1915.06.09: Suffragist Silently Suffer Watching Men Get Vote Right


June 6, 1915

Suffragist Silently Suffer Watching Men Get Vote Right

College Women Wearing Caps and Gowns Make Voiceless Protest in Federal Court--Judge Doesn't See Why They Are So Anxious for Ballot.


It may seem remarkable to those familiar with the campaign of argument the suffragists have carried on, but Mrs. Charles L. Tiffany and her co-workers of the College Equal Suffrage League proved, in their visit to the Naturalization Court, that votes for women workers can present their case without speaking. Garbed in their caps and gowns, these native-born, college-bred women sat silent and attentive while thirty-six Germans, Austrians, Italians, Frenchmen, Scandinavians, Jews and Britons were made full citizens of this country with the right to participate in its government.

"Of course there will be no demonstration," Mrs. Tiffany said before entering the courtroom. "We come to protest by our presence against the exclusion of the 1,000,000 native-born women of this state from the franchise, and surely words are not needed."

The women came in automobiles, and changed from their street wraps to caps and gowns in the lower corridor of the Federal Building, with a crowd of the curious looking on. Then they made their way to the Naturalization Court, on the fifth floor, and from 10:30 o'clock until 12 sat in two rows in the rear seats. The doorman was struck with fright when he saw them approaching.

"Will they try to address the judge?" he inquired, and, though he was assured that they wouldn't, he kept an uneasy eye upon them until they left. 

Miss Becky Edelson, the girl leader of the I.W.W.'s was one of the spectators and sat near the college women.

"I read in the paper that they were going to do this, and I thought I'd like to see them," she said. "It's quite a novelty for me to come to court as a looker-on. I don't usually go to court unless I'm arrested.

"I think this stunt ought to have some effect. Anything that takes the starch out of the men is good. Some have to be convinced one way, some another. Some require bombs, some more quiet methods. I don't know that the vote is of such great value, but I think women ought to have it as well as the men."

Judge Augustus Noble Hand, who was presiding, didn't appear to be at all disconcerted by his voiceless visitors, but neither did their presence have any effect on his opinions about suffrage.

"I don't value my own vote enough to understand to understand why women should be so anxious for the ballot," he observed after court adjourned. "It seems to me that women are quite as well represented now as they would be if they had the franchise. I'd be quite willing to give up my vote if I could be represented by others, those of my class, understanding my needs. Of course," added Judge Hand, "if all the women want to vote they ought to have the right. But all of them don't."

However, the woman had some effect on at least one of the men who was naturalized. He was an Austrian, and at first he didn't understand what those black-gowned women were doing. When it was explained to him he nodded.

"Ya, ya," he said. "I vote now, I help the suffrages all I can."

The women represented various professions, including those of lawyer, doctor and writer. Several admitted that they were "just plain mothers." Among the thirty were Mrs. Charles Darnton (Wellesley), Miss Jessie Ashley (New York University), Miss Alice Morgan Wright (Smith), Mrs. Alice Baldridge (Wellesley), Mrs. Wendell Bush (Radcliffe), Miss Pauline Angell (Vassar), Mrs. William Spinney (Bryn Mawr), Dr. Elizabeth Balch Holmes (Bryn Mawr), Mrs. Edgerton Parsons (Smith), Mrs. Walter L. Harvey (Wellesley), Mrs. Frederick Pease (Bryn Mawr), Mrs. Francis Brewer (Vassar), Mrs. Frederick T. Ackerman (Bryn Mawr), Miss Margaret Calhoun (Vassar), Mrs. Clara Vail Brooks (Bryn Mawr), Miss Marian Bradley (Vassar), Mrs. Anne O'Hagan Shinn (Boston University), Miss Elinor Byrns (University of Chicago), and Mrs. Charles Tiffany (Bryn Mawr).

Dean Virginia Gildersleeve of Barnard promised to attend, but was unable at the last minute to do so.












