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AiLAiNiA UiLOivOi A*\U ,'j,
AFFIDAVIT LAYS
Swears Frank Told Him Girl Had
Hit Her Head Against
Something.
The Georgian in ita second Extra
published exclusively the first REAL
confession of James Conley, the ne
gro sweeper at the National Pencil
Factory, regarding the part he played
in the Mary Phagan mystery.
The Georgian has dealt in no hap
hazard guesses as to the negro Con
ley's testimony to the police and in
giving prominence to his statements
desires to say that it must not be
taken as final until it is examined at
the trial of Frank.
Atlanta. Go., April 29. 1918.
On Saturday, April 26, 1913, when
I come back to the pencil factory
with Mr. Frank I waited for him
downstairs like he told me, and when
he whistled for me I went up stairs
and he aaked me if I wanted to
make some money right quick, and I
told him yes. sir, and he told me
that he had picked up a girl back
there and had let her fall, and that
her head hit against something-
he dldnt’ know what It was—and for
me to move her and I hollered and
told him the girl was dead.
And he told me to pick her up and
bring her to the elevator, and I told
him I dldnt have nothing to pick her
up with, and he told me to go and
look by the cotton box there and get
a piece of cloth and 1 got a big wide
piece of cloth and come back there
to the men’s toilet, where she was,
and tied her, and I taken her and
brought her up there to a little dress
ing room, carrying her on iny right
shoulder, and she got too heavy for
me and she lipped off my shoulder
and fell on the floor right there at
the dressing room and I hollered for
Mr. Frank to come there and help
me; that she was too heavy for me,
and Mr. Frank come down there and
told me to "pick her up, dam fool."
and he run down there to me and he
was excited, and he picked her up
by the feet. Her feet and head were
sticking out of the cloth, and by him
being so nervous he let her feet fall,
and then we brought her onto the
elevator, Mr. Frank carrying her by
the feet and me by the shoulder, and
we brought her to the eelvator, and
then Mr. Frank says, "Walt, let me
get the key," and he went Into the
office and come back and unlocked
the elevator door and started the
elevator down.
Says Frank Stood Guard.
Mr. Frank turned It on himself, and
we went on down to the basement
and Mr. Frank helped me take it off
the elevator and ho told me to take
It back there to the sawdust pile and
1 picked it up and put it on my
shoulder again, and Mr. Frank he
went up the ladder and watched the
♦ r*M‘door to see if anybody was com
ing, and I taken her back there and
vi..u'ii the cloth from around her and
taken her hat and shoe which I picked
up upstairs right where her body was
lying and brought them down and
untied the cloth and brought them
back and throwed them on the trashl
pile in front of the furnace and Mr.
Frank was standing at the trapdoor
at the head of the ladder.
He dldnt tell me where to put the
things. I laid her body down with
her head toward the elevator, lying
on her stomach and the left side of
her face was on the ground the right
side of her face was up and both
arms were laying down with her body
by the side of her body. Mr. Frank
Joined me back on the first floor. I
stepped on the elevator and he stepped
on the elevator when it got to where
he was, and ho said, "Gee, that was
a tiresome Job," and I told him his
Job was not as tiresome as mine was,
because I had to tote It all the way
from where she was lying to the
dressing room and in the basement
from the elevator to where I left her.
Frank Washed Hands, He Asserts.
Then Mr. Frank hops off the ele
vator before It gets even with the
second floor and he makes a stumble
and he hits the floor and catches
with both hands and he went around
to the sink to wash his hands and I
went and cut off the motor and I
stood and waited for Mr. Frank to
come from around there washing his
hands and then we went on into the
office and Mr. Frank, he couldnt hard
ly keep still. He was all the time
moving about from one office to
the other. Then he come back in
to the stenographer’s office and
come back and told me, "Here
comes Emma Clark and Corlnthia
Hall,” I understood him to say,
and he come back and told me to
come here and he opened the
wardrobe and told me to get in
there, and I was so slow about
going he told me to hurry up,
damn it, and Mr. Frank, whoever
that wap come Into the office, they
didn’t stay so very long till Mr.
Frank was gone about seven or
eight minutes, and I wag still In
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SCHOOL BOYS’ AND QIRL8’ BALLOT.
the wardrobe and he never had
come to let me out, and Mr.
