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WEATHER. Fair and cooler tonight and tomor- row. Temperature for twenty-fovr hours ended at 2 p.m. today: Highest, 67, at roon today; lowest, 57, at 10:15 p.m. yesterday. Full report on page 10. Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 28 No. 28,688. SOCIALISTS WRECK WIRTH'S GABINET, BOLTING GOALITION Dissatisfaction With Repara- tions Policy at Root of Ger- man Shake-Up. Ynterod as sccond-class matter post office Washington, D. C. !GERMAN LEADER WHO HAS FALLEN NON-PARTY IDEA LOOMS IN NEW UNDERTAKING President Faces Confusion in At- tempting Appointment of New Ministers. WHnLw PHOTEY Iy the Associated Press, S HANGE IR BERLIN, November 15.—The Ger- SHANCELEORAWIRTH. headed by Chancellor Wirth, has fallen. The ministerial res- ignations, filed last night, were pre- cipitated by the decision of the united socialists not to participate in a coali- tion ministry which included members of the German people’s party. But the friends of Chancellor Wirth were not oblivious of the feeling that he had outlived his usefulness and now has become a victim of a policy of inde- on and inactivity which found its culmination in the government's fail- man cabinet, MILLIONS SWARM 10 BRITISH POLLS; @) WASHINGTON, D. C, ENGLAND 0PPOSES PRINCIPAL TURKISH DEMANDS ONALLIES Foreign Office Outlines Stand in Note to. FPance and ¢ Foening S WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION Italy. ARMISTICE PACT TO BE KEPT, SAY KEMALISTS Give Formal Assurance of Intent to Observe Terms—Concede De- manded Police Rights. By the Associated Press. LONDON, November 15.—The Brit- ish foreign office, it was stated in an authoritative quarter today, has tele- graphed to the French and Italian governments a memorandum in which Great Britain declares that the main Turkish demands which are to come before the near east peace conference at Lausanne are not regarded favor- ably by the British government. Great Britain stands by the agree- ments previously made with her al- lies, according to the memorandum. She regards unfavorably the three W THE EXPERT. faf. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1922—FIFTY-TWO PAGES. ‘“From Press to Home Wisthin the Hour” The Star’s carrier i{ block and the regular edition is ivered to Washington homes as the papers are printed. s system covers every Americans Urged To Aid Filipino Freedom Fight By the Associated Press. ” » MANILA, November 15.—Manuel Quezon, president of the Philippine senate, addressing the American Chamber of Commerce here” today, “urged it to co-operate with the Philippine legislature in seeking authority from the United States Congress to call a constitutional conventfon to plin a future inde- pendent republic in the islands. Adoption of a republican consti- tution, he asserted, would better the relations between the Fill- pino and American governments. “We all agree,”.he said, “that the present status:of the Philippines 1s ynsatisfactory. and that some- thing should be done to make it less unsatisfactory. The fact has been disputed that the Filipinos .want Jndependence., The, Filipinos have been asked by United States officials what kind of independence they want, if they really want ft. They have been asked what rela- tions should exist between the United States and the Philippines in the future, ) “I can't find any other practical _.way of hripgjgg about a situation wheére these matters could be defl- nitely 4nd authoritatively discuss- ed between representatives of the American and Filipino peoples ex- cept_in a constitutional .conven- tion.” —_—— . “ENEWY BOMBER DEFEATED IN AR Yesterday’s Net Circulation, 91,046 TWO CENTS. IHARRISON ASSAILS BROWN PUBLICITY ONREORGANIZATION Senator Indignant Over Giv- ing of Plan tg Press in Advance. 'MAINTAINS CHAIRMAN IGNORED CONGRESSMEN Adds That No One Tock Member- ship on Board Merely to Act as an Automaton. Congressional members of the joint commission on reorganization of government departments have been ignored by the chairman of the com- mission, Walter F. Brown, declared Senator Pat Harrison, democrat, of Mississippi, a member of the com- mission, today. The Mississippi sen- ator said any reorganization plan would be given most careful scrutiny by members of the commission. The Brown plan, he intimated, was In for some hard sledding before it could be adopted. “I taKe it,” said g'snator Harrison, “that no member 8 the commission main Turkish demands, namely, a plebiscite in westetrn Thrace, rectifi- cation of the Syrian frontier in favor of Turkey and abolition of the