Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TEN
KILLER'S PAC™:.
BY JULIUS LONG ‘
35
I told what had happened at
Larry Stone’s apartment, In
spector Merica made a deprecat
ing face. “Now you're insulting
my intelligence, Marshzll! Even
a guy that’s been creased on the
head would be able to spot the
skull fracture Stone died of.”
1 half-rose out of my chair.
“Stone had no skull fracture
when Sonya and I left him! If he
did have one when he was found,
neither Nanabarro nor Lon is
responsible for his death! Someone
~ else got in there, deliberately took
- advantage of his condition and
murdered him!”
“There you go again, talking
about people getting in and out of
-the Brentwood Arms without the
clerk seeing them.”
“There’s a service entrance to
the place!”
“And it's kept locked at night.
Try again, Marshall!”
“Well, that's the way Al Nana
~ barro and Ilis lieutenant got in!
Ask Sonya. Ask them!”
“I will. Tl've already sent for
Nanabarro and Lou Brisso.”
I knew they weren’t the type to
admit even assault and battery.‘
[ Sonya's testimony and mine would
1 sound sour in view of the fact that
. nobody had seen the night club
manager and his lieutenant enter
the Brentwood Arms.
“Mind telling me who found
Stone?” 1 asked.
“Not at all. Your friend Smiley
Wetlauffer found him. Does that
answer your question?”
“Not quite. I saw Wetlauffer
and a girl enter La Jolla Club ear~
lier in the evening. The girl was
Clara Mayhew, receptionist at the
Prater offices.”
“Sure. She was with Smiley
when he decided to call on Larry
Stone. They were pals. He and
the girl are in the next room
signing statements now.”
. Merica frowned his impatience.
His phone rang., He answered it,
listened and said: ‘“Send them
right up.” He put down the phone
and looked at me. “Now we’ll get
to hear what Nanabarro and Bris
so have to say about it.”
* - =
A few minutes later a patrol
sran ushered in the night club
man and his aide. Botn regarded
me with fleeting glances; neither
betrayed a sign of Irecognition.
They denied everything, of course.
“I've never been in Stone’s
epartment in my life! As a matter
of fact, I don’t even know where
he lives.” Nanabarro said.
“Get Sonya in here!” [ told Mer
ica. “She’'ll back me up!”
Merica grinned. “Maybe she
would at that! You two have been
pretty cozy lately, haven’t you,
Marshall?” He turned to Nana
barro, “Got an alibi for tonight?”
Nanabarro nodded. “Ask any of
the help at my place. They'll tell
you Lou and I've been in the of
fice all evening.”
“A fat alibi,” I scoffed. “Any of
those punks out there would back
up Nanabarro for an extra ten in
his pay check!”
Merica eyed me coldly. “Tell
that to the jury that tries you for
the murder of Larry Stone. That’s
what I'm holding you for. That
and falsifying and tampering with
the evidence in the murder of Rose
Bidault. It may interest you to
know that Carl Prater is across the
hall swearing out an affidavit for
Andy Tanner at this moment!”
“You're kidding, Merica. Pra
ter’s in the hospital.”
“Fle was, but he has been re
leased. He had only a mild heart
attack after your assault on him.
Tanner’s fixing up an assault and
battery charge and an assault with
a deadly weapon charge for that
little session. Add breaking and
entering the Prater offices and as
sault upon Wertheim, and you
have quite a package. Star Wil
liams will certainly have his hands
full defending you—if he has any
time off from defending himself!”
“Somebody mention my name?”
We all turned at the sound of the
vcice from the doorway. Star
stood there.
The patrolman at the door stood
docile as Star shoved open the
door wider to permit the entry of
two other men. They were the
two Valleyville morticians, Esplin
and Brayton. They entered sheep
ishly, giving me barely any rec
ognition,
“What's the idea?” Merica thun
dered. “Who are these men, any
way?”
Star produced a folded paper
from his inside coat pocket with a
flourish.
“These gentlemen have just
signed this affidavit. I think it
would profit you to read it before
proceeding further with charges
against my valued assistant.”
. 3 * \
Merica picked wup the paper,
unfolded it and began to read.
His expression tightened progres
sively; when he had finished he
eyed Brayton and Esplin and de
manded:
“Did you men sign this affi
davit?” |
They nodded. “Yes, sir, we did.” |
Merica placed the affidavit on
his desk and eyed Star, who re
garded him amusedly.
“I'll eoncede that this places an
entirely different light on what has
happened. I'll get Wertheim in
here, also Prater. Prater is with
Andy Tanner, Any objections if I
bring in Tannér, too?”
“As a matter of fact, while
you're at it, I suggest that you
bring in all the parties concerned.
Including Madam Sonya Sareeta.” |
All the while, Star didn’t give me
# look at the affidavit.
Merica started to say he didn’t
mind a bit; then he saw the grin
on my face and demanded: “Why
do you want that magician dame
in here?”
“So 1 can complete my casc
sgainst the murderer of Barney
Bidault,” said Star Williams.
’ Chapter 38
| Sonya Sareeta was the first 1o
be brought in. A matron had giv-
R
_on Sonya they: looked good. Then
RNt A % ;',.,;,;,,‘,‘ Baad ;e'.f- l’?f"}qf‘(‘{.
Smiley Wetlauffer and Clara May
hew came in. Clara looked as
blondly attractive as ever but
Smiley was the worse for wear,
As Wertheim was ushered in, he
gave a double-take at Esplin and
Brayton, but he eyed me with
dead-pan indifference. Carl Pra
ter, who entered a moment later,
escorted by District Attorney An
dy Tanner, froze at the sight of the
two Valleyville morticians.
