The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 30, 1923, Page 11

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R. Wineim Marx Heads New Compromise Ministry BERLIN, Nov. 80. ~The German government announced’ today that, subject to reservations, a cabinet had Deon formed, with Dr, Wilhelm Marx as chancellor and Dr, Strese- mann as foreign minister, ‘The reservations are duo to uncer. tainty over the eventual reception the announcement will receive, The ministry is a minority one, estab, lished by risky political compromises, ‘The provisional cabinet will ins elute: 3 Dr, Marx, chancellor. Streseman, foreign affairs, Gessler, defense, Luther, finance, Tarres, Vice chancellor, Partisan developmenta in the reichstag today showed the provis- fona? cabinet was in danger before it started functioning, Hamm, interlor. Brauns, labor Hoefle, posts and telegraphs, minger, justice. Schiele, food. Teinrich, economy. eee Commission Will Probe Reparations | Nov. 30.—-The reparations commission today deciled to form a | commission of experts to investigate many's capacity to pay. Accorting to the newspaper In-| 2 commi es of the United provided action, qransigea Include represen’ States on the commission, bat cbuntry abnro the oe This decision of the reparations | commission ts aftermath of the) + recent efforts by the United Stat» ani Great Britain to form a commis | sion to fix the amount Germany would be able to pay. That effort failed because of the French reserva- tions to the proposal. Theredpon Pre nounced that the mission — whi France—would organ Mission ef experts. SNOW COVERS MIDDLE WEST Heavy Downfall Is Big Help| _to Wheat Crop Nov.. 20 Poincare an-} parations com- dominated by s own com:| Missouri | Oklahoma, Arkansas City within a' few | aviest snowfall"In five was wet; the temperature | the freezing, and there as little wind, so.there wero few drifts, making it an ideal fall for wheat. In case the temperature Should drop sufficiently now to injure wheat, the crop will be protected by the snow blanket. : 1. D. Graham, assistant secretary ure for Kansas, said the be of great benefit to plants. nd interurban Many motorists on trips were stalled on} was predicted, | MAN AND. GIRL | PACING TRIAL lon ‘ot tans up the fight s of Mrs. t to death Ia: ing into Mound | and minary hear a's husband of the slaying. stream of autos began ar-}a fe seat, showin © over | ficor, inity where }enid secu s merchant, home, ‘ear-old | d to show that a notive for the killing. y t the co ted to demand the si t De punished, Motor Wreck Puts Woman i in Hospital Mrs. Harold nade 26, of 1012 dy the Swedish suffering from 4 ng an auto a which st which she oepital Torna th Pothell high north of the cit 8 on the Hmite, in ex. afternoo: It 1 recov: | _|he pushed him back into his Of London, England, Internation. ally Famous Cartoonist and Lecturer, Men and Women, 50 Cents Saturday Evening, Y. M. ¢ December 1 A. Auditorium son agreed to ° {Millionaire and PI Photnoteoter |. traffic ommunications were sert-| Jup the receiver and rushed to th her ma, {to r abit d SAYS TEACHER eremenetorey Went of Own Will VANCOU “i No’ | Austin was spirited away from home in Seattle by force or thru {and forced to leave her home |friends, Her home life was ha and her surroundings harmoniow Austin, elder sister of the pretty terlous disappearance last Sun bo instituted, Mins Loita and ay Miss Georgia, arrive late ‘Thursday night, when t learned that their sister was leved to be under treatment at Vancouver General hoapital here. arriving they hurried to the hosp! but would not be admitted to t sister's presence. fied the hiking togs that Misa Au }had worn asx the property | Georgia The clothes had been kept tn old trunk in the basement of home of Mix Margaret McLean, [Allard st, where tho thre —_——— lived, SISTER DENIES THER. WAS Y TROUBLE Nothing wil! make me belleve Jtert of hor own free will," moniously together. me person carried ompelied her to go with them. {am certain she never left | her own accord." Soc fi Neither of the slstora could exy LOS ANGELES, Nov. 30.