lunchers9 neighbors guard secret, though füll story frank...
TRANSCRIPT
Lunchers9 Neighbors Guard Secret, Though Füll Story of Frank Outrage Is Known to AllFRANK'S MOTHERIN TEARS, AWAITSHER SON'S BODY
Burial ii Accord with Tal-n* ", 1 aw Plannedfor Mob's Victim.
JEWISH PATRIARCHSTO GUARD COFFIN
rarenK Pleading To Bo LeftM^no in Cirio ». May Not.Have Syn! *ogue Service.
at G . t the 1 >me ofhis Avenue,red from its
I 17 tOW
». tl that there is no
wssh.conformity witn
the itrict Talmiidic Isw.t bod)
in r
a» "tachnebim*1 .' whitelinen «ark.
with an ,«'''1 ¦
rkull cap of the same material. The
brl* «'no.
"Arba kanfo a c i .;¦¦<¦..'. withfour corners, w
wl wTappe I
about it The »great toes of both fee*,
will be tied tor .-»eat numberof es- Äefl 1 ' and arrangedin an oval about man.
Patriarchs to Guard Hody.
The old men will sing a psalm o*
I>avid. Underneath the head one of
the attendants placea a pile ofAce Of Mr. and
Ml T body will not bp buried
until to-morrow morning. To-night n
dozen oi bo of Jewiah patriarch« willly and
«.in-. ni dawn. The motherwill then be left aloro with the body.
Thr-, 'ration:will be <l«s
pense.1 with. None but Leo's "ut.
last at thegttn ud to manhood.
not G» orgia's,"y. "My lor
1 ,,:'., I want a
tt.lc wife willthe funeral arrange
men'¦npany-
:.. I a
Whci'e<l at
Her.
».
fror
w«« '
The
tors to the
n their.h has
«tone,
Will 11
i' Mr
ii Mo
and at ..
««
"II.
;
places, may he make pence fer ui andall Israel; nr«l say ye, amen."And so it will come about in future
years that at sundown each August I"¦i little, white haired old Bson will as*tbil wife to Habt a memorial candlewhile he will totter to the synagogueto say a "kadisch" for his son. For
Frank, victim of a mob, left no
children to mourn for h mi.
May Raise Fund Hereto Hunt Frank Slayers
A e<«nimittee is b«'ing formed in thiscity to give morn! nnd financial sup- j
rt t« the task of finding and prose¬
cuting those who lynched I SO M. Frank.- .'¦.>. merchants and other pro¬al men have become Interested
and pledged their support, 'ix-1'epieW ri S. Kennet and Judge
M Pryor, a firmier .encrai inhave consented
biwer« informed Of the plan by HarrySrVTr.' of the Last SideI r«'*«-("
'o become mem-r are [sidor*f M.
1 evy, '.ii of t'ne lionrd of
-, .«nil Representative¡: wi eyday thai
r«.l y- v York for
hunt down the twenty-five
BLAMES SLATOKFOR LYNCHINGI I'llliiiiii! frem piiL'' 1
When the Federal courts re-
itood for law andres on but to think that
IW would take its usual eouiIn the Supreme
..." c« allow thirty-.r past before the order affirming
Judgment il entered. Not so ,n thisLouis Marshall, ol New York.
who argued thai case, ;,t once waivedand movea that the remitti
tur issue si one« i K theInto Georgia, while Slat on
wa i yet Governor.Prank is the out¬
ward dem." t outraged publicon.