~ “I want my lawyer,” he cried
out. “Get me J. J. McNamara at‘
once!” :
Merica put through a call for
McNamara and then the police of
ficial turned to Star. “You might
as well get along with it while
we'’re waiting for McNamara. Pra
ter don’t have to say anything till
his lawyer gets here.” .
Star took the floor. “Here on the
inspector’s desk, is an affidavit
signed by Mr. Brayton and Mr.
Esplin, who conduct Valleyville’s
leading funeral parlor. Prater’s
hermetically sealed vault firm has
been making a considerable effort
to sell them the Prater vault.
“The company has been success- |
ful with their product, making a
profit for Mr. Prater, who obtained
49 per cent of the stock for his
invention, and the late Barney Bi
dault, who supplied the capital in
return for 51 per cent of the stock.
“Mr. Wertheim, the sales man
ager, ribbed up a bizarre device
for graphically demonstrating the
principle of the hermetically sealed
vault. Of course the idea is de
cades old. I've seen many demon
strations in store windows of min
iature vaults submerged in water
upon dolls. But Wertheim went
one better by putting on a life
size show with a real vault. Miss
Clara Mayhew, the company re
ceptionist, doubled as the doll,
“When Mr. Brayton and Mr. Es
plin came for a demonstration,
they arrived so late that Miss
Mayhew had been excused. Prater
and Wertheim made the best of the
situation and took their customers
out to dinner at the La Jolla Club.”
* * *
Al Nanabarro was a greenish
white as Star went on. “Prater
suggested that Frannie substitute
for Clara as the doll in the vault
and she said she’d make it to the
offices between shows., ‘Prater
probably told her to bring the
yellow bathing suit she happened
to be wearing in one of her num
bers. This she did, borrowing Al
Nanabarro’s car.
“The girl took her place and the
vault was lowered into the water.
Brayton and Esplin were favor
ably impressed when Wertheim
suddenly became excited. Too late
he reached for the lever causing
th vault to rise. When it was at
last lifted, the doll was wet, in
stead of dry as it had been in the
past. In short, Frannie Martin had |
drowned.”
The gazes of Sonya and Nana-!
barro turned to Carl Prater, who
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breathed heavily. Wertheim then
l broke. ;
“It wasn't my fault!” he
screamed. “It was Prater’s! The
metal was cracked when it was
stamped out.” -
Al Nanabarro reached Prater
before anybody could stop him,
Merica and Nanabarro’s own lieu=
tennt, Lou Brisso, pulled him off.
The night club man continued to
stare across the room at Prater
with hatred.
“When the horrible accident was
discovered,” Star went on, “all
present were frantic. Mr. Brayton
and Mr. Esplin saw ruin if publi
city about this episode reached
their home town, as it inevitably
would if something drastic were
| not done. Mr. Prater and Mr. Wer
theim also saw ruin,
“It was Mr. Wertheim who came
up with what seemed a brilliant
sugestion. No one else, he assured
the other, knew of Miss Martin’s
visit to the Prater offices. Why not
~drive her car to some spot along
‘the riven, send the car into the
river with Miss Martin’s body in
side and pass off her lamentable
death as a traffic accident?
“The idea seemed perfect at the
time. Wertheim sent his employer
and his prospective customers
packing back to La Jolla Club,,
where they were to establish their
alibi. He himself managed the
manipulation of the accident,
dressing Miss Martin in her street
clothes. Bidault probably learned
of the tragedy from Wertheim.
* * *
“What happened afterward sis
open to transparent conjecture.
Armed with this deadly informa
tion, Barney Bidault confronted
Carl Prater late one night in his
office. He was also armed with
his wife’s small automatic pistol.
He had borrowed the pistol with
the pretext that he needed it for|
protection on a trip. !
“Barney had ‘veen quick to see
his opportuni‘ty to freeze Prater
out of his highly successful com
pany. With threat of exposure and
threat of the little pistol, he ex
tracted a complete confession from
Carl Prater. He left Prater with |
the adjuration that the confession
would be returned—if Prater as- |
signed his shares of stock for a
ridiculously low figure and aban
doned his office as president.
“But he reckoned without re
prisal. He was followed home, at
tacked from behind on his wife’s
own threshold and struck down.
The little gun was taken from his
person and used to murder him.
That was why the bullet appeared
to have been fired from the floor—
actually Bidault was lying on the
“Lord, but women’s rum cattle to deal with, the
first man found that to his cost
And I reckon it's jusi tnrough a woeman the
last man on earth’ll be lost.”
—George Sims
But who do we spend our lives working for?
G. F. STEPHENSON
Phone 1300
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Newark, N. ),
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
G i
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Lo}
CuUILvUI Seivor i —basis ‘_:)t
his censorship of testimony in
the *MacArthur inquiry is com
mon sense, says Vice Adm. Ar
thur C. Davis, who is charged
with combing the testimony for
information valuable to the ene
my. Admiral Davis, who com=~
manded the carrier Enterprise
when it provided air cover for
the Marines’ invasion of Guadal- |
canal, says he has cut out “a
great deal less than 1 per cent”
of what has been brought out. |
floor, and the bullet was fired
downward at an angle through his
mouth and through his brain.
“The killer left the pistol be
hind but took the confession from
Bidault’s pocket. Naturally—"
“I didn’t do it!” We all jumped.
Carl Prater had sereamed.
(To Be Continued)
FROM HOCKEY TO TOBACCO
MONTREAL —(AP)— Leonard
Patrick (Red) Kelly, winner of the
1951 Lady Bug Memorial Trophy,
one of the highest awards in pro
fessional hockey, helps his father
run a tobacco farm during the off
season. Red also plays a lot of
baseball during the summer
months.
No Bitter Memories in
the Beer that
Tastes Like a Million...
So delicious the flavor’s insured for $1,000.000!
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