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Czolgosz Is Feeling Well
Assassin of President McKinley Eats and Sleeps
Regularly
and Does Not Seem Particularly Downcast.
Auburn, Oct. 14.—“Absolutely nothing
new with Czolgosz,” was Warden Mead’s reply to a question of an
Associated Press representative this morning. He has not asked for
any spiritual adviser whatsoever. The death warrant has not been
read to him as yet. He has not suicided nor given the least intimation
that he would like to make way with himself, contrary reports notwithstanding.
Of course he will not be given the
slightest opportunity for this purpose. He ate heartily of his breakfast
this morning and has not a complaint about his health. Warden Mead’s
greatest puzzle is how to get the hundreds of applications from
all parts of the country cut down to the limit prescribed by the
state law.
New York, Oct. 14.—Il Movimento, an
Italian paper published in Paterson, N. J., makes the statement
that scores of Italians have been discharged from the silk mills
in that city since the assassination of the President because of
their nationality.
The paper strongly protests, and declares
that there was nothing in common between the Italians and McKinley’s
slayer.
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