The Attempted Assassination of ex-President Theodore Roosevelt - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Q. What paper do you read at home in New York?
A. The World.
Q. Is that the only paper you read?
A. I read German papers and every paper I got, but the regular paper is the World.
Q. What country do you hail from?
A. Germany.
Q. What part of Germany?
A. Bavaria.
Q. What is the name of the place?
A. Two hours from Munich; Munich is the capital of Bavaria.
Q. What is the name of the place?
A. Erding.
Q. What schooling did you have?
A. Well, I have attended school in the old country and I attended night school in New York for about four winters; that's all the schooling I had.
Q. You haven't a very good education then?
A. Indeed I ain't.
Q. Have you always enjoyed good health?
A. Yes, sir; I am a healthy, sane man, never been sick.
Q. Never been sick?
A. No, sir.
Q. Ever been sick within the last year?
A. No, sir.
Q. Well, do you believe that that's a sane act that you committed this evening?
A. I believe that is my duty as a citizen to do, it's the duty of every citizen to do so.
Q. Well, how did you happen to get the idea that it was your duty among all the people that live in the United States?
A. I don't know; I thought maybe somebody else might do it before I got there.
Q. And you spoke to no one about your intention on all the route you took concerning this, n.o.body?
A. No, sir; n.o.body.
Q. Are you familiar with the law in New York with reference to carrying concealed weapons?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. What is it?
A. I know when I bought the gun the man told me, "I have to take that one screw out in order to make the trigger ineffective" and I told him not to do so because I was going to leave town the very same day, which I did.
Q. He didn't take it out?
A. No, sir; he didn't do it; I showed him the ticket for the steams.h.i.+p that I was going south the very same day and he said as long as I was going out the law didn't fit that.
Q. Where were you going to?
A. To Charleston.
Q. On the steams.h.i.+p to Charleston?
A. Yes, sir; I wanted to go from New York to New Orleans because I thought he was going to speak in New Orleans and I thought I would be too long on the road and he would be gone before I got there and I thought I would go and get him at Atlanta.
Q. What hotel did Mr. Roosevelt stop at in Charleston?
A. Sir?
Q. What hotel?
A. He hasn't been at Charleston; I went to Augusta and from Augusta to Atlanta.
Q. What hotel did he stop at at Atlanta?
A. I really could not tell you, I don't know; I think I left the memorandum downstairs where I stopped, but I don't think I could tell you where he stopped.
Q. What hotel did he stop at at Chicago?
A. At Chicago, at Chicago he stopped, stopped at La Salle.
Q. Where did you stop?
A. I stopped at Jackson, Hotel Jackson.
Q. Where is he going to after he leaves here?
A. The way I read in the paper this morning he is going back to Chicago and from there to Indianapolis and from there to Louisville.