: " - ' - - - ' ' 1 ': ' ' ' . VOL. XXL NO. 7. GOVERNOR ENCLOSES HIMSELF WITH MARTIAL LAW AT HIS COUNTRY HOME. ' PRANK BEGINS SENTENCE Commutation is Received . With Wild Demonstratons. Governor Hang in. Effigy "As Traitor." ' Atlanta,! Ga. With several hundred men and boys clamoring ta enter his front gates, which had been "barri caded and threatening to overpower 20 county policemen, Governor Slaton called upon the militia to protect his home. Upon the arrival of four com panies of militia whOy had been held under arms and rushed , to the txover nor's country home in- automobiles, he proclaimed martial law in a district extending half a mile back and for a distance of about a quarter of a mile on either side- .'; ; ; . - When the soldiers lined up with fiied bayonets to disperse the crowd, atones, bricks and bottles were thrown at them. A brick struck Lieut Ar nold Parker and rendered him uncon scious for a short while. The com manding officer. Major Catron, was struck by a stone, as were several of the men. . , ; The Governor proclaimed martial lav at exactly 11 o'clock and by mid night the crowd had practically been dispersed. There was -no firing. : . k telephone message from Mill edge Tills There the state prison is located and There Frank was taken after, the Governor commuted his sentence, said that trouble was feared there and askad that the Governor order but the MledgeTille company of militia. The Governor tod his informant. that such a request -would have to come from the sheriff of Baldwin county. The Governor was. surrounded in his home by about a dozen friends, nearly every one of wbom was Srm ed with a rifle or plstoL The unex pected arrival of a member of the mob at a dark' corner of the front porch caused the. Governor himself to hastily pick up a large pistol. In front of the Governor's house ere more than 100 automobiles filled ith persons evidently there to see That the crowd would do.. The troops tod great difficulty in clearing the road of these machines and many of their orders were met with the retort of "shoot!" A crowd estimated at 700 men and toys reached Governor Slatlon's coun try home on Peachtree road about 10:45. a force of county police was on the large estate and the crowd made no effort to get into the grounds, standing outside and shouting. . ' Governor Slaton's Statement. Governor Slaton still was. at hl3 country home when he announced nis decision on the case " over the telephone to The Associated Press, to making this announcement the governor dictated the following brief statement: .. ."All that I ask is that the people Georgia read my statement of the jfasons why I commuted Leo M. 'rank's, death sentence to life im- Pnsonment, before they- pass judg ment. -"Feeling as I do about this case I JHd be a murderer- if I allowed s man to hang. It may mean that imust live in obscurity the rest .of J? days, but I would rather be plow Jn a field than to feel for -the rank m or my life that f had that man's '00d on my hands." Pernor Slaton issued a statement Proximately 15,000 words explaln- nis action. He maintained there reasonable doubt of Frank's guilt tfthe e murdpr nf Mqto Ty, nron XIo H a. Tted mUCh ff ,a ofnfnmnnf V.t fart the neern Jamoi Pnnlov mht hav e Played in the 7.iTri . - - wuv lllUV. hafli Canie several nours after Frank . 11 been Serrptlv Voiron fmrn tlio 4qI1 h,.. "J wuau 1.1 uu UQ jail nere anH v . - x. . . . 'arm uuuieu lo tne state prison pti ?l Mille(igeville. ; Frank was sen- ho uaugcu uere June 22 ior 'ue ItlUHor. t -rki.l.--. 1913 iviary -nagan. in April, Dorsey Issues Statement. Victor r.nB-i -n . Uted tti CAai wnwji wno pros nv! 1, Frank' issued a statement in Lv 'L ue declared that "the action of k f ; numPrn? th.e 3udS" SM ovc 411(1 Iedral courts the ot f g -ne recommendations fcprerpJ . ard of Pardons was Cant ? td" He added that no de the .he 1118 recollection had had stat! l?f.more. Weals to both ttUU leaeral courts. r BAR SHIPMENTS OF GOODS TO HOLLAND MUST BE CONSIGNED TO HOb ? LAND OVERSEAS TRUST TO GET THROUGH. : WILL AFFECT ALL THE TRADE Not- Only Contraband But All Other Goods Included in OrderControl . Neutral Exports. t - London.,- An order-in-council is about to. be issued ; prohibiting ex portation of all goods to Holland ex cept those" consigned to The . Nether lands Overseas Trust. It is expected to stop the trade now believed to be passing through Holland into Ger many. An announcement to ' this ef fect was made in the