Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 163, Decatur, Adams County, 11 July 1935 — Page 5

Kklien es girl _ fl'''77”niin<’i' and charge ■\h earning weupotw pend- ■ .It Instigation. The Hfon '' ,:l ! "' * ll -JX

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1 night, (hoy said. • They also wanted to determine wlietlu r powder imnicle* in porea ; of Klndeh’a hands ware caused by I firing a shotgun, as he claimed, or Hale's pistol, with which Frances was shot.

The shotgun used heavy black ’ powder and the revolver cartridges contained a kmokelcss I powder of finer tekthlt, thrV said. Leach was the second police j officer called in to aid in the In-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1935.

Evangelist ' >s ' WPw * The Rev. C. E. Shull*, state evangelist for the Christian Church, who has been conducting aerviees at the Decatur Christian chttrch the past three weeks, will in all probability deliver the eluding sermon Sunday evening. Evangelist Shultz comes from Newcastle and has been Very successful in evangelistic work. Rev. J. M. Dawson is pastor of the Christian church in thia city. Vestlgalion to become convinced that Frances had committed suitid*. Sergt. Arch Ball, ballistics expert of the Indianapolis police force who conducted the paniffin testa, arrived at the same conclusion. “Examination of the piraffin vast of the right hand of the Prince girl showed pppitive reaction that she had discharged a I firearm of some.sort very recent- | ly, which would indicate suicide,” ; Ball said. Frances, a seventh-grade pupil of a country Khool, who left the farm home of her Quaker father two months ago because he objected to her frequent dates, was shot in the forehead during an amorous automobile ride down •‘Lover’s Lane." The two men and her girl chum I brought her to the hospital and said Frances had attempted stiivfde. She died two hours later. The three companions were arrested as murder suspects a few hours later when an autopsy revealed she had suffered a skull fracture in a brutal beating before she was shot. Authorities believe she was beaten by Kinder with a pair of bra«s knuckles found near the sedhe of the shooting. GRAND LARCENY CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONR ed was placed against Brewster. The two men will appear for arraignment in Allen circuit court next week.. Burglaries in Adams coun*y admitted by Brewster include the following: Mutsehler Packing company at Decatur, burglarized twice; Runyaji’s garage at Decatur, Al I). 3,chmitt garage at Decatur, Roop’s Restaurant at Decatur, Ashbaucher's tin shop at Decatur, Schnopp filling station at Decatur, Elhersons filling station at Decatur, Fogle's filling station at Decatur, Adams theater at Decatur, Joseph & Lang store at Decatur, Decatur Lumber company, Berne Ice Cream company. Berne Milling company. A. J. Moser & Co., at Berne, Reis•an filling station >M Berne. Jefferson garage at Berne and the Berne Garment company. Brewster admitted looting the McCormick-Deering company, and taking S4B from the safe and the Chevrolet Sales where he obtained no loot in Kendallville. The DeKalb county burglaries which were committed at Auburn, are as follows: Goodall Lumber company, $400; Aumirn Burner company, $4; J. G. Garns Candy company, no loot; O'Day Oil company filling station, S7O, and the Wilson Tire Service company, S7O. During Brewster's boastful confession he said, “If I had known how easy it was I w*uld have been a.t this racket a long time ago." Brewster had tta word “Hard Ldck” tatooed on his righ! hand, it wad discovered following his arrest. BTVB ARE FLIES and MOSQUITOES BOTHERING YOU? USE - - PHILLIPS 44 Insect Killer —becaus; it really kills flies and doesn’t just make them dizzy. A complete knockout to flies, mosquitoes, ants, roaches, etc., because it is 19% stronger than any other intect killer. A trial will convince you. Sold in (4 pint to 5 gal. iot*. KNAPP Service Station Second and Jackson

