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Show Dr. Young told police he had seen his wife enter a cab occupied by a man. MYSTERY 2S5i", JL Jsg3S& flfTr . H ! nH? TV-IT- ' V4 t f Dormeytr Portable Mixer mix- Lightweight er make any mixing job Convenient heel taty. instant beater rereft, lease, handle twitch, modern design. Mi SSlXlg Heiress Had she run away or met death? Only a detective's insight into womanly ways could provide the answer rr,w-f-?f'U'- Beverly Savings and Jxan Association of Chicago offers your choice of free gift below for $500 new or increased savings account. 9 Case of the1 ",.jf, . ; i Dormeytr Coffee Maker automatic coffee maker signals when coffee is done, keeps it hot for hours. Striking new 8 cup AW WSJ1 $ "spoutless" design. z o Beverly Savings and Loan Associaon your account, intion pays sured safe to $10,000 by F.S.L.I.C. Savings Postage paid both ways received by the 15th of the month earn Use coupon to open from the 1st your account TODAY! W 4i rcrnp 1 W By WILLIAM T. BRANNON RATE CURRENT MO. . HI0 A' WflfM Hill Paid on All Accounts BEVERLY SAVINGS as ever, into Los Angeles police headquarters and asked for Capt Jame$ Bean, homicide chief. "I want you to find my daughter," he said. "It's been four months since I reported her missing." Young, Captain Bean knew that the woman, 35, had been reported missing by her husband, Dr. Thomas W. Young, about two months after she was last seen on Feb. 21, 1925. "Do you have any idea what happened to her?" Captain Bean asked. The father was cooly silent a moment. Then he said, "My w married her forller money and couldn't wait for her to die. She had $100,000 in Liberty Bonds that he wanted to get his hands on." Captain Bean promised an investigation at once. He went to see Dr. Young, who told of the strange disappearance: On Feb. 21, Mrs. Young had asked him to let her have $100,000 in Liberty Bonds, which he claimed he had bought with his savings. She had pleaded with him not to ask questhe negotiable bonds, tions but to trust her. He had given-heand she had insisted on writing out a receipt. That evening they had gone out, first to a night club, then to the Biltmore Hotel, where she had excused herself, presumably to go to the powder room. But he had watched her go through the front door and enter a cab occupied by a male passenger. He never saw her again. A few days later, he had received a note mailed in Los Angeles. She said simply, she was going on a trip, and he would hear from her. A week later, a second letter came .from Denver. There had been others, all postmarked in New York, the last dated March 25. When three weeks elapsed and he heard no more, he went to the police. "Did you recognize the man in the cab?' Bean asked. "Yes. I'm quite sure he was her father. That's why I didnV do anything then". My relations with him were bad enough-- he accused me of marrying her for her money and that The wealthy financier, F. W. Hunt, self-assur- ed Mrs.-Grac- e son-in-la- - r wasn't true." "Did she take any of her clothes?" Captain Bean asked. "Only what she was wearing. Maybe she had others at her ' father's home." "Do you still have the letters she sent and the receipt for the bonds?" "Yes." Dr. Young rummaged In his desk and produced the letters. "I threw away the envelopes though;" Noting the receipt and letters were written on expensive, blue-tintstationery, Bean turned them over for examination by document experts. - When questioned, Hunt denied he had been the man in ed AND LOAN ASSOCIATION the cab and insisted his daughter had kept no clothes at his home. He stuck to his accusations against the doctor. 2138 W. 95th St., Chicago 43, Dept. HI. B note The document examiners established the blue-tintpaper was the .kind habitually used by the missing woman. Using specimens of her known handwriting they said there was no question she had written the receipt and the several letters. It was a finding that interested Bean very much. He was now confronted with some puzzling questions, Here's my check, or money order, for $500 or more, to open my savings account. Please send free gift checked: indeed: Name ed My MBnature Had her father needed $100,000 quickly and used his daughter to get the bonds from the doctor? Had Mrs. Young's husband killed her? If so, how could the letters be accounted for? Discreet inquiry revealed that the financier did not need $100,000, an amount he could have raised easily. On the other hand, Dr. Young was named in his wife's will for a consid... erable fortune. now leaned more to the suspicion that Dr.. Young had his wife, but what about the receipt and letters? The father agreed she had written them. "I don't know how he did it, but it was a trick." :. "If Young did kill your daughter, can you think of any place where he might have disposed of her?" "Yes," said the father. "They had a lodge in Beverly Glen. Why don't you take a look at it?" Captain Bean picked up Dr. Young and drove to the lodge. The captain noticed a cistern freshly covered with cement. "Do you mind if we open it and have a look?" Bean asked. "It's just a repair job," the doctor protested. But the captain went ahead, and as tne workmen tore off the cement covering Dr. Young broke down. "You'll find her there," he said. Then he confessed he had murdered his wife for his share of her money and explained how he had induced her to write the receipt and letters: He knew she would, do anything he asked after a few drinks. They drove tq the lodge, drank until she was in a gaymood,then he proposed a game. They would pretend she was on a trip, writing letters to him. They would also pretend she needed money and would borrow $100,000 in bonds from him. He dictated and she wrote. "She thought the receipt was a great joke," the killer related, "because she, not I, actually owned the bonds." Dr. Young went on trial for murder but didn't wait for the" executioner he took his own life. It might have been the perfect crime but for one mistake: Captain Bean couldn't believe that the woman, even if she went away voluntarily, would leave all her clothes yet would note paper. --: " take along a supply of the blue-tint- Coffee Maker Portable Mixer Address Zone .City State PHOTO CREDIT Pag 5: UPI. Bean -- SORE THROAT? RELIEVE PAIN EASE SORENESS DOUBLY FAST Taste good! Orange flavored. llo Jagging Bac'iacliafensa Good light's Sleep cross-count- ry Nagging backache, headache, or muscular aches and pains may come on with emotional upsets or day over-exertio- n, ::: ed Family Weekly, December 31, 1961 TOADIES I to day stress and strain. And folks who eat and drink unwisely sometimes suffer mild bladder irritation... with that restless, uncomfortable feeling. 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