—Possible| ytisg Nell’s delirious referen, action against Marry Hartze, racing|“pagay.” ‘They say she had driver, whose machine caused the} death of two persons at the Beverly | city only a few months, Hills speedway yesterday, will hinge on the inquest verdict over the vic- tims, it was announced from the sheriff's office today. » ‘The Inquest wax to be held today, and at that time it will be officially determined whether blame for the death of Russell Hughes, newspaper photographer, and George L, Wade, Kansas City millionaire automobile racing owner, who was backing Har- lun Fengler, should be lald to Hartze, Benny Hill today {* the hero of the racing classic and a firm oeliever in fabler, or at least he] ought to be. Apropos of the story of | the tortoise and the hare, Hill en aterda with a carded m o—one W h Mar maga refused to u clar. | ’ r De Alzaga did ie Ua ssa father hax been de | Jsix years of a Ifrequently ad duct themaclve a would have plea alive,” Miss Austin sald. Physicians expected the girl some timo Friday 000 prize money and|fort to obtain her story of her e best racing] appearance and wanderings. Are Victims the school terms three months and had obtained | teacher before The unhappy girl, ithe porch of a deserted ‘houne |Marine Drive, was unconsci Later she revived at the but fous and hysterical. ing from a nervous breakdown, tending physicians assert PHYSICIANS EXPECT | TO QUESTION GIRL During her delirious ravings ently upon “dadd | protect her. would say: dy, don't let them get sntinuous of he leaving engaged in a ¢ ad since Her mother nonished them to mannor Hi, a jroared across daredevil young chap, | the finish four laps who fin- inbed: second, EX rne was third; Fengler fourth and Frank El- liott fifth. By this open defiance of coveted Le $9,000 of the pfeated some of th drivers in the world. By virtue of taking third, | Hearne secured enough points Eddie give | higher for the | this year, lexcept In three states, HERE'S MORE ABOUT MURDERED REPORTER | STARTS ON PAGE 1 lor the editorial staff. ¥or an hour [before day bapaks, he is the only | powder, locenpant of the office. The janitor fot be building said be let Brown front door as usual at 6} dered Be this morning and tbat n seemed more cheerful and amiable than usual, he climbed tairs to the editorial rooms|ner of the marks that ou the second floor. enlarged fingerprints, NO ONE IN OFFICE, learer as the powder settled (THE JANITOR SAYS |them. Setting up a camera "Lt had just finished sweeping up)the table, May dusting off the desks in the) pay PRINT ON “DEAD rtial department when he ar-| yanys" DESK FOUND rived,” the janitor sald, “and 1 um positive there Was nobody .on jthe second floor at that time. Only minutes after I let Brown I made the rounds of tho first} trying the doors and windows © locked befor “iling photogra 5 fast-|nway in his bag, May then let myseif|Painstaking search of the whic pom, starting at the of the " ith an excla made sienna and chalk, then M tered it over the desk of t man.” With a ac an to work der back and forth across t} and soon there ‘ed in one top, dently he said. “Looks hand Had been of paper on the de sharply the line {s cut.” ag tho h rest bto be sure the this I went home. y 1 out thru the front door, kept locked from midnight and; locking it after went hom ery one was wall clas » and he had found angle behind 4 {bullet that hac ftwelf in the Seattle crimfr on the phon to hurry over. Waiting only long cnough to request that nobody jtouch the “body” and that all per- |wrapped the extracted | sone keep away from the immediate |carefully and put ft ity of the shooting, May hung|then continued the search, Every inch of tho entire edit Brown wall bullet imbedded | office. ldepartment was gone over One Jeng, issis® “100% Oe the | every plece of rumpled paper ud man, still lay in Aine shart” waste basket 1 ition Ov he | halk sprew ine yom latraightened out and scrut jdosk, and May turned {;|Down near the bottom of the » charge of the de “lof paper he foi something hegan to ply him with intumested: hie” s A it fr concernins the vict |pocket before any of the connections. |could see what it was eTHING | DORPSE” clothes and