Newspaper Page Text
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TTEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA„ SUNDAY, JULY 27, 1913
>aM against
own as ag-
The Boilr-
the State’s
• nergy for which he ix
Continued From Page 1.
that the trial will he a titanic fight.
Solicitor General Hugh M. Dorsey.
Frank Hooper and Aaflstant Solicitor
Stephens will conduct the
Frank. The three are kn
gTesplve, tireless lawyers,
itor General has put int■
case all th
noted.
At the very first he took charge of
the case with a masterful hand, and
when the mystery seemed beyond so
lution he set an army of detectives to
work. Through all the stress of a
veering public opinion. h«* has helu
firmly to the course he had set. defi
ant, obviously preparing for the grc.it
fight of his career as a public prose
cutor. In most of the prellminar.v
legal battles, especially 1n his hardest
fight against the Indictment of Con
ley he has been successful.
The Solicitor General, from the evi
dence in his hands, believes in the
guilt of Frank. He will defend his
conviction to the end.
The defence presents a corps of at
torneys who are reputed to be as able
criminal lawyers as the South can
produce. Luther Z. Rosser, county
attorney, is the towering figure of the
defense. He is a pitiless questioner
of witnesses and cross-examinations
which he conducts are generally pro
ductive of significant results. The
defense will build its greatest hope, it
Is expected, on the charge that Jim
ConleV killed the Phsgan girl Jim
Conley will be one of the witnesses
against Frank, and all the force, all
the ruthless power of Luther Rosser’s
questions will be brought Into play
against the negro. The public ex
pects a wonderful psychological dem
onstration on the hour the negro
takes the stand.
Arnold Striking Figure.
No less powerful as a criminal law
yer is Reuben R. Arnold, who was re
tained by the defense to co-operate
with Mr. Rosser. Arnold Is a brilliant
lawyer, and always n spectacular and
compelling figure in the criminal oases
with which he if* connected. Asso
ciated with Rosser and Arnold In the
case will be Herbert Haas and Sam
Boorstln. who were employed by the
Frank family when Leo Prank first
was arrested, and who have been
realous in conducting the score of In
vestigations that were made, neces-
*ary by the unexpected turns which
Incidents took time after time.
The trial will be called Monday
morning in the Superior Court room
on the first floor of the courthouse, at
South Pryor and Hunter streets. The
room, which Is the largest available
to the StaU courts, is expected to be
all too small for the crowd that will
come, eagerly curious and expectant.
A strict police supervision of the
crowds will be necessary, and ar
rangements already are being made
by court officials to prevent conges
tion or disturbance.
Special deputies will be employed
for the occasion, and altogether It Is
expected that twenty officers will
guard the courtroom. The little army
will he in charge of Ifc'puty Sheriff
Miner, who will be stationed at the
main entrance According to the
plan, all principals in the case, all
who are interested as lawyers, rela
tives. witnesses and press represen
tatives. will be admitted before any
spectators are allowed to enter. After
them the spectators will be admitted,
one by one. until the seats in the room
are filled. Then the doors will he
locked.
It has been sugested in the Sheriff’s
office that every person admitted to
the courtroom will ho searched for
firearms, but whether this cour?
will be followed has not been decided.
Postponement Unlikely.
Judge L. S. Roan will preside at the
trial. Ho announced In a telegram
from Covington, where he Is spending
a short vacation, that the case will
be called Monday morning, without
fail. There is little probability that
an attempt will be made to obtain a
postponement, although It has been
hinted that there are one or two
causes which might tend to bring
about delay. One is exceslve heat,
another the fact that certain attor
neys in the case are engaged simul
taneously in other litigation hardly
less important. Rut the court officials
and all who are interested vitally are
ready to scout the idea of a postpone
ment.
The ground thus Is laid for what Is
confidently expected to be the great
est battle of Atlanta’s legal history.
A mysterious de.ath, a chain of dam
aging circumstances pointing to the
guilt of the accused, a coterie of law
yers for the defense who are given to
surprises and who are known for In
exhaustible resources, a Solicitor who
is determined and a fighter—every
thing points to a great struggle.
Considerable difficulty will be en
tailed at the first, it is expected, when
the jury must be drawn. From indi
cations. It is likely that the prelimi
nary jockeying will consume the first
day of the trial, or even more. So
widespread has been gossip concern
ing the Phagan caae. so thoroughly
have citizens of Atlanta had the de-
Don’t Be
“Grouchy”
just because your stomach
has "pone back” on you.