House of Com mons by Capt E. G. Pretyman, Parlia mentary Under-Secretary to the Board of Trade. Exportation of good sto The Netherlands Overseas Trust would equivalent to a guarantee that nc goods either in the form received 01 in a subsequent jform, would reach a country hostile to Great Britain. Cap tain Pretyman madev the announce ment In introducing. the customs ex portation restriction bill." He : ex plained that ; a partial arrangement ith The Netherlands trust had been m operation for some time and that the British Consul had made a favor able report on it. He added that the bill would en lAle extension of similar control over exports to other neutral countries. Provision is made in the bill for a ffhe of $2,500 or imprisonment for two years for violation of its terms. Consigners v and shippers will be equally responsible. ' Mr. Pretyman said it was proposed not only to 'regulate the number of consignments exported but to keep a careful record "of the" amount of each article going to certain countries and to prohibit further exportation im mediately it appeared that more of any article was going to any country than could normally be - consumed there. . .. A special committee will be ap pointed to deal with licenses for ex porting cotton. Mr. Pretyman said all cotton products would be on the pro hibited lists. - ' The bill passed all stages. MEXICANS DENY REPORTS. General Gonzales is Marching Toward '- : Capital. Ordered to Halt. Washington. Denials of friction in the Carranza ranks and of dissention among Villa leaders were made by the Mexican agencies here. The be lief still prevailed in official quarters, however, that the breach between General Obregon. and Carranza had not been healed and that the depart ure of Gen. Felipe-Angeles fr6m the camp of General Villa this time was an important military, if not political loss. " ' Other advices say that Gen. Pablo Gonzales, the Carranza commander marching against Mexico City, who was ordered to ' halt until Carranza reorganized his Cabinet, has gone ahead and is now reported within a few miles of the Capital. Communi cation behind him to Vera Cruz Is cut. This development is regarded as ominous in official quarters. The Carranza authorities at Vera Cruz claim the lines were cut by the Zap ata forces but other information r re ceived by the United States Govern ment indicates that General Gonzales cut his own communications; .. New Constitution in Tennessee. Nashville, Tenn. By authority of a recent act of ; the Legislature, Gover nor Tom C. Rye called an election for the first Thursday in August 1916, at which the people will vote on . the question of calling, a convention to frame a new constitution. Frank Under Care of a Physician. Mllledgeville,. Ga Leo M. Frank now is under the care of the prison physician here.' His condition was declared to be too. serious for -him to be sent to the fields to work .with other prisoners for a week for more. Seven Enlisted Men Arrested. New York. S even men who are alleged to have enlisted at San Fran cisco as British veterans were arrest: ed by special agents pt the Depart ment of Justice. They were en route to England. Assistant District Attor ney Wood said an investigation of al-' leged ; breaches " of neutrality was . in progress iff San Francisco. The men arrested here he asserted were wanted as witnesses. They .were arrigned and held in 500 baiieach for appear ance before the Federal grand Jury in San Francisco. ' w TRYON, POLE COUNTY, N. LEO M. FRANK Leo M. Frank, who was sentenced to die for the murder of Mary. Fagan is now in the state prison. His sen tence was commuted by: Governor ' ' Slaton. ; - - - ' WILL MAINTAIN DIGNITY MEXICANS WILL OBJECT IF WIL SON'S WARNING SHOULD MEAN THREAT. Vllla-Zapata Convention Willing to Co-operate With Other Factions to End War. ' j ! Washington. The United States Government was informed by Fran cisco Charazo, President of ' the Vila Zapata convention in Mexico City, that if President Wilson's recent warning to- Mexican factions: to com pose their differences should signify "pressure or , threat" the Convention Government "still harboring the con science of its sacrifices, will maintain the dignity of the Mexican : people." After declaring a .willingness to make peace with the Carranza fac tion the note says in part: "The Conventionist Government does not see, does not wish to see, in the substance of .the declarations made by President Wilson . anything more