Newspaper Page Text
WRAPPED HER BODY UP LIKE DIRTY CLOTHES/’ SAYS CONLEY
Whole Court Audience Keyed to Catch Every Word of the Witness
THE ATLANTA HKOKCilAN
EPEH FIRST ADMITS HE
LEO FRANK AND FIVE LINKS IN
CHAIN STATE HAS WOVEN FOR HIM
(Continued from Page Two.)
here in Atlanta.
Q. When did you get your first Job?
—A. About eleven yea. ago.
Q. When you were about 16 yca"S
old?—A. No. I was about eleven year*
old.
Q. What year was that?—About
1901. I won’t be sure.
Q. Can you read newspapers?—A
Not much, I read them some.
Q. Do you read them often?—A. !
pick them up now nd then.
Q. What do you read?—A. Lltt’a
words like “this*’ and "that.”
Q. They are pretty common word-1
In the newspapers, aren't they?—A.
Yes.
Tries Conley on Spelling.
Q. Can you spell "school?"—A. Yes.
Q. Color?—A. No.
Q. Shirt?—A. Yes.
Q. Cat?—A. Yes.
q. Do you spell it with a ”k” or
with a "c?”—A. With a "k.”
Q. Can you spell “mother?"—A. No.
Q. Can you spell “papa?”—A. Yes.
Q. How?—A. P-a-p-u
Q. Can you spell "day?"—A. Yes.
Q. "Daylight?"—A. Yes.
Q. Can you spell "beer?”—A. Yep.
Q. Can you spell "whisky?"—A. No.
Q. Look at this picture and tell me
if you can read any of these words?—
A. No.
Q. Do you know your figures?—A.
Yes.
Q. You know a go . deal more
about figures than you do about spell
ing. don’t you?—A. Yes. I can count
better than I can spell.
Q. Then you are better at figuring
than you are at writing?—A. Yes
am better at counting.
Q. Well, isn’t figuring counting?—
A. 1 don't know.
Q You don’t know you are 27,
years old, do you, Jim?—A. Yes. Hr.
that’s what my mother said.
Q When did you go to school?—A.
Before I went to work.
Q. You don’t know where it was?—
A Yes. It was at the Mitchell street
school.
Q. Who was your teacher?—A. MU*
Aaron Cook
Q. Who was the principal?—A. Miss
Corey.
Q. What year was it?—A. 1 don’t
know.
Q. What did you do for Dr. Pal
mer?—A I drove for him.
Quizzed About Former Employment.
Q. How long did you work for Mr.
Coates?—A. About five years.
Q. He ran a pressing club?—A. No,
sir. he ran a woodyard.
Q. Do you remember any of the
names of the white men who worked
there? A. Yes. Mr. Babe, I think.
Q. He wasn’t 'Baby', was he?—A.
No, Hr
Q Jim. when you went to the Na
tional Pencil Factory, who employed
you?—A. Mr Herbert Schtff
Q. Who paid off? -A. Mr. Schiff and
\somet!mes Mr. Frank.
Q. Give me the dates Mr Frank
paid off—A. I hardly ever drew my
money. 1 had somebody draw mine,
usually.
Q. Why did you do that?—A. Well.
I owed money, and I wanted to get it
an 1 get away without them getting It
all.
Q. Did you not owe the boys more
than you wanted to pay them?—A.
No. sir, 1 Just owed 10 or 16 men.
Q. What were you drawing?—A
$6.05.
Q. Who else w’orked there?—A. Jot
Bryce.
Q. What did he draw?—A. He said
$6.48.
Q. What made Mm tell you that?—
A. We were arguing down in the
basement.
Q. Did you tell him what you
drew?—A No.
Q. Why didn't you tell him?—A. 1
didn’t think It was any of his busi
ness
Q. You didn’t want him to know?
A. No, sir.
Q. A!1 you had to do was to put
Vital points in
evidence
against Frank
illustrated
by artist
P. A. Carter.
remember? Why didn’t you tell thai
then?—A. You cut me off so sharp
I didn’t have a chance.
Q. What time did they come?—A
Some time about 2:30 or 3 o’clock.
Q. What did he say?—A. He asked
me if Mr. Fraqk had put me wise.
Q. He and Frank used the same ex
pression?—A. Yes, sir.
Q. How were the women dressed?—
A. I don’t remember.
Court was then adjourned until 2
o’clock.
Jim Conley was brought to the
courtroom at five minutes* to 2 o’clock.
didn’t I. Jim?—A. The last time 1
watched was about the last of Sep
tember.
Q. Jim, what time was it you
watched the second Saturday?—A. 1
don't remember, sir.
Q. You don’t know what time you
left for home?—A. No, sir.
Q. Jim, we don’t want any contro
versy between us, but tell all about
these times you watched.—A. I done
told you like I remember them.
Dramatic Moment of Trial
Comes as Negro Takes Stand
worKiv
SAYS' MMW
Health Restored by
Eckman’s Alterative
If you *re * sufferer from Glandular Tuber
culosis. or know of anyone bo afflicted, it might
l*e well to lnvcMtlgatc this rase, whore the writer
declare* after a year of suffering, he found per
manent relief and full reentry to health by
using Krkman’s Alterative, a tnedlrlnc which has
been effective In many rases of Tul»errul«i*l»
257 l.aruston 8t , Pldla., Pa.
“GenUemen: In March. 1900, my doctor pro
nounced my rase ‘Tuberculosis In Uie Glands.'
and a numl>er of operations In a hospital failed
to benefit me. In the meantime, a friend of
mine a lrlsed Kckman's Alterative The wounds
in my t eck were still open and In a frightful
condition when I started .o take It. After using
two bottles I found I was Improving, haring
gained weight, could eat and was able to sleep
I continued using it until I mss well, which
was In November, 1910. Hcfore I look the medi
cine I had three hemorrhages since 1 hare been
taking It I have not had any. On Noeeriher 11,
1910, I started to work, and since that time I
have not lost one day's work through slckneas.
I highly recommend Erkiuan'a AlteraUve U> any-
bo Is suffering from Gland trouble.'*
“'it) JOSEPH B WHITE.
abbreviated: more on request )
man's Alterative has been proven by many
lest to be rnoel effleacinus In case* of se-
Thrnat and Lung Affections. BronchiUs.
Bronchial Asthma. MtublKJrn Cold* and in up
building the S3 stem. l*oe» not contain narcoUcs.
poisons or habit-forming drugs For tale by
all of Jacobs’ l>rug Store* and other leading
druggists. Write tire Kckman Laboratory. Phils
delphla. f«r booklet telling of recoveries
and additfHftA evidence.
your envelop** In your pocket and he
couldn’t see It. or tell what was in
It?—A. Yes.
Settled Hi* Bills by Buying Beer.
Q. Then If you owed this fellow
Bryce money, you were afraid to get
it while he was there?—A. No.
Q. Why didn’t you settle with
them?—A. I usually settled with them
at the beer saloon by buying twice as
much beer.
Q. Didn’t you say a while ago that
jou owed Joe Bryce some money?—A.
No. I said Walter.
Q. Then the reason you didn’t draw
your money was that you w*anted to
get It and get away without paying
money?—A. Sometimes.
Q What time did the night watch
man come?—A 1 don’t know. 1 never
saw him come to work.
Q. You never paw the watchm«\n
there?—A. I saw the white watchman
get his money there.
Q. At w’hat time did he come?—A.
About 2 o’clock
Q. Did you see old man New*t Lee?
there?—A. No. I heard he was.
Q. Who was there before Newt?—
A. Old man Kendrick.
Q. Who was there before that?—A
His son. 1 think.
Q. What time did they pay off on
Saturdays? Was it 12 o’clock?—A.
| Sometimes 12. sometimes a quarter to
! 12 and sometimes at 11:30.
Q. Now you said you watched for
I Mr. Frank, didn’t you?- A. Yes.
J Q. When was the first time you
ever watched for Mr. Frank?- A.
Sometime last summer.
Frank Called Him Into Office.
Q. What did Mr. Frank say to
you?—A. He came out and called me
into his office.
Q. What did he say?—A. Well, he
sometimes talked to me about the
work.
Q. When did he first call you in
and talk to you about the work 0
Didn’t he call you in during the week,
sometimes?—A. No, sir. He called
me into the office to talk about the
work one Saturday night after I went
there.
Q. Did you punch the clock?—A.
Sometimes I did and sometimes I
didn’t.
Q. Didn’t they pay you by the
clock?—A. No, they didn’t pay me
that way.
Q. Didn’t they pay everybody by j
the clock?—A. They paid me $1.10 a
! day.
Q. Don’t you work by the hour?—
A. Yes. sir.
Q. How much? A. Eleven cents an
hour.
Q. Did you miss any time?—A.
Sometimes.
Q. Wouldn’t they dock you w hen you
were not punched right on the clock'.’
—A, Surnames Mr. Frank would
come out and say he didn't dock me
for the time I missed.
Q. Why did he tell you that?—A. 1
don’t know, sir. He Just come out
said he hadn’t docked me.
Q. They didn't ask you how r long
you had been there?—A No, they just
asked me If I was there.
Q. You say the first time you
watched was hack there in July? You
don’t know the name of the man?—A.
Yes, the man was Dalton.
Q. You don’t know the name of th*
woman, do you?—A. No. but she lives
on West Hunter street.
Toll Name of Woman.
Q. Do you know the name of the
woman who was with Frank?—A.
Yes, her name was Daisy Hopkins.
She worked on the fourth floor
Q. He asked you to watch?—A.
Yes.
Q. What time was It?—A. 3 or 3:20.
Q What did Frank say to you?—
A. He called me to hls office and
said: “You see that young lady go
ing out?" I said: ‘Yes. sir.’ He said:
"Watch the door, and don’t let any
body but them in.'
Q. Was the woman, Daisy Hop
kins, at the office then?—A. Yes.
Q. What did the other woman do?
A. She went out and came back
later with a man that was Dalton.
Q. What did they rto?—A. They
went into Mr. Frank’s office.
Q. How long did they stay?—A.
About 10 or 15 minutes.
Q. Did they coine out?—A. Yes.
after a while. The man and the
woman came out. Mr. Frank said:
Ml right, Jim.’’
Q. Then the man’s name was James
Dalton?—A. No. he was talking to
me.
Q. What did they do?—A. They
came down and went towards the
basement.
Q What did 3’ou do?—A. I went
back and opened the trap door for
them.
Q How long did they stay down
there?—A. I don’t know.
Q. Frank stayed in his office?—A.
Yes.
Q. What time did he leave?—A.
About 4:30.
Q. What time did the people down-
staii-s go?—A. I don’t know exactly,
but they came up and went to Mr.
Frank's office.
Q. Was the front door locked?—A.
No. sir. I was standing there watch
ing it.
Q. Was that the first time this
happened?—A. Yes.
Q When did it happen again?—
About the last part of July, or the
first part of August.
Q. When did Mr. Frank tell you
about it?—A. That same Saturday
morning.
Q. What did he say?—A. He said.
"Well, you know what you did for
me ’ast Saturday?” I said: “Yes, sir.”
He said: “I want to put you wise to
this Saturday.”
Q. What happened after this?—A.
After Mr. Holloway left, Miss Daisy
Hopkins came in.
Q. Did she see you?—A. Yes. sir.
Q. Did anybody else come that day?
A. No. sir.
Q How long did she stay up there?
A. About half an hour.
Q. Did he give you any money?—A.
Yes. sir; he gave me half a dollar.
Q. When was the next time?—A. I
don’t hardly remember; it wrs near
wintertime.
Q. About what time? A. About th©
middle of August.
Q. I thought you said it was near
winter?—A. Well, that’s near winter.
Q. Middle of August near winter!
It's mighty hot then.—A. Yes. sir; it’s
pretty near winter.
Q. What did Frank say?—A. He
said: "I’m going to put you wise.”
Q. That’s what he said every time,
was it—"I’m going to put you wise?"
A. Yes. sir; something like that. But
he said what he did in a funny way.
She Had Red Hair
‘‘Like Mr. Hooper."
Q. Who was the woman?—A. T don’t
know who she w r as.
Q. How* did she look?—A. She h.^d
hair like Mr. Hooper.
Q. How do you know Mr. Hooper
so well? He has questioned you a
lot, hasn’t he?—A. No, sir; I never
saw* him but once before. v
Q. She w r as gray-haired, then. w*a>-.
she? You see Mr. Hooper is gray-
haired. old and broken with a j ome-
what weasly appearance.—A. I don’t
know w'hether he is gray or not. Her
hair was like his.
Q What color was her dress?—A.
It was green.
Q. What kind of clothes d.d she
have on the first time?—A. A white
waist and black skirt.
