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NOTICE
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can, Atlanta. Ga.
SUN
EDITION FOR
AUGUSTA
VOL. I. NO. 17.
Copyright, 1911, by
The Georgian Company.
★★★
ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, JULY 27, 1013.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
Frederick Upham Adams Shows
Why This Country May Have to
Repel Yellow Invader Seeking a
New Empire at Its Very Doors.
“War or Humiliation Confronts
U. S. as Result of Applying the
Monroe Doctrine as Threat and
Not as Firmly Enforced Policy.
“Others Will Take Up Task We
Decline—We Are Responsible
for the Lamentable Condition of
Affairs To-day in Mexico.”
By FREDERICK UPHAM ADAMS.
“The time is coming when the
United States will be forced to
fight Ja'pan on Japanese soil in
„ North America.”
In varying phrase this startling
prediction was repeatedly made to me
during a recent protracted tour of
Mexico and Central America. It was
first uttered, practically as above
quoted, by President Francisco I. Ma-
dero in the course of a long inter
view In the Castle of Chapultepec.
' This prediction was repeated to me
by a President of a Central American
lepublic who shall ftb naffiPlesB, since
be has thus far escaped assassination
or overthrow by revolution. It was
also \olced by an American of high
reputation and keen Judgment, who
1 as been a student of Latin American
affairs for more than a generation.
U. S. Diplomacy Scored.
The ignorance and Indifference of
the American people concerning Mex
ico and Central America, coupled
with the ignorance and stupidity
which has marked our diplomatic in
tercourse with them, constitute a
menace of dire portent.
The Danger Zone.
As a result of years of diplomatic
imbecility we have made of this great
section a danger zone. We have cre
ated at our very doors conditions
which promise war with any of the
great commercial nations we now
coun* as friends, or the alternative of
abandoning a Monroe Doctrine.
We are responsible for the lamenta
ble condition of affairs In Mexico; for
the chronic conditions of military des
potism and recurrent revolutions
which afflict Central America.
These conditions are the direct re
'suit of applying the Monroe Doctrine
as a threat and not as a just and
firmly enforced policy. And what is
the fruit now ripening? The certainty
that some other nation will take up
*.he task which we decline. That will
mean war or humiliation.
Let us consider the interest of Ja-
' pan in this matter.
Japan and Central America.
It is a reasonable certainty that
Japan has not spread her cards on
the table in the pending controversy
over the California anti-alien legis
lation. It may be assumed that Japan
has no immediate expectation that its
people will be permitted unrestricted
John Early, Noted
As Leper, Is Insane
Man Who Guarded Colony Is Himself
Put in Cell, Raving
Mad.
. SEATTLE. July 26.—John Farly, who
was called in Washington a few years
ago a leper, and who more recently was
a guard at the Federal leper colony at
Diamond Point Station, has lost his
mind and is himself under guard at the
colony.
Early has been under watch for sev
eral months, officials at the station be
lieving hip mind was not right. Some
time ago, It was reported, he became
violent and was locked up to protect
himself and the unfortunates at the
colony.
When Early was first adjudged a leper
by the District Health Officer, he was
Isolated In a camp on the lowlands of
the Eastern branch. After a long fight
with the local authorities and another
with the Pension Office for an allowance
as a veteran of the Spanish-American
war, he was permitted to slip unosten
tatiously away to New York.
Golfers Go 35 Miles
In Just 1,087 Strokes
Experts Play From Maidstone to Lit
tleton on the Sea
on a Wager.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON. July 26.— 1 To cover 35
miles in 1,087 strokes is a feat that
two golfers accomplished in playing
from Maidstone to Llttleton-on-fhe-
Rea.
How this came about a well-known
golfer offered to bet Neville Foster,
of the Ashdown Forest Oolf Club, and
W. Warman, of the Newton Green
Golf Club, that they could not play
from Forest row to Crowborough
over the woodland heather and hills,
a distance of eight miles, in 350
strokes. The bet was taken and the
task accomplished? in 184 strokes.