There’s a splendid chance
for it to ‘‘come back”
with the aid of
HQSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
It soothes and tones the
tired nerves, promotes
bowel repularity. aids di
gestion and will help you
back to health Trv it.
COURT STRUGGLE r»+
‘Fairest Girl' Turns Author
-j-e-i. d-e-h +•+ +*•!• +•+
Miss Hinckley Writes Experience
PREDICTEO IN FRANK CASE
Trembles TEST IF SIN'S
HEAT TO HELP
F
+•+
+•+
Intis rp
a part
Asks Governor to
Stop Papa’s Drinking
Girl’s Appeal Touches Heart of Ore
gon’s Chief Executive, Who Or
ders Investigation.
ailed, rd muon has it become
f the city’s life that men will
BPVHH to find, it Is expected, who
will be willing to view the evidence
coolly, without prejudice or without
bias Then, too, the lawyers, know
ing the men from whom the Jury must
be picked, will select the men with the
utmost care.
The defense, It has been announced,
will ask that a Jury be selected from
the Grand Jury venire. Whether this
request will be granted is altogether
in the discretion of the trial Judge.
It Is expected, however, that it will
be refused unless significant Teasons
are brought to bear by the defense.
Trial Will Last Days.
Then the case will start. Evident
probably will not be taken until the
morning or afternoon of the second
day. It will be taken slowly, in great
detail, at such length as to Insure a
trial of many days’ duration, if the
length of time consumed iri examining
the witnesses at the Coroner's inquest
Is any indication.
Surprises will come, surely. It is
likely that most of the surprises will
be those of the defense, the public
generally crediting that side with
more evidence hitherto hidden than
the prosecution.
The State’s case has been perpet
ually before the publie, The agencies
of the State have been crossed at
times, and out of the antagonism has
grown publicity that was not good for
the privacy of the prosecution’s line
of attack. The defehse, on the other
hand, has kept quiet. When the Min-
cev affidavit was published last week,
favoring the defense, It came as a
surprise to the public, and led every
one to expect further surprises.
The Frank trial absorbs the public
interest for more than one reason.
The revolting nature of the crime by
which Mary Phagan went to her
death, the mystery surrounding its
circumstances, the uncertainty that
came with new revelations day after
day, pointing first to one and then 10
another suspect, the final centering
of all suspicion on the two prisoners— j
Frank and Conley the charges and
countercharges that have been han
dled hack and forth—all make' the
case one to attract and to hold the
interest of every man or woman who
can hear or read.
At Factory Short Time.
Mary Phagan. an employee of the
National Pencil Factory, was a girl 14
years old. Her father was dead, and
she lived with her mother and her
stepfather. W. J. Coleman, at No. 146
dndsay street. This Is in that sub
urban section of Atlanta known as
Bellwood. She was a gay, friendly,
lovable girl, well liked by the children
of the neighborhood and by the? grown
folks as well, according to every rev
elation of heT personality that has
come since her death.
The little girl had worked for some
time, straitened circumstances of the
family driving her to that necessity.
She had been employed at the pencil
factory on South Forsyth street only
a short time.
Saturday afternoon. April 26, sha
went to the factory to draw her week
ly pay. It was the day of the Con
federate Memorial parade. Forsyth
street was deserted. The factory was
quiet. The little girl went alone to
the big building at about 12:10 or
12:15 o'clock, according to the state
ment of the street car men who took
from her home to the down town sec-
tidn,
Watchman Finds Body.
Early Sunday morning, at about 3
o’clock. Newt Lee, the negro watch
man at the factory building, found the
girl’s body In a dark corner 1 of the
basement, bloody from a dozen cuts
anti bruises. The clothes wen- tom,
and every evidence pointed to the
fact that there had been a struggle
In which the little girl fought vainly
against her assailant. Her neck was
discolored, where a rope had been
ushi it. lower h«r body down an ele
vator shaft from the first fioor.
Later, on the third floor, in the
bathroom of the factory, blood,
strands of hair and other evidences of
a struggle were found, pointing to the
fact that the child had there been at
tacked first.
