Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 17, 1913, Image 3

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'JMMtfrv. Confidential Relations An unvarying rule or tms bank is to regard all transac tions as strictly confidential. Whether it is a matter of opening an account, making a loan, seeking advice or the mere routine of depositing or withdrawing money, the transaction carries with it the assurance that it is re garded as of a private na ture which concerns only the bank and its customer. Why not make this YOUR bank? ’’TIE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. I SETST F TRUTH II FRANK CASE By JAMES B. NEVIN. ir , ,, | observers, people with rejudieed and free of bias, - , sighed a welpht of sincere : ,m their souls when, at last, „ ments closed in the Supreme r, . ; ,rfng of the Frank case, and that 'minus cause had been given , the keeping of Georgia's hides' court of review. in generally will lncHne to th , ; ,hat little if anything of fur- light aas thrown upon the cas i tVio nnntrnvurav V by far as t con wer Court done, th flndlnifH the case there tv a , , side to the controversy, so oratorical efforts pro and , concerned in the Supreme \nd, after all is said and hr v «>urt will proceed to its upon the written records in an 1 not otherwise—and so, - nothing much sained by fhft superabundance of eloquence re- L-ed before the high court, there llkelv wasn’t much lost. And there It H the opinion of one observer, at | ea c- -hat neither side to the Frank ctly festooned itself With g]or> in the matter of the Supreme Court arguments Its Rulings the Law. Those people, of high or humble fpta'e, who love their country, who their patriotism pure and unde- flled who nlease to linger lovingly over'such phrases as “the majesty of t w. -i ■ and all that sort of thing, see r the Supreme Court of this n wealth the majesty of the law in its ultimate, dignity! Whatever that court says, that then | S iw of the land! Its decrees and judgments are be yond dispute- it speaks from out the most appalling chaos the ineffable And as. ated, word of truth and right r. ece - rv to restore reason and bring unerringly to its own again absolute and impartial justice. Far from the madding crowd’s ig noble strife" sits the Supreme Court, serene and unafraid! The Trank case, in the hands of the most august tribunal within the State, is utterly impersonal. What ever may have been the passion and the pride of opinion characterizing the attorneys and their methods, their utterance and their movements, in the hearing Before the trial court below, they appeared small and inconse quential things, indeed, to lug into the presence of the Supreme Court! Squabbles Out of Place There. Somehow sadly out of place seemed the .squabbles and the vehement chargee lodged this way and that in the trial ourt, when one sat there in the presence of the Anal court of re view and thought upon the tremen dous significance of the matters then under consideration, and what they mem eventually to every citizen of the Commonwealth—for upon the findings of the Supreme Court in the Frank case depends, perhaps, far more than some easy-going and loose-thinking citizens may imagine. It was not surprising, therefore, that a - <sne point in the hearings Mr. Justice Evans expressed a measure of the court’s coldness toward out- 1 irsts of feeling in the Supreme Court, and rather sharply reminded ih‘ attorneys engaged that the court they then were dealing with and ad dressing directly cared for none of that! * The sheet anchor of the Ship 1 *>f State is the law—the Impersonal ami unimpassioned law. That, and noth ing more nor less! And it is the mighty province of the Supreme Court i * say what IS—and equally what is NOT the law! If Leo Frank was tried according ''‘law he Supreme Court of Georgia much—and that will end tho matter. If he was not tried ac- W, the Supreme Court " H say as much—and Frank will be tried again. Honor of State Involved. \ man’s life, a man’s liberty, and a tnan - iearnst honor are involved in the decision of the Supreme Court— J es - Rut over and beyond that, as u above it as the stars are far above the sea, the dearest honor of State of Georgia ' boasts a proud ancestry s. inong the original thirteen States— 13 involved. It is that sacred honor of Georgia, the guarding of which has been placed in the hands of the Supreme Court! The sovereign -Georgia—can do no wrong. Nobler and