JUST I DISEASE
Dementia Telephonica, Recently
Discovered Malady, Is Superin
duced by “Line Is Busy.”
ATLANTANS ARE AFFLICTED
Operators at Ivy Exchange De
clare That They Had Known of
It for Years.
Elinor Glyn's Hero,
‘Baby Paul’ to Wed
Boston Girl Will Marry Wan Around
Whose Adventures Three
Weeks’ Was Written.
FRANK FIGHTS FOR LIFE MONDAY
*•*
+•*
*• +
*•*]
4* • \*
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BOSTON, July 26.—“Baby Paul," of
“Three Weeks,” is to become a bride
groom. Miss Elizabeth Golden, of
Boston, Is to be the bride.
Olalrmont Jocelyn Preston Arnot is
the name by which Efilnor Glyn’s hero
is known in London, although as
plain Paul Allen he has had some un-
romantlc adventures in New York.
As "Prince Paul de Clairmont” he Is
known in both cities.
“We will be married on September
1,” said Miss Golden yesterday. "We
have known each other a year. Yes,
I have means of my own, but Paul
will support himself.”
Porter Charlton
Makes 'Xmas Date
Dorsey Ready to Avenge Mary Phagan
+•<■ -he-!- +!•!•
Mystery of Months Is Still Unsolved
P RINCIPAL figures in Atlanta’s most noted criminal case. Two pictures of
Mary Phagan, the little factory girl, whose slaying has proved South’s
most baffling mystery, are shown, while below is Leo Frank, superintendent of
the National Pencil Factory, where her body was found, who is accused of her
murder, and about whose guilt or innocence brilliant legal battle will be fought.
Waiters Back of Bill
To Prevent‘Tipping’
Measure Provides Fine for Both 'Tip
per’ and Recipient of Bounty, and
Reward for Informer.
ST. LOFIS. July 26.—An ordinance
to end "tipping” has been passed by
the City Council and will now go to
the House of Delegates, where it is
expected it will be speedily adopted,
and, With the signature of the May
or, become a law.
This ordinance has had the back
ing of the union waiters of St. Louis,
who are now striking in the principal
hotels and restaurants. The bill pro
vides a fine of from $10 to $50 for
each offense, both the "tipper” and re
cipient of the “tip” being subject to
fine, and the informer to receive half
of the fine.
Shrinks Three Inches
During Long Illness
Patient Hurt in Auto Accident Loses
in Height Each Month Spent
in Bed.
PORTERVILLE, CAL., July 26.—When
George Crittenden, an attorney, got out
of bed to-day for the first time since
he was Injured in an automobile acci
dent two months ago. he found that he
had lost 3 inches in height. This unex
pected sequel of his recovery is the
more extraordinary because It is well
known that the human body gains in ,
length wlyile lying prone. A man Is |
normally taller in the morning than at
night.
Suffragists Plan
National Campaign
Women Who Now Possess Franchise
Will Aid Movement in All
Other States.
“Number, please?”
The voice came over the ^Wire. Ii
was sweet and poft and dreamy-like.
But the voice in answer was not.
"Gimme Main 100, and darn quick,
too," it growled. Of course, it came
from a man.
"This is the ninth time I’ve rung
’em,” he raved on. "You tell me
they're busy, and 1 know they ain’t.
They’ve got no right to be busy.”
And .his voice went up and out with
a shriek.
The little incident is just as was
recorded by a pretty switchboard op
erator in an Atlanta exchange. The
man in question was not a brute. He
was merely a Victim of Dementia Tel
ephonica.
Yes, there is such a disease, and
business men are acutely susceptible
to its visitations. The Journal of the
American Medical Association in a
recent number discusses 1 the new dis
ease and pours out its sympathy on a
certain victim whose case is men
tioned and analyzed.
Wrong Number One Cause.
The telephone dementia, it seems,
usually seizes its victim about the
fourth or fifth time he has been told
that a number is» busy, and then finds
out that it was nothing of the kind.