Few men were in the factory build
ing between the last time Mary Pha
gan was seen alive and the hour her
body was found by the night watch
man. The men were Leo Frank, the
factory superintendent; Jim Conley, a
negro sweeper; Newt Lee, the negro
night watchman; John Gantt, a for
mer employee of the company who en
tered with Frank’s permission, that
he might get a pair of shoes he had
left behind, and two workers, Harry
Denham and Arthur White, who were
on the fourth fioor and who remain
ed in the building until 3 o’clock. At
that time Frank, who had. left the
building at 1 o’clock, came in and let
them out. Frank was alone in the
factory until 4 o’clock, by his own ad
mission. When Conley came in, <?r
when he left, no one knows.
Newt Lee Suspected.
After the first discovery of the body
suspicion fell on Newt Lee, who had
reported the discovery of the body. He
was arrested. The negro, frightened
to within an inch of his life, protested
his innocence. The police were not
satisfied that he was the murderer,
and began the search.
Information came thick and fast
and of every variety. The first tangi
ble statement was from Ed Sentell, a
grocery man. who said he had seen
Mary Phagan walking by the side of a
tall young man aa late us 12:30 o’clock
Saturday night. Later he identified
the young man as Arthur Mullinax, a
street car worker. Mullinax was ar
rested.
Deveipoments came fresh with
every hour that day. Gantt, the young
man who w4s In the factory late Sat
urday afternoon, was arrested on sus
picion, which deepened when it was
i announced that he had been in love
with Mary Phagan.
Monday morning following the dis
covery of the body an Inquest was
I held, and as a result of revelations
I that he had been alone in the factory
j building much of Saturday afternoon.
Superintendent Frank was arrested
I on suspicion. Detectives asserted their
conviction that the guilt lay between
J I^ee and Frank. Gantt and Mullinax,
proving Hltbis, were released.
The third day of the mystery a
young man named Paul Bowen was
arrested in Houston. Tex . on th©
charge that he had killed Mary Pha
gan It Is said that he had acted in a
suspicious manner upon being con
fronted with news of the girl’s death.
He was arrested by the Houston po
lice. but later was released when he
established an alibi. Out of his ar
rest grew a scandal in the Houston
II police circles
That Lee killed the girl was assured
j by the detectives for several days. By
I the side of the girl’s body had been
1 found several dirty scraps of paper.
Miss Gladys Hinckley, called “the most beautiful girl in
America,”ivho has written her experiences in Washington society
ized in 25 Years, Declares Ex
pert, Who Has New Theory.
SALEM, OREG., July 26.—The faith
of a little girl In tho power of the
Governor to make everybody stop
selling her papa “drinks” so her mam
ma will have money with which to
Agriculture May Be Revolution- buy clothes, is graphically portrayed
in a letter received bv Governor West
from a little girl living in a small
Oregon coast town. r ^he letter say®:
“Mr. West. Dear Governor;
“I am a little girl. 12 years old.
My papa is a hard working man and
rlnr , Arn Tll1v . Startling not vel *y well, but what I am
CHICAGO, July 26. Ktartl! * j trying to tell you 1b that oftentimes
changes in existing theories regarding he gj veg hotels for drink what we
the sun and its effect on the earth are need at home, oh, so bad, and they sell
it to him on Sunday, too, and It makes
us all so unhappy. My dear mamma
can not go to church. She has no
clothes to wear like she uned to have.
Oh I wish you could do something
for us. He Is often so cross to my
mother.
“I tried to earn enough to buy my
mother some clothes It is such hard
work to earn money when you are
so small.”
made by Professor Edwin B. Frost,
director of the Yerkes Observatory at
Williams Bay, Wis. He says that nu
merical values regarding the equiva
lent in horsepower or other units of
the amount of radiation received from
the sun, as given in the best school
and college textbooks as well as in
most of the cyclopedias and dictiona
ries, should be reduced 20 to 30 per
cent.
Professor Frost asserts that meas
ures and estimates by the late Profes
sor S. P. Langley were too high—
nearly 50 per cent too high—and that
the theory of the “solar constant”
should be revised; that it is not a
constant, but a variable; in other
words, our sun is a variable star like
hundreds and thousands of others in
the sky.
Absorption to Increase.