Q. When did you see her last? -A.
The morning 1 was arrested.
Q. What did she hav* on then?—A.
A black skirt with paiiv spots on it
Q. You swept the fourth floor?—A-
Yes.
Q. Saw that little girl on the fourth
floor every day, didn’t you?—A. Not
ail the time, but often.
Q. That first time he told you not
to tell Darley, didn't he? A. Yes.
Q. What time was it. Thanksgiving
Day?—A. I don't recall.
Q. Who came down first?—A. Mr.
Frank.
Q. What did he do?—A. He went to
the front door and opened it and
looked out.
Q. What did he do then?—A. He
w'ent to the stairway door and lei
the woman out and walked to the
front door with her As she passed
me the lady said, “Is that the negro?”
and he said. "Yes. that’s him. He
is the best negro in the State.”
Frank Walked to Door With Her.
Q. Did he walk out?—A. No, h*
just walked to the door with her and
came back.
Q. How was she dressed?—A. A blue
dotted dress and a gray coat that
looked like it was tailored, white
shoes and white stockings.
Q. What kind of a hat?—A. A big
black hat with big feathers.
Q. Did you see that woman in the
office before?—A. I thought 1 saw her
in his office sometime before Thanks
giving.
Q. What did she have on?—A. I
don’t know'.
Q. What kind of a looking girl was
^he?—A. A tall, heavy set girl.
Q. Who else was there in the of
fice?—A. Friends of Mr. Frank.
Q. What time was it?—A. About 8
o’clock.
Q. What were you doing there at
that time?—A. Stacking some boxes.
Q. Any jewelry?—A. 1 didn’t notice
any.
Q. What was the next time after
Thanksgiving?—A. Along after
Fhristmas.
Q. What time?—A. I don’t know
exactly.
Q. What is vour best guess?—A. It
was some time about the first of Jan
uary.
Q. When did Mr. Frank speak to
you about it the first time?—A. I don’t
remember.
Q. You don’t remember anything
about it except thet you watched?—
A. Yes. sir. I do remember one t ing
O. I thought you said you didn’t
remember anything?—A. les. sir; Mr.
Frank told me a man with two wo
men would be there and I might make
,i piece of change off of the man.
Q When was this?—A. About 7:3h.
Q. I thought you said you didn't
COTTLE*
AT -L O'CPOCH Ore Flit’S'T* rkOOT&
Oie OKE- lCVLiF HOUK- KITE'S? QlRi/ DBJO
He tvas accompanied by W. M. Smith,
his lawyer, and Chief of Police James
L. Beavers. He spent the noon recess;
at the police station. The negro went
straight to the stand and waited for
court to open. Frank, who was in the
room, sat w’itb his back turned to the
witness stand and talked to his wife.
Conley showed no signs of nervous
ness. and for the greater part of the
five minutes he kept his hands locked
in his lap and gazed calmly at the
curious faces turned hls way.
Just as Judge Roan walked to the
stand, Deputy Sheriff Plennie Minot
announced all women would be ex
cluded from the room for the re
mainder of the hearing. Reluctantly
they vacated the seats they had se
cured and held during the noon re
cess.
Fully 150 women w*ere barred by
the ruling. Rot*ser resumed his cross-
examination at five minutes after 2
o’clock.
Q. Who saw f you at the police sta
tion?—A. Chief Beavers.
Q. Anybody else?—A. My lawyer.
William Smith.
Q. What did they say?—A. Well,
my lawyer—
“I object," said Attorney Hooper.
"You can’t bring out what took place
between him and his lawyer.’’
Didn’t Remember About Time.
Q. Well. Jim, what did you do on
the Saturday before you watched for
Mr. Frank the first time?—A. I don’t
know.
Q. What did you do the Saturday
after that?—A. I don’t know, sir, 1
disremember.
Q. What about the Saturday after
that?—A. Well, long about August 1
I watched again.
Q. Le'. me see if I get that right
—one Saturday you didn’t watch and
the next Saturday you did. The next
Saturday you didn’t watch, and the
next Saturday you did, and then you
didn’t watch any more until Tnanks-
giving?—A. I don’t know exactly. 1
can’t count it like you.
Q. Well, I got it like you said,
SEASHORE
EXCURSION
AUGUST 7.