"Now. I !o not believe in lynching.for law and order, but the peo-
Frank are as goodpeople a< you have In New York or
j on may name. Theyan int« ii'. I ]¡o did things in
Without Intel!.-could not have driven 170
miles and hack, gotten the fellow andexecuted him as the)
Says He Saved Hum«."1 would not help lynch anybody
I am, in fact, the man who saved Will«iam J. Burns from being lynched
lince theil badly send as be
"But right here we believe and stand i
for the honor and purity of our worn
We imifct upon their protectionAnd when, as in 'his ease, the !«.'.'.
wrongs, when Itto miicai ry, as it
then outraged publicOp ' aCt.
x% at born in thi¦fat ;.«'r and 1 erlittle wbili
di« ii, 01 ri I ..ne oldhe wa». And the peoplesympathizing with thii j
the wrongThe people who did ii,
will find anywhere..'. who did it. 1 do not
iw. i'ut I will say this: Youthat
«-, « Frank was guilty andi 1 deserts, lie was
.¦ e evidence of niggerLeave Conley out of il
m that record inevi»the man who did
ay that as a iawyei.th« r« fur all who wantn it. all repoi ts to the
here Is evi-acy.«¦ has been done it has
I« of Cobb Co inty andbi n held up to
and moved by thenot
by any moblati n to protect their
womenfolk and theh horn«
Slaton Denounces Mayor;Will Return to Georgia
B] Bi Govertooi JOHN M. si.aton.\ . I hov«
bet goodeont mue to do.' state and 1
totion.co with my
no, after having
«.*. ii.I und ofthem im
cal i
in the peopleI hov«
«in 1.1 s
r At
Ihe odium andthink tin'
..I. in his speechsuggested
not a
( thai
on the statti" furthei
I stand Inis m tothers «
a 1 nman life could be made a Í
Advance Styles.Fall Suits notv ready«Al slroiif* inrrntives for early buying, hundredsoí Itylish, reUable suits are specially priced
at $15, $20 & $25
MARIETTA HIDESFRANK LYNCHERS
I «>i.l Inudl fi. m pas' 1
renrl, the jail, 170 milos distant, aboutton o'clock Meantime a party of fif¬teen Millcdf-esillo men were to cut them .. »hele and join the Marietta del«'-gation. '-'or some reaaon r,«>t yet el
plained, the MilledgeviIIe croup fnile.ito arrive at the ronde/vous, and foitwo houn the aolf-atyled avenger.« ofMary I'hagan waited, fearful that theplan had mi>carric(!.
Finally at midnight it was decided toproceed and "take n ehance." Hcinuseof this two hours' delay the lyncher«acre foreod to amend their plan andlynch Frank where they did. To reachthe cemetery where (he girl'i body lieinvolve« driving through the centre o."the city.
At the pri-on thincs wont caeily.Those with whom I talked to-,lay said
arter, thai every one aoouwdt., '«', «p. And without a struggle,!
thst made by 'ho prisoner, how;i- nanaclod and thrown into an ti-
tomobila and headed BOTOOl country forthis placo. Foi four hours they rode,
hen it was broad daylight, buttbey «"tit nued on their way un'il theyneared W\ iam Froy'i cotton pin, on
the itakir « Prey was up and sawthe party pass, with Fr..nk -it.inf* up¬right in one of the four machine.«.
It mi then nearly 7 o'clock, or fourft« the (tU-eOeiste l Press and
"The Atlanta Constitution"* bad noti¬fied Carter, their local correspondent,
rank had been taken tr..m jai!and was heading this way. Carter
d the night policeman, N. D.White, ami togothei they wen! to the.cemetery, bul found nothing. N'o ef¬fort wa« made, according to Carter,to notify deputy .-'io;i'T> «,r to i'epu-tizc any person to assist in prevent¬ing the lynching should the '»art-come here.
Gun Repel« "I'nknown."Just before 7 a man named Chandler,
a member of a railroa.l surveyingparty, reached the forks at Frey'.- plac«'to go to his work. There as he ateppodinto the woo.led road that abuts on thenational cemetery a man stepped frombehind a tr.%<\ levelled i icj-i at himanil ordered him to move on. Bemoved. This, and the statements ac-eredited to members of the party, fixthe actual time of tho killing as be¬tween 7 and 7:15 o'clock.
Ace-online to tho story told by «'han¬dler to night, he did not go no furaway, however, but that he saw partof what was going on.