capitu- lations. ' WILL KEEP TO ARMISTICE. ure to make a practical arrangement with the allied reparations commis- sion during the course of its recent visit to Berlin. Ever since the assassination of For- eign Minister Rathenau the chancellor has been described as a man who ap- parently possessed no inspiration, no initiative. This attitude gave added weight to the assertion that the late foreign minister was Wirth's inspira- tion and the force which urged him on. With the passing of Dr. Rathenau, the chancellor visibly lost influence with his cabinet colleagues. As a re- sult the support given his “policy of fulfillment” diminished day by day. supposes he was appointed to under- take this important work merely to act as an_ automaton—accepting the I_E UVERD B recomrhendations of the chairman (] -]wxmour himself investigating every phase of the question. Press Got Plan First. “The worst phase of the Brown re- organization plan, as has been pub- lished in detail, is its violation of the expressed understanding of the mem- bers of the commission on reorganiza- tion. It is almost inconceivable that Mr. Brown should have given his per- sonal views to the press before sub- mitting them to members of the com- mission. U. S. SHIP SENDS S. 0. S. Hematite Disabled 1,200 Miles Out and Reported Drifting. | BAVARIANFASCIST BETSFAVOR LAW Results So Uncertain, How- ever, Few Predict—Premier Demands Majority. FIND WOMAN DEAD, MOTHER IN SWOON| Police Hear Story of Misfor- tune and Poverty at Mary- ! land Avenue House. Bolling Field Scouts Foil At- tack and Force Sur- render of “Foe.” | Hematite sent out radio messages| early today that she was disabled at sea and drifting. Her position was| given as ahout 1,200 miles east of| Boston. : The Shipping Board steamer Sav-| con sent word that she was hasten- ing to the aid of the Hematite. LR e Turk Nationalists Assure Allies They Will Respect Agreement. By the Associated Press. CONSTANTINOPLE, November 15.— The Turkish nationalist government has given formal assurances to the allies that the stipulations of the Petite Widow, Born in Texas, Spurs “Gray Shirts” in Fight on Socialism. By the Associated Press. LONDON, November 15.—The electo- rate of Great Britain swarmed to the polls by the millions today in Eng- land, Scotland, Wales and Ulster to elect the fourth parliament of the Five huge Martin bombers sneaked into Washington from Langley Field, He admitted the collapse of this poli G P 2 N ] 1 i last summer, when he announced that | relgn of King George V. The polls|Mudania armistice agreement will be ! ; [Va. at 11:30 o'clock this mer;lin: e e el the government's slogan had become: |opened at 8 o'clock—: 5 = he intention of “destroying”| . ssion on 1 ] % _in some big industrial cen- e asha, ke nationalist EOV-|By Wireless to The Star and Chicago Daily bors, Policeman Emil Desch of mell C st P " ¢ -| government. It consisted of thre. Undermining Causes. ters—and by 9 o'clock tonight the new | £rRor of Constantinople, hag conceded bt BEL LT o ninth precinct broke into a b ey e B B e lancs from | members of the ‘Senate and thres Forelgn eriticism of the alleged |house of commons will have been se- | forces of oecupation to exercise police November 15.—An Amer- i a house at| yare met by six fighting planes from | MO IEES B O, e, 310 Maryland avenue northeast this| morning and found the body of Miss | Lizzie Goetz, fifty years old, stretched | across a bed and the unconscious; form of her mother, Mrs. Johanna | Bolling Field, who frustrated their attempts and forced them to land at the Anacostia station. As the five large Mr. Brown, as the personal represent- ative of tne President, was added to the commission to co-operate with the congressional members of the commis- sion at the instance of the President, and the joint resolution creating the com- ican-born woman, widow of & German naval officer, is the heroine of the Bavarian fascisti movement. Unheralded, and like an apparition, lected. No eleventh hour development has lessened the uncertainty of the result. The few prophets who venture fore- control over their own nationals. The | allies are understood to have pressed | for similar jurisdiction over the mi- nority populations, but Rafet refused. .He agreed to a further discussion of weakness of the cabinet, emanating from London, as well as Berlin, dur- ing the last few days, contributed to undermining the chancellor’s position, OF TRYING T0 KILL birds” circled : i the - subject today with the allied | Andrea Ellendt. a native of El Paso, : i were constantly even in the ranks of the coalition |casts tie strings to their predictions. ge;":‘;sl“ Y wi Z Goetz Beam, eighty-cight, prone on|C or, e clty they S on mission was amended to meet the views party. His belated espousal of the|It is therefore something of a sur-[EFSfal% concession of the right of [ Lox 2nd her bodyguard of 300 heav . the floor. harrassed by three little SE-5 SCOUl| ;040 pregident in that particular. He beople's party as a necessary adjunct [prise to the public that Prime Minls- | the allies to protect their nationals | !l armed “gray shirts” sweep into} Nelghbors had noticed that the|Planes. which maneuvered in and was made chairman of the commission the towns and villages of northern Y a e | about the formation, firing vigorously | by a majority of the members of the and his seeming spirit of conciliation has eased the anxious situation mo- mentarily. Under the terms of the original demands of the Kemalists ter Bonar Law in his final speech at Glasgow yesterday discarded his na- ive caution and declared that had morning newspaper and the pint of milk had remained untouched on the front step of the little four-room that body. but over the objection of the minority members. Hass Held Three Meetings. to the government definitely alienated the support he had been recelving from the socialists. from mythical machine guns, while {a formation of three De Havilands Bavaria, stopping just long enough to deliver flery speeches against so- claliom and bolshevism. They theu|FOPMEr " iderable confidence” that > ino- Washington Man | am kept vigil directly overhead. With- E sl the assassination of Dr.| every cons for complete control of Constantino- u < ept vigl y o Rathenau, the chapeelor has be the olections would give him & work- | pie, alllsd_sublects or citizens wags] are: gons: arain ae quickly s they ST g 2 e mse 4% that adaress and sus- | ;.1 5'doubt, it the fight were Teal, the| The commission, although created Keased With fear for his personal (€ MAlority today on which he can|liable to arrest and imprisonment by | arrive. Atter having been on her| Tried in MiSSOUNi—NOW [overtaken the inmates. Deson anter. | SUSTdian aviators of Washington | nearly two years ago, has held not over the nationalist police, creating a situ- ation which would be tantamount to abolition of the first principles of -the capitulations, making the position of foreigners in Constantinople unten: ble. G In order to facilitate the departure of Greeks and Armenians from Con- stantinople, the allies have decided to waive passport formalities. The allies desire, apparently, to relieve themselves of as much responsibility as possible for the protection of the lives of minorities when the Kemal- ists formally take over the city. three meetings and at nec time has it | considerea any question of reorganiza- tion. “The congressional members of the commission have been ready, willing and anxious to co-operate with the executive branches of the govern- ment in beginning its work and to consider such plans as might be laid before it by Mr. Brown or any one else tending toward reorganization. “At the last meeting of the commis- sion, which was called at the insiance afety. During the last few months a : heavy guard %l vlsu:lcl;‘!he! men has would have emerged the victors. constantly surounde m. Chancellor Wirth's efforts to extend the government coalition to include the German people’s party really foundered on the unrelenting an- tagonism of the united socialists to any participation in a cabinet in which, the Stinnes-Stresemann group also would be represented. The vote which finally precipitated the crisis came last night, the so- cialists in the reichstag deciding by trafl for many hours, the correspond- ent finally caught up with the Amer- | jcan woman in the small Franconian city of Kitzingen, Bavaria. Dressed Like Cowglrl. Andrea_ Ellendt looks anything but like an Amazon. She is thirty-two | years old. pretty, petite, dark-eyed | and dark-haired, giving the impre ! gion that she is part Spanish. She | said her father was Charles Reming, would be dissatisfled with anything less than an independent unionist mu- Jority. Experienced observers nc- ‘where express strong confidence in such a result, however. Betting Favors Law’s Party. Gamblers, betting on the election re- sults in the London insurance mar- ket yesterday, had to pay a rate which indicated that a majority of conser- vatives and independent unionists ed and went upstairs to the front - Closely Guarded. bedroom. There he found the mother beos s oy o ot o8 the still breathing, but in a feeble con- | dozen or more planes roared overhead, dition, caused by her age. The daugh- | while many upper stories of buildings ter was pronounced dead shortly aft- | N¢ld interested spectators watching the | “battle” as it progressed over the city. erward by a physician from Casualty | ’ | Hospital. Death was due to natural | e A e caunes, the deceased having been | This morning Bolling Field got “wind" subject to epileptic fits for a number |that a quintet of death-dealing birds of years. was leaving Langiey Field and would Cloth Distress Signal. rrive over Washington about noon to| Special Dispatch to The Star. ELDORADO SPRINGS. Mo., Novem- ber 15.