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Show CIS Mil II as iiiim Spy Suspect Says Wander-well Wander-well Sends Photos to Brother in Germany. Special to The Tribune. ATLANTA, Ga., March 25. Apparently Appar-ently unworried by the close watch maintained over her movements by the government agents and by the predicament predica-ment of her husband and her former lover, both now jailed here on charges of suspicion of being German spies, Mrs. Anna Coltwanger Van Endcn today told of her long walking trip since leaving; Salt Lake and of her romance with Walter Wanderwell. She savs she met him in July of last year, and he filled her heart Virh stories of the open road. He wanted a companion, she said, but her aunt would not allow her to go nnWa they wore married, so to escape this condition they 'ran away. In California ?he met A'an En den, and as War.dcrwpll showed irt o matrimonial mat-rimonial intent she married the alleged Hollander. Since then thev have walked across the continent, and several sev-eral times have passed through towns only a few weeks behind Wandorwcll. "We meet Germans who say they do not like "vVanderwell," Mis. A'an Knden said. "lie tells so many different dif-ferent stories of who lie is. Wander- ; well shows the police books here with clippings of his wanderings. T don't know where he got them. Perhaps he has copied from my husband. J don 't know if he is a spy. He takes photographs photo-graphs of everything and sends them 1 to his brother in Germany. They correspond cor-respond regularly." j The German girl has not heard from home in over two years. Her father is an engineer and she 1; nows he is in the army. TTer brother is 17 now and perhaps he has grown big enough to go into the army. When the war is over she says that she is going home. |