Sometimes it comes over the suffer
er, causing him to see red and to talk
blue, when he calls once, twice, then
three times, and finds each time that
the poor little “hello” girl has given
him the wrong number.
The girls in the Atlanta exchange
say they understand now, and do not
pay any attention to it. The men do
not mean it.
A girl on the Ivy exchange was
asked yesterday ju^t what she thought
of the scientific discovery of the dis
ease.
"Huh," she snorted—if a pretty girl
can snort—“are the wise ones just
finding that out? Why we knew all
the time that there was something
like this, although we didn’t know
how to call it. The best treatment
we know is, when they rave, to pull
out the plug and let them talk to
themselves. And to ourselves we
murmur, ‘poor fellow'.’ Or maybe it’s
a woman.”
Maybe it is a woman. The medical
men say that women are susceptible
as w’ell as men, and as violently de
moniac when they succumb.
Diseases Develops in Germany.
The malady first was noted scien
tifically when a lawyer was put on
trial in Berlin, accused of slander
ing the postoffice, which also controls
the telephone in the land of the Kai
ser and of government ownership.
The lawyer lost his patience after he
had called his number three times in
course of three-quarters of an
hour. The girl told him that “Num
ber Undsow’eiter” was busy. Later he
found that it hadn’t been, and he ex
ploded.
The medical expert of the court be
fore which the lawyer was taken tes
tified that the defendant was of a
highly nervous temperament, and that
he had heard of men going insane
from telephone vexation. And so de
mentia telephonica became a subject
for research, and w'as put in the doc
tor’s books.
American Ordered Extradited to Italy
Confident He Will Be Back
in Few Months.
JERSEY CITY, N. J., July 28.—
Porter Charlton, the young man who
has been ordered extradited to Italy
to stand trial for the murder of his
wife, seems to be apparently uncon
cerned about the outcome of the trial,
arid openly stated that he would be
back In America again for Christmas
Although the United States Govern
ment has ordered him sent back to
Italy, he confidently told a friend yes-
terday that he would soon return.
“Don’t you worry,” he is reported as
saying. “I’ll make an engagement
with you next Christmas at Church
ill’s.”
Most Bitter Legal Battle in
History of Atlanta Courts
Is Expected—Case Will
Probably Last for Weeks.
A FTER throe months of mystery In the death of
Mary 1’hagan, a climax is at hand more tenae,
more dramatic, more breathlessly interesting to
Atlanta and all Georgia than any situation of fiction.
Leo XI. Frank, employer of tho little girl whose tragic
death. April 26, stirred a State, will be brought to trial
Monday on the charge that he killed her.
Frank's trial is the crowning event of the hundred
llirilllng circumstances surrounding the tragedy.
Whatever the outcome, regardless of Frank's convic-
| tion or acquittal, the incidents that follow the trial will
come as an anti-climax. The prosecution has cast al
most all Its chances for solving the mystery into the
case it has prepared against Frank. Its heavy guns
are trained against the factory superintendent, it
Corsets Accepted
As Bank Pledge
Burlington Financiers Take Dainty
Article as Collateral for
Loan of $2.
BURLINGTON, N. J., July 26.—In
the steel vault of the Mechanics’ Na
tional Bank reposes an oblong pack
age tied with pink baby ribbon.
The parcel, the center of much gig
gling interest among the bank clerks,
contains the oddest collateral ever
deposited with a New Jersey banking
institution as security on a loan.
Within the folds of paper and rib-
bc s is a pair of corsets, avowed value
$6.25, on which a young woman, lack
ing railroad Lire to Philadelphia, in
her extremity yesterday borrowed $2
from the bank.
Colonists at Arden
Now Going to ‘Roost
Sinclair’s Followers Desert Homes on
Ground for Bungalows Built
In Tree Tops.
WASHINGTON, July 26.—Plans for
a widespread campaign for "votes for
women” to be carried into all the . —^ ... - j
immigration to the United States and j States of the Union not now having ; I\,ailr0UQ-S ROLLGIIj
the rights of naturalization. Japan
knows that it is not within the power
of our National Congress to control or
change the alien land laws of any
State.