"I saw Frank taken from tho secondof th? four cars stalled down the roada bit." he said. "He limped along likea man in a hobble skirt, with a man oneither side of him, to the tree where Iafterward «aw his body. Then thecrowd got around him. and I left. Nonaof them had maaka on then. He madeno outcry that I know of."
Kode a» in a Dase.Aside from the alleged refusal to do-
clare his innocence given out this af-tornoon, there is nothing t<> indicatethai Fiank said anything after beingtaken from his cell. One report hasit that all the way from the prison herode as one dazed, the blows he re¬ceived upon the head when being;dragged down tho jail steps havingapparently stunned him.An hour later svoriT came to tho
crowd that was waiting at the villagec.-ii..-cry for the party to arrive th itthe body had been found. Carter was
>f the tir-t on the ground."The body," he laid, "wai han;,:-i'*
ab three feet from the groundAround tho neck exactly und. r thechin was a regulation hangman'i noose.Abo ' »ho upper part of the body wasa ,-hir» of light mesh and nightshirtor which was embroidered 'I.e.,' Mrs.Frank'i pel name for him. About thelower part of the body l piece of gunnysacking was tied. On his face, tiltedupward by the knot, a handkerchiefhad been thrown. The pressure of therope had burst open the cut on histhroat and blood was flowing from it."
.i after Carter's arrival the crowdto arrive in force. With it came
kl bad man, a member of one ofthe oldest families in the state. Thisman hai served time for a killingfamily influence and money are credited
friends here with having savedhim from Frank's fate. He at once
began haranguing the crowd to burn tbody.
Harris Twenty Miles kWmf.lie wa« still haranguing niul brar
ishing a pistol when Judge NewtonMorris, one of the strong men
Georgia and a man of undoubted cm
agr, came at Vanderbilt Cup speifrom Alpharetta, twe.ity miles awn
where he bad been trying a case. Wihim were William Burks and CoronHoyd. Morn« at once sought to quithe local bad man.
"I just talked to hm," said JudMorris this afternoon, "and urged hito be quiet. All the time he was cut
it'g horribly and hitting me on tlchest. Finally I got a bit of quiet ai
then I asked the erowd to desist." 'Roys,' I said to the men, 'Frank
dead. The law has taken its cour*His body now long to his wife ai
his mother. Loi them have it. Vhave no right to interfere with them."'That thing have a mother!' can
from the mob.""There were 1,500 to 2.0M peop
there then. I put it tu n vote and tleitiw.t all voted oye, ail except tllender. Then I called for a showir'.f beads. All were in favor of n«
burning tin- body > *ept two or three" 'Boys,' laid I. !; ¦! you agr«
with ine that the State of Georgshould not stand charged with ma
treating tk ¦'. body;Judge i.i the Hope.
"Then I reached up and holding tl:rope with my left hand cut it witmy right. I was not quite stronnough '.« hold the body andbumped quite hfird. In a minutei.umbrr of th" men had the end of thrope and haul owa*) Ara'I ut i', thil t.. ie Bbove the chin an
the crowd was satisfied to cut the ropinto bits <»s souvi"A man iaunedlately jumped for th
prostrate body and began stampinupon :'. II«' stamped on the face onci
I think. The goes peimiooieito move the body, snd it was put int<an undertak.'i basket yoiknow what I mean and put on a waiting hearse. 1 got up on the heart*,with tu negro driver and lus helpeiand we started for Atlanta. The crowimeantime wai yelling and rnakini,threats and the ringleader was be
.turn to go and burn th«bfdy.
"A short distance down the load «mi
of the negroes WOS hit. It was gettinitoo hit for comfort, at d I ordered thrl.ei'lne« t.r ptgl | e !....'s into my car.
" 'tiini is ths negro, "butit do that. If I do they'll ge
inc.' With the aid of a white manthrew the bosket across the doors o:
my car and started for Atlanta Orthe running board was s reporter fo:'The Atlanta Journal.' It was a ikride. I don't belie.', a Ford WOS sveldriven so fast before, and every te:feet weps Og our wayI kept to the centre of the road, an«1th«- reporter kept yelling to look ouithat I WOS running so close to otherers that I would take his legs olf.