Frank come back and I said:
"Goodness alive, you kept me In
there a mighty long time." and he
said: "Yea, I see I did; you are
sweating." And then me
and Mr. Frank sat down in
a chair. Mr. Frank then took
out a cigarette and he give me the
box and asked me did I want to
smoke, and I told him, "Yes, sir,"
and I taken the box and taken
out a cigarette and he handed me
a box of matches and I handed him
the matches back, and I handed
him the cigarette box and he told
me that was all right I could
keep that, and that I told him he
had some money In it and he
told me that was all right I could
keep that. Mr. Frank then asked
me to write a few lines on that
paper, a white scratchpad he had
there and he told me what to put
on there and I asked him what
he was going to do with It and
he told me to Just go ahead and
write, and then after I got
through writing Mr. Frank looked
at It and said It was all right,
and Mr. Frank looked up at the
top of the house and said, “Why
should I hang? I have wealthy
people In Brooklyn," and I asked
him what about me and he told
me that was all right about me,
for me to 'keep my mouth shut
and he would make everything
all right.
And then I asked him where
was the money he said he was go
ing to give me, and Mr. Frank
said, "Here is $200," and he
handed me a big roll of green
back money and I didn’t count it.
I stood theTe a little while looking
at It In my hand and I told Mr.
Frank not to take out another
dollar for that watch man I owed,
and he said he wouldn’t—and tna
rest Is just like I told it before.
The reason I have not told this
before is I thought Mr. Frank
would get out and help me out,
but It seems that he Is not going
to get out, and I have decided to
tell the whole truth about the
matter.
While I was looking at the
money in my hand, Mr. Frank
said: "Let me have that and I
will make it all right with you
Monday if I live and nothing hap
pens." And he took the money
back, and I asked him if that was
the way he done, and he said he
would give It back Monday.
JAMES CONLEY.
Sworn to and subscribed before
me the 29th day of May, 1913.
G. (\ FEBUARY,
Notary Public, Fulton County, Ga.
If the latest confession of James
Conley is true, then Leo M. Frank
killed Mary Phagan, and the killing
was apparently accidental.
Conley swears Frank told him he
had picked up a girl and let her fall,
and that her head hit something.
When the body of Mary Phagan was
found there were deep wounds and
abrasions on the skull. Conley does
not say specifically whether it was
all an accident. Conley says when he
reached the girl she was dead.
In his confession Conley admits he
himself tied a cloth about the dead
girl’s head, so he could carry her to
the basement at Frank's direction.
The police theory has been that the
murderer of Mary Phagan accidental
ly knocked her against a piece of ma
chinery, then became frightened and
finished the Job by strangling her
with a rope. Conley makes no men
tion of a rope. From his story, there
fore, it would appear that the deep
furrow’s in the dead girl’s flesh giv
ing credence to the theory of strangu
lation were produced by the cloth
which the negro himself tied about
the girl’s body. Conley insists the
girl was dead when he first saw her.
Turning the Suspicion.
Frank superintended the carrying
of the girl’s body to the cellar, Con
ley swore, displaying great nervous
ness. Then, when the body had been
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deposited on a trash pile, Frank took
the negro back upstairs and laid plans
for throwing suspicion on the negro.
At Frank’s direction, Conley says,
he wrote the notes presumed to have
been found with the body of Mary
Phagan. Frank took the notes, gave
the negro a cigarette, remarked
"Why should I hang?’’ and told him
he (Frank) would see that everything
would come out all right for him
(Conley.)
Frank then gave the negro a roll
of bills, which he said was $200. In
a few minutes he took them back,
promising to make it all right the fol
lowing Monday morning.
Whether the killing was premedita
ted murder, or murder after Frank
had unintentionally injured Mary
Phagan, or accident pure and simple,
remains to be determined.
"Betrayed Himself.”
If Conley’s confession is true, Leo
M. Frank killed Mary Phagan by ac
cldent, and in nervous, half-crazed
efforts to dispose of the body laid
himself liable to the very charge of
murder he sought to avoid.
He knew he was alone in the fac
tory with the girl, that sensational
reports would follow discovery of the
body and feared his story of an accl
dental killing would be discounted.
Therefore, he bribed the negro to
help him dispose of the body—fear
ful lest the groundless charge of
murder be made against him.
Frank told Conley—so the negro
says—that he picked the girl up and
let her fall, her head hitting some
thing hard. The girl was dead, Con
ley says, when he first saw’ her, and
In an effort to facilitate removal of
the body he, Conley, tied a stout
cloth around the head. It was this
cloth, tightly drawn over the dead
girl’s features, which gave rise to the
theory of strangulation.
Examination disclosed a fractured
skull, caused by contact with a
heavy substance. This wound un
doubtedly followed the dropping of
the girl’s body against "something
hard."