than an advice, a friendly sug gestion to induce the contending groups to wipe out "their differences and lead them into the path to the end pursued by the revolution. Com ing to the declaration that if we Mex icans can not settle our differences within a very short time the Govern ment of the American Union will find itself constrained to decide as to what means it shall use to bring it about, the Conventionist Government can not understand how President Wilson previously declares in the same note that the United States does not desire or claim any right to settle the affairs of Mexico and more to the same ef fect. The same chief of the American Nation made at Indianapolis the fol lowing categorical declarations : "I am proud to belong to a pow erful Nation which says that Mexico which1 we could crush, will enjoy the same liberty in the management of its affairs as we enjoy. If I am strong I should be ashamed to dictate to the weak in the measure of my strength. My pride consists In keeping my strength free and ndt in oppressing another people with it.' i -. ; . "If . contrary to the interpretation which in the most friendly sense the Conventionist Government puts upon President Wilson's declarations, this closing- part should signify a denial of the instinctive sympathy generous ly demonstrated to the Mexican rev olution and should ' further signify pressure or threat, the Conventionist Government still harboring the con science of its sacrifices will maintain the dignity of the Mexican people. We continue, however, to conjecture that the general idea of the Government of the United States is to help us in a friendly way to bring to an end our fratricidal struggle which would be for the greatest good of the coun try. The government is ready to bring about by all means consistent with its ' dignity r the fusion of all the contending groups, to initiate all the economic, political and social reforms .aimed at by the revolution and to establish a strong stable government with which all tendencies and all legi timate interests will find the fullest favor and enjoy the guarantees whicb our fundamental law provides.' warneford Is Killed In Fliaht. II M - w Paris. Lieut. Reginald A. J. Warne fordr 'who gained fame - recently by blowing to pieces a Zeppelin over Bel--araa ihiIaiI hv the fall of an aero- IAXU ii m - Diane at Buc. France. 1 ' " ' " 0., FBmAY,- &UNE 25, 1915. "GRANDFATHER" LAW . x . ' i.'. . . . SUPREME COURT ANNULS THE 'FAMOUS y OKtiAHOM A RACE ' .' r LW. ' DECISION WAS UNANIMOUS - ' - Chief Justice WHte Announces Decis 'ion Whih Uphlojds Conviction of Oklahoma Officials. Washington. iJ .probably on of ttie most important race decisions in isi history, the supreme court annulled as unconstitutional the Oklahoma con stitutional amendment and the An napolis, Md., voters' qualification law restricting the suffrage rights of those w)to could not vote or whose ancestors could not vote prior to the ratification of the Fifteenth I Amendment to the federal constitution; Chief Justice White, a native of the South, and a formjer Confederate sol dier, announced the court's decision, which was unanimous except that Justice MReynols took no part in the case." -V-li;;' ; "It is true," continued the chief justice, "that it contains no express words of an exclusion from the stand ard which it establishes of any person on account of raej color, or previous condition ot servitude prohibited by the -Fifteenth Amendment, but the standard itself inherently brings that result in to existence since it Is based purely upon a . pejriod of thne before the enactment tof the r Fifteenth Amendment and nakes that period the - controlling and-; dominant test of the right of suffrae.. ' - "In other words we seek ' in vain for any ground which would sustain any other interpretation but that the provision, recurring to the conditions existing before thja Fifteenth. Amend ment was adopted and the continu ance of which thi Fifteenth Amend ment prohibited, proposed by, in sub stance and effect, lifting these condi tions over a periojl , of time after the amendment to make them the basis of the right to suffrage conferred in direct and' positiv disregard for the Fifteenth Amendment. And the same result, we are of opinion, is demon strated by considering whether it is possible to discover; any basis of rea son for the standard thus fixed other than the purpose 1?ove stated. "We say this because we are un able to discover hov