Threatened for Speeding."However, he stuck until we got to
Smyrna, helping John Woods hjhl 'hebosket in place. Al Smyrna he jumpedto 'phone his paper, arid I asked him to
.notify an undertake) and a.-k Atlantatu send police to meet us. Just outside Atiento two bicyelc; cops came up.1 was driving like mad, and they yelledafter me to stop. I kept. on. Thenone of them reached my seat and saidif I didn't stop he would arrest me.
" 'I've got Leo Frank's body here!'I yelled to him. 'If you want thatcrowd that's chasing me to get it, justarrest me and they will have it!'"'For God's sake, drive faster,' he
answered, and with his mate leadingthe way and he riding be Is '«he car
we raced nntil Atlanta was almostreached. There we met ;«n undertak -r
with an ambulance, transferred tin-body, and it was token to s place to beprepared for burial."Every ten feel of the way from the
tery in »re pa .¦'! i car. I «i«. not
know how many, certainly into thehundreds."When we returned here the crowd
was about. There were many in thecemetery and many more out at Frey'place. The place was as quiet as you
no .v. Tl '¦¦ e' the who!« itoi y."One effeet of the Frank lynchr
to nccelei at e o i some
time ago to distribute the record in.- all ab »criben
to "Dun's" and "Brsditreet's.""We are going to do that," saiil Car¬
ter t -ii ght, "to let tl." outside world.the responsible people misled bj at¬tacks upon Marietta am! Cobb
know exactly what the facts are.
thev refuse to bo convinced oftruth then, wo won't care. Hut thesrd will convince them."
Case Ended. Cobh County llopeiLeft to itself, Cobh County will
prosseuta the slayer« of Leo M. Frin the opinion of those most famwith conditions there. It i« heldno grand jury that might be impanethere would find an indictment, an
i» extremely doubtful if the coron
inquest, adjourned to Tuesday, willturn any verdict other than deatithe hand« of person« unknown.There is, however, a movement ur
way here to force action.In the opinion of some local lawy
who declare the lynching to be a
upon rtie state, prosecution «vould liany of the four counties through wr
Frank was taken. This la based u
the presumption that the killingwhat is known in law os a continucrime that ,s to say, one over whsock of the counties traversedjurisdiction.Ihn, however, is not the view
o'her lawyer«, who hold that in C.«County alo.-.a could action be hadmurder, while at MilledgeviIIe the o
crim- charged could be abductionjail breaking.
Slaton's Friends I'idirule InquiryGovernor Harris has declared it
be his intention to have the mat
probe.I to the bottom, but friendsh rank and followers of ex-GovertSlaton do fiot expect much will ro<
from any inquiry the Governor milo r. Fer tins reason it is now pi
posod to offer a heavy reward .'or e
us to the members of the lvn«hi.: party on the chance that prose«'«,,1-, eon be had in other than CoCounty, where Marietta is situated.One lawyer, a leader in this mo«
ment, told me this afternoon that itnot by nny love of Frank, bof fear that tho mob spirit a
'ling are beginning to run
such a pace as to threaten serious co
sequences.
Governor Seeks to BringLynchers to Justic
Atlanta. Aug. 1«. Flans for inveslgating the abduction and lynchingLe«. M. Frank went forward steadi
i. nor Harria state«! thatthorough inquiry would be made, ar
that rewards would he offered for tlsad conviction of the men wl
hanged Frank."I am inexpressibly «hocked," «a1
the Governor. "This affair has placía blot upon tho fair name of our sta»
that can never be wiped out. T!lynching will be probed to the bottoand every effort within my power wibe made to bring the guilty membeiof the mob t«. justice. At the pronetime i will (,tT. r rewards for the arre«
and conviction of the men, and I wi
urge tho judge, the solicitor and thsheriff to make diligent efforts to ajprebend them."
