to be that the Spies brothers, Fielden, Schwab, and
Parsons,
should he be arrested, can readily be convicted of being accessories
before the
fact. An interesting and vital statement
from a party who was present at the time of the explosion, but whose
name has
been withheld, indicates that Fischer, Stange, and Hirschberg were the
secondary actors, who undertook to do the work after it was planned and
urged
by the leaders. Of these three Fischer
and Hirschberg were the most directly connected with the
Arbeiter-Zeitung
faction, and the former, the police claim, can clearly be proved to
have known
all about the bomb throwing, and either threw it or stood within
reaching
distance of the man who did.
Conspirators in Court.
Anton
Hirschberg, an Anarchistic printer, said to have been connected with
the
Arbeiter-Zeitung, who was captured in his home at No. 60 Mohawk street
last Thursday
night by Detective Bonfield, appeared before Justice Meech yesterday
morning
charged with having participated in the haymarket riot and being one of
an
unlawful assemblage. Bonfield said that
the police connected the prisoner with the printing of the circulars
which
called the assembly at the haymarket last Tuesday night.
He was there at the time of the riot and
received a shot through his cost. A
continuance of the case was asked for and granted until the 18th,
but in default of $6,000 bonds the prisoner was remanded to jail, very
much
against his attorney’s wishes, who declared that the would make a
motion for a
habeas corpus on the ground of excessive bail.
Justice
C.J. White, recently of the Desplaines street court, occupied
yesterday for the first
time the bench of the West Twelfth Street Police Court.
The docket, for that precinct, was a rather
heavy and important one, and the manner in which the cases were
disposed of
seemed to give much satisfaction to the authorities there.
The most important cases before him were
those of three Anarchists named Vaclav and Hynek Dejmek and Frank Nowak. The brothers Dejmek were arrested Saturday
last at their home, No.
614 Centre Avenue, and in their rooms were
found quantities
of materials for the manufacture of dynamite and nitro-glycerine,
revolvers,
bullets, other warlike materials, and a dynamite tube loaded and capped
ready
to be used for destructive purposes. Both
of the Dejmeks have been in this country nearly seven years, Vaclav
having been
specially engaged in the circulation of local and foreign Anarchistic
publications. They were booked on three
charges each – for unlawful conspiracy, for assault with intent to
commit
murder, and for riot. On the first
charge they were held in $1,000, on the second in $3,000, and on the
third in
$500 each, until the 14th inst.
Nowak was held for conspiracy in $1,000 to the same date. All three are dark and sinister-looking, and,
pretending not to be able to speak any English, deferred their defense. Daniel
Place, the wild-eyed individual who lived on
Van Buren Street
and was arrested with Dejmek and others, and who while under the
influence of
liquor became possessed with the idea that he was an arch-conspirator,
was also
before Justice White. It transpired that
Place’s tales of dynamite bombs were the creations of his distorted
imagination. He was charged simply with
“unlawful assemblage”—being present at the haymarket meeting—and his
case
continued with the others to May 14 under $700 bonds.
Vaclau Dejnek,
Frank Nowak, Hynek Dejnek, and Anton Hirschberg were taken to the County Jail
at 1 p.m. and
given
quarters in the boys’ department. Their
first night in an American jail was spent in restless tossings on their
small
hard beds. At 9:30 last night John Harper, under
the
impression that the deputy stationed in the alley was getting a
terrible
beating, seized a heavy club and rushed out of the jail to aid him. He was disgusted when the bailiff on
picket-guard in the alley told him that the loud noises of wrangling
were made
by two quarrelsome teamsters.
Hirschberg
boarded at No. 60 Mohawk
street
with a family named Schmidt, who occupy the second flat.