braver than that, Georgia WILL do no wrong! She will do in the Frank case as her ac credited ministers direct—as the Su preme Court shall say. And in directing a course of con duct for Georgia, that course must be right, though the heavens fall. It must be remembered that the Su preme Court of Georgia is not serv ing Leo Frank in this matter, save in so far as he is the hub about which mighty principles of law temporarily revolve—it is the people of Georgia the court is serving! Franks may come and Franks may go, but the supremacy of the law abides forever! At last, “the tumult and the shout* ing dies; the captains and the kings depart.” Into the austere keeping of the highest court In the State the last word of argument in the Frank case has been confided. Weighted With Dignity. Much of that which has gone bi- fore now seems utterly confusing and vague. Where are the storms and ragings of yesterday? The winds have blown them all away. Sitting in the presence chamber of the Supreme Court, over in the grim and g^rimy old Capitol, callous indeed must have been the spectator who failed to feel heavily the full signifi cance of the proceedings. When the honorable Court filed in in the morning there was no need to admonish those present that It was their part to stand the while the Court seated itself. Somehow, one instinct ive!'' rose to his seat and remained silent as the Court settled itself to work. The law does not design to be spectacular—it is full of purpose to be dignified in the extreme, however. Less and less attorneys incline nowadays to proceed to Supremo Court hearings by way of verbal pleadings. More and more they In cline to appear by brief and written arguments alone. Those few who heard the oral pleadings in the Frank case probably all agree now that the written method is the better— certainly it appears more in keeping with the spirit and intent of the high Court’s functions. For one thing, human beings are more careful in what they write than in what they say. The written word stands a permanent witness that in the afterwhile may arise t > confound or affright tin* writer if he fails to consider carefully the things ne writes. The spoken word, reckless of consequence and mindful of later confusion and possible indefiintencss of meaning, lend itself Inevitably to error and miscarriage of justice. Looks to Records for Truth. And so, in considering this famous miscarriage of justice in the final word the Supreme Court speaks. One recalls again and again tj** ad monition of Mr. Justice Evans—the warning word that. . fter all, the Su preme Court will look to the WRIT TEN RECORD for the truth of the Frank case's history and may forget entirely tl)e passionate vehemence of attorneys in partisan argument. Ands o, in considering this famous Frank case in its final analysis, those who wish to see it ended—and their name is legion—will do well to re member that the Supreme Court is not going to put Dorsey’s construc tion upon the evidence, nor yet Ros ser’s, nor Feldef’s, nor Arnold’s. The Court w r ill make up its own mind in its own way. Dorsey may shout and Rosser may imagine vain things—the or.e may say thus and so proves this and that, and the other may beat himself to willing fragments contending ’that thus and so mean nothing of the kind. The Supreme Court still will decide for itself. From out the warp and woof of this curiously and amazingly complex weave of the Frank case, the Su preme Court will unravel the red thread of truth that surely MUST be somewhere tangled therein. You, reader, believe thus and so to be the truth of the Frank case, and in that conclusion yea do violence to EMPTY STOCKING FUND TO GET M0||[lf Rill TO BIG BOOST FROM TECH PLAYERS One-fourth of Receipts From ‘The Magistrate’ Is Promised—Play Friday Night. Another delegation of friends of Atlanta’s poor boys and girls turn ed up Wednesday. They are the members of the Georgia Tech So ciety, who made announcement that 25 per cent of the gross receipts at their annual play Friday night would be devoted to The Georgian-Ameri can Empty Stocking Fund for the youngsters of the city who otherwise would not have a visit from Santa Claus this year. As the Tech play is one of the events of the winter season and in variably attracts a big house, the fund will be swelled materially by the generosity of the students. On Sunday another substantial addition to the* Empty Stocking Fund will come from The Georgian’s