Frank’s statements to Conley while
the glrl'itUjfeless body was not yet
cold thro\v wo light on the dramatic
scene ending in Mary Phagan’s
death. Whether they were on inti
mate terms and he was fondling her,
or whether they were struggling when
he "picked her up,” is still a mystery
—a mystery made all the more deeper
by the absence of any details per
taining thereto in the negro’s nar
rative.
Wesleyan Warns of
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MIDDLETOWN, CONN., May 30.-—
"Undue attention, not to athletics, but
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to-day and for the majority of the
failures in college work," says the
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during recent years Is becoming a
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FACSIMILE OF CONCLUDING PORTION OF NEGRO CONLEY’S
SENSATIONAL AFFIDAVIT, SHOWING HIS SIGNATURE
The reason I have not told this before*is I thought
Hr. Frank would get out and help jne out, but it seems that he Is
not going to get, out and I have decided to tell the whole tTuth
fasofo, O? fUATl,
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J
T DRAMATIC SCENE AT FACTORY
AS CONLEY RE-ENACTS CRIME
try.rqin
Dorsey Ready to Act if Negro
Sticks to Latest Story Ac
cusing Frank.
Solicitor General Hujrh M. Dorsey
announced that if Conley persisted In
his story he would take steps to have
him indicted as an accessory after the
fact and bring him to trial on this
charge.
Conley was Friday afternoon re
moved to the Tower, on an order
signed by Judge Roan.
Conley’s startling tale came late
Thursday afternoon after he had been
under a merciless sweating for near
ly three hours. Noting the signs of
weakening, Detective Harry Scott and
Chief I.anford shot question after
question at him In rapid succession.
Conley hesitated and then told
the men who surrounded him
that he had seen Mary Phagan on
the day of the crime, but that she
was dead when he saw her. When It
became evident that the most Im
portant disclosures of the long In
vestigation were to be made, G. C.
February, secretary to Chief Lanford,
was called in and took the negro's
statement.
Sticks to Note Story.
Conley stuck to his story that
Frank had him write the notes that
Were found by the girl’s body and
the detectives believe that there cun
be no doubt of this now.
He said that after the notes were
written Frank tg>ok his arm and led
him to the body. Frank’s hand was
shaking, the negro declared. To
gether. they raised the limp form
from the floor, Conley told the de
tectives, and took it into the base
ment.
Offering no explanation of the
tragedy which had occurred, Frank
ordered Conley to leave the build
ing, according to tne statement.
Conley explained his long silence by
saying that he thought Frank had
plenty of money and that he would
be able to get both of them free
within a short time.
Chief Lanford and Detective Scott
both declared after the third degree
that they were confident that the ne
gro at last was telling the truth. If
he has any further knowledge of the
crime, they said they would get It out
of him Friday when they put him
through another grilling.
Admission of Conley’s statements
Int4l a court of justice Is certain to be
fought most bitterly. The fact that
Conley has been discovered in a tan
gle of lies which he has been telling
ever since his arrest three weeks ago
is expected by the defense to go a
long ways in shutting the doors
against his affidavits.
In addition to the maze of con
flicting stories In which he has been
involved, Conley has signed three sep
arate statements, no two of which
agree in some essential points.
His first affidavit swore tnat he was
not at the factory on the day Mary
Phagan was murdered.
His second affidavit swore that he
was at the factory on the Saturday
the girl was brutally slain, but that
he left immediately after he had writ
ten the notes at the direction of
Frank. He saw Mary Phagan neither
alive nor dead, according to this doc
ument.
H1s third affidavit, or statement, re
pudiated both of the other statements
In many of their details, and declared
that he did not leave the factory at
the time stated in the other affidavits,
but. Instead, assisted Frank to carry
the little girl s body to the basement,
w here it w as found by Newt Lee Sun
day morning.
The fact that the negro has altered
his statement In some important par
ticular every succeeding time that he
has been questioned has not served
to throw suspicion on the negro in
the eyes of the detective.
Negro, Step by Step,
Shows Detectives
Part He Says He Had
in Slaying.
Continued From Page 1.
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tective Harry Scott, of the Pinker
tons, and City Detectives Coker and
Campbell.
"Where did you first see Frank
when he whistled to you twice?” Con
ley was asked as soon as he had
reached the second floor.
Details Every Move.
"Right here," he replied the negro,
pointing to the top of the steps.
From this point the negro went on
detailing every movement and every
fragment of conversation that he
remembered until he left the build
ing.
"He asked me if I wanted to make
some money right quick and I told
him I did," said Conley. "Then he
said he had picked up a girl back
there who had hit her head against
something and he wanted me to bring
her body to the elevator."
The negro at this point walked
back toward the rear of the second
floor, all of the officers following him.
He pointed out to the officers the ex
act point where he had found the
body, lying partly doubled up near
the men’s toilet.
"When I got back here, I got scared
and hollered to Mr. Frank and £aid
that the girl was dead,” the negro
continued. "He was standing in that
doorway right there. He told me to
get a sack and put her body in that.”
The dozen men in the party, gripped
by the realistic reproduction of the
tragedy, followed Conley as he walked
to a cotton box in the middle of the
second floor and picked out a sack
of cotton bagging.
Tells of Seeing Cord.
"This is jus’ like that I got that
day except that this has got a little
more cotton in it and the other one
w r as slit,” said the negro, holding the
bagging up for the inspection of the
officers.
"I w ent back and raised her up and
slipped the bagging under her like
this,” said the negro, illustrating.
"Then I raised her head and should
ers and pulled the bagging up so
that I could put it over my should
er."
Here the negro told for the first
time of seeing the cord which was
used in the strangling of the little
girl.
"The cord was lying right there,"
said Conley. “It was right by the
body, but I didn’t notice that it was
around her neck. I didn’t think that
It might have been used to strangle
her."
Conley then pointed out the spot
where he said that the girl’s weight
oecame too heavy for him and he
called on Frank to help him. Frank,
he said, came cursing from the door
way.
"He picked up her feet," said Con
ley, "and I carried her shoulders. Just
w’hen we got by this window Frank
was so nervous that he dropped the
girl and her feet dragged on the
floor.” It was at this place that a
splotch of blood w r as found by the
detectives.
Conley then walked toward the ele
vator, talking all the time of what
was occurring on that other time he
had made the same trip through the
building. The negro appeared to be
telling a straightforward story and
was ready with an answer whenever
any of the officers asked him a. ques
tion.
As Conley and the detectives reach
ed the e!?Vator, the negro said that he
waited there while Frank went into
the office to get the key to the eleva
tor door. He described the manner in
which the body was carried into the
elevator and dropped on the elevator
floor. Frank ran the elevator down
to the basement, according to Conley,
while he (Conley) ran it on the return
upstair?. Conley went down on the
elevator just as he had done before,
the officers with him.
"I took her body out of the eleva
tor," said Conley, "and Mr. Frank
helped me. He told me to take the
body up to the trash pile in front of
the furnace. I put the girt on my
shoulders again and walked up there
with her and dropped her right there,”
pointing to a point only a few feet to
the left of the furnace.
"I pulled the bagging out from un
der her and threw it there on the pile
of trash in front of the furnace. Mr.
Frank he waited there at the trap
door to s»ee if anyone was coming.
Before that I went back upstairs and
got her hat and shoes and brought
them down in the basement."
"Show us the wav you left the
girl’s body," commanded Chief Beav
ers
Conley promptly lay down in the
identical spot where Newt Lee found
the body of the girl. He lay with
the left side of his face on the ground,
his right arm slightly under him and
the left arm stretched by his side.
His feet pointed toward the rear door
of the basement where the staple was
pulled.
Negro Never Hesitates.
"You can’t help but believe him,"
muttered Detective Harry Scott, as
the negro went through the terrible
tragedy movement by movement
without faltering for an instant or
hesitating as though he were not
sure of his ground.
Conley appeared perfectly composed
as though he were reciting an every
day occurrence, but his earnest and
apparently truthful bearing gave his
dramatic story, told in a matter of
fact way, a convincing power that
evidently h$id its effect on every one
who was listening to his recital.
Negro Ran Elevator Up.
"Did you ever find that piece of
cotton bagging?" Chief Beavers in
quired of E. F. Holloway, the day
watchman.
"No, I never did,” Holloway re
plied, his answ’er leading to the pre
sumption that the bagging subse
quently had been burned.
After showing the detectives where
he had disposed of the body, Conley
retraced his steps toward the eleva
tor. ,
"Frank climbed up this ladder," he
said, "and I ran the elevator back
up. He met me on the first floor
and got in the elevator with me and
rode with me up to the second
floor.”
Conley ran the elevator back up
as he had done the day of the trage
dy. Chief Beavers and several of
the detectives rode up with him. Chief
Lanford climbed up the ladder as
Frank was represented as doing. Con
ley said that Frank was nervous
and rushed off the elevator before it
had come to a stop, stumbling in his
haste.
Illustrates Fall.
