00:00Secret Hunt by Burns and Mystery is Likely. Atlanta, Georgian, Wednesday, May 14, 1913.
00:05Probably will not reveal presence in city as he investigates Fagan case.
00:10Colonel Thomas B. Felder said Wednesday that Detective William J. Burns had not arrived as
00:14yet in New York from his European trip, but that as soon as he did, he undoubtedly would start at
00:19once for Atlanta to work upon the Mary Fagan strangling mystery. Colonel Felder is acquainted
00:24with the day and the hour on which the famous sleuth will reach this city, but for the purposes
00:28of the investigation, he is withholding the information. There was no authority for the
00:34statement that Detective Burns would be in New York Tuesday, said Colonel Felder. The date of
00:39his arrival has been known in my office, but it had not been made public. It is quite likely that
00:44the great detective will come quietly and unannounced into the city, make his investigation of the
00:49mystery and slip out before many persons are aware from their own knowledge that he has been working
00:54on the case. In touch with Burns Agency, Colonel Felder has been in constant touch with Raymond
01:00Burns, son of the detective, who is secretary and treasurer of the Burns Agency and has offices in
01:07New York. The agency is being placed in possession of the important new developments in the mystery as
01:12rapidly as they occur. An outline of the whole case will be laid before Burns the instant that he
01:17arrives at his New York offices. That increasing importance is being attached to the notes that were
01:22found beside the dead body of Mary Fagan was indicated Wednesday, when several handwriting experts
01:28were called before Solicitor General Hugh M. Dorsey. An expert testified at the coroner's inquest that he
01:35notes, in his opinion, were written by Newt Lee, the night watchman at the National Pencil Factory.
01:40The expert was corroborated by the unofficial testimony of two other experts. The solicitor, however,
01:47has not been satisfied with the evidence he had on this important point. Experts were found who
01:52disagreed with the conclusions presented to the coroner's jury. The writing in the notes found near
01:58the body of Mary Fagan, they declared, was much better than the normal writing of Newt Lee.
02:03Difference in the slant. The writing showed evidence of education and training which Lee did not possess.
02:09Lee would have had to be under instruction for two or three months, they said, before he could show the
02:13improvement that is evident between the test specimen of his handwriting and the handwriting of
02:18the notes. Lee's normal handwriting shows a decided slant. That of the notes closely approaches the
02:24perpendicular. The final letter in each of the words written by Lee ended abruptly. The final letters
02:30in the notes were rounded acrefully, indicating a considerable instruction in penmanship. A poem said
02:36to have been written by Mary Fagan will form one of the specimens of her handwriting, which will be
02:41compared with the notes found in the basement of the National Pencil Factory. The poem is entitled
02:45My Pa, and Mary is said by her stepfather J. W. Coleman to have been the author. The poem follows,
02:52My P. A. ain't no millionaire, but gee, he's awful smart. He ain't no carpenter, but he can fix a
02:57feller's cart. He ain't no doctor, but you can bet he handwriting of Fagan notes examined solicitor
03:02General Dorsey, working on new clue in the factory slaying mystery. Continued from page one.
03:08Alice knows just what to do to fix a boy what's got a bloody nose. My P. A. ain't president
03:12because,
03:13he says, he never run, but he could do as well as any president has done. A president may beat
03:18my P. A. at piling up the vote, but he can't beat him, I will bet, a whittling out a
03:22boat.
03:23My P. A. ain't rich, but that's because he never tried to be. He ain't no electrician,
03:27but one day he fixed the telephone for me. My P. A. ain't never wrote a book, but I know
03:31he could,
03:32because the stories that he tells to me are all as powerful good. My P. A. knows everything,
03:36I guess, and you bet I don't care, because he ain't president or rich as any millionaire.
03:40Whenever things go wrong, my P. A. can make him right, you see. And if he ain't rich or president,
03:45my pa's good enough for me, woman witness excited. Mrs. Mary Barrett, the woman who is said to have
03:51been in the factory the Saturday afternoon that Mary Fagan was killed, was in a state of great
03:56excitement when she emerged from the office of solicitor Dorsey Tuesday afternoon. She had been
04:00summoned by the solicitor to tell of what she saw while she was at the factory. It was evident that
04:06she believed her knowledge of the affair had been misrepresented. When she came from the office,
04:10she declared dramatically, if anyone has told any lies on me in connection with this murder,
04:16they will certainly suffer for it. The daughter of Mrs. Barrett was heard to tell the solicitor,
04:21I'll talk with her tonight and then maybe she'll do what you ask.
04:24Move for fingerprint bureau. The police commission at its meeting Tuesday night authorized a thorough
04:29investigation into the advisability of establishing a fingerprint identification system in Atlanta.
04:34This move was made largely as a result of the mystery that has continued to surround the Fagan
04:39case and the possibility that it might have been cleared up within a few days had the city had a
04:44fingerprint expert. There were several distinguishable fingerprints found in the factory basement.
04:49Persons who have had experience in detective work believe that they might have developed the
04:53most valuable clues in establishing the identity of the criminal. Chief of Police Beavers told the
04:59commission of instances in which fingerprints had fixed the guilt of prisoners when there were no other
05:04clues. He was appointed by the commission to work with one of the commissioners in making an
05:08investigation into the feasibility of the bureau plan.
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