unless the pro hibitions of the Fifteenth Amendment were considered, tfte slightest reason was afforded for bingVthe classifica tion upon a periodJSf time prior to the Fifteenth Amendment. Certainly it cannot be said thafj there was any pe culiar necromancy (i the time named which engender attributes affecting the qualification tof Vote which would not exist at anothe5rfand different pe riod unless the Fifteenth Amendment was view." !. f "; -T ... LAUNCH BATTLESHIP ARIZONA. Big New Superdryeadnaught Glides lntp5ater.: . New,. York. The i new battleship Arizona was succef ully launched at the Brooklyn Navy Ifard. The Arizona shares with her leister ship, the Pennsylvania, recently launched at Newport News, the 5ionor of being the world's largest battleship. She went to the river with the wine and water of her cjristening tricking in rivulets down hler bow from two broken bottles thattswung, bound to gether by a long rd, white and blue cord of silk. Misi' Esther Ross of Prescott, Ariz., theti sponsor made a fair throw as the bihull quivered and slid slowly forward.fi; the froth of the wine spattered her'j'gown and the clothes of those, in per party. From the grandstand the : christen ing was withessed y Secretary Dan iels, army and nav officers, ; Gpvern nor Hunt, Senator jhurst and others ' . ' :. , Lansing in Lifie Tor Job. Washington. Prefdent Wilson was understood to haveBJylrtually decided on Robert - Lansingp as Secretary , of State to succeed ' William Jennings Bryan. Dummy Cut Down and Burned. Marietta, Ga.- A life-sized' dummy bearing in the Inscription "John M. Slaton, ; Georgia's Titor Governor" was burned in the prublic square here by 'a small crowd off men. The effigy was hanged to a telegraph pole on the edge of the square after the news was received of the confutation of Leo M.; Frank's death slitence. The -pck lice made no attempt6 interfere with the crowd when they cut down the dummy and set fire'tfi it near the base of the monument ofjj the late Senator Alexandr S. Clay". , . MISS ESTHER ROSS Mls Esther Ross of Prescott, Ariz., was jseiected by Governor Hunt to christen the new battleship Arizona at the. Brooklyn navy yard on June 19. Miss Rosa Is only seventeen years old. BRI ISil PREPARE ANSWER REPliY TO AMERICAN NOTE OF ARCH 30 PROTESTING AGAIN SJ BLOCKAD E. Expected That England Will' Soon Dispatch Explanation of the Cause ! For Her Big Blockade. , Washington. It was stated offi cially that there had been intimations from (reat Britain recently that a re ply mijght be forthcoming soon to the American note of March 30 protesting against the illegality of the order fn council in its Testruction on honcon trabana commerce with Germany through neutral countries. . - Officials have been preparing an answer? to the British notes which pre ceded jthe issuance of the order in council and covering j the academic principles : as they were affected by the law of contraband and continuous voyage. The United States has never admitted the right of the allies to de tain cargoes of contraband consign ed to neutral ports when enemy-' des tination is not proved and several cases still are pending in which that principle is involved. The close rela tion ofj the order in council, prohibit ing' noncontraband commerce with Germany, to the traffic in contraband article with neutral countries,; has caused officials to combine all phases of these . questions in a single note which s expected to be sent as soon as all data is obtained and when the situation with- Germany is clarified. The possibility that Germany may sug gest aj modus vivendi whereby sub marine! warfare may be abandoned if the almes order in council were re voked ;and the usual laws of contra band put into effect Is one of the con siderations which have . delayed the dispatch of the "American note to Great Britain 'until tne Germany reply to the J last communication from the United iStates is at hand. U. Si Mail Opened in England. Washington. Formal notice that United iStates mail pouches destined for Swejden had been broken open Jm England and their contents tampered with, wis. submitted to the state de department by W. A. F. Ekengren, the Swedishi minister, with a request for appropriate action. The minister called at the depart ment and delivered to Secretary Lansing I a letter written on instruct tions frpm ; nis government, ' reciting instances of- interference with mail for Sweden and pointing out .