He is a Bavarian, about 28 years of age, and
a printer by trade. He came to this
country four and half years ago, locating in Chicago, where he has been ever since. Mr. Schmidt said Hirschberg had lived with
him two years and a half, and was a very decent young fellow. He worked for the Arbeiter-Zeitung, and, if
he had anything to do with the circular it was as a compositor, setting
up the
portion of the copy handed to him. Hirschberg
was at the haymarket meeting, but Mr. Schmidt said he wouldn’t harm any
one. The police searched his room, but
found nothing which implicated him in any crime, and Mr. Schmidt
couldn’t
imagine why Hirschberg had been taken into custody.
Hidden Bombs.
About dark
last evening some children who were playing under a sidewalk on Clyde Street,
near Clybourn Avenue,
found two bombs. The attention of a man
was called to the fact, and he took the bombs to the Larrabee Station. Officers were sent to the place to hunt for
more, but none was found. These bombs
are made of a composition resembling lead, and are doubtless of the
same kind
as that thrown by an Anarchist at Tuesday night’s meeting, as pieces of
the
same kind of material were embedded in the flesh of some of the wounded
policemen. The bombs are about three
inches in diameter, a quarter of an inch thick, and weigh over a pound. A nut screwed onto a piece of iron fastened
to the lower half, and piercing the upper half., keeps the two halves
together,
the edges fitting closely. A small hole
in the side admits the fuse. The inside
would hold three or four ounces of explosive material.
When taken to the station the bombs were
carefully handled, as it was supposed they might be loaded. But the unscrewing of the nuts disclosed that
there was nothing in the interior, the surface of which was clean and
shiny. Neither bomb had evidently ever
been made
ready to do its deadly work. Now that it
is known that the Anarchists are “planting” the evidence of their crime
a
vigorous search will be made in all suspected localities, and it is
expected
that not only bombs and dynamite but guns and revolvers will be found
concealed
under sidewalks and in other out-of-the-way places.
Calls on the Prisoners.
Mrs. August
Spies and Miss Spies visited the Spies brothers at the jail at 1 o’clock yesterday. They remained an hour, after which they took
a Milwaukee avenue
car for home, and did not come back.
Fielden was allowed to come out of the body of the jail and
visit with
his wife in the jail office at 4
o’clock. Mrs. Fielden was
accompanied by a fat man about 60 years old.
Fielden talked long with his wife and twice he seemed touched by
something
she said. He looked crushed and spiritless and very unlike the agitator
of last
summer atop a new platform on the Lake-Front. There were in his face
evidence s
of fear as well as of distress and wearing.
The fat man and Mrs. Fielden took a West Lake street car. Moses Salomon, the lawyer, was allowed an
hour’s consultation with the Spies brothers, Schwab, and Fischer in the
lawyers’ cage in the afternoon. Salomon
left at 4 o’clock
and
Attorney Buettner spent the next half hour with the prisoners. All of the prisoners looked greatly worried
and worn. Mr. Buettner was requested by
August Spies to defend his brother Chris, and, if possible, to get him
out on
habeas corpus, August claiming that Chris had nothing whatever to do
with the
haymarket meeting.
A German Reporter Rudely Awakened.
The
peaceful morning sleep of Lieut. August Boecklin, night police reporter
for the
Staats-Zeitung, was roughly disturbed
at 8 o’clock yesterday morning by the abrupt and unceremonious entrance
into
his room, at North Clark and Sedgwick streets, of five policemen in
citizen’s
clothes, who had rapidly ridden there on a patrol wagon in the
expectation of
seizing a Socialistic outfit. The
startled reporter explained to the officers, all of whom knew him, that
so far
from being an Anarchist he was a hater of their creed, and the
disgusted
patrolmen left in haste. The owlish
hours kept by the newspaper man and his habit of keeping himself aloof
form his
neighbors in that quiet spot had excited the keenest curiosity in a
kinky-headed spinster who lived closed by, and it was she who reported
to the
police that she had discovered the deadly den of a dynamitard.
Stray Riot Items.
