Let's take this to the next stage.
Utilizing information that we know, such as where the bodies were found and those involved in the discovery, we can surmize a possble chain of events.
I'll continue my story.
Two of your friends got scared and jumped out of the car at 35th and Archer, going into the Peterson Bowling Alley, where you guys hung out.
That left you and your friend with the girls who were by now either hysterical or very angry that you will not let them go home. As you wonder what to do...you drive Southwest on Archer heading out of the city. You find yourself near Santa Fe Speedway, a newer venue for stock car racing that had opened in 1954. The track was closed for the winter and literally deserted. There are very few homes in the area since the entire region has been dedicated as forest preserve.
Santa Fe Speedway
At least there, no one would hear the girls scream since it was already after midnight. You see a building away from the track and decide to break in...it turns out to be a concession stand. What may have happened in that building that night will never be known unless the case goes to court. Concession stands such as this typically would have a large walk-in cooler or freezer to accomodate the various perishable products they sell.
Both girls suffered facial bruising, consistent with either a hand or object being held over their mouth and nose causing suffocation.
Both bodies show little decomposition and no putrefaction so it is quite possible that the girls could have been placed in the cooler.
You leave the park and head home, relieved that you were able to get away with murder and nobody saw you in the company of the girls. You know that it will be at least Spring before the park is reopened and the bodies found.
All of a sudden on January 15th things abruptly changed.
Walter Kranz, a 53-year-old steamfitter, called police from a local bar on January 15 to say that he had dreamt that the bodies of the girls were in Santa Fe Park at 91st Street and Wolf Road. The park was around one-and-a-half miles from the true location where they were to be found one week later. Krantz claimed he saw it in a dream that the girls were there but it is more likely it was a bar room conversation. Did Krantz give the perpetrators time to retrieve the bodies and dump them by the road, or did the heavy snow that fell on the night of January 9th and 10th provide the opportunty?
Krantz himself would be accused of the crime and did fail three seperate lie detector tests, but was never charged and drifted into obscurty.
As soon as Krantz informed police, Santa Fe became the object of a massive search and police turned up a yellow sweater, found in the basement of...the concession stand. Both girls wore yellow that night, one wore a sweater and the other a yellow blouse.
Police exiting the basement of the concession stand, where the sweater was found.
Link to article that mentions Walter Krantz.
http://archives.chicagotribune.com/...mes-reward-offered-now-new-institute-declares