00:00Police still withhold evidence. Frank to be examined on new lines, Atlanta, Georgian,
00:04Thursday, May 8, 1913. Witnesses are quizzed in detail, but nothing important brought out.
00:10Officials say they are satisfied with case as it is being developed. Whatever evidence the
00:15police officials may have directly to connect any of the suspects with the killing of Mary Fagan,
00:19it was not produced at the early session of the coroner's inquest Thursday.
00:23What this evidence is, the officials refuse to say, except that they are satisfied with the
00:28progress that is being made in unraveling the mystery. Leo Frank, superintendent of the National
00:35Pencil Factory, is expected to be the most important witness of the day. It is said that an entirely new
00:41line of questioning will be taken up. B.W., Boots, Rogers, former county policeman, and Lemmy Quinn,
00:48foreman in the tipping department at the National Pencil Factory, were the principal witnesses.
00:53Neither gave testimony that was materially damaging to either Leo M. Frank or Newt Lee,
00:58who were being held in connection with the crime. Rogers was questioned closely of the events of
01:03the morning the crime was discovered, and told of taking the officers to the scene in his automobile.
01:08Beyond his belief that Frank appeared nervous when he was visited at his home by the detectives,
01:14Rogers had no information that appeared to point suspicion in one direction more than another.
01:18He was sure, however, that the time clock tape on which Newt Lee, the night watchman,
01:24registered his half-hour rounds of the factory, had no misses when it was taken from the clock by Frank
01:30that morning. Three misses were found on a tape subsequently brought to police headquarters.
01:36Quinn's story unchanged. An effort was made without a veil to break down the story of Lemmy Quinn that
01:42he was at the factory, and talk to Frank between 12.10 and 12.20, the Saturday afternoon of the
01:47tragedy.
01:49Coroner Dunhu tried to get Quinn to admit that he previously had told officers who interviewed him
01:53that he was not at the factory between Friday and the following Sunday. Quinn steadfastly refused to
01:59admit that he had made a statement of the sort. He supported Frank's testimony of last Monday by
02:04insisting that he visited the factory for a few minutes and went into Frank's office.
02:09Miss Hattie Hall, the stenographer who was at the factory office Saturday until noon,
02:13was another of the witnesses called to the stand during the forenoon. She testified as to Frank's
02:19movements while she was there. Frank pale, but calm. Frank was brought into the commissioner's
02:24room in the police station before the inquest began, but later was excused and Rogers called.
02:29The factory superintendent was pale, but calm and collected. He whispered a few words to his
02:35counsel, Luther Z. Rosser, and smiled faintly at a remark that was made to him. He appeared to show
02:40the strain of the days since he has been in a cell. Lee was not admitted to the room at
02:44the beginning
02:45of the hearing, but was detained in a nearby office. The night watchman seemed almost indifferent.
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