Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

BAFFLING MYSTERY OF GIRL’S DEATH

Elsie Walker’s Strange Fate

-Body in Quarry 200 Miles From Home

Will the Mystery of Elsie Walker’s death be solved when the inquest is resumed on Thursday? asks the Auckland Sun. Since her dead body was found lying in the scrub near an old quarry at Tamaki on the afternoon of October 6, ceaseless inquiries have been made by the police. A huge pile of evidence is awaiting the Coroner —evidence which has been gathered from every available source.

It is believed that the car reached Papi'.toetne on the morning of October 2. It was discovered in a side street at mid-day that day, though no one seems to have seen anyone leave it there. Did Elsie Walker walk the seven miles from the abandoned car to the quarry, was she accompanied on the journey, or was she taken there and abandoned?

After her body was discovered at Tamaki some wrappers from sweets were found in the vicinity, but the police have proved that these were left by a party which had visited the quarry some days previously. A man who had been seen walking near the quarry was also able to give the police a satisfactory explanation of his activities. Last Seen in Evening. Elsie Walker was last seen at the Bayly homestead after dinner on the evening of October 1. She was then seen taking 'some scraps out of the house in a bucket. Tho girl was dressed in a house frock over which she wore an apron. She was also wearing a hat. When found at the quarry tho girl was wearing the same frock, hut over it she had a boy’s overcoat belonging to her young cousin. Letters belonging to one of her cousins which were found in the pocket of the overcoat led to the identification of the girl. Miss Walker’s disappearance was not discovered until the following morning, October 2. At the same time it was found that Mr, Bayly’s car was also missing. - Trevor Bayly, son of Mr. Frank Bayly, discovered that tho motor car was missing at 1 o’clock on the morning of October 2. He had come home from a dance amd noticed that the garage door and the gate leading from the yard were open. However, ho did not bother to make inquiries and went to bed.

Elsie Walker -was the 16-year-old daughter of Mr. Do Ronzy Walker, of Ruakokori, on the Gisborne side of Opotiki. She did not live at home, but for some time had been working for her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bayly, of Papamoa, Te Puke. The girl would have been 17 years of ago on October 20 had she lived. Here, briefly, are the facts of the mysterious caso as far as they are knmvn:—

Lato on the evening of October 1, Elsie Walker disappeared from the home of Mr. Frank Bayly, Papamoa, near Tc Puke, Bay of Plenty. A Whippet motor car, belonging to Mr. Bayly, also disappeared tho same evening.

On October 6, five days later, the (motor car was found b.bandone'd at Papatoetoe. That same evening, seven miles away from the abandoned motor car, the dead body of Elsie Walker was found in the old quarry at Tamaki.

Medical evidence declared that the girl had been dead for at least three davs.

When she was found on October 6 the girl was lying on her face, in a natural attitude, with one arm extended. Her face was buried in the am, as though she..had been asleep. There was a small bruise on the top of the bead under the skin. This might have been caused by a blow or by the force of her failing and striking her head on some hard substance. This is one of the Joints’ about which medical experts may differ. Who Drove The Car? The girl’s father stated that his daughter could not drive a motor car, but evidence was obtained that she had been seen to drive Bayly’s car in and out of the garage. How did this girl of 16 reach a spot nearly 200 miles from her home? Wlio drove the ear? After the girl had disappeared from her uncle’s place it was found that £ll and a watch, the property of Mr. and Mrs. Bayly and their son, were also missing. No money was found on the dead girl.

Mr. Walker, father of the dead girl, is certain, that his daughter met with foul play. A few days beforo her disappearance he had received a cheerful letter from her and he had arranged to call at the Bally’s house on October 4 to meet her. One curious fact is that there were six gallons of petrol in the car when it was last used by tho Baylvs, but when the car wa3 found it contained no petrol at all. Six gallons would not have been sufficient to take the car on the whole journey to Papatoetoe, so that some must have been obtained on the journey. Who obtained it and who paid for it? To reach Papatoetoe on the morning of October 2. whoever was in charge of the car must have driven at an average speed of 25 miles an hour. Here is a mystery which so far has baffled the police and eveTvonc concerned witjt the girl’s death. A post mortem examination of the body was made by Dr. D. N. W. Murray. He examined the contents of the stomach, but found no traces of poison. Dr. Gilmour, pathologist at the Auckland hospital, also assisted in tho examination.

A tyre wa3 changed on the journey from Papamoa to Papatoetoe, and some extra petrol was also obtained. How was,this done if the girl could not drive or manage the car, and where was the petrel obtained? No one has been found who saw the Whippet car on the journey from Papamoa to whero it was found abandoned at Papatoetoe. The journey between those two points must have been made on the night of October 1 and 2. though the route taken is not known. If the girl did drive the car, how did she find her way at night over roads which she had never travelled? Her father stated that she had never been further north than Rotorua, so the route would be new and strange to her.

Later several other medical experts were called in to examine tho body, particularly the lump on the head. It is expected that when their evidence is made known much of it will bo of a conflicting nature. Will anything definite be brought forward at the conclusion of the inquest?

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19290110.2.10

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Times, Volume LIV, Issue 6807, 10 January 1929, Page 2

Word Count
1,113

BAFFLING MYSTERY OF GIRL’S DEATH Manawatu Times, Volume LIV, Issue 6807, 10 January 1929, Page 2

BAFFLING MYSTERY OF GIRL’S DEATH Manawatu Times, Volume LIV, Issue 6807, 10 January 1929, Page 2

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert