Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 28, 1913, Image 4

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I M 1 GUILT ILL BE FIXED Blf NIGHT, OFFICIALS SAT TI1K ATLANTA GEORGIAN AM) NEWS. TUESDAY. APRIL 20. 1010. ISS PEARL ROBINSON, sweetheart of Arthur Mu'linax, the man questioned by the police in connection with the slaying of Mary Phagan. Her story cleared Mullinax of any suspicion of complicity in the crime which has shocked Atlanta. Admit Chain of Evidence Is Still Tangled, but Assert Solu tion Is Near. •rr*/ <*f pretty little ipped the net that ar»*ftilly spread for Has the mu Mary Phagan ■he police mof hliti ? Ir the Author of the crime that shocked the city and State with its terrible brutality still at large? Is the mystery, as baffling in its myriad conflicting elements as It Is revolting In Its details. *tlll as far from solution as It was when the beaten and bruised little body of Mary’ Phagan was'found lifeless in r i pile of trash and litter In a Forsyth Street basement? When the city detectives and Pin kertons picked up the twisted skein j of evidence this morning they ad mitted that they were as badly- tangled as when they laid them down after working incessantly upon them until long after midnight. They are positive, however, that the guilt will be almost certainly fixed he- fore nightfall. It only remains to follow each thread of evidence out to “To what person will the damning thread lead?” Is the question that is? holding the entire city in suspense. No other tragedy In years has so gripped the people as this one of the laughing, innocent girl lured to her death. Wheft the final truth Is known will the accusing flnger-point of guilt be leveled at— Newt Lee, the negro night watch man. against whom suspicion was strongly directed to-day, although he at first was held only as an Important witness. Or— Arthur Mullinax, of 60 Poplar Street, formerly a street car conductor, who was the firr* man arrested and se riously regarded as the possible mur derer. The evidence against him Is slight. Or— J. M. Gantt, an employee of the Na tional Pencil Company until three weeks ago, arrested as ho got off a car in Marietta yesterday. The evi dence against him is far from con vincing. Or— Geron Bailey, negro elevator man in the pencil factory, who was ar rested at about the same time as Mullinax and held as a material wit ness Or— Some man whose name has not been previously mentioned In connection with the case. Police Expect Results. The police are confident that they will know In a few hours the Identity of the slayer. Chief Beavers, Chief of Detectives L&nford, Detectives Black, Starnes, H&elett, Rosser and Bullard and Pin kerton operatives were on the case again early this morning. Out of the many clews obtained yesterday they expected to get a definite lead and bring order out of the confusion that hampered the first two days’ work. They have everybody in custody against whom suspicion has been strongly directed. They have a mass of Information and a mass of testi mony, much of which is conflicting. From this they will eliminate the in accurate and Improbable and proceed carefully to weave the net of evi dence. No mystery In recent years has served to excite the public mind as the Phagan murder Detective head quarters have been thronged with per sons who have believed that they had clews to the perpetrator of the crime. All day yesterday was a ceaseless procession going Into the detectives' offices and another procession coming out. The officers were harrassed as much as they were aided. Many Worthless Clews. Countless persons came to give general Information about Mullinax, or Gantt, or Lee, or Bailey. Others tame to Identify Mullinax as the man they had seen with a girl on a certain street at a certain time Saturday night. Others were ?»ure that it was Gantt they had seen. Some of the information was abso lutely worthless and some was re garded as furnishing possible clews. While some of the officers were hearing the various tales of these peo- LOYALTY SENDS GIRL TODEFENDMULLINAX Brave little Pearl Robinson! Her loyalty and devotion to Arthur Mullinax, one of the four men held in connection with the brutal strangling of Mary Phagan, form th* only bright feature in a sordid and revolting crime. What did she care for the stares of the groups of people that hung about the detective headquarters when the life of her lover appeared to be In danger? What did she care for the re marks that were directed at her when she pushed and shoved her way through the morbid crowds awaiting for a new sensation? What difference did it make to her that her name instantly would be on the lips of everyone as the defend er of a man pointed out by one wit ness as the mysterious person with little Mary Phagan the last time she was seen alive? Love Gave Her Courage. It was the ages-old story of a wom an's heart refusing to believe nny ill of the man to whom it is pledged and devoted. In the young heart of pretty Pearl Robinson was implanted that eter nally feminine and eternally remark able attribute as deeply as though she wore twice her 16 years. She knew Arthur Mullinax, liked him, probably loved him with the Im plicit trust of a woman. He had been good to her, kind to her, and always gentle and courteous. Tha* was enough, lie could not have been guilty of the terrible deed that has shocked a community as it has not been shocked before in years. 1 Feel as Though I Could Die/ Sobs Mary Phagan’s Sister Suggestive Illustrations Clipped From Magazines Pasted Up About Scene of Tragedy. ] And she was not afraid to tell to the world her confidence In t?ie In nocence of the man toward whom the wavering and shifting finger of sus picion had pointed at various times since the authorities began following out the many clews of the baffling mystery. She was astounded, overcome, when she read that Mullinax had been held in connection with the gruesome kill ing. How could they associate him with such an act—that of a fiend and beast? When the first shock had passed she was all action. She w’ould tell the officers their mistake. She had no sooner made up her mind than she proceeded to carry out her Inten tion. “Arthur Did Not Do It!” A few minutes later she was in the office of Chief of Detectives LanforJ. She was surrounded by sharp-eyed and keen-minded detectives. Th.it did not disconcert her in the least. She trembled from the thoughts cf the terrible crime with which the name of her lover had been linked, but not from any fear of the guilt of him she had come to defend. “Arthur did not commit that awful deed,” she told Chief Lanford, in a positive and not-to-be-contradicted manner. That settled it. She had said the final word. Of course, she went on and told-of his movements on the night of the tragedy, and with the aid of his landlady established a very strong alibi. But that was incidental in her mind. All that mattered and was of consequence was what her heart told her—"Arthur did not do it.” Pictures of Salome dancers in scanty raiment, and of chorus giris in different postures adorned the walls of the National Pencil Com pany’s plant. They had been clipped from a theatrical and prize-fighting magazine. A more melodramatic stage setting for a rendezvous or for the commit ting of a murder could hardly have been obtained. The .building is cut up with partitions, which allow of a person passing about from one part to another without attracting the at tention of others. While the main en trance is used in gaining entrance to the building, the first floor is vacant, this space having formerly been leased out by the National Pencil Company. A person could enter the building, descend the ladder to the cellar and not attract the attention of those above. One could likewise move from one floor to the other with out being noticed. Stygian blackness greets those who enter the cellar. Two gas jets afford a flickering, sickly light, which seems only to add to the pitchy darkness. Temptations Many. That temptations probably were laid across the path of the girls who worked in the plant was not denied by Superintendent Leo Frank. Instead he admitted that It was highly prob able. “In a plant of this size, where 170 people are employed, and among them a large number of girls', it is quite probable that some of them were ap proached by some of th£ men work ing in the shop,” said Mr. Frank. “A force of this kind is continually shift ing, and undoubtedly many low char acters have worked there. It has been our effort to eliminate them as much as possible and the foreman have been strict in this regard. “Under the present conditions of morals in Atlanta, with the segregat ed district abolished, these low char acters undoubtedly have grown worse That our janitor was bribed to allow them in the building, while a surprise to me, is not an unbelievable sugges tion. Such fellows as these might be expected to stoop to such things.” HOT SPRINGS \ LIVER BUTTONS! I END CONSTIPATION t < > Jf you really want to get rid of > s constipation, bad stomach, stuffed \ ? up bowels and all ailments arising j ( from a disordered liver. Get a box J ? of blissful. satisfying HOT j < SPRINGS LIVER BUTTONS to- i day. s They never fail; take them as S 5 directed for a week and notice the < ) feeling of happiness that comes $ om ability to eat well, vleep well. < in clear tip, the t eyes grow bright- \ eturn. -all you ne BU pie, other detectives were putting the prisoners through a grilling examina tion of their whereabouts at ©very minute of Saturday night. Third Degree for Lee. Newt Lee, the black night watch man. was given the “third degree” in the belief that he knew much more about the crime than he professed. He showed signs of weakening seve- al times, but each time recovered be fore he had made any admissions se riously damaging either to himself or any of the other prisoners. The shifting of suspicion to Lee was the most startling development of this forenoon, although what basis it had in actual evidence is hard to determine. It is known that the Cole man family are inclined to believe that he knows a great deal more about the crime than he has been pleased to tell. Screams in the build ing were heard by persons in the livery stable nearby, according to stories current to-day. How could Lee have made his rounds every half hour and not have heard them, mem bers of the Coleman family ask. O- L. Bagley, shipping clerk for the Atlanta Milling Company, was with Gantt Saturday night and left him a few minutes after 10 o’clock, according to a statement to a Geor gian reporter. Bagley declared; “Gantt is but a ci >f mine, though 1 aequaitanv known hi: 1 Din and mght in ed to him some time. My brother and a friend of Gantt’s, named White, were playing a game of pool. Gantt does not play and we sat down and watched my brother and White. About 10 o’clock Gantt and myself strolled out of the pool room and walked around. We went a block or two out Whitehall Street, then turned and came back, walking back to Alabama Street and up Alabama to Broad Street. 1 told Gantt that l was going to catch a car and he said he would go back to the pool room. I noticed that he walked up Broad Street. m> car came along and I went home. I caught the 10:30 o’clock car. Had Started West. “In the course of our conversation Gantt told me that he had left Atlanta to go to San Francisco and had gotten as far as St. Louis but had been held up there several days on account of high water. He said he then changed his mind and came back to Atlanta. "He also told me that he probably would go to farming; that his mother had offered to give him a 500-acre farm near Marietta. “That Gantt could have met th« Phagan girl later in the night and committed the crime appears improb able to me, as most of his conversa tion Mas about him preparing to got married in August. He svemed to b< very much in love with the young lady.* “Ou meeting Saturday night was accidental. I had not seen him for three or four weeks and asked h>m where he had been. He then told m* of going to St. Louis,** _ ‘Bally’ Customs Men Hold Wedding Gifts Sir Wilfred Peck Declines to Pay Duties on $10,000 Worth of Presents for His Bride. NEW YORK. April 29.—This is Sir Wilfred Peck’s opinion of the United States customs officials, expressed to day: “I say, my word, what a bally, blawsted. mercenary set you cnaps are." Sir Wilfred landed to-day on the liner Lapland. With him were about $10,000 worth of bridal presents in tended for Miss Edwina Thornburg, a St. Louis beauty and heiress to whom he will be married on May 7. The customs officials insisted on turning Sir Wilfred’s trunks topsy turvey, after which they told Sir Wil fred he would have to pay 45 per cent duty on the presents. Sir Wilfred balked. "I cawn’t do it. ’y’know,” he ex claimed. “The mercenary chaps” were ob durate. Sir Wilfred finally quit the pier, leaving his wedding gifts behind. Among all .the hearts that are bowed down in sorrow over the mur der of Mary Phagan, the 14-year- old factory child found dead in the National Pencil factory Saturday, there Is none who feels the suffer ing and the anguish of the separa tion so keenly as her sister, Ollle, 18 years old, her companion since child hood. For with her it is the suffering of youth, when the roue-veil of life has been lifted to show Its tragic and terrible side In all Its fullness for the first time. And It is all the more pitiful for her because it ig the kind of suffering that brings to one that sense of despair and a later sadness that makes the whole w’orld seem never quite the same again, no mat ter what happens. Something of Its sweetness and Joy has gone out to stay. “Oh, I am so lonely without her.” the young girl told a Georgian re porter as the tears fell down her face unheeded. She was atfier little home on I.indsay Street. "Mary and I were always together and we al ways told each other everything. We slept In the same bed at night: we had ever since w’e were little bit o’ kids; and we always talked after the lights were out. There wasn’t a thing that Mary wouldn’t tell me, and I would always advise her and tell her what I thought was right if little questions would come up be tween us. She was always such a good little thing, nobody could help loving her!” She clasped and unclasped her hands In front of her as though she did not know what to do, and leaned upon the bureau as if she were tired. “1 Never Had But One Sister.” “I don’t know w’hat I’m going to do—I haven’t got anybody now,” she said. “I never had but one sister, and she’s .gone.* Her voice choked and she could nert go on for a time. When she did it was to speak of how she w r as in Ma rietta when the tragedy happened and how the news came home to her 1 mother o:i Sunday morning. She had not been home'to go to the poor little body , In the undertakers’ parlors shortly after it was taken there. “The first mother knew’ of it all wad a‘little before 5 o’clock Sunday morning.” she said, her lips quiver ing. “A girl named Helen Ferguson, who lives near her© and who has a telephone, was called up by Grace Hicks, the girl who identified Mary’s body. Grace told her to come right on over and tell mother what had happened. Saturday night when Mary hadn't come home they had all been worried. Mary had said she was coming right back after the parade, but didn’t show j up. Then somebody remembered she had said she had heard the show' at the Bijou was good—some of the girls j had told her—and she would like toj go, but she wouldn’t go without she j had some one to go with her. When I she didn’t come home a little later they all thought maybe she had found some of the girls anyway and gone, and so Mr. Coleman, her stepfather, went downtown to bring her home. He waited until the show was over and everybody had filed out of the theater, but Mary was not with the crowd. Mr. Coleman had returned home and found Mrs. Coleman and another woman, who had stayed with her while he had gone to town, "till up and waiting for him. Then was when they decided that Mary had met up with her aunt from Marietta and gone home with her. She had intend ed going anyway Sunday. “But I know r MffVy’s safe,” said Mrs. Coleman, and iffter a few minutes they all went to bed. The Awful New3. When Helen Ferguson’s footsteps touched the front porch at 5 o’clock the sound waked her mother imme diately. “There’s Mary now!" Mrs. Coleman exclaimed as she sat up on the bed. “No, it i.-Ti’t either,” declared Mr. Coleman. “I feel it’s news for us, and bad news.” Mrs. Coleman went to the door. “Mrs. Coleman,” said Miss Hender son. “did you know that Mary had been killed?” "Oh, it can’t be possible!" her moth er sobbed. "What do you mean? I don’t understand you. Tell me how. Maybe you’re mistaken—maybe it isn’t Mary.” But Mis.-« Henderson said that Miss Hicks was positive in her identifica tion. And then Mr. Coleman came out and brought her mother in the house, she was crying so, and then as quick ly as he could be dressed and went downtown to look at the body. There was no mistake. It was Mary. Her voice was pitifully like a child’s. when J'he had finished, as she asked The Georgian reporter if jbe thought the man woulcLbe capture*. “If they get him they ought to treat him just like he treated her,” she de clared. “Oh. my poor little sister! He had no iiitw/or her. and they oughtn't to have artv Hhr him. Oh, God, I just feel as Jf I could die.” Sh?Will .attend.the funeral of her sister in Marietta, going jwith the family Tuesday. She was formerly employed at a downtlwfi department store, hut recently g«re up her posi tion. She is very pretty and attrac tive, slenderly built and resembles her sister to some extent, it is said. Old Arctic Pioneer To Seek Polar Dead Capt. Peter Bayne, 69, Survivor of Hall Expedition, 1866-69, Mfiy Find Franklin Victims. SEATTLE, April 29.