Governor Harris will have a conference with the three members of thState Priori Commission to-morro'.i
Each of tl«- commissioners was in Waiden Smith's home »ho night Frank wa
taken away They had been makingretrular inspection of the prison.
Tie Governor hopes to obtain infoi:, from the commissioners, an
possibly some of the prison official:who were o'.'erj.owered, that will let«to the identification of some of th«lynchera. Only a few of the member:of the gang wore masks. If the identification of any of the men is cstab!i !«d. the Governor said to-day h«would make every effort to have then. ted.
I:. K. Iiavison. chairman of the com
mission, announced here to-day thathe identity of one member of the molmight be d «closed through a pair o
handcuffs which wore left on th«wrists of .1. M. Murk«', inperintenden!..r' ths prison farm. Mr. Iiavison sal.
bore 'lio «erial number of th:manufactUI*« r and that he had been in¬formed the name of the original pur-chaser could bo obtained by this m-ans.
The Marietta end of the investiga¬tion was not pressed to-day. The cor¬
oner'.- jurv, which held a brief sessionyesterday, had adjourned until next
T.i" day. Much Interest attaches tjwhat i:i.,v '..« l,iought out when the jury
mbles with the special counselprovided by the county commission-ers. Official opinion here is that Mil¬ledgeviIIe ;.- the place for the investi-
n, or at leas! the beginning of it.the Prison Commission woulJ
ike an inquiry was further indi¬cated to-day when another member,K. I,. Kainey, stated that he did not
think any one connected with »h» prion was to blame. The commission hiabsolute power In handling pri'ori a
fsirs, and in the conference t" morrothe commissioners will act only in I
advisory capacity.Local postal authorities to-day ej
eluded from the mails postcard phot«graphs of Frank's body before it ws
cut down. I'hotographers an«l othel«lid a large business selling them iMarietta and Atlanta. Acting M ave
Kagsdale received several protests bu
Said he was peworiosi t» stop the veri'l« rs who had obtained a license. Hmid no more ¡ic-ns-s rroold be issu«'«
Would Bar RequisitionPapers from Georgi.
Chicago, Aug. 18. Edward J. Dod<¡president of the Chicago Patrolmen'Association, made public a letter to
day which he said he had sent to Goventer Harris, of Georgia. The lotteItatod that the lynching of I.eo MPrank Indicated that Georgia was no
capable of self government, and therefore he would osk Governor I'unne o
Illinois not to honor requisition paper1sent him by the Governor of Georgia.Dodd said it was hi* intention tc
request the heads of every policemen*!organization in the country to makfsimilar requests of the governors- oltheir respective states.
Beeolutions conilemning the lynchingof Frank were adopted to day at thennnual meeting of th" I'lmois Federa¬tion of Colored Wumcn'j Clubs.
Warns Jews of Dangerof Outbreaks in Georgia
in. Ti '.'-ni. n.- no a«*.]Macon, Ga.. Aug. 1» A note of warn¬
ing to the Jewish press of this coun¬
try that the sal'. ¦¦: .'¦¦ «s [_ Georgiadepends on th«'.se publications is sound-« d by "'!'h. Ma'mi Doily Telegraph" inan editorial which will appear to mor--¦'. moi nlng, tying, in part"Soberly and earnestly, its ««ion un-
obscured, and its focus unclouded byprejudice and malice, 'The Telegraph,'aspiring only to safeguard the bestinterests of all the people in Georgia,takes a look through the veil whichcovers the immediate future in thiistate. There is pregnant m this state
a potentiality which may bring fort«ho gravent ami crudest Injustice,dark hour in Georgia in which sham«lui and regrettable deeds may be donThe «ituation i« beyond our control Ait «tends right now we can only folloian immutable deduction out to it« logical conclusion, busing our results tbe on what ha« happeno«i."A« it now rtands, Israel itself stand
indicted ami la the object of a gn-adeal of indignant anger, but the individual Israelite himself i« liked an«
respected."Against the race generally there i
m Georgia, however, a sentiment o
linger, a pronene«« to denunciationwinch is just at the present in qu.escent statu quo a «talus which SOIquickly die OUt altogether or cai
quickly he blown and stirred into\ lolent flame.
"If among 'he tutaide newspapergenerally ther" js .ny attempt at a «us
tnined denunciation of this stnt,Thomas E. Watson will, with a quideagerness, acc«pf. what he will coris,«i<a gi go of battle thrown at his feet, an«
ho will answer in kind moro than ir
km,!. We can see thil ahead as corta,n
ly and as unavoidably as the co.-¡
tho hour of death to every man irGod'a good time."Watson will be answered in km«;
again, and so it will go on until th(tim* will come when he will tell thepeople of the Mate of Georgia »hat therich Jews of the nation have nought ur,
the press of the Republic to vilify andblackguard and defame th. State olGeorgia in revenge for the killing <>fI..". Sf, Frank. And when tha« chargebrought it will be ly andplausibly presented and Georgia gen¬erally will beltevi it."What will ' 'How such a ehaiv
¡ts acceptance The Telegrsph'say. Anti-Semitic demonstrslCertainly. Ant'-Semitie riots? Prob¬ably. Actual violenc Jewish citi¬zens? 'I'o-sibly. ,
"The men responsible, ignornntlyporiib)**, Indifferentlj probably, are
t'r.'"e mainly outside this «taro.
"Georgiana h. ri been brought to be¬lieve in the Stiausos, the Ochses, thePulitzers and other loading .lew« ofNow York and the Fast generallyThese men now hold the comfort,safety, peace and happiness of the
,f Georgia in the hollow of theirhands."
BLAMES PRISONIN FRANK CASE
"The Maçon News" Can'tUnderstand Why Prison¬er Was Not Protected.Macon, Ga., Aug .«_*»»
," In an . tayathat a.-:> *7 b«,made of the Frank m «. .* h mount te
'hing of I.' '. V Frank, %'r agaa
by a mob of Cebb ount ,* r.er.t taw.
able n'Tair. Kver«, tru itizen ofr.o matter
'tior .Siatostor commut iicnalty (.life imprisonment, o -r he b«.
.* «nt,"Had the pi tm a»
,h«ir guard th« .<¦ t»ubeen able to br« .« Mtlm
try. After all I * of th«.sniatk«
'arm aj t,how well Prank eould be rofcted, «is inc idbbjpermitted ra forciblj
' of »h,toe. aad, of
»... will pa^ . »,»» th«
I never haprosecuted nor rtbemoJiebend 1
sy ii»-ate, hut, Ilk - n ,)<.reel, no r I be a<:o_.ed.
¦¦ ¦."
..
lynching ol Leo M at th«r>n that th«from ne«
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will gladly play your favorite music. Otherstyles of tne Victor and Victrola $10 to
$250.Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J.
Above 96th Street.Emanuel Blout. , . ..2799 BroadwayBuckley-Newhall Co_............. 5th Ave. & 125th St.Kranich & Bach.16 West 125th StAlbertSichel.233 West 125th St.F. L. Steers Co.,Inc.3496 BroadwayLenox Talking MachineCo.312 West 145th St.Epstein &Berdy.2977 Third Ave.L. J. RooneyCo.145 I St Nicholas Ave., Near 183rd St
Brooklyn.A. I. Namm & Son, Fulton St. at Hoyt St. Subway Stat/n, B'klynEpstein & Berdy.1 198 Fulton St., near Bedford Ave.Pease PianoCo.34 Fiatbush Ave.. BrooklynE. A. Schweiger.1525 Broadway, BrooklynB. Guy Warner. .Bedford Ave. & Halsey St. Brooklyn
Out of Town.Hunt'-« Leading Manic House, Inc.. 52 Martin« Av.. White Plains, N. V.Steger & Sons Piano Mfg. Co.743 Broad St. Newark. N. J.
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Victrola XVIII, $300Matched mahogany cabinet with
paneled moulding, swell front and.ides.