victi™.” | nothing that Interested chair | asked tie man |these stories to his office early would t probably new story, picked up and walked out of the Half an hour later he to say: “ve who baat wate MAY FINDS SO} INTERESTING 0} Turning again to the After searching the “dead ma him, who is wr Jand looked him over critically {Straightening out the clinched fists, hands closely, the and then object placed it come around Saturday he examined the fingernails espe 4 in paper som found there and pocket. Then he tc the} gerprints of the “dead m | After this he asked all the mem-| ber of the editorial de rtment} \to form a fine, Calling turn he took a finger print on jcompact hand printpad he wh jped out of his pocket, and ame t with a number of sm scraped the under sma office callec talked with the Janitor his story as he 1 it to seoms straight talked with the folks who e in neighborhood of The Star and | found omen were lying awake carly Fri¢ heard what they thought w | each in two W who sa low sticks, he pails of each, plac - Two or they tcld me they hot, but belleving them both thing but the backfire from jauto, they paid no attention t, and went back to sleep. That's golng to teresting. TWO y ONE GUN! rt of each ser depressions in that he carried, king the alongside the de nam make it, n SHOT: And ONE B staft. May really find rime? What See tomorre fmoon| (What did Mr. otully | the of th ix he working © | Star) on the SPIRITED AWAY Sister Does Not Believe Girl| 40.—Mina Nelt| influence of some person or persons, | ‘That is the bellof of Mins Lai year-old school teacher whose mys Night causedsa nationwide search to unger slate in Vancouv Hoth girls identi of Miss} On Tu Mins |reila Austin said. “I deny that there gight | waa auiy trouble between us at home. | » were perfectly happy, and tiv Ov her off home of |" friends in Seattle, having ved in the} She came | from Hugo, Okla., at the opening of} her position as her home. when found on} hospital, when questioned became delir- | She is suffer 4 “papa if he were | °° } to question in an ef- ‘The ratio of males to females ts farm population| phim the national championship for|than {t 1s for the total population Drawing a small vial of yellov of mercury, bumt | fathe looked | instit clearer, photographed this, |evening, was part of a palm prin where the] ®irl ing to his pocket, | thoroly. y i apparently — findin an a | shot This was at 6:30 by their three minutes later} heard another to be THE SBATTL Sleuth’s Own Story of How He Trailed Girl |Sergt. Carr Tells of Following Miss Austin aoe Border to Hospital BY SERG , CARR, Seattle Totlco Sparen VANCOUVER, B.C, 10, Misy Nell Austin left hom@with, a; welbformed plan in mind—to run} away-—but with Httle knowledge of | whut course she would take to reach her destination, whieh,» from the '} start, waa Canada, day | Last Sunday night Misa Auatin do: colved her sisters wh house to go to chur drean she wore her | hiking toga, She hey | versity bridge and at Tenth ave, ber] 1, and dint, he threw off her hat théland put on a boy's cap, Later sho On| discarded the dreas, Then sho start: ital, led to walk tow Canada, with helt| Everett as the first stopping point I had information that there had dixcussion between the misters | sday I went to the home of} | Miss M ret McLean, who con-) & boarding house for teachers Millard ave., to inv igate While we we at the rirls|houwo, I. F. Barnett of 64aN. S0th| Ist, drove up and said he had read} Jot the dixappearance of the girl and believed he had xome information, Neti| Barnett said. he had been driving n the Bothell highway late Sunday pight when he waa stop, by a in a hiking costume. He soon od the "boy" way a girl maw ading. ‘The girl pleaded with her to Everett, and offered He finally took her as far where sho left his} as hor} the | and ppy i atin | be an} duets the}at 817 §17| this angle om Sergt. W. EB. Carr Photo by Frank to take phim $10, Silver lake, pital, and wo readily Minn Austin She Is delirious, and in a delicate condition from fatigue, hunger and| her trying experiences. She has suf fered a nervous breakdown, When she recovers and tells her