The Jeffersonian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1917, July 15, 1915, Image 1
CbeJ effersontan Vol. 12, No. 28 While Leo Frank Is Loafing at the State Farm, the Rich Jews Continue to Defame the People and the Courts of Georgia JpROM the M arietta Journal and Courier I clip the following, for it is certain to be an item of interest to many people: At half past ten o’clock Friday morning, July 2nd, 1915, the monument erected to little Mary Phagan in the city cemetery by the Marietta Camp U. C. V. 763 was unveiled in the presence of a vast throng of people from Atlanta and Cobb county. The unveiling was by James Sauls, a crippled veteran, who was a soldier for four years in the conflict between the North and South. Hon. Henry Boyd Moss made the formal eulogy of the martyred girl, and Rev. A. C. Hendley, of East Point, made a brief address. Gazaway Hames made the opening invocation and Dr. Rembert Smith closed with a prayer and benediction. The grave was covered with flowers by friends of the family. The modest monument, carved out of Georgia marble, and paid for by the old soldiers who vent to the wars for Georgia; and unveiled in the presence of “a vast throng’’ of representative Georgians, will serve to remind the doming generations of the little Georgia heroine who perished at the age of fourteen—died because she would not yield her person to the insistent lusts of the vilest Jew that has lived, since the desert winds blew into space the ashes of Sodom and Gomorrah. We Georgians have often been divided among, ourselves by bitter political feuds; we differ among ourselves, now, upon many a question of Church and State; we are antagonistic and combative at many a point of material interest; but on this case of our little girl—just an humble daughter of the plain people—we are as warmly united, and as deeply stirred as any State ever was, for we know that Right has again 'been condemned and crucified. While Mary Pragan's body lies moulder ing in the ground, where is the lecherous Least who assaulted her, and choked her to death ? Apparently, there is no intention of put ting Frank to work, at all. He is to piddle about, and pass away the time as agree ably as possible, until Burns, and Straus, and Hearst, and Ochs, and Pulitzer, and Abell. and, the L. & N. Railroad, and the noble fij-m of Rosser, Slaton & Phillips can again set in motion the legions of hysteria, slanderous fabrications, bought affidavits, and forged letters. The invisible powers which saved Frank from the just penalty of capital punish ment. arc merely taking a recess; they are awaiting to see the effects of the ovations which the rich Jews of the North and West are tendering to Slaton. They are at a loss, for the present, as to the best method of renewing “the fight:’’ they have not agreed among themselves how to begin. Talkative and boastful, and impudent, as usual. William J. Burns— who bears the brand of infamy burnt into hint by the U. S. lb part me nt of Justice — told the Denver Times the following: Ultimately, perhaps in the very near Loo Frank will be freed. He will come from the Thomson, Ga., Thursday, July 15, 1915 Georgia prison, where he has been since Gover nor Slaton commuted his sentence of death to life imprisonment, vindicated of the murder of Mary Phagan, and the crime laid on the should ers of the principal State’s witness in the famous trial. Governor Slaton, hissed by inobs in Geor gia, will be hailed a hero. Blames Mob for Conviction. , “The conviction of Leo Frank was one of the foulest perversions of justice the United States has ever known,” Burns declared. “The mob prevailed at his trial. The district attorney made his case on an appeal to the passions and preju dices of that mob* He had not a scintilla of true evidence. Perjury and intimidation was resorted to. Lowest Strata Involved. “Only a portion, and that portion of the lowest strata of Georgia’s citizenship, are in the mobs that now threaten Governor Slaton, and that tried to get me when I went to Atlanta to make an investigation. “The better class of Atlantans believe Frank innocent and will work to prove him so. Already some of the witnesses who helped the State, in K Full Review of Frank Case in Watson’s Magazine For August. This article will be profusely illustrated with photographs. The official record will be quot ed so that every one can under stand it. Place your order early. Price ten cents in single copies. THE JEFFERSONIAN PUB. CO. THOMSON, GA. face of the fact that for perjury in a murder trial in Georgia a witness can be giv;n the same punishment as the person on trial, have repudi ated testimony. “One, Minola McKnight, a negro servant em ployed in the Frank home, swore on the witness stand that the affidavit she had sworn to against Frank had been obtained from her by the police, who held her in jail two days and nights to force her to sign the document. Killed After Confession. “She denied absolutely, in face 'of possible prosecution, that what she had sworn to was true. The State made no effort to punish her, but a short time afterward she was found dead, her lace and throat gashed, in the street. These threats as to what the Frank boodlers, bribers, and slanderers mean to do; and these astounding falsehoods as to what has occurred, make it plain enough that the battle is to be fought over; and the same old methods of bribery, intimida tion, forgery, gagging the ?Atlanta dailies, &c., are to be used again. “She was found dead, her face and throat gashed, in the streets” Who was found dead? Why. Minola Mc- Knight, the cook of Leo Frank. So says this bewilderingly prolific liar, William J. Burns. And of course the Times believed it. and the readers of the Times believed it: be cause Burns shouts it brassily, and no zU lanta daily will deny it. Without a defender, without any way of answering these hired libellers, the people of Georgia have to sit silent and helpless, under an endless campaign of villification. Burns impliedly charges, the State had Minola McKnight killed, because she went back on the affidavit she gave the State in the presence of her lawyer. George Gordon. Minola McKnight is no more dead than I am: she is as m uch all re as Milliam J. Burns. She lives in Atlanta, and so does her husband. This negro was the cause of suspicion fixing itself upon Leo Frank, for he it was who told three gentlemen, working for the Beck Gregg Hardware Company, what had been said in Frank's home. Frank got drunk, at home, the night after the murder, and told his wife he killed the girl-; and called for his pistol to put an end to himself. Albert McKnight has never repudiated his evidence at the trial, nor has he ever said he was bribed to tell what he knew. How can you be surprised at the furor that has been raised against the people of Georgia, when you see what arrant lies have been universally circulated. not denied by the Atlanta papers? Do those papers owe no duty to Truth, to the honor of the State, to the reputation of the South? Are those three Atlanta dailies totally indifferent to the good name of their city, and the honor of their State? Do these Democratic organs care nothing for the bad name that is being made for Georgia democracy—made by mercenary defamers? Are they so cravenly terrorized by the Jew advertiser, and the L. & N. Railroad, that they dare not defend the integrity of Georgia people? “The District Attorney made his appeal to the passions and prejudices of the mob!’’ The readers of the Denver Times will see this brazen statement of Burns, and will not see the magnificent speech of Solicitor Dorsey, in which there is not one single line of appeal to any man's passion or prejudice. The readers of the Denver Times will have learned that Burns says the Solicitor had not one scintilla of evidence to' stand on; and they will not read the record, nor Dorsey’s speech, where the invincible evi dence appears. The readers of the Denver Times have no • means of knowing that William J. Burns and his man Lehon came to after the Supreme Court of Georgia had UNANIMOUSLY refused Leo Frank a re- Price, Five (2ents