-that such acts were in " violation, of the provisions of the World . Postal Con ventiofli and of other treaty stipula tions! I The letter stated that t ; the seals of mall bags were broken, that letters were opened and censored, and that one registered unit was retained. While Various" reports have been in circulation as to the interference with .mail since the outbreak of hostilities in Europe! the 'protest from Sweden is the first1 official communication on the subject.1 & .ii. :;-. : . - . - . .. v . ....... L . . . . . - ESTABLISHED MAY, 1894. SURE OF SUCCESS NOT SINCE BEFORE BATTLE OF MARNE HAVE ALLIES BEEN SO CONFIDENT. KAISER TAKES UP COMMAND German Emperior Has Established His Headquarters as Near Front as is Practicable. LondjonJ After seven weeks' batter ing across Galicia 1 during which the Russians -have been thrown back more than 150 miles the Austro-Ger-mans are as close to Lemberg as were " the Germans to Paris last Fall. Never perhaps since before the battle of the Marne, have the Teutonic Allies ap peared so confident of success. Hav ing failed in theor original plan of . crushing . France and then returning to Russia, they have reversed the order of their strategy and now judging bjr the expenditure of life and ammuni tion in Galicia they have pinned their whole faith on paralyzing the Russian army to permit the throwing of a tre mendous weight of men and metal Into the west, there either to break through the Franco-British line, or force an in terminable, period of sanguinary war fare, v - ."''' '-'-,'- V' A - dispatch from Copenhagen say that the German Emperor Tiimself has taken supreme command of the "Gali cian campaign, establishing his . head quarters in Silesia as near to the front as practicable- Meanwhile the German official com munication reports the - further prog ress of the German-Austrian troops toward Lemberg.. It claims as well that the Russians have been cleared from parts of the Dneister. , I TEUTONIC ALLIES ANTI-GERMAN MOBS AT MOSCOW. w Wreck 500 Stores; $20,000,000 Worth ' r of Damage. -' Petrograd, . via " Londan. Moscow suffered damage to the amount .of ?20,000,000 during the recent anti German demonstrations in which near ly 500 stores and factories and more than 200 private lodgings were wreck ed;;. '- The infuriated mobs turned th city into wild disorder, according to eye-witnesses. From music stores, pianos and other-musical instruments were hurled Into the streets until the piles of wreckage made traffic im possible. The rioters, heated with liquor found in the demolished wine stores, became reckless in their pillaging, burning many 'stores and apartments, the owners of which were Russians.. Of the total number of buildings de stroyed only 113 belonged to Austro German subjects. . The demonstrations beginning early on June 9 lasted more than 24 hours. Buildings were burned nd crumbled . to ashes, and the fire departments although active throughout the dis turbances fund, It impossible to cope with the flames. - Bryan Speaks at Carnegie Hall. - New York. William Jennings Bry an, addressing a labor peace meeting a: Carnegie Hall htr 2, attacked form- er Presidents l(osevlt and Taft as leading sponsors cf organizations which stood for the use of force in In ternational affairs, and which the for mer secretary of state declared, wer . inimical to the true interests of this country and to the cause of interna- v. tional peace. .-.' . -'; ' New Orleans Gets Federal Bank. Washington. After several week' consideration the federal reserve board intends to authorize the Atlanta Fed eral reserve bank to open' a branch in, New Orleans.' No final .vote has been taken on the proposal,- but it was un derstood there is practically; no oppo sition to It among the board members. Floods in Middle West. Kansas City. Twenty-four, hours of only negligible rain " in Eastern Kan sas and Western Missouri "gave some relief from fears of large flood damage by waters of the Kansas and Missouri Rivers.. : . " -'''Ay Xr . Automobiles '. for Rufal Routes. Washington. Automobile rural mail delivery routes will be establish ed in many parts of the country be ginning August 2. It was announced that orders had been signed by Post master General Burleson authorizing the-operation of 105 machines on that date. . Preparations are being carried forward for. installation of the automo bile in the rural mail service wherever the roads will permit. Already some carriers are using automobiles on their routes. J t t, . - mm