Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Member of the Seripps Northweat League of Newspapers Published Daily by Ti Phone Mal Joy for John Jr. ee IONGRATULATIONS to John Rockefeller, Jr., over the safe arrival of his sixth child, his fifth | WHATS so FUNN @ ~~ N “Tom ore BUT You WERE A FI;NNY LOOKING LITTLE BRAT WHEN Nou \WERE A KID boy! It would be much better were it the 60th chil 50th boy. Large numbers of children in families Of enormous wealth are highly desirable. Chil dren are great dividers, and the greater the division the greater the chances of other folks getting a Slice. The children of multi-millionaire families are useful as dividers, and the more there are of them in such a family the greater their likelihood of rip ping up a will passing the fortune along in bulk. Grandpa Rocketeller should be congratulated on increase of grandchildren, too. He will be able to save. something by buying birthday presents at wholesale prices. eee es Pat Sees the Light TAKES a man of broad when he discovers STAR—MONDAY, EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE SEATTLE Stella and Gertie a res, GERTIE THIS IS SOME | acu’ week WE ave |COASTING ALONG WuiLe THE POOF BOvs SLAVE NOTRE. © Nees it candidly \ Of small caliber clutches at any straw “to save his face father than confess a mistake It is for this reason that will begin to revise its former opinion of Pat McHugh, the ntractor Pat is a bigger man than most of us had supposed he was. He was big enough to admit he had the wrong in the way he had nducting his road Camps and in hiring cheap labor Voluntarily, he has informed the im the future he will give the preference of to Seattle citizens who are married Pat frankly admits he has seen the light For years this big, healthy, wealthy contractor | he has been in error, t man road cc been in been ¢ that employment city officials followed in the rut established by other contract ying as little as possible to employes. For years, Mc ugh has been permitted to conduct his business on just that sort of a basis without any particular public criti cism. But when the light was turned on—when the Mi Hugh methods received public censure—MecHugh be gan to think, and he admits he has been wrong His frank admission stamps him as a man, who « if he really wants to, be of commendable service t community x Show Us, Wm. | if William Jennings Bryan wants to prove that he’s the real candy kid in the peace line, let him take on the job of bringin If he can pull it off succe the oe, Se. & and Villa t siully, and stop the scrap Ping next door to us, most everybody will be willi t mt his qualifications for the greater task in Europe tt us have a sample of the goods, as it were * 6 cd * * . ER something that has us guessi again. When the European war broke out, wheat, as everyt knows, went up almost out of sight. Now mere rumor that President Wilson's note to Germany would lead to war, sends wheat down six cents a bushel. We can iguess the weather, sometimes, but what wheat will d never. oe £6 2 8 WE SINCERELY wish the government would quit Nissuing statistics on the goat industry in America. Every ime we read them we change our order from spring Mlamb to liver and bacon **e* & & & * A NEW YORK dist We've ict attorney declares | are mental aids. noticed that after a man swal Ows four he is liable to think almost anything * * * * * * WE OBSERVE by reading Old Art Brisbane's stu‘f that Mr. Bryan was wrong and Mr. Wilson was wr d- Mr. Hoist exactly right a ces ee @ 4 | HAVING LOST 7,500,000 men thus far, Europe ought sto begin figuring on what will happen when the others go * * * +t a * AN ILLINOIS plow manufacturing plant has changed into a shrapnel factory; beating our plowshares int Leo M. Frank in the center; in upper left-hand corner, little Mary me’ | Phagan, for the murder of whom ~ | Frank was convicted; below, Sheriff Wheeler Mangum, who had been | scheduled to spring the death trap in upper right-hand corner, Mrs. Leo |M, Frank, whose long fight to save her husband has at last been suc cessful; below her, Gov. John M | Staton, . ANCER. 2. oie oe CONTINUED —— |} FROM PAGE 1 | Don’t Let Your Truss." ___ Make Operation Necessary tomorr rrow Opz2iation fer rupture wou'i hardly ever be heard of if it weren « De Yi which was scheduled for | ‘The sun was just coming up os Frank and Sheriff Mangum enter Ei miischie: aone by elac:'> and spring, truss ed the Milledgeville farm gates at }4:30 this morning Mighty few people ever to be} a of le * aon 0 The trip from Macon was made EAE tececenstt srpeses year] the corse of belle. lap tir ear emit |in @ taxicab, which Frank se year is sooner or later almost sure| How it i perap mand water, | lected le make work for the surgeor root, and in the bath. Mow ou Takes News Calmly eee Snow that from your own ex. jean try Kt 60 days without having to risk! eangum