Jacksonville, Brunswick,
St. Simon, Cumberland, At
lantic Beach, $6.00—Limit
ed 6 days. Tampa, Fla., $8
—Limited 8 days.
TWO SPECIAL TRAINS.
10 p. m. solid Pullman train.
10:15 p. m. Coach train.
Make Reservations Now.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
L. O. Grice, a stenographer in the
offices of the Atlanta and West Point
Railroad, was the first witness called.
He said that he saw Frank on Sunday
morning after the murder and Frank
attracted his attention by his undue
nervousness.
Grice said he was on the way to
the Terminal Station when he bougnt
an “extra” stating that a murder had
been committed at the National Pen
cil Factory. He said he stopped by
the pencil factory and saw eight
men on the inside of the building.
“Did any of these men attract your
particular attention?” asked Solicitor
Dorsey.—A. Two or three of them
did.
Q. Who were they?—A. When I
went in the building Detective Black,
whom I knew, was asking a great
many questions.
Q. Did anybody attract your atten
tion by their nervousness?—A. Not
right then, but later we went down
through the basement and out the
back door. Then I was attracted by
the nervous actions of a small dark
man. I did not know him.
Q. Is this the man? (Pointing to
Frank.)—A. Yes.
Shows How Frank Acted.
Q. What did Frank say? A. He
said something about looking for his
pin. Detective Black told him they
had already looked for it.
Q. Just tell the jury how Frank
acted.—A. He did ilke this, (The wit
ness stood up and walked about the
stand with his head bent, intently
gazing at the floor. His hands, with
the fingers extended, were shaking.)
Rosser took the witness on cross-
examination.
Q. When were you served to ap
pear as a witness?—A. Last Satur
day.
Q. How did you come to be called?
A. I told my friends and they prob
ably told Mr. Dorsey.
Q. When you saw that that little
girl was murdered, did it not affect
you?—A. Yes. some.
Q. You were excited, were you not.
just like an ordinary human being?
—A. Yes.
Q. Did you show your excitement?
—A. I might have.
Q. You don’t recall whether anyone
else was nervous, do you?—A. No.
Dobbs Is Recalled.
The witness left the stand and Ser
geant L. S. Dobbs w r as recalled. »
Q. Mr. Dobbs, did you find a hand
kerchief in that basement?—A. About
ten feet toward the rear from the-
body,
Q. Is this It?—Yes.
Rosser cross-examined the witness.
Q. The haindkerchief was about ten
feet beyond her feet on the left hand
side of the building?—A. Yes.
Solicitor Dorsey took the witness
again. «
He had Sergeant Dobbs identify
a flashlight photograph of the spot
w'here the body w r as found.
Rosser questioned the witness
again. ,
Q. Do you recognize in this picture
the handsome countenance of our
friend, John Black?—A. Y’es.
Dobbs w r as excused.
Handkerchief as Evidence.
Solicitor Dorsey gained consent to
tender the handkerchief as evidence.
Mell Stanford, an employe of the
pencil factory, was recalled to the
stand. i
Q. What w'as the condition of the
door in the rear of the second floor
of the pencil factory leading to the
stairs that led tt> the third floor on
the Friday afternoon before the mur
der?—A. It was barred.
Q. Is there any other way to get
out that way except those steps.—A.
None except the fire escapes.
Q. Was the floor cleaned subse
quent to the murder?—A. Yes, some
time in the early part of the week.
Mr. Rosser took the witness.
Q. Did you clean It?—AA. No, I
saw a negro doing it.
Q. Who was he?—A. I don’t know
Undertaker Gives Formula.
The witness was excused and Wil
liam Gheeslin, the undertaker, was
recalled.
Q. Are there curtains on the out
side of the room in which Mary Pha-
gan’s body was placed?—A. Yes.
Q. I don’t want you to disclose the
formula of your fluids, but I w^ant to
know if there is formaldehyde In It?
—A. Yes. I will state that there is
S per cent of formaldehyde.
“I object,” said Mr. Rosser, “for him
to bring out one ingredient without
the others.”
"Well,” said Mr. Dorsey, “I don’t
want him tQ disclose his formula when
it Is a secret with him, and I hope
that Mr. Rosser will not try to force
him to do so.
"Mr Rosser tried to bring out from
Dr. Hurt that the lungs were not
congested. I want to show' that for
maldehyde cleaned them out.”
Didn’t Point Out Scar.
