0662 Sheet – Supreme Court Georgia Appeals of Leo Frank, 1913, 1914

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Visible Translated Text Is As Follows:

corner of Whitehall and Alabama, where Mr. Schiff waited
until I caught an Alabama Street or Georgia Avenue car and re-
turned to my home. I returned to my home about a quarter to
four, and found there was no one in, as my wife had told me
that if she wasn't at home, she would probably be at the resi-
dence of Mr. Ereenberg, I proceeded over there, coming up
Washington Street in the direction of the Orphans' Home, and
on Washington Street, between Georgia Avenue and the next
street down, which I believe is Bass Street, I met Arthur
Haas and Ed Montag and Marcus Loeb, who stopped me and asked
about things they had heard about the little girl being dead
in the Pencil Factory, and I stopped and discussed it with them,
and I was about to leave them when Henry Bauer came along in
his automobile and stopped where I was, and he asked me what
I knew about it, and I had to stop and talk with him; and I
finally got loose from him and went over to the home of Mr.
Ereenberg on the corner of Pulliam and Washington Terrace,
and when I arrived there, I found Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Marcus,
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Ereenberg and my wife, and a little later
Mr. and Mrs. Sig Selig came in. Here the subject of
conversation was what I had seen that morning and what the de-
tectives had told me, and what I had told them and how the
little girl looked, and all about it, as far as I knew. I
staid there until about 5 o'clock, when Mr. Ike Haas, the
Vice-President of the Pencil Factory, telephoned me to come
over to his house, and I thereupon went over there, and on ar-
riving at Mr. Haas' home, which is situated on Washington Street
right across the way from the Orphans' Home, I talked to him
about what I had seen that morning, and what I could deduce from
the facts that were known and what the detectives had told me;
I staid there until about 6 o'clock. On arrival at Mr. Haas'
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