told reporters Frank's probably «etting worse sentence had been commuted “for the time being. The prisoner took the the commutation calmly i) | This, Free Book Is Full of Facts news of Never Before Put in Print ve if rigger Ag have learned His jailers said he hardly gave a can) erence re Guring 40 years of ex-lany evidence of being relieved of i : why saitic ond the terrific strain under which he havi k mp ptured rr must have been laboring a There much speculation as to car) te Prove nethods. cote . the next step which will be taken foe ved it te ' operat It is believed his friends will con (hee pega en rth . tinue their efforts until they suc SEMMEIEL Shir waving to be operated on. Poo ceed in having the case reopened Bede has 60 thoroughly proved ite merits| truss in some way, possibly thru new What we are willing to send it on 40 days’| | {1 shows why 60 days’ trint te the evidence. PO We'll make st expecially for aso—| en th io oe coming out way, then Don’t Send Any Mone Bimply tell | i OF FRANK CASE Young Leo M. Frank was |tendent and part owner of the Na uperin write f everything 4 want This Brings tional pencil factory in Atlanta. He : : a Fic dew Hox 994, CLUTHE A 4 j}was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., and tly and a COMPANY graduated at Cornell university ni Healy every strnin « 1 oaslbly he forced how in addition |) provides the ever Macovered for overcoming. news which is His residence in Atlanta extended over only six during which » he had married and establishe Book and Fries §| time he b A nd established himeelf among his business associ at a w York City # years 14 me your Fr Otte , ates a thoro-going, intelligent, MMM saa i Servackdasariiaasei > reputable young man. He is now about 30. Addrons In the metal room of the National ae YG arrangements for the ex.’ | WONDEF. [uate tae 2 S\NOISE was | ‘ pencil factory a pretty girl of 14, Mary Phagan, operated one of the machines. At 30 on the morning of Sunday, 1913, Newt Lee, watchman pencil factory building, found the crumpled-up body of a girl in |the basement. It was Mary Phagan | ‘The girl's clothing was badly torn and part of her body exposed. A blood clot covered a gash on her head that might have been inflicted with a penknife on her body City Cries for Vengeance At about this time Atlanta |thoroly aroused by the perpetration of three revolting crimes against | women—the culmination of a neries of over a dozen murders within a |year in which the police hag failed to attach the guilt in any ip The mayor declared that tits was the day of reckoning for the police and that out they would go if the murderer was not ferreted out and expeditiously hanged Mobs swarmed the cussing the case Jim” Conley, a shiftless negro, who was given to desultory employ |ment about the factory, was found |the next day at the factory in the |questionable process of washing some stains from a shirt When cross-examined, Conley ac cused Frank of the murder. was streets, dis The Negro's Story Conley's testimony was in effect thi Fy k w given to immoral prac. ice id he had let Conley bi he after Mary Phagan Frank called him into his confide: the day preceding th murder and told the r ro the Phagan girl was com. ing to the factory the next day, and that while she was in his office on the second floor, Conley was to stand guard in the hallway | Frank, having the Phagan girl in There were numerous wounds) JUNE 21, 1915. PAGE 4, 'A Married Man’s Troubles ‘ ‘ . : ; ; F ; : SPEAWING OF COMIC VALENTINES, © WHAT WAS THAT On Nour. UPPER. LIP WHEN You WERE ABOUT , TWENTY-ONE & 4 THERE COMES ) THE CAPTAIN LETS asKw WAS TKAY RACKET 2 \ Rox - RUDDER. day! - iy carrier, city, 260 = montt THAT \ ALL THE TIME ANL NOBODY | (WILL See ir! —— a = ~\ e | | | set to work to get at least a com- mutation of his sentence from death to one of life imprisonment Thousands upon thousands of pe- titions from every part of the coun- non the pardon board and to the governor personally eee You can't beat it fo: Holly wood 2 Pike | kel—} an Ice Cream Adv Soda— |Pe tof etty, one yomr, 84.505 90; She per month np t fle, Wash By Allman fa [Si DONT, Tae Aaa 5 ng ITS UNDER WATER GOVERNOR OF GEORGIA SAVES LEO FRANK; THREATENING MOBS FILL ATLANTA STREETS MINING MAN WORTH $3,000,000 IS DEAD SPOKANE, June 21—John A. Finch, 61, sald to have been the wealthiest mining man in the Northwest, is dead today at his immer home at Hayden Lake, Idaho. His estete is said to be $3,000,000 Beef Roll A New Way of Using Left Overs By Mrs. Fauet McKenzie Hill, Lditor of the Boston Cooking School Magatine Every housewife finds the dis- position of left overs a most per- plexing problem. K C Beef Roll will go a long ways toward help- ing you out when the family get tired of hash and stews. You worth more thi jreally ought to try it for supper tonight or tomorrow night at the latest. 