—Roy S. Kuehling, formerly of ‘Washington, was fourd guilty of at-| tempting to kill his wife, Kataleen, a former Washington war worker, late last night by a jury in the Stock- a large majority against any exten-|gver all other parties was regarded The Kemalists will contest the right : : - o key: will ! W W O leut. - byt i came in its th, particularly the:a e e House abou , this L nghout the day there was hope |7 to 3 against the expectation that| ternal affairs of Turkey: they She herself is the wido L gullty, fixing Kuehling's punishment |RUNE @ white plece of cloth attacied | mrey e Ty | vear, and at which meetin® evers conservatives would get 2 majoricy | TeSPect the “presence’ of the atlles, of eighty or more. i The morning papers today earnest- 1y appeal to the electors to exercise their franchises, and to take nothing for granted. The anti-labor news- papers express considerable fear of apathy among the electorate. They are particularly concerned lest the middle class of home-keeping women, whose first interests are their fami- liea, neglect the opportunity to cast their vote agalnst labor. Slogan Against At the last parliamentary elections it was estimated that only about 60 per cent of the electors went to the polls. Opponents of labor fear that unless more energy is displayed to- | day, laborites will benefit, since their organization is believed to be very complete. From the unionist newspapers goes up the earmest cry: “Whatever you do, don’t vote labor.” Lloyd George, too, is strong in his opposition to_ the laborite program. In an overnight message to the eiec- tors he urged them to support “can- didates who are opposing socialism as laid down in the manifesto of the labor part “I am looking forward to the return of men of progressive ideas as a bul- wark against reaction on the one hand and revolutionary experimenta- tions on the other,” sald the message of the little Welshman, who only a few weeks ago was the prime min- ister of Great Britain. Hit Robin Hood Program. Commander Ellendt of the German navy, who was killed in the war. Mrs. Ellendt was dressed in cowgirl fash- jon, wearing a gray shirt and short skirt. | “What are your alms?’ she was asked. “Are you against the German republic?” “Indeed mnot,” replied Mrs. Ellendt, as she shook her head violently. “Since ex-Kaiser Wilhelm's memoirs show only too clearly how incom- petent he was we no longer desire to return to the monarchy. We be- lieve that we can live quite happily | under a republican form of govern- ment if we have a dictator in Ger- many, who, with an iron hand, will crush out socialism and its principal evil, corruption. And it is my work to pave the way for the dictator.” ‘The little dark-haired woman paus- ed, catching her breath. Then she ratted a pocket in her skirt Many Secretly Sigm. “I am always armed,” she said. “On several occasions I have had to fight oft socialists and communists. Then the police authorities are hunting me, too. Ltke a wandering Jew, I have to chase from town to town, not dar- ing to use the railroads or stay at hotels. Most of the time I travel by motor car, and sometimes on the bicydle, but alw: accompanied by that a truce might be effected, es- pecially in view of the government's new reparations proposals, Which were drafted by the cabinet, which included four socialists. Besides, the proposal approved several of the de- mands put forth by the socialists in connection with the program for in- ternal financial and , economic re- forms. This was particularly true of the proposal to stabilize the currency through the aid of the Reichsbank’s gold reserve. Saw Hope in Note. Chancellor Wirth had hoped that his new reparations note would con- stitute the rallying point for an en- largement in the government coali- tion, especially as it had the ap- proval of the clericals, democrats and the people’s parties. Even the efforts of President Ebert to persuade his party friends to continue in the gov- ernment