1915.04.01: SPECTATORS IN COURTROOM FRIGHTENED BY EXPLOSIVE

April 1, 1915

SPECTATORS IN COURTROOM FRIGHTENED BY EXPLOSIVE

LAWYER WAVES BOTTLE OF COMPOSITION--DISARMED.

Thrill Is Furnished in Courtroom During Trial of Two Men at New York Charged With Planting Bombs.


New York, March 31. — The alleged written confession of Frank Abarno and Carmine Carbone, charged with making and placing a lighted bomb in St. Patricks Cathedral, March 2, were offered in evidence at their trial today, but ruled out by the court.

"William J. McCahill, the stenographer who took down the prisoners' statements, was permitted to testify as to what he heard the prisoners say. McCahill failed to remember the salient features of the alleged confessions, and Assistant District Attorney Train went on the stand himself.

Train admitted the prisoners had not been instructed as to their rights in giving information, but said this was unnecessary.

Mr. Train was permitted to say that in his presence Abarno stated Carbone made the bombs and that after they were made it was decided to destroy the cathedral as a protest against capitalism.

Did Not Want to Kill Anyone.

"After we walked into the cathedral I said to my companion we did not want to destroy human life and should leave the bombs unlighted, simply as a protest. When I had placed the bombs and began to walk out the detectives in the women's clothes grabbed us."

 Seventeen witnesses for the other side, including Sweet Marie Ganz, Louise Berger and other anarchist leaders, greeted Polignani with jeers and hisses when he walked from the courtroom, guarded by four detectives, at recess. There was mush hissing and some one spat in his face. Those who participated in the demonstration were hustled out of the building.

The afternoon session was taken up chiefly with the testimony of Captain of Detectives Thomas J. Tunney of the anarchist squad. He told of the arrests at the cathedral and corroborated the testimony of Detective Polignani, who associated with the defendants for weeks in order to learn their plans.

Had Plans All Arranged.

Captain Tunney testified that Abarno had confessed that he intended after the cathedral affair to follow the same course at the homes of Carnegie, Rockefeller and others. Similar action in the chief banks of the city was also a part of the plan of the men, he said, according to their statements.

There was a thrill in the courtroom late today while City Chemist David E. Relkey, who analyzed the explosives in the bombs, was on teh stand. He had testified that he found the composition in the bombs had as great an explosive power as gunpowder, when Lawyer Keir for the defense. In cross-examining the witness, held up a bottle containing a sample of the explosive, and waving it in the air, shouted:

"Isn't it a fact that you could drop a can of this stuff right here in the courtroom and it would not explode?"

Before the witness could answer court attendants sprang at the lawyer and snatched the bottle from his hands. The spectators settled back in their seats when the chemist said he did not think the composition would explode if suddenly dropped.



1915.04.01: NO DANGER IN BOMB, NEW DEFENSE PLEA

April 1, 1915

NO DANGER IN BOMB, NEW DEFENSE PLEA

Call Cathedral Officials to Prove Police Gave Assurances Against Damage.

COURT BARS FALSE WHISKER

Refuses to have Detective Make Up Before Jury--Prosecutor Train on Stand.


Subpoenas were issued yesterday for dignitaries of the Catholic Church to be witnesses for the defense of Carmine Carbone and Frank Abarno, the anarchists on trial before Judge Nott in General Sessions for trying to blow up St. Patrick's Cathedral on March 2.

Attorney Simon Pollock, for the defense, abandoned all effort to escape admission that a bomb was carried into the Cathedral and lighted there by one of the defendants. But he said the defense would show that the bomb was no more powerful than a big firecracker, that the police staged the whole affair as a bit of "play-acting," and that the Cathedral officials had been told that the bomb amounted to nothing, or they would not have allowed the Cathedral to be invade by a "horde of detectives bent on staging there the play of capturing a bomb maker."

During the testimony of Detective George D. Bernitz, who was in the Cathedral made up as an old man, Mr. Pollock tried to have Judge Nott order him to appear before the jury in the identical disguise he wore in the Cathedral. Mr. Pollock summoned the false hair, beard, and old-man clothes that helped Bernitz play his part, shook them at the jurors, and demanded that the detective put them on.