—Capt. Peter Bayne, 69, probably the last survivor of Dr. Charles Hall’s expedition thai .‘■♦ought for three years, beginning In 1866, for traces of the remains of the Sir Jphn Franklin expedition has un dertaken to complete the work he began as a young man. He has purchased the old Arctic schooner Duxbury and is now out fitting her for a cruise to Victoria- land. where Sir John Franklin's body Is buried in a tomb made by Jiis HIGHER COST OF DRUNKS STRIKES ANNISTON, ALA, ANNISTON, AT.A., April 2». A beer or “red-eye" spree in Anniston on Sunday is as expensive as cham pagne on any other day. Some time ago Recorder Croon an nounced that he would raise the line $1 every Monday morning for persons convicted of being drunk on Sunday. The price has now reached $30. Next Monday the price for plain Sunday drunks will be $31. Germany’s $250,000,000 Gold. BERLIN, April 29. -The statement of the Imperial Bank of Germhnv shows for the first time in its his tory that there is over $250,000,000 in gold in the vaults of the bank. ♦ The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signa ture of Clias. II. Fletcher, and has been made under hi* personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow iio on© to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good 99 are hut Experiments, and endanger the health of Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Oftstorin is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Tar.- gorie, Di'opW < aml Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opiuui, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness, it cures Diarrhoea and Wind. Colic. It relit ves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Favorite Horse Shot as Owner Is Buried Widow Gave the Order and Will Erect a Monument Over Steed of William Mayer. NEWPORT, April 29.—As the body of William H. Mayer, the society four-in-hand whip was being lowered »in his plot at che Island Cemetery lus favorite gray horse Ironbar was put to heath and buried in the rear | of the Slate HI I! Farm. This was done by direction of the witTOW who will later erect a monu ment for the horse. Mrs. Mayer and her husband had i nany times ridden behind Ironbar t ; Newport, so many times that ever;> man. wo than and child knew his no mo * W +4 In Use For Over 30 Years. THI CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. HED 23 YEARS DR.E.G. GRIFFJP’S GATE CITY DENTAL RG0MS BEST WORK AT LOWEST PRICES Ali Work Guaranteed. Hours 8 tc 6-Phone M. 1708-Sundays 9-1 24' > Whitehall St. Over Brown & Allens Swift’s Premium Ham “Smoked Carefully selected and perfectly cured all the way through A. pure meat, delicious in flavor Every Ham U. S. Inspected and Passed Swift & Company in Atlanta” The Allen Corset Department COMPLETE WITH CORSETS OF MANY GOOD SORTS OuV Corset patronage lias grown to the point of a great broadening in our Corset Department, taking in several new lines of distinctive worth. Since the introduction of the Treco and the Regaliste Corsets last Fall, we have added the P. N. and C. B.—two Corsets of splendid repufaton. Our famous Mme. Mariette is w r ell known, and among higher-priced numbers there isn’t a better Corset in the world. The Regaliste and the Treco are the Corsets of necessity in this day of Grecian lines, and our handsome models are irresistible in their beaut v. Mme. Mariette Corsets, Regaliste Corsets . B. & J. Treco Corsets . C. B. Corsets . Eloise Corsets , P. N. Corsets $5 to $25 $5 to $35 $3 to $15 $3.50 to $12.50 . $1.00 to $3.50 . $1.00 to $2.00 i * if ♦ y rassieres and Corset Drapes « All necessary and many luxurious Corset accessories are to be found in this complete Corset Department. Brassieres of easy style, from plain lace and embroidery trimmed to those of handsome hand, embroidery and Cluny or Yal lace. Over the close-fitting brassier is worn the dainty drape of shadow lace, or Swiss embrodery and lace, with ribbon ties, which are most effective. Brassieres Drapes . 50c to $7.50 $2.00 to $5.00 —Second Floor. J. P. ALLEN & CO. 51 and 53 Whitehall v