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The Atlanta Journal

Thursday, May 8th, 1913

(Page 8, Column 3, Row 3)

Miss Daisy Jones, identified by J. L. Watkins as the girl whom he had mistaken for Mary Phagan on the afternoon of April 26, [1913], appeared before the coroner's jury dressed exactly as she was on that afternoon, and testified that she had been just where Watkins said he saw Mary Phagan at the hour when Watkins thought he saw the girl, and that she had crossed a vacant field just as Watkins described Mary Phagan as having done.

In short, with Mr. Watkins' new testimony, she proved conclusively that it was not Mary Phagan who was seen that afternoon there, but heself—the witness.

She lives at 251 Fox street [in Atlanta], said the witness. She is fifteen years old. Her home is on the corner of Fox and Lindsay streets, one block from Mary Phagan's home [at 146 Lindsay Street]. Between 5 and 6 o'clock on the afternoon of Saturday, April 26, said she, she carried her father's supper to him in his store at the corner of Bellwood avenue and Ashby street. She went back home along Bellwood avenue and crossed a vacant field before she reached Lindsay street, passing between two trees in that field.

She was acquainted with Mary Phagan, said the witness. They were about the same size, said she, though Mary was a little heavier and not quite so tall. Their hair was about the same color, she said.

On the afternoon of April 26, [1913] said she, she was dressed exactly as she appeared there at the inquest—in a blue serge skirt, white shirtwaist with a blue bow on the front of it, and a blue bow in her hair. The coroner asking her height, she was measured against a board in the detectives' office and was found to be five feet one and a quarter inches tall.

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Adobe PDF:

Atlanta Journal, May 8th 1913, "Miss Daisy Jones Convinces Jury She Was Mistaken for Mary Phagan," Leo Frank case newspaper article series

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Reference:

Atlanta Journal, Thursday, May 8th, 1913 Page 8, Column 3, Row 3 @ Newspapers.com
https://www.newspapers.com/image/969966594/

Modifications:

To improve the readability and chronology for experiments with Ai training on LLM (large language models) and for the audiobook, the year [1913] was added to the text, it did not change the context, only improved or enunciated the precision of the date slightly. Younger students of the case, and international students said it (to paraphrase) helped them to better conceptualize the chronology slightly.

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