Society Blamed for Girl's Tragic LifeBy CHUCK CHEATHAMChildren are not naturally bad •—but when they find themselves denied the love and affection they should receive at home they areShe was adopted from this home by the Meyer family and brought to Long Beach.The investigation disclosed, from talking to teachers andEdward P. (The Duke) Wellington was questioned last night by Los Angeles homicide lqiiAd officer* and Bnrhink police in connection with the killing of Elisabeth Short, the “Bl»ck Dahlia” of Long Beach. The “Duke” admitted living with MUs Martin in a Ventura boulevard motel.Fake I(Why do pei police and eon/i did not commit (Last week confessed” to inp 0/ Eliza Black Dahlia geles. Police q that none of thnection ttfifh thmsneighbors, that the child was in “great need of care by some quiet j and understanding person.j “Mother is increasingly nervous j and Unreasonable with child.”!(Continued on Pase 91(International asked Dr. DtmaJ noted psycJtolop give his opinioi these fake con, hi* explanation..(Acme Telephoto)LYNN MABTIN.quite apt to get themselves, and many others, into a sordid and tragic predicament, searching for that Jove.This was the opinion yesterday of Joseph M. (Joe) Kennick, head of the city’s juvenile bureau, after reading the juvenile record of Lynn Martin, 16, friend of the slain “Black Dahlia.”Lynn, or Norma Lee Meyer, was well known to local juvenile authorities and has a record of Seven arrests in this city.At the present time she is being held by Los Angeles juvenile authorities and officials are preparing to start court action against 10 male adults with whom; the girl told police she had been: intimate.“This poor, unfortunate girl is Jjust another sad example of a ’ child who never had a chance,” j Kennick stated. Read the record yourself and you won’t be able to blame the child. You can blame many persons for her ruined life —ruined at 16 when most girls are still going to school—you may even blame yourself. You and I and society as a whole .are to blame. Not the girl.”Lynn Martin, as the girl herself prefers to be known, first came to the attention of juvenile authorities in . July 1943, when 1 neighbors reported that she was the victim of an unfit home. \ A Bad Start jThe thorough investigation; made by the department dis- j closed the girl’s earliest recollections were of living with a half sister in Minnesota. The half sister was living with a drunken common-law husband. She believes she was 4 years of age then.Her half sister was continu-crysr.g, upset and nervous. n many occasions she attempted j to commit suicide. Lynn was res-1cued from thus while still 4 by a ' maternal aunt. jAt the aunt's home on a farm,; she told officials, she was happy, j She was well treated and the aunt j had a son near her age with whom j She played. |After three years of living a; hnpnv and normal life on the farm j in Washington she was placed in'a detention homo in the same state by her aunt because the j family was iinahie to supjmrt her any longer. IyBr DR. DON,Noted PsychL.'osii Human (Written EsptThere is an iiANNOUNCIHer* Is aturms . . .startling 1ness, natu is exactly One roll cTRI-VISION VIEWER, stream! ii richly grained, walnut finhobit lenses which locus to tCARRYING CASE of t for Tri-Vision Camera. L strop.CAMERA S n O P8 TB