Maintains Court's Dignity.

There was a titter through the room and Judge Nott protested that such procedure would promote laughter and needlessly lower the dignity of the trial. he demanded to know why the lawyer insisted that Bernitz put on his disguise.

"Because, your Honor," said Mr. Pollock, "I want to show that this whole business was a bit of play acting in which the police, made up like vaudeville actors, had a full equipment of leading mean, stage hands, supes, and even an audience selected from among the Church officials who had been told that an anarchist was to be arrested in the cathedral.

Judge Nott decided that the defense could make its case clear enough by showing the disguise to the jurors.

The detective defended his disguise and its purpose. "Of course, I understand the sacredness of the Cathedral," he said in answer to a question, "and, as insinuated by the lawyer, I am not a Catholic. Yet I think that going to the cathedral disguised was part of the performance of a duty of great value to the people. Here was an anarchist with a bomb he wanted to light. If any able-bodied person should approach him his first act, naturally, would be one of concealment. But if an invalid--an old, limping man--should approach he would go right on with his work.

Saw Bomb Lighted.

"I approached in the only way I could to 'cover,' Abarno, and when he glanced at me and saw my feebleness and my gray hair he leaned over his bomb again and touched a lighted cigar to it. Then, of course, I caught him in my arms and tossed him to the detectives disguised as scrubwomen.

"I threw him into their arms because I had to take care of the lighted bomb. I picked up the bomb. I picked up the bomb, snuffed out the light and cut off a section of the fuse to keep in evidence."

From D.E. Roelkey, a Health Department chemist, the defense gained the admission that the mixture of antimony, sulphur, potash, and brown sugar in the bomb was one of the weakest of explosives. He testified to elaborate tests he made and said: "I found this explosive almost exactly equal in power to black powder."

Lawyer Pollock held up the bombs and asked the jurors to see that they were wrapped around them and an explosive inside that would not surpass in power an ordinary fire cracker. Mr. Pollock continued throughout the day to belittle the bombs and to try to prove that they would not have endangered anybody's life if they had exploded in the cathedral.

Train Takes Stand.

Assistant District Attorney Arthur Train, in charge of the prosecution, took the stand to tell about the bombs and the confessions made in his presence. He had not intended to be a witness, but he found that a police stenographer who took the interview could not read his notes with sufficient clearness to testify.

Mr. Train did not object to the effort of the defense to show that the bombs were not dangerous. He said Abarno tried to convert him to anarchism, and argued that he had no intention of harming any one, but did want to damage the cathedral as a protest against the service of the church to the rich.

Mr. Train got into the record the views expressed by Abarno to him, and also the contents of anarchistic documents, which, he said, had been well studied and absorbed by Abarno and Carbone before either of them met Detective Polignani.

From comments of Mr. Train both as a witness and as prosecutor it appeared that he meant to rest his case on the "state of mind" of the defendants as demonstrated by speeches they made, copies of which he was able to produce, and by literature which they handed to their friends with expressions of approval.

Mr. Pollock brought out in the cross examination of Mr. Train that there was no one within thirty feet of Abarno when he lighted the bomb, except detectives. Mr. Pollock held up before the jurors a bottle filled with powder that has been removed from Abarno's bomb.

Bomb Scare in Court.

 "You all know," he said, "that this would merely fizzle like a fizzling firecracker if I should light it. And you know that if I threw it on the floor it would not go off and would not harm any of you if it did."

He made a move as if to throw the bottle on the floor and two court attendants ran to rescue the bottle.

At the noon recess and again at the close of the afternoon session Detective Polignani was hissed by anarchist women in the corridor, among them "Sweet Marie" Ganz and Louise Berger, a half-sister of Carl Hanson, one of the men blown up with Arthur Caron while making a bomb last 4th of July.

The trial will be resumed at 10:30 o'clock today.






1915.03.03: I.W.W. AND REDS MORE DARING IN LAST 2 YEARS

March 3, 1915

I.W.W. AND REDS MORE DARING IN LAST 2 YEARS

Bombs Used Against Churches--Cathedral Damage by One.