Finally it was agreed that Mr.
Gheeslin should shqw his formula to
the attorneys and the Jury.
Rosser took the witness on cross-
examination.
Q. Mr. Gheeslin, when Detective
Black, Boots Rogers and Mr. Frank
were in your undertaking establlsh-
ment, didn’t you point out th© scar
on the little girl’s head?—A, No.
Q. Instead of there being a cur
tain to the entrance to the room in
the undertaking room where Mary
Phagan’s body was lying there was a
bathrobe and a small coat hanging on
the door?—A. Yes.
The witness was excused.
Mrs. Arthur Ellis was called, but
did not answ’er.
Jim Conley was called at 9 :45.
State May Rest Wednesday.
The second w’eek of the Frank trial
opened Monday morning with the in
dication that the State would not
conclude with the presentation of its
case before Tuesday night at the
earliest. In the event that the cross-
examination of Jim Conley required
the time the lawyers for the defense
intimated they would devote to it,
there was a strong possibility that the
prosecution would not rest much be
fore Wednesday afternoon.
The conclusion of the testimony of
Dr. H. F. Harris was regarded as of
scarcely less importance than the
story of Conley. Dr. Harris was on
the stand Friday and created a gen
uine sensation by declaring that Mary
Phagan could not have lived more
than half or three-quarters of an hour
after she ate her simple midday meal
and started from home for the Na
tional Pencil Factory. He came to
this determination from the fact thit
the cabbage she had eaten for din
ner had undergone scarcely any
change from the digestive juices when
he examined the contents of her
stomach.
The physician also strengthened the
State’s indictment charging strangu
lation by declaring that this was as
suredly the cause of her deatn, the
blow on the back of the head being
insufficient to produce more than a
temporary unconsciousness.
In the midst of his startling testi
mony, which was the first evidence
brought out by th© State that was
not already known by the public, he
collapsed. Solicitor Dorsey had
planned to ask him a number of other
questions, but was forced to stop
w’here he was. The defense, it may
be supposed from the ungentle man
ner in which they attacked the doc
tor’s statements the next morning
with another of the State’s medical
experts on the stand, also was plan
ning to question Dr. Harris at length.
Whether any other revelations of
importance as the result of Dr. Har
ris' examinations of the body at the
first and second exhumation would
have been made under the examina
tion and cross-examination can only
be determined when Dr. Harris again
takes the stand. It also is prob
lematical whether the physician will
testify with such assurance and pro
fessional ease W’hen he gets under the
grilling cross-fire of Reuben Arnold,
who knows a little medicine and
physiological causes and effects him
self.
The prosecution, before it finishes,
has still other witnesses to call. An
expert in abdominal surgery, to cor
roborate the testimony of Dr. Har
ris, probably will be one of them.
Solicitor Dorsey would not reveal his
name Monday morning. ^
Harry Denham and Arthur White,
the factory employees w'ho were on
the fourth floor of the building Sat
urday forenoon and in th e afternoon
until 3 o’clock, are expected to be
questioned briefly by the Solicitor be
fore he concludes the presentation of
his evidence. Their testimony is not
regarded as of special value, except
to establish the time when Frank
came to their floor to tell that he was
going to leave and lock the front
door. They are expected to say, in
addition, that they were hammering
and making a great deal of other
noise and that they probably would
not have noticed the running of the
elevator had any one used it.
Are You Sick, Diseased,
Nervous, Run Down?
Have You Blood Poison, Kidney,
Bladder and Urinary Troubles?
IF SO, CONSULT (FREE)
Dr Hughe3, Atlanta’s Long Estab
lished, Most Reliable Specialist,
1 cure to «tay
cured
NERVE. BLOOD
■ad Skin DlBeaees.
STRICTURE.
Pro«t*tic Troubl**,
VARICOCELE.
HYDROCELE.
Kidney. Bladder
and UMrary
rHseaaea. PUaa aod
All Chronic and
1 A . e "06. me celebrated German
S reparation, for Blood Poison, and
uarantee results. Everything ab
solutely confidential.
It you can't call, write.
Free Consultation and Advice to all
HOUR8—9 i *. to 7 p. d Sunday*. 9 to 1.
DR. J. D. HUGHES
Opposite Third National Bank.
Ifl'/y N. Broad St., Atlanta, Oa.
i I ■