have been unavailing. The procedure of the radicals last night in bringing to a vote their stand on the cgalition ministry, which would include Tepresentatives of the Ger- man people’s party, was viewed whol- 1y as a tactical maneuver calculated to impress the radical voters, Who kave been told by their leaders and helr press for months past that offi- ial alllance with the industrialists’ party was unthinkable. Throughout Monday and Tuesday parties comprising the radical wing stiffened their opposition to the pro- posed extension of the government, and the declding vote was pushed but will not admit of occupation in the military eense. JAPAN’S INTEREST VITAL. at five years in the state penitentiary. The case went to trial yesterday aft- ernoon before Judge Thurman at Stockton. As Kuehling left the courtroom yesterday afternoon, Mrs. John B. Whitesell, his mother-in-law, became enraged at seeing him, and beat him over the head with an umbrella, call- ing him a brute. Kuehling shog his wife at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Whitesell, twelve miles southeast of Eldorado Springs, on September 22. The case attracted a great deal of attention owing to the prominence of the Whitesell family here and in Washington. Kuehling is being closely watched by officers, as he has said that he never would be taken to the peni- tentiary alive. He has made at- tempts to break jail since being con- fined in Missourl. While confined at Nevada he almost reached freedom |block to an imposing large pebble- by sawing through three steel bars. | dashed house and said\that it was but The trial came to an unexpected;one of the many houses the family had close late yesterday. It had been | owned. expected that the case would last| A widow for vears, Mrs. Beam had; several days. let property slip through her hands; N EWBMES | Gicea"o dhe. circumstances in- which | HE WILL NOT RESIGN jthey were found today. Mrs. Beam Michigan Senator Denies Rumor. By the Associated Press. < LAUSANNE, November 15.—Japan, like the United States, has a vital in- terest in the question of Turkish capl- tulations, sure to be considered at the near eastern peace conference here next week. Sweeping dentinciation of the capitulations, which are extraterritorial rights granted to foreigners in Turkey, and which the new nationalist govern- ment in that country want abolished, would aftect Japanese plans for the ex- tension of economic relations with Tur- key. . Recent installation of a Japanese legation at Athens and the launching in the Greek capital of a bi-lingual magazine, the Near East, devoted to fostering commercial relations, indicate the aspirations of the Japanese to ex- pand their trade in near eastern zone: The Japanese have no treaty with Turkey. Therefore they benefit from the capitulations only as one of the signatories to the treaty of Sevres. ‘They would like a commercial treaty according them most favored nation treatment. There seems to be a general idea that the whole subject of capitula- tions is too vast and of such porten- { tious importance that it cannot be settled at Lausanne. Some of the ad- vance delegates to the conference mention the possibility of appointing Labor. according to neighbors, when the two women liv- | ‘ing_ in the small frame house had| been wealthy. One neighbor, in fact, ! pointed down Maryland avenue a in whispers this morning told Lieut. Guy Burlingame of the ninth pre-i cinct that she was a daughter of| Jefferson Davis and that her maiden name was Johanna Louise Davis. She is reputed to have originally come to Washington from southern! Maryland, where her family was held in high repute, and the older per- sons of the neighborhood recount tales of her life with her first hus- band, & Mr. Goetz, in which she is to & stick. It had been placed there | { member was present, the congres- by the mother, who tried this moetheg | 1t Was but & matter of a few seconds | sional members of the commissison she | 5 be submitted to them within the next i : determined. Then three DeHaviland re- | be submitt found that her voice could not sum-| ,nnoissance plancs, one of them carry thirty days. Vented her from seeking assistance. | the direction of NOrfolk to search for the | mecels® a “Aiscascion ar e et Mrs. Beam was taken to Providence | POlbers and report. | 3 A ahort time later the radio station| Nanding - that ayme. of the Sotmne lat the fleld picked up the message| would be given 1o the press o being made by persons who have be- e radio pl tne mress éetand _ | were heading this way and then three A ed the two women who