Tuesday 29th April 1913 Negro Watchman is Accused by Slain Girls Stepfather
Tuesday April 29th 1913 That Mary Phagan never left the factory after she entered it at 12:15 oclock Saturday the day of her murder and that she was killed and her body dragged into the basement by the negro night watchman Newt Lee now in jail is the firm belief of the childs stepfather W. J. Coleman and other members of her family. As for Arthur Mullinax former street car conductor held on suspicion Mr. Coleman told a Georgian reporter he thought him innocent of the crime. He was also very doubtful if J. M. Gantt ex bookkeeper for the pencil factory where the girl worked had anything to do with her murder or knew anything about it. If the negro watchman did not kill the child how would it have been impossible for him to hear her screams going on in the building? he asked. A livery stable man next door heard them and it would have been much easier for the watchman to. If the black did not do it himself then he must have known something about it and who the person was who did it. Outlines Theory of Murder. Then in broken tones for he had just returned from making all arrangements for taking the girls body to Marietta Georgia to be buried he outlined his idea of how she met her death. When Mary turned from the window after receiving her money he said I think that instead of going directly out she went to the dressing room perhaps for a drink of water as one of the notes found said. Superintendent Frank missing her when he came out and supposing she had left the building locked her in. The negro watchman must have seen her go into the dressing room and a little later seized her and gagged her. Later developments in the story go to show that the spot where the childs hair was found caught on a steel lathe was not the scene of her struggle with her assailant. In the dressing room it was said by a member of her family there were plain evidences that the attack was made. She was also gagged in the room for a strip of her new lavender dress was cut off from the front and bound around her mouth to keep her from screaming. Ribbon Found Near Boiler. Another bit of evidence it was said that went to throw added suspicion on the black was a bow of the childs blue ribbon and a handkerchief found down near the boiler where he constantly stayed. The negro evidently kept the child in the factory all day Mr. Coleman said and was afraid to attack her until midnight for fear she would scream or somebody would come. He may or may not have knocked her senseless from the first or he may have tied her. I do not know but when Gantt entered the shop it is more than likely that he knew nothing of the girls presence there and simply went up and got his shoes as he said and went out again. All this about Mary having been seen on the street at midnight or at any other time after 12 oclock in the day I do not think can be true. I believe she remained all day in the building. After the negro did the work he was afraid to leave or not to notify the police which would make appearances worse for him. Therefore he called the officers. Now Clears Mullinax. Mr. Coleman said he had at first given credence to a report that Mary had come home at 6 oclock Saturday afternoon and that Mullinax meeting her as she got off of the car had taken her back to town with him. This report Mr. Coleman said turned out to be untrue. The conductor had made a mistake and the girl Mullinax was with was Miss Pearl Robinson of Bellwood as he swore in jail. This was corroborated by the conductor himself J. C. Horne 11 Coral Place on whose car the reporter rode out to the Coleman home on Lindsay Street. The conductor said that Mullinax and Miss Robinson had taken his car out and knowing Mullinax he had talked with him and the girl who at that time he thought was Mary Phagan. When Mullinax and Miss Robinson reached their corner Mullinax remarked that it was a bit chilly and he was going home to build a fire. It was later that they returned to the theater the conductor said but on whose car he did not know.
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