Having the elevator stopped about
a foot and a half below the landing,
Conley illustrated the fall of Frank,
who in his hurry to get out of the
elevator stumbled and fell on his
hands, the negro says. Getting up
from the floor, Conley led the officers
to the sink where the negro claims
Frank washed his hands. Conley says
he waited for Frank by a post near
the elevator landing. When Frank
came from washing his hands, Conley
said, he led him (Conley) into the
office and had him sit down. Conley
said Frank kept twisting about in his
chair, wringing his hands, and "act
ing lak white folks does when they Is
scared, turned red in the face, and
kept looking around.”
Conley said Frank next walked out
of the room and got a box of matches,
stopped in the door and fooled with a
cigarette box. He says Frank then
looked out the glass door and said:
"Oh God here comes Emma Clark
and Corinthia Hall.” and quickly
pushed him in the closet at the side
of the door, closing the closet door.
Put Him 'n Closet.
The officers put Conley in the clos
et It easily held him. Conley said
he could not tell whether or not the
girls entered the room. He heard one
of them, ask, "Are you all alone,
Mr.
Reproduces Conversa
tion H e Declares
Took Place as Prank
Directed Removal.
Frank?” and Frank answered, "Yes,
I am alone.”
Pretty soon Frank came and let
Conley out, Conley says, and had him
sit down at Frank’s desk. Conley
says Frank got some paper from a
drawer and told him to write a note.
The officers had Conley sit down and
write what he claims Frank dictated
to him. Conley readily wrote, “Dear
mother a long tall black negro did
this by hissleb he told me if I would
lay down he would love me play like
the night wich did this by hisselb."
How About Me?
Conley says he asked Frank what
he was going to do with the note.
Frank replied that he was going to
put it in a letter and send it to his
mother in Brooklyn, that he had
wealthy people there. Conley says
Frank then clasped his hands, looked
at the ceiling and exclamed, "Why
should I hang?"
"I asked him,” Conley told the of
ficers, "what about me?" Frank
says, “Don’t you worry, you are a
good boy and you will be all right.”
The negro stated that Frank then
handed him a roll of greenback
money and said it was $200. Conley
says he did not count it, and that
Frar.k suddenly grabbed it away from
him, felling him that his people in
Brooklyn would send him plenty of
money and he would give Conley
plenty of money later.
Frank next took a cigarette, Con
ley declared, and then asked him to
have one, handing him the box. Con
ley says he saw a little money In the
box and was afraid to let Frank see it,
for fear he would take it away from
him. Conley next Illustrated the man
ner In which he says Frank walked
to the stairs with him. The negro
says Frank placed his arms around
his shoulders and walked to the
stairs with him, and watched him de
scend. Then Frank ran about five
steps down and looked to see if Con
ley went on out.
Of His Free Will.
While in the superintendent’s of
fice Conley stated that he was making
this confession of his own free will
and accord; that the officers had nev
er in any way mistreated him or
cursed him or struck him, and that
they had not offered him any regard,
in order to induce him to tell what he
knew. He explained his delay in
making his confession by saying that
he had been hoping to receive a large
sum of money from Frank’s people.
He said that he had thought Frank
would get out and then help him out,
but he now saw that there was no
hope for either of them, and he had
decided to tell the truth. Conley stat
ed that the people at the factory,
seemed to be dotVn on him, butv.hat
he wanted to tel] all he knew and had
done so.
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winter I would be sure to have either Bronchitis.
Pleurisy or Pneumonia. I had Typhoid-Pneu
monia one time. I had catarrh of the stomach
and bowels and had Hay Fever for the last
few jears; but have not anything of the kind
this year. I will answer all letters sent to me.
asking a history of my case, from any one suf
fering with lung trouble.”
(Affidavit) ETTA PLATH.
(Six years later reports still well.)
(Above abbreviated; more on request.)
Kckraan's Alterative has been proven by i
many years' test to 1* most efficacious in cases 1
of severe Throat and Lung Affections. Bron
chitis. Bronchial Asthma. Stubborn Colds and '
in upbuilding the system. Does not contain
narcotic*, poisons or habit-forming drugs. For '
sale by all Jacobs* Drug Stores and other lead
ing druggists. Write the Eckman Laboratory,
Philadelphia. Pa., for booklet telling of re
coveries and additional evidence.
23 lbs. Sugar . $1.00
50c String. Broom
24 lbs.
24 lbs.
50c Durkee’s Dressing.
30c Coffee
Square Condensed Milk
25c Can Tripe . .
35c Midget Pickles
Armour's £J *%&*■%**> 1
& Swift's 810Gilo ■ ■ AO2C
WYATTS a O.D.
73 South Pryor
We Deliver
At!.
947