ocen- |1l 'S s's- of the type that gave| It has been the opinion of certain s of th i < ber of years. always on the border of | western front—flashed off the field, L [poverty, and yet eking out an exist-|formed into a “V* and hid up in the| o mission, that before any defimite £ Miss Goetz| DIOUan [ CRey Tene ol ool mee o | Steps should be taken the questions as a charwoman in the Libray of Con- | Havilands, and the six planes, perch- ] s Sress. commission, with & full exchange of o T b0y, awaTiedehele torar: views, and, if the commission thought Defenders Aggressive. granted. “Some of the recommendations made that the bombers were nearing their|very wise, but, as one member of the objective and a few minutes later|Commission. I'shall neter sign a re- Congress without a thorough in- fect formation. Out of the clouds like| vestigation and an opportunity, when a flash came the pursuit planes and advhlsed as to the questions involved, to be heard. tellow dashed In and out. first attack- = ing the leader and then sWingIng| .rne minority members of the com- mission, Mr. Moore and m in the bombing formation. The oth- : o ; | operate in every way wit ers continued fo harass the compara- | majority members of the commission, cith _difficult 2 2 e made thelr way OVer|pp.gident, in effecting real reforms, and co-ordinate certain bureaus, thrill for those who watched below. . Once it appeared that one of the scouts | departments where efficiency might | Treasury, Capitol and railroad yards. i al was | were inf ’ A el el before the exact time of arrival was|were informed that the plan would mon aid and that her feebleness pre- | ing a radio equipment. were Sent oUt In | mestiags ot the commission Tos Tren | naries, but always with the under- Hospital. Funeral arrangements are io pl ; trom the radio plane that the Martins pretbtalield ey pled the house together for a num-|the Germans & merry chase on. the far as I know, of all members of the ence 7rom the income of Miss Goetz|Cl0Ud% They were followed shortly, would be considered by the whole . 4 FeSs i e ed high and dry from the view of it advisable, a full hearing should be A rumbling told those on the ground | by Mr. Brown, as published. may be they broke through the mist in a per- | POrt recommending any changes to advisable, for those who are best then the battle started. One little Expresses Wish to Co-Opernte. around on one wing for the last man desired, from the beginning, to tively slow and clumsy ships as they | Majority members of the commission. Every few .moments there Was a|where possible, and reorganize the had dived right onto one of the bomb- be promoted and a saving might be jeffected, but they will not be a party The Daily Chronicle, an ardent sup- " s through after Chancellor Wirth had 2 a permanent international commis-|my faithful bodyguard. Refuses - said to have stopped at the famous!ers, and it was feared that one or both ! reguested the parer leaders to hasten | porter of Lioyd George, stresses the | ion to. study ways and means for| wAnd,” Mrs. Ellendt added proudly, fuses to Dis hostelries of the day In New York | of the planes would drop down out ot-;‘;;‘"'do!"“;;‘;:;‘."fiun‘l‘;:l catablished n. was s contentio: v 4 L. t! i . thelr decisio same thought in its editorials, urging | gradually abolishing the capitulations | ugegpice all these dificultics, dangers cuss It. and Philadelphia, U e|control: from another part &mz::hcl;‘ye ondor fleT R SnEagTieks il foan e of the government service. be unreasonable for the commssion, after deiaying a report for eighteen months, to expect congressional tion within three months, with the alendars of both houses crowded with important legislation. ——— WILL ADDRESS CONGRESS. President Personally to Deliver Message Next Tuesday. Tentative plans were made today for President Harding to go to the Capitol next Tuesday and deliver in itx Taad Ereoieoia & % |in something like the same manner : T T ot ettorn thoT oun- | a3 the Washington conterence handled |and hardships I have succeeded, for 1t would e e rd"y {the matter of Chinese capitulationsiat my command this whole country e Tt parey thad o foatish| 204 the accompanying question of|wny rise up in arms against socialist customs and tariffs. During the tran- Robin Hood program forced upon them | sitional period, it has been suggested | CPPression and corruption.” % by their fanatics,” according to the | that commercial treatics could be| Kitsingen, which is near Wurzburg, | Lumers that h:l"""‘:e::“’r:""l': = Daily Chronicle. “If anybody wants | framed and put in operation