story, ar Wednesday we started from Dens more station under orders of Claude Bannick and Chief of Police |W. B. Beveryns to trace this girl's path, convinced that It was Mins Austin A milk truck driver sald that he and a companion had seen a girl in ja boy’s hiking costume walking b tween Silver lake and Everett Mon-| day morning, At Everett Sheriff McCullough reported he had seen girl who a trifle dazed.) dress in clothes, on the} lain | to fow deductions in detail ago, | on} | jour, seemed hiking streets of Everett Monday night At Stanwood we met a nian ¥ had seen the girl on the highway. «| Mount Vernon a man was located who had seen her, and a number of people had seen her on the outskirts lingham ‘Tuesday. Our #last r was from a farmer who pal creek bridge at she | | her on the ha man with me, soak: 7 ( r hon thet P08 2 ° to Van Arriving there, we read in the Van. couver papers o an unidentified girl being cared for in the Vancouver General hospital. The girl had been found, unconscious, tying on the| porch of a denerted house at 4615 Marine drive by H. B. Routledge, | | Who lives at 4657 Martnae drive. | Of course, thin waa the girl we had | been trailing. We went to the ho HERE’S MORE ABOL GIRL FOUND ‘ARTS ON PAGE 1 fathor, wish | wn din MUM MMs pomsibly Minn Austin sald but 6 months old died. We have never ther as ‘dad,’ but and I can onl. mean } = “Nellic when h okon alwayn as accoun mutterings in delirfum a ring to a sweetheart of whom I do « ation-wide search which wag ed for Misw Austin, following her disappearance en route to ¢ into | in the choir of the University \ over| dist Episcopal church last Sun definitely ended at | Vancouver Thursday afternoon when Sergt. W. ©. Carr and Patrolman Jennings positively identified the girl the object of thelr search. The officers had followed a scant trail from 11th ave. N, B. and N | 41st et. in Seattle, along the Pacific highway thru Bothell, Silver Lake rett, Stanwood, unt Vernon, Hingham to Coal Creek, just south aing, on the international bor. where the last trace of her was | == found, LUVECUVQUCUNOUHUECUUEUUUOAGEUUEG TEU noxt in Vancouver search. In the Vancou they read of an unknowr been found by H had | Routledge, 4667 Marine drive He| Unconscious on the back porch up| Yaee house 5 Marine drive They immediately went to the ho: | and identified the girl | Austin, orlal stop, ver pa MO Miss | == x | Governor ar Trapp, Secretary of Secretary of the co-operation | in the search | === y had wired al. stations at n Francisco to tend re inj th waa| War Weeks to i [of the army and navy pile] for Miss Austin. Den that |{structions to tho na + his | Bremerton and hers possible aid Hart, who a telegram from Ge | Trapp, had issued instruction tate highway he| the search for the missing girl iting 1 to an’s” police to co-operate in i ll SS BEES ae 1 up and you t1K0 the I've| they | and| PINE ST. A an| to w«- | Dr. EeH. ‘Melius And earisksint , |] Optometriat and Optician, fo UL-|P merly with) Marcum Opt Pand ta COMPLUTH, # I at} clue Sure. Fit "Ortical Co. va 1 Ave. Seattle Hotel Bldg. | Agenoy Report Tells of Ger- Nowell | identified her] am satisfied that it will bear out our MEDIUM- PRICED LONDON ROUSED BY WAR STORY man “Preparations” BY LLOYD ALLIEN (United Presa Mtaft Correspondent) LONDON, Nov, 40—A_ nensiltion which threatens to develop intd a national scandal has been caused by publication of an article sent to Brit: ish newspapers by a news agency, stating the government is concerned over military operations in Germany, The article said “rapid military training of large Dumbers of men in excess of the Versailles treaty stipu: | Hlations hax been progressing” and | that the government is cognizant of the facts. RIGHT PERSON TO GET CASH Supt. of Schools Thomas KR, Cole} on Friday announced that the $1,000 | jreward posted for the recovery of | Miaw Nell Austin, 22-year-old sehool teacher who disappeared last Sunday night, and the arrest and conviction of persons responsible for her disap: | pearance, would not be paid until} vons entitled to it hayé been | tablished, “We do not intend to become in- volved in a legal controversy over | who {s entitled to the money,’* Cole |waid Friday, *'We are all gind she |has been found and are delighted to| |rewarnt whoever {s entitled to the} money. |court proceedings result.’ rintendent Cole said that 1 Austin was teaching her first term in the Seattle schools. ‘The | girl camo here in September at the | opening of the fall term, he said. She | |was highly recommended, well equipped by experience and @ unt- }also has an | Inducing a | do these old no-called Hut we do not care to have| survived by two brothers, Dr 'S MORE ABOUT MUSIC TARTS ON PAGE “Aw for if you jazz, please, ontinued, “It effect on the moods, more hilarious, exhill- on the emotions than ‘clawsios. But even jazz wouldn't cause even the most highly emotiopal person to commit suicide on hearing it played.” HERE’S MORE ABOUT DOCTOR STARTS ON PAGE 1 the modern music she rating effec Dr, Whiting had just finished playing Bach's “Largo” on the bari- tone horn when the shot that ended Mattice’s life was heard. ‘The pistol belonged to Dr. Whiting and had been taken from his brief case by Mra. Hugo France, his accompanist, when she was hunting for musi Dr, Whiting had used the pistol 4 | proover hy & means of protection during his nightly visits to Richmond Beach. No one actually saw Dr. Matti shoot himself, as he the crowd a minute before the acci dent Among the guests at the giving festivities were Mrs, Wilson, Mrs, Hazel ter of Dr. Whiting, of Los Angeles, and France of San Francisco. Dr. Mattice was 40 years old. parents, Dr. and Mrs. M. B, Mattice, live at Sedro-Woolley.’ He also is Clyd Mattice, Seattle dentist, and Menzo Mattice, dental student at Portland, and two sisters, Mra. Mildred Hunt. ington, Seattle, and Mrs, Dorothy Wheeler, Bellingham. The dead ocullst was a of Johns Hopkins medical college, and had studied aboard in Vien hanks. ‘isk, stepdaugh- A. ©. Williams Mrs. Hugh vernity degree and came from a well-known Southern family, the army during the war as a captain J (ogopas Sa ee Over Two Hundred of Our Go on Sale SATURDAY MORNING Many of these dresses show reductions greater than ONE-HALF OFF- ff WESTLAKE An early selection is advisable. PINE ST. AT WESTLAKE 1536 WESTLAKE AVENUE Hundreds of policemen | Ray, | mensa stepped behind | | day, Mary | weverts that Hoover used these hours | thumb, | of goods stolen during recent raids, His | led to his arrest on suspicion of rob- graduate London and Freiburg. He served in Retiring From Business —Prices Lowered Again DRESSES 19.50 na°24.50 They include dresses for evening wear, dinner, afternoon and street. The colors and materials are the sea- son’s newest. THA lin the medical corps under Col. PAGE 14 a Posses Searching for Three Brothers MILWAUKEE, Wis, Nov, 90 and deputy and around Milwaukee today searched the ciiy and vicinity for the three Qe Auuwemont broth rs, sought on charges that they held up and robbed a Southern Pa: cific railroad train at Siskiyou, Ore October 11, Killing three trainmen and a mail clerk, Police were notified that the mea, Roy and Hugh, were seen in the clty. This followed receipt of # from the sheriff of Fond du Lac cotnty that the brothers heading for Milwaukee from Wis. Rewards totaling $14. out for the capture of the Aheriffe in 400 are men. | Hospital Patient Believed Burglar MONTESANO, Nov. 30.—Sheriff's officers here believe that several re: cent robberies in Montesano and Aberdeen were the work of Clifford Hoover, patient in a local hospital. « been confined to the hus | pital several weeks, and wears & plaster cast while recovering from # injury to his back. During his recent convale has been allowed to leave the hos pital ward for eral hours each and Deputy Sheriff McIntosh wevere ence he of freedom to advantage. ‘The fact that Hoover has only one and his attempts to dispose bery, J. Be Eagleson of Seattle, He had fived in Seattle since 1911 He made his home at the ttle Golf & Country club. His office was in the Cobb building. ‘The first reat picture painted by Michael Angelo was-the one on the pee of the temptation of St Anthony. SSA 'UUULAUUNHUUCU SUTURE he

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