Only one
death (that of Lewis) from gunshot wounds has yet been reported to the
Health
Department, aside from the policemen. It
is believed that others who were shot Tuesday night have died. Several of the cemeteries will bury bodies on
a physician’s certificate, not requiring a permit from the Health
Department. Coroner Hertz could stop
this by ordering the cemetery authorities not to do it.
Unless this course is adopted the number of
casualties will never be known officially.
Mrs.
Schwab, the wife of the Anarchist, and Miss Spies, the sister of the
Spies
brothers, who are now confined in the County Jail,
called on Sheriff Hanchett yesterday for the purpose of obtaining
permission to
see the prisoners at frequent intervals.
The Sheriff told them they would be allowed to see the prisoners
twice
each week.
The Arbeiter-Zeitung was not issued yesterday,
owing to their lease being canceled.
They were preparing to move out of the building, No. 107 Fifth Avenue,
but other quarters
have not yet been secured. It is not
likely that the paper will be issued again before a press has been
bought, so as
to make the paper independent of other printing offices.
The inquest
on the body of Mathias Lewis, the shoemaker and supposed Socialist who
was shot
during the riot Tuesday evening, and who died Sunday at his home, No. 2307 Wentworth Avenue,
was held yesterday, but nothing was developed further than the facts as
set
forth in yesterday’s TRIBUNE. Lewis
leaves a wife and two children. The wife
insisted that her husband was no Socialist, and Deputy-Coroner Kent and
the
jury accepted the statement, not caring much anyhow whether he was or
not. The neighbors are of a contrary
opinion, but,
in the absence of proof, Mrs. Lewis entitled to the benefit of the
doubt and
any comfort she may get from it. As
nobody has yet started a fund for the relief of either “innocent
spectators” or
out-and-out Anarchists, the matter is of the lesser importance. The jury found that the deceased died from a
pistol-ball fired by some person unknown the night of May 4, 1886.
James
Hagan, David Reed, and A. McKinley, three strikers from the Calumet
Steel &
Iron Company’s works at Cummings, were arrested at the latter place
yesterday
by Deputy-Sheriff Morgan on State warrants issued by Judge Garnett,
sitting as
a committing magistrate, on complaint of David Reed, a non-union
employee of
the company stated. The warrants charge
them with riot, making threats, interference, and intimidation, and
also
disturbing the peace. The prisoners were
brought before Judge Garnett at a late hour in the afternoon and held
in bonds
of $1,300 each. Bail was furnished. More arrest are to follow.
Anton
Hradecny, editor of Lampecka, “The
Lantern,” the Bohemian paper whose office was raided by the Twelfth
street
police Thursday last, went into that station last evening and gave
himself up,
saying that he was ready to answer all charges against him. What to do with him was for a while a
question with the officers, but he was finally let go.
The
lumber-yard employees have divided their association into seven
sections, each
section holding its own meetings and electing four delegates to a
committee to
confer with the Lumbermen’s Committee some day this week.
Sections 1 and 4 met at Twentieth Street and Blue Island Avenue
and at Twentieth Street
and Hoyne Avenue
respectively, but did nothing further than to elect their delegates. Section 3 met in the afternoon at Sach’s
Hall.
The
Executive Committee of the Retail Dry-Goods Clerks’ Association met at
the
Grand Pacific last night and arranged for a general meeting to be held
at the
hotel Friday evening , when an organization will be perfected. It has not been decided yet whether the
organization will become a branch of the Knights of Labor or not. That matter will be discussed Friday night.
At the
nailworks in Brighton
Park the 300
employees
were granted nine hours’ work at the old pay, and after a three days’
trial the
men asked for eight hours’ work and nine hours’ pay.
This the company acceded to, but some of the
men objected, and there were fair prospects of a break and a stoppage
of
work. Yesterday, however, John Foley and
J.D. Murphy of the Executive Board of District 24 visited the works and
read
the riot act to the strikers, with the result that all continued at
work.
Haymarket Trial
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