EX-CONVICT IS UNDER ARREST Paroled Convict Held For Attack On Aged Indiana Woman South IRend. Ind . July 11 ti’l’) Elmer Traver. 39, p.roled i unvlct from the utat-’’ priuon, was arraited here last night as a su, p ct in a| brutal nttHck on Mm. ,'arrle Goten. 65 year old widow, in her flnin home aeven miles w-.-st of her -. Although Id ntlfind an the attn k er by George .Moi .hh, neikhn r of Mns. Goten. and wearing blood,pattered cloC’ing when ar-pi ehended, j Traver denied the crime. Mrs. Goten was reported in u tterious condition in a hospital here todiiy. She wax rut and bruised and ren-i dared semi-constious by a blow <m the head w hen the attacker invaded her home in what police believed wis a robbery attempt. One room of the horn ? was r n-i sacked and splatter d with blood, from the .struggle. Her clothing wan torn when she einerg.*d screaming from tee li u.< ■ j and was seen by Morass. in identifying Traver as the at-i tacker, Morrs-s euid the ex-convict fihst appeared at his home and then j went to the Goten reeidenc”. He . merged .shortly 'afterward | and sped sway in an uutoa. ibile. ' Moress mid. Traver Ls on parole from the stat' prison where he serv d a term on I un aut xnobite theft charge from la»-1 porte county. He Was impli ated in a kidnaping > but wass (prosecuted on <i light r ! tharge for his aid in apprehending . other suspects. o CONVENTION AT CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE i ,— —— i Quartet — Union. Re ding—Marcile Ham- ri k Duet. Opal Ray. und Mildr d ’ [ Bragg—Union Recitation — Ruch Tinkharn. Duet, Maxine Tinkharn and Nel-' ■ wyn Brookhart. Union. i Recitation — Bonn: Swoveland | Reading Eltehu Merrinmn I Song - Adult Class, Union Address —Rev. Geo. Bailer Collection. i Benediction —Rev. E. E. Bragg. f o ! Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

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!WHOSE WIFE? L- -./»</ GLADYS SHAW gRSKINE anq I YAH FIRTH -J

Twrwwtrri m t ■■»■»<.■<■ CHAPTER XLII Cyru* K. Mantel, atill chuckling like a benevolent gnome, walked swiftly to his waiting car and was driven home. • He went immediately to hi* library and, sitting at the big desk, drew the lcathcr4>ound book, without title or any sort of mark, toward , hint. He unlocked it and laid it open before him, at the page marked: “Solution,” and wrote: “The chip of brick and mortar broken from the wall of Vane’s penthouse, beyond reach, suggested to me that the body could have been slung onto the roof from the buildI ing in process of erection. Assuming that the body was not that of Isobel Vane, it was reasonable to suppose that Isobel herself had left the apartment by the fire escape. The fact that her jewels were gone, but that there were no signs of burglary, and that her bod was undisturbed further strengthened my theory of voluntary flight. The finger prints on veronal bottle not chocking with Vahe’s or those of the body, might easily, therefore, be those of the missing i wife. I discovered that among Isobel** many lovers was Roger Thornley. I also discovered that he was the i contractor on the building next door, having access to it at any time. ,1 went through this building and found a derrick operating within j reach of the Vane terrace. Having noticed the birthmark on the dead body which caused the ! mother to identify it, caused me to , think that no woman who lived by the beauty of her body, would have permitted this blemish to remain long on hers. I therefore found the plastic surgeon and discovered that iny deductions wore correct and I that he had indeed removed such a blemish from the body of Isobel : Vane, and therefore, it was certain that the body was that of an unknown woman. Who, wishing to elope with the notorious Isobel would be prevented from so doing by the tie of another 1 woman? The only one was Roger Thornley. Upon investigation he was shown to have left by motor with his wife Millie for the West Coast two days before the murder. Old Suky, starting voodoo magic against some unknown man, was well worth watching. It was easy to deduce that the man she hated was Roger Thornley because of his abuse of Millie whom the old woman loved. The chemist in Greenwich Village ■ eould not identify Vane, but only knew that th° man who purchased j the veronal said he was Vane. • In the same way, a man’s voice announcing the murder had said he was Renton, but there was no pr*--* that it was Renton and later plenty

