0608 Sheet – Supreme Court Georgia Appeals of Leo Frank, 1913, 1914

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Visible Translated Text Is As Follows:

the way we usually do with the time clock. After placing
these slips in the clock and bringing those back in the office,
Mr. Schiff and myself left for home, I think about 6:30. I
neglected to state that while I was still in the office, Mr.
Schiff was paying off Newt Lee--these are the two time slips I
took out---

Gentlemen, as I was saying, these two slips that had April 26th,
1913 written at the bottom are the two slips I put in the clock
on the evening of Friday April 25th, to be used on the day
following, which, of course, was April 26th. I neglected to
mention also, in going over my duties at the factory, that Mr.
N. V. Darley was superintendent of labor and of manufacture,
it fell to his duty to engage the help and to distribute the
help throughout the plant, and to discharge the help in case
it was necessary; it was also due to him whether their wages
were raised or not. In other words, he was the man that came
directly in contact with the help. Moreover, he saw that the
goods progressed through the factory without stopping, easily,
quickly, and economically manufactured. On Friday evening, I
got home at about 6:30, had my supper, dressed up, then went
with my wife to the residence of her nephew, Mr. Carl. Wolfsheimer
and his wife and myself played a game-of-auction bridge for
the balance of the evening. My wife and I returned home and
retired at about eleven o'clock. On Saturday April 26th, I
rose between seven and seven thirty and leisurely washed and
dressed, had my breakfast, caught a Washington Street or Georgia
Avenue car, --I don't recall which, at the corner of Washing-
ton and Georgia Avenue, and arrived at the factory on Forsyth
Street, the Forsyth Street plant, at about 8:30, is my recol-
lection.

On my arrival at the factory, I found Mr. Holloway, the
day watchman, at his usual place, and I greeted him in my usual

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