Other facts set forth are that, be
ginning" In the summer of 1912, there
has been a decided increase in ab
sorption and that when the sun spots
nre numerous the radiation received
from the sun 19 relatively high. In
about four years the spots will be
numerous.
The belief is also expressed that
eventually it may be possible to de
termine general weather conditions
six months or longer in advance by
careful observations of solar condi
tions, and tnat the advance forecast*
will revolutionize the agriculture of
the world. Professor Frost, however,
thinks 1t may be 25 years or longer
before long-distance forecasts on th®
lines mentioned will be possible. Lot
cal scientists who have read the arti
cle of Professor Frost say it is most
valuable.
Useful in Time,
j Beauty a State of
Mind, Says Doctor
Homely Girls May Reffiedy Defects
by Concentration on Ideal
of Pulchritude.
Continued From Page 1.
CHICAGO, July 26— Dr. C. Frank
lin Leavitt has made public a lesson
in winning a husband by suggestion.
“A woman has two weapons—
thought and action. When she is pos
sessed of a ‘going mind’ she is almost
irresistible. A woman with power
wins the man she wants.
“The first lesson to all unattractive
women should be to picture them
selves in a receptive attitude toward
men. From childhood they should be
taught to meet the opposite sex with
out fear and bashfulness. Fear gives
a shock.
“Thoughts properly directed can
change the physical being. From
concentration on a subject fifteen
minutes a day women have become
beautiful. They should suggest to
themselves at intervals that they are
beautiful.
"Married women should take ‘treat
ments’ to retain the affections of their
husbands. Going back to the old days
of honeymoon attraction she is able
to keep her husband interested.”
“It Is a highly interesting article to
the layman and scientist alike," said , __
Professor Henry J Cox, in charge cf ! (Inn <30,1 pri P.P H11TT.S
he Chicago Weather Bureau. The ! UUUOUiCLLbC X1UI bO
subject of the earth's absorption of
the sun’s heat is one which has in
terested the Government to a great
degree. We haven’t reached the point
of using the figures set forth by Pro
fessor Frost, but I feel sure that we
will be able to in time. Professor
Rimhall has been making observn -
tions along these lines at Mount
Weather.”
FewU. S. Employees
Amount Returned by Those Whom
Error or Fraud Benefits Is
Decidedly Small.
Brilliant Young Woman Will Tell Real Facts of
Life in the Capital’s Whirl.
WASHINGTON. July 26.—Society
is waiting, it can’t be said eagerly,
for the publication of Miss Gladys
Hinckley’s book, “My Experience in
Society.” In fact, it is whispered
that there are not a few of the Cap
ital's four hundred who would breathe
with more ease if they were assured
that the girl called by the Russian
Ambassador “the most beautiful girl
in America’’ had decided to forego her
literary career.
So far Miss Hinckley has been able
to keep secret Just what her book
will reveal, though all society has
known she has been working on it for
months.
The young author, she is Just 20,
has had a decidedly interesting ca
reer since her debut a couple of years
ago. Her beauty made her admired,
but her caustic wit has made her
feared.
She is a deep student and is known
to be fearless In expressing her views.
Realizing this, the society set is ex
pecting a pretty frank statement of
Miss Hinckley’s experiences, and
there is no great joy in the expecta
tion.
Mfas Hinckley does not have to
write for a livelihood. She has a for
tune in her own name, while society
momentarily expects the announce
ment of her engagement to young
Jerome Bonaparte.
on which were written almost unde
cipherable words. They were sup
posedly from the unfortunate girl.
One note was as follows:
“He said he wood love me laid down
like the night witch did it, but that
long, tall, black negro did it by hie-
self.”
The other was:
"Mama, that negro hired down here
did this i went to get water and he
pushed me down this hole a long tall
negro black that has it woke long
lean tall negro I write while day with
me.”'
fcbeperts* declared positively that
these notes were In Lee’s handwrit
ing.
The inquest, stretching through
several days, was productive of one
result, at least. The .bulk of the sus
picion veered to Frank. The negro
Lee made a number of candid state
ments which afterward were found to
be true, and thus much of the suspi
cion againrt him lightened.
, Elevator Boy Arrested.
Testimony tending to show that
Geron Bailey, a negro elevator boy
in the factory’s employ, had been seer
lurking around the building the fatal
Saturday evening, brought about his
arrest. 'Lee and Bailey still are held
in the Tower, although suspicion
against them is negligible.
