P.O. BOX 87 GEORGE STREET MCDONALD HOTE® H. SHALLARD, Proprietor (Formerly of Spences Bridge Hot Water Heating in All Rooms EUROPEAN PLAN PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. 20 Rooms With Hot and Cold Water WEST END MOTORS JOHN NIELSEN, Prop. International Trucks, Parts’ and Service Firestone Tires Coyle Batteries PRINCE GEORGE B.C. The quest for the best ends at the PRINCE GEORGE CAFE “Where Friend Meets Friend’ * Prince George, British Columbia NICK AVGERIS RAW FURS P.O, BOX 191 PRINCE GEORGE B.C. W. M. MOTORS Chevrolet Pontiac Oldsmobile Buick SALES AND SERVICE Goodyear Tires, Tubes, Accessories Shell Gas and Oils C British Columbia Prince George Page One Hundred and Ten lay bare the facts the writer gives us. First he says the girl was murdered. She died by strangulation, he says, by pressure being exerted on her throat, and this is supported by medical testimony. He tells us also that medical evidence can tell us that she had been criminally assaulted. How does he arrive at this? Merely by presuming that because she had been murdered and medical testimony affirmed that she had been carnally known prior to her death. He links those two facts together—the fact that she had died from strangulation and the fact that she had been carnally known, and because he had read in his text-book that lust is often a strong motive in female kill- . ings, he immediately concludes that the girl was criminally assaulted, whereas the only factual assault which emerges from this part of the statement is that the girl was strangled, and we believe this statement be- cause we consider, and rightly, that she could not have strangled herself with her own hands.” “Rather severe analysis,” Gar- rett commented smiling. “I am not arguing on the merit of this investigation,’ Tuohey told his friend. “I am merely refuting your contention that the report is a good report. Now he goes on and states: ‘Close to the body was found a red beret which was much crumpled and dirty as if it had been crushed and trampled in the struggle.’ Let us ex- amine this statement about the struggle which the writer presumes to have taken place. On what does he presume to base his assertion? In the first place on the con ° dition of the ground and bushes, secondly on the finding of the broken watch, and thirdly on the finding of the soiled and crumpled beret. He states *. . . the place where the body was found is all trampled with nearby bushes broken down. It shows that a struggle took place and points to the fact that there must have been more than one person engaged in the commission of the crime.” Now in this statement you can see careless and ‘mass-mind’ attempts at reasoning. The writer of the report saw what he believed to be the signs of a struggle, or rather what he had been taught to believe are usual signs to be seen after a struggle had taken place under similar con- ditions and in similar surroundings and he immediately states that a struggle has taken place, not giving it as an opinion, mind you, but as an actual fact. Following up this LICENSED PREMISES Clean and Comfortable train of thought he declares, without ducing any evidence whatever in sup that there was more than one person gaged in the commission of the crime. ] if the officer had permitted his imagin: to work along logical lines for a few ments before writing that report he w not have written it.” “Leaving out the expression ‘points t fact’, which looks to me like a lapse journalese,” said Garrett, “I think he right in stating that there was more one person concerned in the crime. / all, he had examined the scene shortly ; the finding of the body and he could rig conclude, by the extent of the damage « to the bushes and to the trampled na TOMMY’S PLACE T. S. CARMICHAEL, Proprietor BILLIARDS, SNOOKER, TOBACCOS AN CONFECTIONERY * PRINCE GEORGE B. A. MOTORDROME PLYMOUTH - CHRYSLER - FARGO TRUCK A Complete Stock of Parts and Accessorie for Chrysler Products Phone 165-X-1 PRINCE GEORGE Bryant Motor: Lid. Dodge and De Soto Cars Dodge Trucks Service Sales and Part: PRINCE GEORGE B.C THE SHOULDER STR