00:00Fagan case will go to grand jury in present form. Atlanta Journal Saturday, May 17, 1913.
00:06State is apparently ready, as solicitor says that he is not expecting any new evidence for some time.
00:12Burns investigator on the job, says Felder. Attorney declares fund for employment of the
00:17famous sleuth has reached $1,500, about $5,000 is needed, that the state considers its case as
00:25practically complete and is ready to definitely charge the Mary Fagan murder to an individual
00:30and to start the legal machinery moving towards a superior court trial is believed from a very
00:35significant statement made Saturday by solicitor general Hugh M. Dorsey. I haven't learned anything
00:41new in several days and do not expect to for some time, he said. The solicitor is still busy and
00:46practically all of his time is consumed in interviewing witnesses and conferring with the
00:50detectives who are at work on the mystery. The majority of the witnesses examined are people
00:55who testified at the inquest or whose names have been identified with the case from the first.
01:01Among the several witnesses, however, whose status remains unexplained is Ernest A. Muller,
01:06an expert accountant of Chattanooga, who has been in Atlanta for about ten days. Mr. Muller was
01:12subpoenaed before the solicitor Friday afternoon and left the city soon after his conference.
01:17Who wrote notes? Mr. Muller did not talk of the conference, but before he answered,
01:21the summons told friends that he presumed the solicitor wished to use him as a handwriting expert.
01:26Mr. Dorsey continues reticent as to the part the letters found by Mary Fagan's body will play in the
01:32case should anyone be brought to trial for the crime, but it is said that the state will contend
01:37that they were not written by Newt Lee, the Negro night watchman, who was ordered held by the coroner's jury.
01:43The grand jury is scheduled to hold another meeting next Wednesday, but this, it is said,
01:48will be for the transaction of routine business, while the Fagan investigation will start Thursday
01:53or Friday, and the grand jury will then act on the cases of the Negro, Lee, and Superintendent Leo M.
02:00Frank, who were committed by the coroner for investigation. Burns man here. One of the best of
02:06the Burns investigators, a man who was right with the famous detective during the tracking of the
02:11McNamara's and in other famous cases, is in Atlanta working quietly toward the solution of
02:16the Fagan mystery, according to attorney T.B. Felder, retained to assist in the prosecution.
02:23Approximately $1,500 has been subscribed already toward the Burns fund, according to Mr. Felder.
02:30The investigation, he says, will require between $4,000 and $5,000, and he is confident that the
02:37necessary amount will be contributed. Should the investigator, who is now on the job, secure
02:42conclusive evidence as to Mary Fagan's slayer, Mr. Felder, states that Mr. Burns' personal presence
02:49will not be necessitated, and this will reduce the cost of the probe. Then, he says, any surplus will
02:55be prorated among the subscribers. Attorney Felder declares that the Mary Fagan murder mystery will be
03:01solved within a month. Am absolutely confident of success, says Mr. Felder. Burns has never yet made
03:07failure on an important case, and I believe he can clear this perplexing mystery. Mr. Felder states
03:13that he has had a number of telephone calls from gentlemen who will subscribe to the fund, and he
03:17urges additional subscriptions. Three Atlanta newspapers have given $1,100 each to the Burns fund,
03:23and among the other subscribers are Joseph Hirsch, Homer George, manager of the Atlanta theater,
03:29William Loewenstein, and Charlie Jones. The great interest in the efforts to solve the mystery of
03:34Mary Fagan's death is shown by the fact that Mr. Felder already has received a number of subscriptions
03:39to the fund from people living outside of Atlanta. Among these subscribers are J.B. Exum of Douglas,
03:46G.L. Fambro, J.J. Baldwin, B.J. Reed, B.F. Walker, and T.W. Whitfield of Smyrna, Georgia.
03:53Mr. Felder states he is withholding the names of the other subscribers at their request.
03:58Unless the donor authorizes it, no names will be given for publication, he says.
04:03Mr. Felder expects a number of city organizations to assist in subscribing the total fund necessary
04:08for the Burns investigation. Representatives of the Produce Men's Association, of the real estate
04:14dealers, and of the automobile dealers, he said, have already offered to cooperate with him.
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