Until several days after the body of
the unfortunate gin was found no one
had thought of Conley as a man to
be suspected. But whilj the Inquest
ou-r Mary FhnganV body WM In
progress E. F. Holloway, an employe**
of the factory, found the negro
sweeper In a secluded spot on the
fourth floor washing a bloody shirt.
He told detectives, and Conley was
arrested on suspicion.
Days passed, days that were full of
theories and speculation, but produc
tive of no real result. Eyes were
turned to Frank as the guilty person,
with dn Inconsiderable number of peo
ple suspecting Newt Lee.
On May 25 came a statement from
a woman named Mrs. Mima Form by.
the keeper of a rooming house. Mrs..
Form by declared that the night of the
murder Frank had telephoned her
with the request that she rent him a
room for himself and a girl. She de
clared in her statement that she re
fused him: that he insisted, later be
coming desy>erate and announcing
that it wav a matter almost of life
ami death with him. The statement
was pretty generally discredited by
the public.
Conley Admits Writing Notes.
After three weeks Frank was in
dicted by the Grand Jury.
Then came a startling and unex
pected thing Jim Conley, silent un
der a siege of questions, suddenly is
sued an affidavit, in which he de
clared that he had written the notes
at Frank's dictation, on Friday before
WASHINGTON. July 26.—Fewer
I penitents tortured by the "still small
voice” confessed and surrendered
"conscience money” to the Federal
I Government during the fiscal year
; 1913 then for many years. The “con
science fund” received during the
twelve months ended June 30 totaled
I only $2,814.44, the lowest amount
since 1901 and comparable with
hundred year average of $4,200.
That fund is the only official index
to the scruples, but no Treasury of
KANSAS CITY, July 26.—Walter i ficial attempts to explain the decrease
Stratton. 35 years old, a deacon in I in restitution of money received from
the Roanoke Boulevard Christian j the Government by fraud or error.
Church here, who was married re- During the last hundred years the
Deacon Newlywed
Hazed After Wedding
Members of Congregation Take
Bridegroom to Lonesome Field
and Lash Him to Tree.
cently to Miss Alta Barber, of Hum
boldt, Kans., was "kidnaped” from his
bride by men members of the congre
Government has received conscience
contributions aggregating nearly
half million dollars, the exact figures
gation at the clu-*© of church services up to June 30 last being $434,615.69.
the other night and severely hazed. —-—-
Members of the hazing party said "R o 1 4-i m DTP Cl Tl r YliPn
they sought “to punish" Deacon ; JJClJLuiiilUI CCtil lJAIlCU.
Stratton for going outside the church j
circle for a bride.
The hazers met Mr. and Mrs. Strat
ton at the church door. While two |
of them guarded Mrs Stratton, the Society Leader Prefers His American
others took Stratton to a pasture a
mile away and tied him to a tree.
By Servant Problem
the Sunday on which the girl’s body
was found.
Not until then was Conley suspected
with any degree of strength. But
when the affidavit came, with Its in
conceivable charge that Frank had
plotted the death of the girl more
than a day before he killed her, Con
ley was suspected of having had a
hand in the murder. It was recalled
that Mary Phagan's visit to the fac
tory had not been anticipated Friday,
and that there would have been no
reason for a murder plot. Conley, It
seemed, had destroyed himself.
The next day he issued a revised
affidavit, declaring that he wrote the
notes on the morning of Saturday, the
day before the body was found. Then
came his third affidavit, that he had
dragged the body of the girl to the
cellar, where it was found, at the in
stance of Frank.
The three affidavits semed to con
tradict one another, and to make
charges that were unbelievable. It
was not until then that suspicion
agnln?t the negro solidified.
Public speculation and doubt deep
ened. Then, after two weeks, it de
veloped that W. H. Mincey, a school
teacher. In conversation with a negro
on the afternoon of April 26, when the
murder occurred, had ben told by the
negro:
“Go away. I’ve killed a girl this
evening. I don’t want to kill anybody
else.”
Mincey Identifies Con!«y.
He Identified this negro as Con
ley.