great free concert in the Forsyth Theater. The play at the Grand Friday night by the Tech student-actors promises to be even more of a grand and delightful affair than it was last year. your well-meaning neighbor who dif fers radically with you. It all depends upon which lawyer you heretofore have pinned your firm est faith to. Flower of Georgia Bar. But consider—how much of the evi dence did you hear, and in what or der of its bearing upon the case in hand? How much do you. of your own knowledge, KNOW of the Frank case? And are your conclusions ra tionally sequenced, and do they fit into one another as they should, the very great gravity of the matter being weP kept in mind? In seeking poise and patience to await the decision of the Supreme Court, it perhaps is well enough to hold fast to the thought that the Su preme Court of Georgia is composed of the very flower of the Georgia bar, that it commands the respect of all classes of citizens more surely and more securely than any other civic tribunal does or may—and that it can have no higher ambition than to ex pound the law of the land as it- really and truly is! Leo Frank is making virtually his last stand. He is making it bravely, too—tha: must be ungrudgingly ad mitted! He is fighting with his back to the wall, sore pressed and with all promising avenues of retrea f shut off The record may soon be closed, the clasp snapped tight and locked eter nally. Bear these grim and thought- arresting things in mind—and be fair! ‘So far the day has gone altogether in the State’s favor, but that is no sure sign the State has won the battle finally. Gallantly enough the State’s generals have pressed their advan tages—and with stubborn courage, that well might, in weaker hearts have engendered despair, have the defend ant's generals fought back! The sun is sinking in the West—the morrow must dawn bright and rain- bowed with renewed promise to Frank, or the sinking sun must go down for him in darkness the last rime an 1 not to rise again. The matter'of Leo Frank vs. the grate of Georgia, murder, is out of the hands of the lawyers—it Is in the ' osom of the Supreme Court, and this 'orrmon weal to will believe that a I is well! when the house was packed from pit to gallery. College Girls to Attend. The annual dramatic effort by the collegians is to be graced this year by the presence of several hundred young women from Atlanta's famed educational institutions. Not that they have not attended before, but Friday night they will be here in larger numbers than ever before; they will be in their prettiest of gowns; they will come in solid delegations from the various schools they repre sent, and they ’will be decked out with the colors of their schools. Washington Seminary, Agnes Scott College, the Girls’ High SchooJ. Miss Woodberry’s and Miss Hannah’s schools all will be at the Grand with large representations. The Tech actors, as soon as The Georgian made public its plans for raising an Empty Stocking Fund for" the poor children of the city, immediately fell in with the idea and decided to make a contribution on their own account. It was agreed that one-fourth of the gross receipts would be turned over to The Geor gian to be used in filling the empty stockings in the poor homes of the city. Some <5f Players. A1 Roberts, who starred last \vrar in “Brown of Harvard,” will have a leading part in this, year’s produc tion, which is Pinero’s famous com edy. “The Magistrate.” It will be the professional Tanks of Thespians for Roberts after his school days are over, according to the report of his friends. He is regarded as one of the best actors that the Tech Dramatic So ciety has ever had. Besides possess ing an impressive personality on the stage, he has unusual ability for an amateur and has decided to use his talents professionally. Roberts is prominently connected with the Play ers’ Club of Nashville, his home. Free Concert Sunday. And remember: The Georgian-American's free con cert at the Forsyth Theater/ next Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock. Every seat in the house will be free. The con^>*rt last year was at tended b> a - man) a - the houie would hold. Some of the best musical talent in the city will have places on the pro gram. Musicians from other cities also will perform. • Altogether it will be one of the most enjoyable affairs that Atlantans have been privileged to attend in months. Here are the latest contributions to the Empt) Stocking Fund: A Goodfellow $ 1.00 Cash + . 