ORATORS INCITED MEN TO VIOLENCE

Fiery Speeches Often Stopped--Many Demonstrations Aimed at the Rockefellers


The Industrial Workers of the World and various anarchistic groups in New York have been extremely active here within the last two years.

Raids upon restaurants, church, invasions and the exploding bombs—the latter costing at least four lives—have marked the trail of the Manhattan “Red.” Just what has occurred since January 1, 1914, follows:

1914.

February 27—Second Avenue Baptist Church invaded by I.W.W. Driven out by police reserves.

March 3—Frank Tannenbaum and 190 of his followers arrested in St. Alphonsus’s Roman Catholic Church, which they invaded, demanding food and shelter for the night. Taken to night court at a special sitting of the court arranged by Chief Magistrate McAdoo, Magistrate Campbell held Tannenbaum on $5,000 bail on charge of inciting a riot, and the rest of the mob were held for disorderly conduct.

Tannenbaum’s trial was held before Judge Wadhome. He was found guilty and sentenced to one year in the penitentiary and fined $300. Tannenbaum asked for immediate sentence after making inflammatory speech.

March 8—A ten inch stick of dynamite was found eight feet from St. Mark’s Church, Second Avenue and Tenth Street where I.W.W. had been given shelter a few nights before.

March 9—All Saints’ Church, Henry Street, invaded by two mobs of I.W.W. demanding food and beds for the night.

I.W.W. in Churches.

March 10—St. George’s Episcopal Church, of which the late J.P. Morgan was a member, and where his song worships, sheltered 100 I.W.W. “unemployed” in the Memorial Building, 209 East Sixteenth Street.

March 12—Riot in Cooper Union when I.W.W. attempted to break up Socialist meeting. Cry of “We want to eat. Quit talking and do something” brought the police and invaders were ousted.

March 28—Threats made against Madison Square Presbyterian Church. Thirty patrolmen detailed to watch edifice.

April 4—Two riots in Union Square. “Wild Joe” O’Carroll, Arthur Caron and six others arrested. Meeting called by the I.W.W. to discuss the question of unemployment.

April 9—Philip Novick set to work house for ten days for creating trouble during I.W.W. meeting. Of eight others arrested for were discharged; one put on probation for a year; one sent to workhouse for fifteen days and another for ten.

April 12—Jane Est, I.W.W. speaker, arrested while interrupting service in Madison square Presbyterian Church, of which Dr. Parkhurst is pastor. “This church has a minister who repudiates Christ!” she cried. “He said Christ had nothing to do with the conditions of the poor in New York.”

April 22—“Sweet Marie” Gans, I.W.W. agitator, arrested in front of Tribune office while making a speech in provoking an angry outburst from crowd. She was forced from the platform and finally rescued by police.

April 24—Becky Edelson found guilty of disorderly conduct and placed under bond of $300 to keep the peace, with Samuel Hartman, a fellow agitator. Sent to workhouse and immediately announced she would go on hunger strike.

April 25—“Wild Joe” O’Carroll, I.W.W. agitator and member of the Anti-Militarist League, in Union Square said: “if American workmen have to go to Mexico to shoot Mexican workmen, just make a mistake and turn the guns on your own officers. When you start killing them you will find that the war will stop soon enough.”

May 2—Marie Gantz arrested near 26 Broadway on a warrant charging her with uttering incendiary remarks against John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Denunciation of Rockefeller, general disorder in meetings held in the open marked one of the busiest May days known to New York police.

May 21—Mrs. J. Borden Harriman and members of the Industrial Relations Commission listened to Vincent St. John, six years secretary of the I.W.W., tell about sabotage.

No Respect for Property.

St. John said: “The I.W.W. does not advocate the destruction of human life to gain a certain point, but we are just coming to realize that the wealthy have been supporting themselves by draining the muscle and energy of the workers, without respect for their property, and we don’t intend to show any respect for the property of the wealthy if its disregard will aid us to gain our point.”