The wise men of Japan know all
this and more, but they have some
concrete motive in demanding some
thing which they know will not be
granted. What Japan desires and
will fight for is an outlet for her sur
plus population.
In her land-hunger Japan wrested
Formosa from China and tried to win
from Russia the bleak plains of Man
churia, but there is nothing that
Japan really wants on the Asiatic
coasts to her west.
Her eyes are turned to the east.
They are fixed, not on California or
any part of parcel of the United
♦ States, but on Mexico and Central
America, th e neglected and semi-sav
age wards of our Monroe Doctrine.
Like Home to Japanese.
For 30 years the Japanese have
Continued on Page 2, Column 7.
suffrage will be laid at a conference
of the National Council of Woman j
Voters here August 13, 14 and 15. An- |
nouncement to this effect was made Senate Dec|ares That MeHen . s Case
to-day at the congressional commit-
ARDEN, DEL., July 26.—“Well
good night, folks; I’m going to roost.’
That may be a commonly used sen
tence before long in the Arden colony,
made famous by Upton Sinclair and |
his associates. Sleeping in the tree
tops, as monkeys and certain tribes
of savages do, is the latest develop
ment of the back to nature idea as
practiced *in the colony'.
It started when two of the colonists,
using a lot of lumber bequeathed by
Mr. Sinclair when ho left, constructed
an aerial bungalow with four poplar
trees as comer posts.
Says Lafollette
tee headquarters of the council.
Lightning Rips Shoe
From Wearer's Foot
Man Escapes Physical Injury Save in
Small Burn—Son Nearby Is
Not Touched.
Is Typical of Entire Sys
tem in Nation.
‘Imperator’ Is Too
Small, Says Captain
Greatest Vessel Afloat Is Already
Fully Booked for Next Two
Voyages West.
Special Cable to The American.
PLYMOUTH, July 26.—"The Impera
tor Is too small; we want larger ves
sels,” exclaimed Captain Ruser, when,
after landing the greatest ship in the
world at this port to-day, he was told
that the Imperator is already fully
booked for her next two westward trips.
The Imperator proceeded from here
to Cherbourg and Hamburg. On the
way over there were three days oT
such extreme heat that many expe
rienced stokers were unable to work.
The average speed for the voyage was
22.5 knots and the best single day’s run
was 540 miles.
DENVER, July 26.—O. M. Simpson, a
laborer, was knocked down and made
unconscious for several minutes when
struck by a lightning bolt In the after
noon. His twelve-year-old son, Vernon,
sitting a few Inches away with his back
to his father, was not touched.
The lightning struck with sufficient
force to tear Simpson's shoes to shreds,
but this is about the only evidence left
of the visit of the electrical freak, with
the exception of a burn about the size
of a dime on bimpson a right foot.
MADISON, WI8., July 26.—Senator
LaFollette, in the current issue of
his weekly paper, praises tho men who
caused an investigation of the New
Haven Railroad and disclosures that
led to the resignation of Charles 3.
Mellon as its president. In an edi
torial, under the captain of "Rot-
te«." Mr. LaFollette says:
"The passing of Mellen is of no
consequence. He was morally the
agent of Morgan in the execution of
plans operated on all of the big sys
tems. The history of the New Haven
merger is the history of every merger.
The whole system is rotten.”
Investigations- by the Interstate
Con^merce Commission in other rail
roads woe d cause more resignations,
k said Mr. LaFollette.
Labor Secretary
Asks 3 Autos of U.S.
Wilson Wants $5,000 Touring Car,
$2,500 Electric and $1,500 Truck
for Department.
WASHINGTON, July 26.—A stir
was caused in the House to-day when
it became known that Secretary of
I>abor William B. Wilson has asked
Congress for a $5,000 touring car for
his personal use, a $2,COO electric au
tomobile to b eused for personal and
official purposes and a $1,500 electric
truck for the official business of the
i new Department of Labor.
