The 26-year-old stage actor had been drafted and was awaiting a call to go to camp when he traveled to Brooklyn, New York, to visit his aunt. On November 25, 1917, tormented by paranoid delusions, La Franie covered his head with towels and blankets in his second floor room and turned on the gas. A letter addressed to his relatives read: "I have been followed day after day by Secret Service men and police detectives, and I am in deadly fear of arrest as they think I am a German spy. Yesterday and today were something terrible, and I can stand it no longer. Good-bye and God bless you for all that you have done for me. It is of no use while these fellow are after me."
No comments:
Post a Comment