00:00Bowen Given Liberty makes full statement. The Atlanta Journal. Wednesday, May 7, 1913, page 18,
00:07column 5. P.P. Bowen, who was arrested here yesterday on suspicion in connection with an
00:11Atlanta case and who was released last night, made this statement today. My father is S.C. Bowen.
00:18He lives at Noonan, Georgia. I told the detectives that they had made a mistake at the time they
00:23arrested me and knew that they would soon find this to be so if they investigated my references
00:28and letters. Of course, I was scared when they entered my room. I did meet them at the door
00:33with an open knife, and before I knew who they were, I did say that if I had a gun,
00:38they would
00:38not have come into my room. I meant it too. Bowen gives his record since 1908 as follows.
00:45Left home in 1908 to work for a transfer and storage company in Atlanta. In 1910, worked
00:50for the Southern Railroad. In 1912, went to the Rock Island Railroad at El Dorado Arc as
00:55a master car builder's clerk. In 1913, went to Tyler Texa as private stenographer to H.D.
01:02Earl, division superintendent of the Cotton Belt Railroad. Left the employ of Mr. Earl April
01:0728th last, and came to Houston Sunday night. I obtained a position with the Southern Pacific
01:12Railroad as a master car builder's clerk soon after I arrived in Houston and was to have
01:16started to work Tuesday morning. I guess that job is a chance gone by now. The statement of
01:21Bowen was substantiated by the chief of police, and Bowen's final words as he left the police
01:26station were, I wish that you would print my statement. I am not a scoundrel. I really have
01:31been done an injustice by this thing. I don't blame the men so much that it is their business
01:35to arrest suspects, but I don't think they have treated me exactly right.
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