Against every statement and every
affidavit that has been published,
charges of untruthfulness and mis
apprehension have been made by one
side or the other. Mlncey’s statement
has been attacked, Conley’s affidavits
are declared false. Mrs. Form by* 8
declaration is said to be without
foundation. Refutations come for
every bit of evidence, revealing plain
ly that the trial itself will be a fight
of veracity and of reasonableness of
testimony.
And so the case stands to-day.
Brilliant detective talent has been en
gaged. Pinkertons were first retained
to reinforce the local detectives, and
later the Burns men were called in.
But out of that incident grew another
scandal, another of the unpleasant in
cidental features that have made the
Phagan case the most notable of
Georgia’s crime annals, even beyond !
the fact that It is the greatest mys- 1
tery.
Last week it was announced that I
the Pinkertons believed Frank in-no-1
cent, after weeks of announcing that
he was guilty. Later the declaration
came that they had not made the
statement. This Incident was value
less in unfolding the mystery, but Is
indicative of the turmoil in which the.
case has been from the first. j
300,000 to Mend
Governor and All Other State Offi
cials to Wield Shovels for
Two Days.
Home, but Goes Abroad to
Get Service.
BALTIMORE, July 26.—Samuel 8.
■a r • ' T1 J] ! Kevser, whom Baltimore society gave
Missouri tbOrlfiS such a warm welcome last winter when
iVliOiJUU.1 I -LuL/ujIXD j returned to his native city aft»r **n
j absence of 15 years, haS sold his big
house at No. 609 Washington Place and
I will again go abroud to live, driven
hence by the complexities of the serv-
| ant problem.
I In London Mr. Keyser maintained a
I beautiful home, but Baltimore, according
to his oft-repeated statement since his
JEFFERSON CITY. MO., July 26.— ; return is the ideal place* to live.
Governor Major has announced that he | _
will issue a proclamation soon setting j GARBAGE MAN HIDES FACT
apart two days in August when every
able-bodied resident in the rural dis
tricts and towns of the State will be
asked to render personal assistance in
improving the highways.
The Governor estimates that at least
) 300,000 men will respond. Many will
furnish teams and machinery.
"The work of 300,000 earnest men for
two (lays will be equivalent to 600,000
days of work, to say nothing of the
teams that will be supplied,” the Gov
ernor said. "Many boys, too, will turn
out and aid the good cause.”
Governor Major himself proposes to
wield a pick* and shovel for the two days
on some highway near Jefferson City,
and he will expect every State official
to do the same.
been investigating Mexico and Cen
tral America, and there can be no
doubt of the favorable nature of the
reports to Tokio. Nature produced
there a section so much like Japan
that its visiting natives feel at once
at home. This marvelously fertile
country has been given up for cen
turies to the rapacity of Spanish con
querors and native despots.
Japan awoke half a century ago,
and since then *has astounded the
world by Its superb advancement In
that half-century the principal con
tribution of Central America to the
world were “revolutions” which gave
picturesque material for comic operas
and plots for grotesque fiction.
Mexico for centuries has been the
victim of military adventurers and
political plunderers, and looks back
with longing to the interim during
which Porflrio Diaz ruled as the most
absolute despot in modern history.
The United States would not make
a move to remedy these conditions
and interpose the Monroe Doctrine In
the way of any other power, with
the result that the world still con
tains a vast and practically undevel
oped tract of land perfectly suited to
the expansion needs of Japan.
Hail Japan as a David.
The stand taken by Japan against
the United States and its demand for
a recognition of its equality has met
with the enthusiastic approval of the
Jingo political factions in all of our
“Monroe Doctrine Republics.” All
anti-American factions in Mexico and
Central America acclaim Japan the
David who will humiliate the dollar-
hunting Goliah.
In recent years the Japanese have
sedulously conducted a campaign cal
culated to win the favor of the ruling
officials of the Monroe Doctrine zone,
and have lost no opportunity to fan
the anti-American sentiment.
This hatred of the United States
does not flow from any act. It arises
and is fed by the very fact that we
still proclaim the sovereignty of a
Monroe Doctrine, which Implies that
the republics affected by it 'are In
ferior and are therefore entitled to
our protection against the world and
against themselves.
Their contempt arises from the fact
that *we have not enforced the detest
ed doctrine.
What does Japan now say to the
anti-American factions of our Mon
roe Doctrine republics? She says:
We also are classed as inferiors by
the United States, whose Declaration
of Independence asserts that all men
are created equal. Let us co-operate
to resent these insults.”