between [is Mrs. Eliendt's headquarters, the |der his resignation ot et ll,:e ;::2; ln-‘{‘!,v a";e;!u;l:;‘t& ":g:“,’fi.',‘ Turkey and the various countries|greater part of the population beingtoday by United States Senator Tru- than to vote against them now." tradingsinjthatfland; either secretly or openly signed up |man H. Newberry. Asked specifically i with the “gray shirts.” She has, how- e EhTih Rl TR = concerning a widely published report U. S. Missionary S the rea ¥ ey trils into PTUS- | that he would'not take his seat In the On the other hand, the Asquithian next Congress, Senator Newberry Daily News pleads with the electors to . AndSonKidnaped |11 bROWN AS LAUNCH By Honan Bandits| SINKS DURING NIGHT when she found ber daughter in_the throes of epilepsy she dragged her- self from her bed and struggled to- ward the window. She tried to call for assistance, she said, but her voice was too weak to attract atten- | tion. Then she tied the cloth to the stick, hung it out the window and slowly sank to the floor to awalit the help of some passerby. Mother May Recover. It so happened that that signal was entirely. ignored and that it was the paper and milk on the doorstep which finally attracted attention and brought aid to the houge. Hope is held for the recovery of’the mother. air at_every bit of 100 miles an hour, to try his hand at downing the at tacking force. He apparently had been | keeping a lookout for more “enemies.” Bombers Surremder. The bombers, however, with much difculty succeeded in making a com- plete canvas of the city, and at the end of a half hour, seeing they could do no damage, were forced to pick out ‘the first clear landing space or suffer at the hands of the Bolling Field filers. They landed and surrendered at the Anacostia station ai 12 o'clock. They will remain here over night heen taken by the united soclalists the chancellor notified the president of the cabinet's decision to resign. Today the president will undertake the first steps toward the appoint- ment of a new cabinet. During the night the situation was one of utter confusion. A number of solutions of the crisis already have been suggest- ed. Oae is for a cabinet of “busi- ness men without party affiliations, while another probability concern: itself with a ministry composed only f the bourgeoisie parly. It is un- ertain whether Wirth again will be t6 constitute a new By the Associated Press. DETROIT, Mich, November 15.— over. said: “There is fiot a particle of truth vote liberal where there is a liberal in the report. I can’t say any more.” candidate. Otherwise, it would have —————— them vote labor. The Daily News and commissioned ministr; CHILE DEPUTIES ADOPT TAditers Favor Change. the Westminster Gazette, leading and leave for Langley Field tomorrow ; . : person his message to the extra ses- Wirth's further availability as|champions of independent lberalism ¥ With the ald of a parish priest of | morning. The bombers were com. chancellor s strongly doubted by 2|among the press of the capital, main-| PEKING. Nowerber 16— Einar |NO Trace o Boat or Victims of TACNA-ARICA PROTOCOL | 5" psers’ cauren,. arrangements manded by Capt Edward C. Black. i e e ISR o L large section of the press, as well a5 | tain that ‘the great feature of the 2 S werefcompletediitohaye ithe imotlier, ig and Hillar; re the FiSeait Borg-Breen of Minneapolis, an Tragedy in Canadian Lake |yjctory in Senate Believed taken to Providence Hospital, ana|ifmes: Cr'€ Hillary were the |with the President by Seaator Curtis by many rechstag leaders. They be- lieve that the circumstances under which the crisis was precipitated, to- zether with the present state of the reparations negotiations, demand as the head of the cabinet a man unfet- tered by the failure of the govern- ment’s previous policies. electoral campaign has been the renaissance of liberalism. They ' de- clare that serene confidence exists among the liberals Urging the claims of 'labor, the Daily Herald tells its readers that the laborite program will insure peace fair pl nd work for all at reaso able w: and with reasonable hour: Answering the objection that the of Kansas, the republican Senate whip, and provide that the spening session on Monday be adjourned as soon as it begins, out of vespect for the late Senator Watson of Jesrgia. CREW ABANDONS SHIP American missionary of the Luth- ' eran Church, and his son have been kidnaped by the army of ban- dits in Honan province, according to a report from Hankow. Alto- gether eight foreigners, including two Americans, now are held cap- tive. Is Found. sured—Pact Expected to Con- By the Assoclated Press. \ QUEBEC, November 15.