00:00Negroes' affidavit not given much credence. Atlanta Journal. Thursday, June 5, 1913.
00:06Even the city detectives, it is said, attach very little importance to document.
00:11Very little importance, it is said, is attached by the city detectives to the sensational and
00:16incoherent affidavit of Manola McKnight, the Negro cook at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Selig,
00:2268 East Georgia Avenue, where Leo M. Frank, the pencil factory superintendent, and his wife reside.
00:29Attorney Luther Rosser, chief counsel for the indicted superintendent, read the affidavit with
00:34apparent amusement. He had no comment to make, but it was evident that Mr. Rosser did not regard the
00:39affidavit seriously. Mr. and Mrs. Selig and Mrs. Frank read the affidavit in the journal,
00:45and although they would make no statement for publication, they appeared to view the Negro
00:49woman's testimony as absurd and ridiculous on the face of it. But little of the cook's testimony,
00:55even should she stick to her story until the day of the trial, will be admissible in court.
01:00It is largely alleged hearsay evidence, and therefore barred. The woman, in her affidavit,
01:06swears that Frank came home to lunch on the Saturday of the Mary Fagan murder about 1.30,
01:12that he did not eat anything, and that he remained only about ten minutes. If the Negress knows of her
01:18own knowledge that this is true, she can so testify in court. However, Mr. Selig, Frank's father-in-law,
01:24will swear, as he did before the coroner's inquest, that Frank ate lunch with him, and afterwards lay
01:29down on a lounge for a nap. Mrs. Selig will reiterate her testimony at the inquest, which
01:34was to the effect that Frank came home about 1.30 o'clock, and that she and her daughter,
01:39Mrs. Frank, were dressed and ready to go to a grand opera matinee, that soon after his arrival
01:44they left. The McKnight woman, in her affidavit, declares that sometime on Sunday she overheard
01:49Mrs. Frank tell her mother, Mrs. Selig, that Frank came home drunk the night before, that
01:54he was very restless and acted queerly, that he told her, Mrs. Frank, that he was in trouble
01:59and begged her to get his pistol in order that he might kill himself. This portion of
02:03the woman's testimony, even if true, would be hearsay and not admissible. Friends of the
02:08indicted superintendent are inclined to make light of the cook's affidavit. They call attention
02:13to the fact, as brought out at the coroner's inquest, that eighth or ten friends of the Selig
02:17family were at the Selig home on the Saturday night in question, and that it will be easy
02:22to prove by them whether Frank was drunk or acting queerly. It is also recalled that the
02:27evidence before the coroner was, that on that Saturday evening Frank sat out in the hall
02:32of the Selig residence and read a magazine for about two or three hours before retiring,
02:37and the point is made that if Frank had been acting so strangely during the night, Mrs. Frank
02:42would hardly have waited until sometime next day to confide in her mother, but that she would
02:47most likely have called in both her mother and father at the time, for they were sleeping
02:51in an adjacent room. Detective Chief Lanford stated Thursday morning that he did not expect
02:57any developments in the Fagan case during the day, as both he and Police Chief Beavers would
03:02be before the grand jury during the greater portion of Thursday. According to the Detective
03:06Chief, James Conley, the Negro sweeper, has made no further admissions. He still holds to the story
03:13contained in his third affidavit, in which he declares he assisted Frank to carry the Fagan
03:18girl's body to the pencil factory basement, and wrote the notes found beside the body at
03:23the dictation of the factory superintendent. No effort has been made during the past few
03:27days to obtain additional disclosures from Conley. Mrs. Frank here, Frank's mother, who arrived
03:33in Atlanta ten or twelve days ago, is said to have visited her son's cell in the tower several
03:38times during last week. Usually it is reported she goes in the evening to avoid the gaze of
03:43the curious. Mrs. Frank has been stopping at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Emile Selig, and is
03:49said to have exhibited wonderful bravery in sharing her son's burden.
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