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SWAN GIRL SAFE, . WRITES DAD SE “HAS OOD JB Went Away Just to Show She Could Earn Her Own Living. NOW IN QUAKER CITY. Mother Will Visit Louise as Soon as She Recovers From Shock. te the letter she promised to write, Feostved early to-day by her father, Louise Swan, the ninetecn-year-old church worker, revealed her hiding (Wace in Philadelphia and refused to s@ern to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ‘Wiliam H. Swan, at No. 11 West Thir- {eth street. Mr. Swan declined to dis- close the contents of the letter and also Yefused to make known the position lis strong-willed daughter now occu- plea, “She is safo and that's all we have to may now,” he said shortly. “She ts employed as 4 nurserys governess, I think you would call the job. She found service in the home of «a wealthy Woman Just outside Philadelphia. This lady does not know Loulse’s identity. Loutse sald. in part, in her letter: “You did not belleve that capable of warning m have shown you, I have a gond poal- ion with a kind lady, who docs not know my real name. I don't want to be disturbed by newspapers here. If J return home it will be independently, and I will be in a position to be other tham-a child, as you have treated me. I am not unwilling to go back, if mother wants mo to do s0, but I prefer to stay here and I tented.’ " MOTHER WILL VISIT GIRL AS SOON AS SHE |S ABLE. Mrs. Mary Matzinger, the girl's aunt, with whom the Swans at pres- ent reside, and who frequently told her niece that she “neoded a good spanking,” stated that Mrs. Swan would visit Louise in Philadelphia as soon as the mother is able to travel. Mrs. Matainser declined to allow news- paper men to see her brother, the girl's father, to-day, and stated that every effort would be made by the girl's fam- ily to keep her present address a secret. She frankly admitted that the word “governess” may not entirely describe am quite con- ithe character of employment found by the girl. Mrs, Matzinger stated that the girl's letter was lengthy and rehearsed griev- ances with her father, who was to blame for bis stringent rules. Besides demanding that her father withdraw his offer of $1,000 reward for information regarding her Miss Swan forbade her father annoying her further, it was stated, by one of the household, who had handled the letter. ‘The letter also told of Miss Swan's {inerary from the time, Monday after- noon, that she left the house. She went directly to the Dime Savings Bank of Hirooklyn, drew out $.00 and, with some $5 she had in oash, boarded a train for Vniladelphia, The girl did not state whore she had spent the days and vights before finding a haven with the “kind woman.” “We have decided,” stated Mrs. Mat- zeinger, “to allow Louise to remain in her position and learn what the world 4 like to one earning her own way in life. Of course we thank the press for Words, indeed, fall to ex- Mabel Dillard, whom Miss Swan addressed a telegram the colored maid to yesterday morning, stating she was ‘perfectly safe,” will accompany Mre. Swan to Philadelphia, possibly to-night, a 9200, Y¥., July 2%1.—Dr, G, @. Rambaud, head of the Pasteur In- stitute of New York City, has been fined $200 for having deer tn his poss mon out of season. He is the husband of Jeanne Gerville-Reache the opera singer. Without Dwelling upon The World's big totale, just take cognizance of the fact that: YESTERDAY: The World printed 251 More “Summer Resort” Ads. Than The Herald; LAST SUNDAY: The World Printed 981 More “Summer Resort" Ads, Than The Herald; LAST WEEK: The World Printed 3,355 More “Summer Resort’ Ads. ‘Than Tho Herald; LAST MONTH: The World Printed 15,622 More ‘Summer Rosort" Ads, Than The Herald, LAST YEAR: The World Printed 35,269 More *‘Summer Resort” Ads, Than The Herald, ALWAYS READ WORLD “SUM MER RESORT" ADS, FOR ‘Il GREATEST DIVER: OF DE- SCRIPTIONS OF SEASHORE MOUNTAIN AND COUNTRY MOTELS AND BOARDING HOUSES, THE EVEXING WORLD, THURSDAY, Isa Woman Most Beautiful at 40 Years, as Otero Says? Doesa Man Preter Her ta the Blushingiy Awkward Girl of I 18? Actress Says the Zenith of Loveliness Is at Forty (She's Forty-one), and Admits Part of Her Fascin- ation Is in Knowing How to Use Her Charms, Does Man Prefer the More Mature and Skilled “Man- Killer,’’ With lier Studied Graces, Gowns and Poses, to the Girl Graduate With the Simplicity of Youth? ay BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH, At what age woman loveliest? La Belle Otero, the world famous Spanish beauty, who dances when she has nothing else on her mind, declares, in a current magazine, that a woman does not touch the zenith of beauty until she ts forty years old. | Incidentally, Otero, like every other siren sure of. her charms, is not ashamed to tell her own age, and frankly admits to forty-one. | “Every woman of middle age and ripened beauty” may choose between the “splendid forties" and the | NIXOLA “terrible forti according to the Spanish dancer. GREELEY* SMITH “Loveliness” she dofines as “a living thing made! of beauty, charm, grace—physical attractions, yes—ana