—A dis tainNo/ R servacions. patch to Quebec from Bersimis, ~on | By the Associated Press. the north shore of the St. Lawrente, |. SANTIAGO, Chile, November 15 reported the drowning of eleven Der- | The Tacna-Arica protocol with Peru sons in the lake of Shelton bay|adopted last night by the chamber ‘The defenders of Washington were Capts. Street and Oker and Lieuts. Smith, Wilkins, Ramey, Baker, Beaton, Beau and Wolfe. —_— ATTACK ON PAINLEVE. further arrangements will be made for her care. Miss Goetz, it was stated, formerly had been employed as a court stenog- rapher in one of the Supreme Court | branches of the District. Her f{ll- ness forced her out of this position and she obtained work as a charwom- an in the Library of Congress. A ort time ago she was affected with In all, President Ebert is confront- PARIS, November 15.—Prosecution ed_with one of the most critical prob- | country could not pey Tor It all, the| "Rev Mr. Bors-Breen was living [river, thirty miles from the seashore. without reservations, now returns to | short time ago she wad aftected With | ;¢" broteasor Paul Painleve, former SINKING IN MIDOCEAN leris of h|: 'rmm':"nélol?"tf'udl"y n.::g.hp:y for itaell “once the e ttan| with his family at Loshan, in the. The accident occurred Monday | the Mnlte,"'l‘h;l vote in the chamber |2, o ontiy had recovered from it. premier, for defamation of the = e in visw of his party a ons o southeastern part of Honan. dight when 3 gasoline launch con-|WaS 78 to 27, with two members not | “rpe ‘o1d house tells the last chapter | Driesthood, is sought in & petition| .. ...y n 5 November 15.—The voting. il ‘The senate is not expected to in- sist _upon its former reservations to Dresented today to the chamber of deputies, asking that his immunity |Italian steamer Monte Grappa, previ- BUS ey b “":"Mr"muy auoted | 2US1Y reported to be sinking, has been as declaring In & speech: - “It was|abandoned by her crew iIn mid-At- not the Iay teachers who were the |iantic, says a radio message from Zets rid of fearful burdens hung around the necks of the people by the incompetence of the ruling class.” Bad Weather Comes. Bad weather caused anxiety to party Among the solutions suggested to- day the proposition for a cabinet of non-partisan experts seemed most favored. although the shortage of available candidates who would eventually command the confidence of of the story. In the dark parlor hang paintings and engravings in abu dance, each of them bespeaking e: pertness in selection, while the group- ng of a set of antique furniture ) ®» volumes... The furniiure is The foreign consuls at Hankow report apprehension throughout Honan over the increasing activ- ities of the outlaws. American legation filgures show that -there are 340 Americans, taining eleven passengers was. sunk and all the passengers perished, ac- iausapan e reath cording to the meager details which e Washington agreemen e two- thirds majority which would be nec- have reached Bersimis. Among the | d0itqS TVOUY VTG Stion againet that the situation demanded immedi- ate clarity. As soon as the vote had the reichstag was admitted on all |agents. In some country districts the i h e passengers was Rev. Father [Tor-|a two-thirds majority in the house|old but sturdy. In its day it was|worst slackers; it was the men in|Cape Race received today by locul sides. It is also argued that a purely | fog which has hung over England 'c.'r'.';:'fih :’l‘zl::lymt‘:::'l in Hol::: telller, a missionary, who was for-|of deputies is considered improbable | probably the Jast word in excellent | the black robes.” | agents of the ship. G i ‘bourgeois cabinet would be short |for several days had given way to| province. merly stationed at Bersimis. It '“'ol attainment. It is understood that gmmmnm“z In_the kitchen are| The petition sent to the chamber| All are believed to have been safely Mved, in view of socialist opposition | rain. The Chinese foreign office has Aeeelite o several senators who voted for the [ empty milk bottles and cans, | was signed by 276 priests, all former | transferred to the White Star liner in the reichstag. which would be| Severai blind men from St Dun-| promised to exterminate the ban- |reported that the an 90 reservations are unlikely to do 80 while ccld o the stove are three pans,.] solliiers, most of them decorated for | Pittsburgh, which had answered ths iContinued @a Page Z, Column 2) (Continued on Page 1) - dits, 2 =5 oupauts had rt et been fouhd. sgain. each Al valor In the war. iR rnt- Grappa’s distress siguals.