Birthplace of Japan.
But, a far closer tie than a lust for
revenge binds the peoples of the
American tropics to Japan.
Millions of the natives of Mexico
and Central America are Japanese in
all save name!
This is a startling statement, but
it is absolutely true. Scores of so-
called Indian tribes scattered all the
way from Northern Mexico to Costa
Rica speak languages derived directly
from the Japanese, look like Japa
nese and follow closely the primitive
arts and customs of the Japanese.
It is a moot question with archaeol
ogists whether Japan was settled
from Mexico or whether Mexico was
settled from Japan. There are cogent
reasons for the belief that the birth
place of the Japanese race was in
Mexico, or Central America, and that
some great war or great migration
resulted in a pilgrimage northward
to Alaska and thence to Japan.
The reader should understand that
strictly speaking there is no such
thing as a Mexican nationality. This
applies to all of the Monroe Doctrine
republics. The upper and ruling class
is of Spanish descent or strain from
inter-marriage with the innumerable
branches of the native stock. This
native stock is called “Indian,” but
millions of them are not Indians.
There are hundreds of these so-
called Indian tribes. They speak as
many different languages. They con
stitute the enormous majority of the
population, but they play almost no
part in the Government.
Different Class of Indians
The Spanieh who came with and
who followed Cortez naturally Inter
married with the more aggressive and
best-favored of the native races. The
Indians who inhabited the present
territoty of the United fltatee bore
absolutely no relation to those in
Mexico and Central America, who
reared wonderful cities whose ruins
still attest their advancement and
their Japanese origin.
There are at least ten known tribes
In Mexico where an Asiatic Japanese
can make himself readily understood.
Thero is one so-called Indian tribe In
Mexico in which a vocabulary of 2,000
words contains not less than 1,600
which are pure Japanese.
The observing stranger who walks
for the first time the streets of Mex
ico City. Orizaba, Guatemala City or
who penetrates into the interior of
these countries can not fail to note
that a large **hare of the natives bear
on their faces the plain proof of their
kinship to the subjects of the Mikado.
The physiognomy of many of the up
per classes reveals a fine blending of
the distinctive facial lines of the
Spaniard and the Japanese.
Mikado’s Subjects Welcome*
There is an Intuitive recognition
by the people of their kinship to the
Japanese. The doors of most of these
republics are open to subjects of the
Mikado. The school children are
taught to respect the military prow
ess of a race deemed inferior by a
w'orld who did not awake to the truth
until the little Jap conquered Russia.
The school children of Mexico are also
taught that their country defeated the
United States in its attempt to annex
their soil.
A f3W years ago I witnessed a mili
tary parade in Mexico City in honor
of her independence. A company of
marines from a Japanese cruiser was
in line. Flowers were strewn in their
path. A half million people greeted
them as if they were their saviors. An
along the line arose the affectionate
salutation of “Brothers.” I did not
understand it; I doubt If they under
stood it, but back of it all was a racial
Intuition.
It is a matter of history that Mexico
stood ready to deed to Japan a naval
base in Magdalena Bay. Had not the
United States Intervened Japan might
now possess all of the Mexican terri
tory of Lower California.
Japan Moves Steadily.
I do not say that Japan contem
plates at present the actual occupa
tion or military* conquest of any of
these countries. This is not within her
probable power, but Japan is moving
steadily for the settlement and devel
opment cf these neglected and revo
lution-desolated republics.
The Japanese will naturally take
possession of fields of enterprise once
possessed by detested Americans.
Thus the doors are opened for the re
incarnation in tropical America of the
old Japan which has slumbered
through the ages.
Its vigorous* Asiatic offspring can
pour 20,000,000 of its people into it and
create the richest and most beautiful
empire the world has ever known.
We could do the same thing, but we
seem to have “more important mat
ters to attend to.”
HE IS BLIND FOR 2 YEARS
DENVER. July 26—For two years
Edward Dormer has worked faith
fully as a garbage collector and has
a good record. City officials In the
sanitary department who employed
him did not know he was blind until
recently.
He as ablp to get about with the
ease of one with clear vision, but Is
very sensitive about his affliction.
City sanitary officials were dum-
founded when they learned of Dor
mer’s affliction. He has not lost a
day since his employment and will
be allowed to retain his position.