45 Three cups fowr 1 tra stoonrulr AC Baking Pow revel milk; I oupecch, ¢ 1 teaspoonful ® om: M heaspoonsul cack, salt é broth or water Make a biscuit dough of the flour, ralt, K C baking powder, shortening and milk, and roll into a sheet half an inch -hick, having the ends even. Mix the j other ingredients by themselves, using iquid as needed to make a paste. Spread the paste over the ugh and oll like a jelly roll. Bakeina buttered man about forty minutes. Brush over ie outside with a little beaten egg left or the purpose and return to the oven o brown. Serve hot with a rich brown auce. Other meats, such as chicken or eal, alone, or in combination, may be ised. The onion and mustard may be mitted. 4 , Ninety recipes just think ‘mous cooking authority, Mrs. Jn MIN, sent free w ifcate nacked 10¢ Can U K O Hand Soap .... For dirty or kettles, bathtubs, etc. This office, told Conley to come aty At the trial the crowd was intense the stamp of his foot and unlock the/in its antagonism toward Frank. door. Conley dozed off to sleep and, The jurymen bad their attention dis. was awakened to find his master tracted by men in the audience who ping the negro excitedly with the | shouted You'd better hang the point of his right shoe |Jew. If you don’t, we'll hang him so easily, imy hands, woodwork No use scrubbing so hard when U K O makes it come off Se 25¢ Ready-to-Use Wonder Polishing Cloth » 10¢ I guess I hit her too hard, and and get you, too.” Specially prepared for cleaning and pol- she’s lying on the floor in the ma Wives of jurymen received threat ng brass, copper and nickel. Said to chine room,” was the gist of Con-| ening telephone Ns and notes s much work as one gallon of metal ley’s remembrance of what his mas- from the outraged citizen h ter rad said Refused Another Tr 75 Sterling Rotary Bicycle Bell The case of the state rested al. Frank Is Locked Up ! most entirely upon the testimony of te one. | Conley went into the room and ™ ‘6 asa p . one prin oe n found the girl dead Caney, Wa0) a hye 35¢ 7-16 Caldwell’s Lightni The chabae ‘aaa coalt 1 and said| Statements, contradicted himself in The fs ; ightning Auger Bit . ® maste 8 excited and said he fastest boring bit at a saving of 50% many detail Conley was admittedly a drunk urd, His habits were proved to be most disreputable Yet his testimony prevailed over that of Frank, against whose hither. to upright character not one word of substantiated accusation was brought At the conclusion of the case—and constitutional lleged to have been de judge had Frank re-| g! as not to be pres to wrap the girl up in a gunnysack, and the two would take the body down to the basement furnace for burning. This they did, and Conley promis ed to return and burn the girl's body, but got drunk on the money} Frank gi him and forgot to And forthwith Frank was locked Up as a suspect Immediately the and erled for the Frank was removed from one jail to another and the state militia was notified to be in readiness at a mo-| ett When the verdict was read ment’s call to prevent mob violence.| After hours’ deliberation, | On Monday evening, July 28, 1913,) the Jury returned a verdict of guilty, | the personnel of the jury which was| That was August 26, 1913 | to ry Frank was agreed upon Since that time efforts were mags hed Bittern abcd on five occasions to get Frank a new trial, without success | The attorneys for the defense de clared they had new evidence that | would show, without the question of a doubt, that their client was inno. Prices. SPINNING’S CASH here was where his rights populace death of Frank moved to jail Silver Fillings .... .25c cont | Recently a supreme court Justice of the United States, Justice Holmes, declared that he was under the im sion that Frank's trial Cal at Me Right Drug Co. 169 | Ad been irregular We ure nothing but the best mate Washington st, near Becond ave, | ‘The federal court Judges and the) fl !« res & pertod of 18 yeare Al Platinas Piling and have the ex-government plysl-| state supreme ¢ urt judges in Geor clan diagnose your eano and prescribe | Oe to m4, for you absolutely without charge, alibi ald Pe dl Falsines Mewecneg Feen @ want your patronage and of- | ine. Examinations und Estimates Free. fer you y With all hope of relief in the e " | induce Lo lor the Yellow Front. courts lost, friends of Frank then| ATTEND TO YOUR TEETH While We Are CUTTING THE CUT RATE PRICES UNION DENTISTS—Cor. Third and Pike. . 440 Any little lady or gentleman will appro. it will pay you well to take advantage of Spinning’s Close-Out P Glad to have you make us an offer on any article in stock. Cash Register, Fixtures, Auto, etc., all to be sold. TEN DURHAM DUPLEX OR ONE DOZEN OTHER SAFETY RAZOR BLADES SHARPENED, 250 FOURTEEN FIFTEEN FOURTH STORE NOW Gol Crowns.......$3 UNION DENTISTS—30514 Pike St., Corner of Third Ave and guna " Sets of Teeth Entrance 30544 Pike St, om.