May 24—Alexander Berkman, Becky Edelson, Arthur Caron, and several hundred followers, in a riot in front of 74 East Fourth Street. Rocks thrown; police reserves called; two arrests made.

May 29—Judge Mulqueen sentenced David Shapiro, known to the I.W.W. as “Edward Gibbons,” to twenty years at hard labor in Sing Sing. Two accomplices were sent away, one for two years, the other for six months. The three assaulted and robbed Morris Sandler on April 18.

May 29—Becky Edelson, Arthur Caron, Edward Plunkett arrested in Tarrytown while attempting to hold a meeting and demonstration near Rockefeller estate.

May 30—Fifteen prisoners taken to Tarrytown jail; result of raid by town authorities upon I.W.W. and followers of Berkman.

June 1—Two followers of Berkman sentenced, one got three months and the other thirty days for causing trouble in Tarrytown near Rockefeller’s estate.

June 8-11—Tarrytown in turmoil, due to invasion of I.W.W., loudly armed men with automatic guns guard Pocantico Hills. Rifles stacked for workmen to use at given signal.

Driven from Tarrytown.

June 22—Alexander Berkman, Leonard D. Abbott and Arthur Caron, with Charles Plunkett, Becky Edelson, Helen Goldberg, Jennie Berger, Marie Yuster and Rose Yuster, leading a dozen sympathizers, driven away from John D. Rockefeller’s estate in Tarrytown by townspeople who met them near the station. Agitators were on their way to Croton Aqueduct to hold meeting which had been forbidden by the police.

July 4—Carl Hanson, Charles D. Berg and Arthur Caron blown to pieces while making bomb, believed to have been meant for Rockefellers. Six story tenement house, 1626 Lexington Avenue, near 103d Street, wrecked. Thirty families living there endangered; twenty persons injured; one woman killed. Italian flag torn down and red flag put in place at Garibaldi celebration in Rosebank, Staten Island. Attempt made to pull down American flag frustrated.

July 11—700 patrolmen with night sticks, also 50 mounted men, stationed in Union Square while Anarchists paid tribute to memory of Caron, Hanson and Berg; 9,000 in front of the speaker’s stand; red flag shown and inflammatory speeches made. No disorder, although meeting was almost broken up by militant peace advocates headed by Frank Urban.

September 19—Propaganda League I.W.W. held meeting in Union Square. One hundred and fifty protest against the arrest of J.M. Rangel, Charles Cline, and twelve other I.W.W. caught trying to take arms to Mexico. Deputy Sheriff had been killed by one of the band. Joseph J. Ettor, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, Pietro Allegra, P. Korinsky and L. Nelson made fiery speeches.

October 13—Bomb explosions in St. Patrick’s Cathedral on north side of church interior, directly in front of St. Bernard’s Chapel. Small pieces of iron and screws, fragments of the bomb, marked one of the several Italian panels back of the Crucifix. Doors of three pews wrecked. Hole one foot in length and six inches in diameter made. Particles of the infernal machine chipped ceiling. Explosion occurred toward dusk.

October 13 midnight—St. Alphonsus Roman Catholic Church damaged by bomb which exploded near front entrance, West Broadway. Priests shaken out of beds. Brother Patrick cut by flying glass. Windows broken. Damage $1,000.

1915.

January 9—“Church worst enemy,” cry of I.W.W., headed by Joseph Ettor, as they broke up meeting called by Interchurch Unemployment Committee, Labor Lyceum, Fourteenth Street and Second Avenue.

January 16—Cardinal Newman, Father Bernard Vaughan and John Mitchel quoted as in favor of defying law and order in speech of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn at opening campaign of I.W.W. at 64 East Fourth Street.

February 4—Five I.W.W.’s fined $5 each for refusing to pay for food, referring bill to Mayor Mitchel.

February 16—I.W.W. induce 125 workers in shop run by Mayor Mitchel’s Committee on Unemployment to quit work, after demanding $2 a day in place of 50 cents for bandage rolling.
 

