00:00Negro watchman is accused by slain girl's stepfather, Atlanta, Georgian, Tuesday, April 29, 1913.
00:07That Mary Fagan never left the factory after she entered it at 12.15 o'clock Saturday, the day of
00:12her murder, and that she was killed and her body dragged into the basement by the Negro night
00:17watchman Newt Lee, now in jail, is the firm belief of the child's stepfather, W.J. Coleman,
00:22and other members of her family. As for Arthur Mullinax, former streetcar conductor, held on
00:28suspicion, Mr. Coleman told a Georgian reporter he thought him innocent of the crime. He was also
00:33very doubtful if J.M. Gant, ex-bookkeeper for the pencil factory where the girl worked, had anything
00:39to do with her murder or knew anything about it. If the Negro watchman did not kill the child,
00:44how would it have been impossible for him to hear her screams going on in the building, he asked.
00:49A livery stableman next door heard them, and it would have been much easier for the watchman to,
00:54if the black did not do it himself, then he must have known something about it, and who the person
00:59was who did it. Outlines theory of murder. Then, in broken tones, for he had just returned from
01:06making all arrangements for taking the girl's body to Marietta, Georgia, to be buried, he outlined
01:11his idea of how she met her death. When Mary turned from the window after receiving her money, he said,
01:17I think that instead of going directly out, she went to the dressing room, perhaps for a drink of
01:23water, as one of the notes found said, Superintendent Frank, missing her when he came out and supposing
01:28she had left the building, locked her in. The Negro watchman must have seen her go into the dressing
01:33room, and a little later seized her and gagged her. Later developments in the story go to show that the
01:38spot where the child's hair was found caught on a steel lathe was not the scene of her struggle with
01:43her
01:43assailant. In the dressing room, it was said by a member of her family, there were plain evidences that the
01:49attack was made. She was also gagged in the room, for a strip of her new lavender dress was cut
01:54off
01:54from the front and bound around her mouth to keep her from screaming, ribbon found near boiler. Another
02:00bit of evidence, it was said, that went to throw added suspicion on the black was a bow of the
02:05child's
02:05blue ribbon and a handkerchief found down near the boiler, where he constantly stayed. The Negro
02:11evidently kept the child in the factory all day, Mr. Coleman said, and was afraid to attack her until
02:16midnight for fear she would scream or somebody would come. He may or may not have knocked her
02:21senseless from the first, or he may have tied her. I do not know, but when Gant entered the shop
02:27it is
02:27more than likely that he knew nothing of the girl's presence there, and simply went up and got his
02:32shoes, as he said, and went out again. All this about Mary having been seen on the street at midnight
02:38or at any other time after twelve o'clock in the day, I do not think can be true. I
02:43believe she
02:43remained all day in the building. After the Negro did the work he was afraid to leave or not to
02:48notify
02:48the police, which would make appearances worse for him. Therefore he called the officers. Now clears
02:53Mullinax. Mr. Coleman said he had at first given credence to a report that Mary had come home at six
02:59o'clock Saturday afternoon, and that Mullinax meeting her as she got off of the car had taken her back
03:05to
03:05town with him. This report, Mr. Coleman said, turned out to be untrue. The conductor had made a mistake,
03:11and the girl Mullinax was with was Miss Pearl Robinson of Bellwood, as he swore in jail. This
03:17was corroborated by the conductor himself, J.C. Horn, 11 Coral Place, on whose car the reporter rode
03:23out to the Coleman home on Lindsay Street. The conductor said that Mullinax and Miss Robinson had
03:28taken his car out, and knowing Mullinax he had talked with him and the girl, who at that time he
03:33thought was Mary Fagan. When Mullinax and Miss Robinson reached their corner, Mullinax remarked that it was a
03:39bit chilly and he was going home to build a fire. It was later that they returned to the theater,
03:44the conductor said, but on whose car he did not know.
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