1.00 J. M. High Co. 10.00 Another Goodfenow 1 00 L. C. Cash .... 1.00 In memory of a Little Niece . . . 1.00 Shellman Poston 1.00 Joseph E. Boston, Jr. 1.00 Dr. T. P. Hin'man 5.00 McMillan Produce Co., box of oranges Industrial Arts Club, Inman Park, provisions Edmund Hurt 1.90 Sarsh Hurt 1.00 Joel Hurt. Third 1.00 Lucy Vincent Goss 1.00 S. P, Monorief Co 1.00 c&o A] Roberts (left) and Walter Troy, two of Tech's star dramatic cast, who will help Empty Stocking Fund Friday. £># HE PASSED It Debate Now Only ‘Vain Repeti tion.' Asserts Senator Kern, Asking Time for Vote. WASHINGTON, Dec. 17. Senator Kern, Democratic leader, asked con sent in the Senate to-day for a vote on the currency bill not later than 6 o'clock Friday evening. Senator Bristow objected. It in believed, how ever that the bill will be passed in any event by Saturday night. Senator Kerr reviewed the cur rency debate and said it had now reached a stage “of vain repetition.” He asserted that fmen now out of work will be recalled to work as soon as the bill is passed. Senator Gallinger said the tariff bill was a partial failure and he doubted if the currency bill would give the expected relief. “Were my questions absurd be cause they revealed faults in the bill?” asked Senator Burton in re ply to Kern's criticism "Must the Senator from Indiana swallow a measure whole no matter how crude or unjust it may be, mere ly because u*'aucus so dec Jes? Must we become nere an aggregation of ciphers to accept without question every measure that comes from the Executive Department or the cau- cus? If so, the Senate sinks from its high estate to deserved contempt. If the Smator from Indiana had given attention to the questions he would not have made the criticism " Senator Bristow* inquired why Sen* ator Kern had wasted an hour s time “when he knew* before he asked that unanimous agreement would not be granted.” 65,000-Horsepower Moves Chattanooga CHATTANOOGA, Dec. 13— Current from the $10,000,000 lock and dam at Hale’s Bar, Tenn., operated all cars upon the lines of a local traction com pany and furnished lights for Signal Mountain for the first time last night. Although more than 66.000 horsepower has been aval able, for several weeks, operating current was not turned Into the transmission lines until last night. Savannahans Go to Ask Visit of Wilson SAVANNAH, Dec. ( 17.—A strong delegation of Savannahans Is .n Washington to-day to urge upon President Wilson that he accept an invitation to attend the meeting of the Drainage Congress here next March. At the same time an effort will be made to have the Government locate the Sixth Lighthouse District at Sa vannah. tt is now at Charleston, white Brunswick and Jacksonville are also trying to win it. Albanian King to Take Throne Jan. 15 Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. F RANK F O R T-ON-MAIN, GER MANY. Dec 17 A Constantinople dis patch to The Frankfurter Zeitung to day says that Prince William of Wied, who has consented to become the flrHt ruler of the new kingdom of Albania, will ascend the throne January 16. Break World Record As Masonic Officials ROME, Dec. 17.—A world’s record in Masonic succession was broken last night when Cherokee Lodge, No. 06, F. & A. M., elected for the thirteenth consecutive capitular year Judge Majc Meyerhardt worshipful master and for the forty-first year R. H. West as secretary Both are prominent Georgians, the former having served as grand mat ter of the Georgia Grand Lodge. Fol lowing the election of officers 400 members participated in a home-com ing banquet. Panama Canal Guns Will Carry 11 Miles WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.-The ord nance bureau has finished a number of 12-inch mortars of new design for the Panama Canal fortification which have shown a maximum range of more than eleven miles. Christmas ugars Oppenheim’s Cigars ‘ For Fussy Smokers” Every man who loves a good smoke knows Oppenheim’s Cigars. And he will appreciate a box of them to smoke during the holidays. if you have a friend, a husband, or a sweetheart, give him a box of these famous brands of Imported Cigars. Webster Cigars Edens, Belinda, Partagas, Punch. Lozanos. Don't Worry, and Live Long, Advises Man,93 SOUTH ORANGE. N. J.N0ec. 17.— Don’t worry; then you’ll sleep well, j If you sleep well you’ll be happy and live long. 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