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Here is a link to an article called The Incredible Disappearance by Pat Clausen. There are also old newspaper articles. It's in PDF format.
http://www.ncgenweb.us/bladen/vrecords/newspaper/bryan/lelia.pdf
It sounds like the scan they are using is very similar to what was used in the 3 Missing Women case from Springfield MO. They think they have found something buried under the concrete of a hosital parking garage that was a big field at the time.
Did he receive any insurance money? Did Edis remarry? Was there any reason to believe he was in love with another woman? Was the family aware of any marital problems? Does anyone know?
He didn't have to kill his little girl too. I'm sure her grandparents would have loved to have taken her. He didn't have to kill either of them but you know what I mean.
I will look in the updates at the Charley Project. I didn't look there.
gaia - I wondered who made the marks through the PDF file too. It's interesting to see all the old news articles and the stuff from Lelia's high school yearbook.
From what I gather just about everyone in Lelia Bryan's family suspects Edis. The fact that he was laying concrete at the same time is a little too coincidental for me.
I wouldn't let my hopes soar too high regarding what's under the slab.
Original articles do not mention any pouring of concrete so I don't know where the nephew obtained that information. All he has to rely on, apart from initial press coverage and police reports, is hearsay and family lore which is not always a reliable source. My own great-grandfather was the victim of an unsolved murder in the early 1930's and when I became interested in the story and started probing relatives about it I found almost as many theories and hearsay details about the case than he had children. Many of those stories were compelling but years later after reading police files related to the murder I found that many of the stories' details did not coincide with known facts and were more based on opinion than reality. For example almost everyone I asked told me my GGF had been found shot in the chest in the back seat of one of his business associate's car near the racetrack, but in reality he had been found shot in the back of the head in his own car and 15 miles away near a railroad track. However most of his family thought the business associate was behind the killing and over the years formed an idea of circumstances that involved this man more closely than he had actually been. What I found was that many of his children had not known him that well (he had been a quiet, private man) and made assumptions about him that weren't true but they believed they were. The business associate was convincingly cleared but was later convicted on unrelated fraud charges for double-charging lumber supplied to the Navy during WW2, something that may have contributed to my great-aunts and great-uncles' negative opinion of him even though this had nothing to do with the murder. Unfortunately once the police reports became available to me most of my GGF's children had passed away or were very elderly and I couldn't discuss the case with them anymore.
Back to the case at hand. Considering that the victim did not appear to have been close with her siblings, how informed were they? The story of how the victim met her husband sounds as if it's straight out of a bad movie. Gunshot wounds inflicted by an irate husband? And police never heard of it? Wife disaapears same day fresh concrete is poured down the basement? One would think cops would have been a bit interested by this detail yet no mention is made of it in the original articles. Also it's not just the husband's word against that of everyone else; there was that visit from his BIL, and his sister was staying at their home at the time. A man who plans to bury his family in concrete would not do it with so many potential witnesses around. Also the police found it was the wife who had acted a bit odd that day, not the husband, and it's not him who brought this up.
Fact: it is she who, unbeknonwst to him, had bought the mercury bichloride at the pharmacy under a false name however I don't think she intented to use it to commit suicide. Contrary to what many believed the stuff isn't a potent poison, even pure mercury is not well absorbed when taken orally and most suicide attempts using mercury have failed to make anyone even seriously ill. In order to kill mercury has to be breathed in vapor form over years before it can cause any serious damage, or eaten in phenomenal quantity -again, over decades of time. A nurse would have known this.
A nurse would also have known that the sole medical use of mercury bichloride was to treat syphillis and if she had that disease it would be understandable that she didn't want her family to know about it unless it had been passed on to her by her husband. But why, in this case, use a false identity? Regardless, syphyllis is known to induce severe depression and erratic behavior when the brain becomes affected and that is usually the stage when sufferers seek treatment. I wouldn't conclude from this that she was having an affair because those symptons only occur years after infection (usually more than a decade), maybe from a premarital relationship in her case. If such is the case I can very well picture her deciding to leave her husband on a whim or drive over a cliff, if she was depressed. She may not have initially planned to take her daughter along.
The fact that Bryan remarried is not suspicious, it seems he did this years later and my guess is with a woman he had not known previously. If I put myself in his shoes I don't think I would have acted any different than him. He most probably wondered what had happened to his wife and daughter to his dying day but did not let this ruin his life, which is prbably the best way to cope (after moving away from ghosts) although it must be painful and frustrating.
I would be curious to know if the husband ever developped symptoms of syphillis in later life.