EXCURSIONS
Two great tours East and West;
special trains, exclusive ships: all ex
pense paid, best hotels On August 9
Southern Merchants’ Tour (free to
merchants) visiting Cincinnati, In
dianapolis, Chicago, Milwaukee and
Lake Michigan. An eight-day ex
pense-paid trip for only $49.76 (ticket
good for thirty days), August 16. Our
great 5,000 mile circle tour of Cin
cinnati. Detroit. Buffalo. Niagara
Falls. Great Gorge. Toronto, Thou
sand Islands. Montreal, Boston, New
York, Philadelphia, Atlantic City,
Washington, Baltimore and Savan
nah, with steamer trips on lakes,
river and ocean. An eighteen-day
expense-paid trip for only $88 8o
(tickets good for thirty days, with
stop-overs). Special trains on both
tours leave Atlanta, Birmingham.
Chattanooga and Knoxville. Limited
and select party. Special cars for
ladies alone. Write to-day for reser
vation and full particulars. J. F. Mc
Farland, Agt., Box 1624. Atlanta, Ga
To Overcome Sunburn,
Tan, Freckles, Wrinkles
(From Outdoor Life.)
If you are freckled, tanned or sun
burnt, dab a liberal amount of mer-
colized wax on the face and allow it
to remain over night. When you
wash off the wax in the morning,
fine, flaky, almost invisible particles
of cuticle come with it. Repeating
this daily, the entire outer skin is
absorbed, but so gradually, there’s
not the slightest hurt or inconven
ience. Even the stubbornest freckles
vield to this treatment. The under
lying skin which forms the new com
plexion Is so fresh and youthful-look
ing you’ll marvel at the transforma
tion. It’s the only thing T know to
actually discard an aged, faded,
muddy or blotchy complexion. It is
fine for a discolored neck. One ounce
of meroollzed wax, procurable at any
drug store, is sufficient in most cases.
If sun and wind make you squint
and frown, you’re bound to cultivate
wrinkles and crow’s feet. To over
come these quickly, bathe the face in
a solution made by dissolving an
ounce of powdered saxollte in a half
pint witch hazel
Jacobs’ Liver Salt
On Arising
and You’ll
Enjoy
Your
Breakfast
appetite in
the momingf
BILioug? Head
ache? Best thing
in the world for you
la Jacobs’ Liver Salt.
Bad breath, bil
iousness, const!-
pation, flatulence, daytime drowsi
ness, wakefulness at night, means
FOOD-POISONING. Undigested food,
fermented, is doling out poison to
the system.
Jacobs’ Liver Salt instantly flushes
the alimentary tract with water,
sending a cleansing stream through
it from all parts of the system. Pack
ed, clogging matter is loosened and
with th© fermentation washed away,
pressure is removed, liver and kid
neys resume their natural cleansing
processes* of elmination. No forced
action, as with calomel, and sever©
purgatives; never a griping pain or
nausea.
Take Jacobs’ Liver Salt on arising.
It is effervescent and stimulating. You
feel better at once, good appetite for
breakfast and good digestion; that
dull heaviness vanishes and your
brain is clear and quick. Keeps one
up to the notch.
Jacobs’ Liver Salt is the business
man’s best stimulant 25o, delivered
anywhere, postpaid.
All Jacob’s Stores
And Druggists Generally
Stop That Whooping Cough
WITH THE McFAUL
Whooping Cough Powders
Instant Relief In Use Over 30 Years
For young babies, children or adults Contains no dangerous or
habit-forming drugs. When given to children under two years of age
it is almost a specific, rendering the disease so mild that the whoop is
not heard.
Prepared by a physician for physicians and physicians prescribe
and recommend it.
By Mail 25 Cents, or at Druggists.
The McFaul Medicine Company
431 Marietta Streat Atlanta, Georgia
Bring Us Your
Films for Development
We Give You BETTER RESULTS
Why? Because Were Specialists
at KODAK FINISHING
AND WE NEVER DISAPPOINT
ASK FOR NEW PRICE LIST.
We Also Carry a Complete Line of
EASTMAN KODAKS, BROWNIE CAMERAS AND SUPPLIES
GLENN PHOTO STOCK CO.
EASTMAN KODVK COMPANY.
Exclusive Kodak Store.
117 Peachtree