0759 Sheet – Supreme Court Georgia Appeals of Leo Frank, 1913, 1914

Reading Time: 5 minutes [829 words]


Visible Translated Text Is As Follows:

Said "Well, is that will you want for good Mr. Frank" and he said Urea and I saw him be one I wrote on was and take out a brownish looking scratch pad the one I wrote on was and he said I saw him take out a brownish looking I took his pencil and made a mark or it.

I took it to be and "No" but he shut the tablet up and looked at me and told me that was all he wanted me, and he come all the way to the top of the steps and he come 3 or 4 steps down to where I could see me until I hit the sidewalk, it seem as if he was trying to see if I would take anything as I went out, but there was nothing to take unless I took a great big box but when I passed those two doors on the steps there, a Frank told me to leave one of them open, and I left the inside one open, and I pushed the trap door to keep it from smutting, when we come out I was very dry and I pulled the front doors to when I went out, and I went to the beer saloon across the street and ordered a cigarette box and it had two paper dollars in there and two silver quarters, and I laughed and said "Good luck has done struck me", and I bought a ten cent double header and then went back to Peters St.

and hand't none of the boys got there that I run with and I walks up there to the moving picture show and look at the pictures and they didn't seem to be any good, and I come down Peters St. looking for that boy I owed, I got to the corner of Forsyth and couldn't find him and I struck the sidewalk half pint whiskey from but I went to Joe half past two o'clock and I took the smoke and went as far as Joe's at Liangum and Magnolia St., and got fifteen cents worth of beer in it and come back home and sent the little girl to get a dime's worth of stove-wood and a nickel's worth of pan sausage, and I eat half.

the other little change I kept it, and I layed down across the bed and there is where I stayed until about half past little while and got up and set in front of the fire a little while, and then swimming any the head and then here comes Mitchell St., and I come on back home.

I was striking feeling bad, and I layed down across the bed and stayed there until 6 o'clock, or 6:30 that night, and I waked up to my mother's at 92 Tattnall St.

and they give me a lunch there and I brought it on back home and I stood there and eat it up and stayed at home until 10 minutes to Mitchell next morning, and when I got to the door for 21 by and running on the factory, and it was 10 minutes after I got o'clock, the clock have been a little fast, and when I got there I went upstairs to the dressing room and in comes Gordon Bailey, and he comes Joe Williams and then Mr. wade Campbell, the lead inspector, and he comes in there and says "Wasn't it bad about that girl being killed", and we asked him "which girl" and it seemed like he said "Mary Puckett", and we asked him whereabouts and he said "In the basement" we asked him if it was a white or colored girl, and he said it was a white girl, he said he had him in the basement, and then he got killed and he said he behind him with the sprinkler in my hand, and then he want to the toilet and I went right behind him, and then he got a sprinkler full of water and I stayed down the 3rd floor not about 9 o'clock, and I went and got my raw stuff from the 3rd floor and brought it up to the 4th floor and unloaded it, and then he said I would go to the basement and see who that was that got killed, and when I got there there was such a crowd of white people there I couldn't go back of there, and then the fireman sent me to get him a nickel and the back of me a nickel and the fireman give me a nickel to get him a bag of apples, and a leaf of roman, and he give me a drink, and the policeman told me to get on out, and I went up the stairs and stayed up there until about 15 minutes to 10.

and the whistle blowed for the factory, and it was 7 hours.

Related Posts
Top