Show Can Can You Help Us q i i 1 v lVa I I M IT fit r A ELIZABETH ERNSTEIN Monday March 18 1968 egan gan an as an ordinary day Elizabeth Lurene Ern- Ern tin em when she left home kt for classes at Moore l Junior School in Redlands Calif But this Monday on one e of March was not ibe be an ordinary 1 day I school day lasted without incident She I fended her last class then school at pm p.m. to I talk home a two-mile two route trough h blossoming orange I roVes She never arrived one Somewhere along e lonely street Elizabeth I vanished There are no clues to her thereabouts Hereabouts or even e to what I to the old 14 I id who was just two months art rt of her birthday tier than a report from a ands businessman who s dr driving through the thelie He lie thought he lie saw a resembling Elizabeth liking king toward the corner th the street on which she shered red ed 1 jO 10 liEn HER PARENTS Norand Norand Noro Nor- Nor o and Ruth Einstein Ernstein the thc theof thes s of uncertainty and lety over their missing are Hare the deepest wish u sh a person can go goIt rough It is a shock so eli you become wooden mother explained The e Ernsteins are appealing for help in locating ng their daughter Mr Einstein Ernstein I a chemical engineer at Lockheed Lockheed Lockheed Lock Lock- heed in Redlands and his wife a psychiatric social worker have posted a reward for information that will solve I the mystery of their daughters daughter's disappearance They have vowed We will not rest until we know NEITHER parent has rested rested rest rest- ed since that first long night when their young daughter failed to come home They have tracked miles through orange groves fields foothills foothills foothills foot foot- hills and canyons in and around the Redlands area They have followed every lead no matter how slight in the search for Elizabeth I HI can face the daytime better than the night the distraught mother said At night I find myself saying Is she safe Is she warm Is she fed and finally is she alive WHEN WilEN ELIZABETH nicknamed nicknamed nick nick- nicknamed named Liz by her friends left for school that March morning she had only 25 cents with her She was dressed dressed dress dress- dressed ed in a blue dress with white flowers tennis shoes and a dark olive corduroy coat Around her neck she wore a small gold chain with a pendant pendant pendant pen pen- dant g gold ld and blue star En- En route home she carried aI ared a I red I algebra book and a blue notebook Neither has been found Elizabeth is five feet five five- inches tall weighs pounds and had brown hair and brown I eyes She is one of five Ernstein Ernstein Ern- Ern Einstein stein children The family lost one of these a son to polio in 1952 THIS TillS THE second tragedy in our lives is even greater because of the uncertainty I the desperate father said int inI in t I j j his appeal to end the night night- I mare I can accept anything even the worst which Im I'm I resigned to but I must know Any information concerning young Liz Einstein Ernstein should be reported promptly to this newspaper or to Capt Charles Callahan San Bernardino County Sheriffs Sheriff's Office San Bernardino California phone I r Q l' l C |