Roosevelt Vaudeville
Star, British Report
Dr. Lyman Abbott Dclares Story
That Fellow-Editor Will Go On
Stage Is Nonsense.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, July 26.—The London
Daily Sketch prints a statement that
Colonel Roosevelt has signed a con
tract for a tour of the Australian
vaudeville circuit at $2,000 a week to
lecture on sociological subjects.
“He has been booked by Hugh Mc
Intosh. the noted Australian fight
promoter, who is governing director
of Harry Rickard's circuit,” it adds.
“The former President is to appear in
talks of fifteen to thirty minutes.
"A tour on these lines would cer
tainly mean the capacity of the
house.”
Dr. Lyman Abbott, when asked last
night about this report, said:
“You may be sure this is absolute
nonsense.”
STRAW HATS FOR POLICE.
CHICAGO, July 26.—Straw hats and
soft w'hite shirts as a uniform for the
ponce when th«> thermometer climbs
over the boilingwoint were urged bj
Mrs." Belle S i£tre in a letter re
I ceived by the City Council.
Chronology of Phagan Case
April 27—Body of Mary Phagan found in factory.
Arthur Mullinax arrested. Newt Lee arrested.
April 28—J. M. Gantt arrested. Geron Bailey ar
rested. Leo Frank held.
April 29—Pinkertons declare Lee guilty. Eliminate
Gantt, Mullinax and Bailey.
May 1—Coroner issues commitment against Lee
and Frank. Jim Conley, negro sweeper, arrested.
May 8—Coroner’s verdict orders Frank and Lee
held for grand jury.
May 12—Burns put on case, through agency of T.
B. Felder.
May 23—Grand jury considers case. Dictograph
scandals revealed. A. 9. Colyar accuses T. B.
Felder of attempts to corrupt policeman. Frank In
dicted. Conley says he wrote notes at Frank’s dic
tation, April 25, Newt Lee indicted.
May 25—Mrs. Mima Formby says Frank asked
her for room night of killing.
May 30—Conley says he helped Frank dispose of
body. Re-enacts crime at factory.
June 6—Conley denies he confessed killing to A.
S. Colyar.
June 15—Mrs. Frank, In statement to Sunday
American, stands by her husband.
July 10—W. H. Mincey’s statement first published,
that he heard Conley boast of killing.
July 15—E. F. Holloway, factory employee, says
he was told of negro's boast just after killing.
July 23—Frank says he is ready for trial. Search
for Will Green, Conley's companion, said to have
seen killing.
hits opposed the indictment of the single other suspect
ttie negro Jim Conley. The enthralled interest of a
public has been pitched about the question: Is Leo
Frank guilty?
FRANK DRAMA'S CENTRAL FIGURE.
Even the pitiful figure of the little factory gin,
mysteriously slain, has become subordinate in interest
to tiiat of Frank. The young man’s own personality,
his steadfastly loyal and loving family, his friends who
iifflrm Ids innocence in the face of a dark suspicion,
all tun e become factors in making Frank the central
figure of the crime drama.
At the in st moment efforts have been made by
Frank’s counsel to have the case continued until fall,
but the indications are that Judge Roan will order tbs
trial to go on Monday.
A hundred ramifications have sprung out of the
case, each one entailing bitterness, aligning faction
engendering a deeper mystery. XIany persons, e
tiefore the trial, are ready to express a belief of F'
guilt. As many are firm in the conviction the
innocent. Rut the great bulk of the public v
case through a haze of speculation aud d
is as impenetrable as on the first day.
LEGAL TALENT BRILLIANT.
Everybody is in one of the three classes
ly that no one lives in Atlanta who is
the case, which has been the central top
of conversation since the day the body o
was found.
The trial will be an event worthy <
est with which the public has invested
of legal talent is most imposing. Aires/
and the prosecution have met in skir
courts nkid in the newspapers. They w
so hard fought and bitter as to hold oi
Ii