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of proof that it was not. Thra wouio argue that someone had plotted the elopement and the murder with care. There were two women missing in whom I was interested. One of them wax dead. They were Isobel Vane and Millie Thornley. The post cards that kept arriving from Millie Thornley were difficult to account for. The murder of Donctta Dane, its similarity to the first murder, saving for the presence of the head, and the presence of Roger Thornley, with his inimical attitude toward Vane, strengthened my suspicion of him. Betty’s report of the whispered conversations overheard in the hall, and Thornley’s threat because of Donetta’a knowledge of some move of Gerry Gordon’s, made me send for the list of women sailing on the Tenyo Kishen Kaisha Line. I had also found the shreds of a telegram in Thornley’s room at Millbank Manor, with the name of this steamship line on it And I was assured by everyone, including Betty, that Mrs. Roger Thornley had sailed on this line. I was also assured that Donetta had known that Gerry Gordon had sailed too, and that that was what had angered Thornley. I found that Mrs. Thornley had sailed for China as indicated, but that no Gerry Gordon was listed. What had happened to this other woman, who now seemed to have disappeared? There were three Wntnen In whom I was interested. Tv.e of whom had vanished. One was dead. My job was to prove that the dead one was not Mrs. Isobel Vane. I went to a radio station and arranged to use theit radio and television facilities to broadcast the photographed head of Isobel Vane. At the same time I broadcast an appeal, offering a reward in care of that station for any information regarding the original of the pictured head ' I was showing. An answer came from a young interne in Chicago on vacation. He recognized the head as that of a woman picked up, injured and quite insane, wandering in the vicinity of San Jose, California. She had been sent to the State Asylum at Napa, where she now was. I sent for him, talked with him and flew to California where I found Isobel Vafte — insane. I brought her with a doctor and an attendant to New York in time to produce her as the corpus delicti at the Vane trial.” Cyrus K. leaned back in his chair and studied the book before him. Then reaching forward, he lifted the phone and gave a number. "Thank vou. I’m just as pleased as you are. He’s a splendid chap. . . . Oh I tr y dear Ingles, you mustn’t

reel nae that. Anyone migm nave thought as you dill. It certainly looked bad for the boy.. W b$L °f course, he won’t hold it against you. Didn’t you do ail you could to help him? . . . Yrs, it is (ragic for her. but that is nil you can expect as an end for them, when the beginning is Ruch as hers. I called you to tell you that I’ve just had a wire from the police at San Jose, California. They have found the head. . . Yea. He apparently threw it into a ravine as he left town after beating Isobel —he probably thought she was dead. Nice customer. Oh, yes. He’ll get what’s coming to him. , What’s that? Old Suky? Oh, she’* sure that voodoo will take care of him, and I’m sure that justice will. You take rare of thia affair of the head, will you, Ingles? .. Fine. I’ll look forward to seeing you soon. Yes. I hope so too, It’ll be fine to be on another ease together. The best of luck to you. Good-bye.’’ Again Cyrus K. took up his pen and wrote. “The murder of Donetta Dane was due io fear of her knowledge—that she might inadvertently expose him. It was an al tempt to hide his own trail and further implicate Vane. The cards supposed to be sent by Millie could have easily been writ ten and signed by her, on almost any excuse before ihe two ’eft New York, to be Posted by Roger at correct intervals. Donetta Dane was an innocent victim. The only thing she had to fear was a fetish of her own. She did not want her husband to know that she had ever posed in the nude for Lawrence Vane. That was the reason for her whispered request of him and his assurance of silence.’ Again he leaned back and surveyed his work. He removed his glasses and stroked one eyebrow thoughtfully, then murmured to himself: “I wish I could write in the most Interesting part, to me—that not only have I been able to save an innocent man and bring a guilty one to justice, but I have been instrumental in bringing young hearts together. Life is very kind to -is. sometimes, very kind.” • He leaned forward, closed the book snapped the lock, and placed the key on a separate hanger within a secret drawer in the desk. Then he took out another book, identical with the one he had just locked. All the pages were bitink. He took out small brushes and embossing stamps and go’ll liquid. Carefully he drew on the cover of the book he had just locked, a small bottle, and a golden derrick. He then laid the locked hook aside, and drew the virgin, blank one toward him. “I wonder . . " he mused, “1 wander I” THE END CnpnlßM. IM<, !>• Mpratilty Cb Distributed by Ktnt Frature* gyruliotn. In*

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