ATTACK INEXPLICABLE SAYS MGR. LAVELLE

Mgr. Lavelle, rector of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, had little to say about the attempt to wreck the edifice. “It is all inexplicable to me,” he said.

“I cannot explain these attempted outrages in the cathedral by any manner of reasoning, and they are all the more abominable and mysterious because the cathedral stands for the very lifeblood of the people.

“We must face facts as facts, however, and try to guard against such attacks, but that doesn’t mean that we can understand them.

“Sometimes it is said that the cathedral is attended by the wealthy and cultured of the city, but it is the church of all the people.”

Since the attempt to explode a bomb in the cathedral near the Fifth Avenue entrance last September, Mgr. Lavelle said, a careful watch had been kept to guard against attacks by dynamiters.
 

TERRORIST SYSTEM A MISFIT IN U.S.

Prof. Robinson Blames “Idea-Glimmerings” for Bomb Attempt.

CONDITIONS PROVE REDS IN ERROR

Pair That Planted Explosive Weak Criminals, Asserts One Analist [sic].

“Foreigners, with idea-glimmerings not worked out, with a terrorist philosophy that is a misfit in this country—that is how I would describe the planters of the bombs in St. Patrick’s Cathedral yesterday and anarchists of their type,” said John Harvey Robinson, professor of history in Columbia University and an authority on his historical philosophical subjects, in discussing last night, the arrest and frustrated plot of Abarno and Carbone.

“There is no justification for the existence of anarchists in the social conditions of this country,” he maintained. “It is hard to conceive the motives which impel such actions as theirs. One can understand the thoughts of a Russian nihilist who is not a criminal in the true sense, but who is working along the lines of a definite philosophy toward a definite end, or of the terrorists of Paris who engaged in the fight for the Commune in 1871.

“But things are different in this country. I can trace no analogy between conditions before the Commune of 1871 and the conditions in this country today which precede what the two Italian anarchists are said to have planned a commune of anarchy and riot in New York. There is no parallel of effect.

“The idea of a Commune being established here by men of the type of Abarno and Carbone is absurd. Even the most disreputable, the most-down-and-out of the hoboes and the unemployed in the city, would never follow such leaders to wholesale plunder and murder.

“The proof that conditions in this country do not justify the actions of the two men and their kind—that anarchy and anarchism are not natural outgrowths of existing society here is simple enough. Think what would happen if anarchists tied up the subway for a day! The whole city would band together for their suppression. Our civilization is too complex, too delicate, too sensitive, to stand such shocks without retaliation. There are not enough anarchists in the country to succeed in terrorizing New York for any length of time, for the simple reason that the community is constructed in such an orderly manner that no disturbance would be tolerated by it.

“The case of the Commune in Paris was different. The country and the city were already in a state of semi-anarchy. Police power and the more certain power of public opinion had vanished from Paris with the capture of the city, the death of her best citizens in the war with Germany and the starvation and suspension of business which followed. It can be said, in a general  way, that the struggle of the Commune in 1871, during which the Hotel de Ville, the Luxemburg and other public buildings were burned and thousands died before and behind the barricades of the anarchists, was the more or less natural result of conditions in the community.

“But that cannot be said of any attempted Commune in New York nor of the acts of the anarchists later. These can be attributed to misapplication of half-formed ideas and ideals, fitted, perhaps, to Russia or even to Italy, but not to conditions in the United States, which are totally different.”

Speaking more definitely of the make-up of the Bresci anarchists, A.T. Poffenburger, engaged in laboratory research and experimental work with the department of psychology at Columbia University, spoke of the terrorist plans revealed by yesterday’s arrests.

“There is no one positive type of mind that belongs to the ‘red,’” he said. “It is always possible to trace the causes of the criminal bent or his anarchistic instincts, if the facts of his birth and his life are known. It resolves itself into a matter of heredity and environment. I have not yet seen Carbone and Abarno, but I have known men of their stamp. Their mental attitude may be best expressed by “The world owes me a living!”

“It is not surprising that the two are so young. Tendencies which lead to crime usually show themselves between thirteen and twenty-five, or even earlier.”