of the way to use| them.” | | Here ts the triumph of the woman of forty. Why, the intuitions of| |the vety young man are unerring in this matter. The youth of seventeen begins with a “grande passion” for a woman of forty. Instinct tells him | that she is the loveliest. | Girls of twenty-five are still getting the sand out of their eyes, accord- ing to Otero, At thirty they are still repeating to themselves, “I am al young thing.” At thirty-five a woman has known no emotion save the sat- isfaction ullog, aud it ts only at foriy ihat she wakes completely to the pulsing life of things. WHAT DO EVENING WORLD| Perhaps, like pineappless, they are very READERS THINK? jconsiderably marked down ‘at their How avout (ts WHEE do tb women} "sweeteat” jntage, through the fear of Feaders of The Evening World think of "Ruy" De Mabsrt ao apt tic this interesting question? Do they agree as . tine woman of forty an injustice. If #0, I with Otero that beauty, lke pearls,! shal be forty myself some day, and | clgars and wine, Improves with age/repentance will seek me out, Mean- and attains the fine flavor of perfection | time, The ng World would Ike to has been decanted for| hear what other people think. or do they prefer the can-! At What age 1s a woman most beauti- td loveliness of eighteen, the riper ful? fruit of twenty-five, the full blown love : TD BROOKLYN I PASSED BY BOARD opinion of my own to the effect that the} “Belle Otero” or any other woman of forty who thinks her beauty superior to Gaynor Refuses to Vote, Say- ing He Will Have to Act on Project as Mayor. that of “the girl Who hasn't gotten the sand out of her is simply throwing the sand she has shed from her own orbs back again, And this ts not said in a critical spirit, Any woman who !d under forty must certainly prefer.to feol that the goal. is) still ahead of her, the race still to bo} run, the golden apple of perfection still) to be attained, But she has sense enough to look the facts in the face in this case—a forty-year-old face—and to} render her judgment of beauty accord- ingly. | The beauty of forty 1s embalmed beauty, and if the Pure Food laws were! In spite of Mayor Gaynor, the Board enforced as extensively as they should| of Estimate to-day cpproved the sub- be every venerable vampire would have m Atlantic avenue, Brook & special number plainly exhibited on)... tha Baeesice ri J po r to the Bat- the and, underneath it would be (or. “ine 4 : . the famillar words: “Preserved with s , intended t> connect the Fourth Uttle benzoate of soda, colored with a| *Venue subway with the Lexington ave- | Mttle carmine. Bottled under the Food|¥@ tunnel in Manhattan. ‘This is one and Drug A of the routes awarded to the Brooklyn | There is no other beauty, no other| Rapid Transit Company and which | lure equal to that of freshness—fresh-| must, before it can be legalized, re ness of body, Eromhats of eel fren the approval of the Mayor. nese of soul. The French recognize| ppg this when they call the fairness of a The Board indorsed the route by a young girl “beauty of the devil.” But| Vote Of 12 to 1, exactly the necessary the genuine appreciation of beauty {a| Yot® with Gaynor not voting, The fairly limited. The woman of forty,| Mayor said that as he would pass on starved into shape, massaged into] the matter later, he would not vote,| adding that he was opposed to the route | and would not consent to {ts location. | joothness, hand-colored and with a yearning for conquest frankly speaking from her eyes, has a charm that ‘81 7¢, however, ratiee Caggant often more potent than beauty. ONC] po .6g ana ther io ere was no further hear- must be something of an artist, some. | en ee ee te animal thing of an aesthete, to care whether | /7h: a WORARiaT touth han theo Edward M. Grout, one of the Inter-| borough company's counsel, but who to- curve or looks as if it had es with @ oan opener when that mouth|@Y appeared for the Fulton street re- tail merchants, vigorously opposed the is uttering this smooth flattery, the calculated ardor which is one of the|foute. Public Service Commisisoner weapons age gives to a certain type. Maitbie as earnestly advocated it. Undoubtedly there are a yreat many| The Board also referred the contract | beautiful women of forty, but they are} for Section 5 of the Lexington avenue route to Comptroller Prendergast for ex- Way route und the |not among the professional beauties ne ltlke Otero and Cavalleri, the while d.| airings The tract was approved \pepulchres of dead souls. They are|0¥ the Public Service Commission yes- among the mothers of children or the|‘erday. It runs under Lexington ave from Twenty-sixth street south to Gra- mercy Park and under Irving place to! The Board also au- e of $10,00 for K plac unmarried women of brains and char- acter whose lives of sweetness fulness have moulded their fa ennodling mask, “HOW TO USE THEM” Fourteenth street wrized the ex IS THE REAL OTERO KEY. street and Fourth. above her rouge with the idea that sie is completing some man's #:bjugation. | The pophisticated gown, the siuated | pone o man-killer are not so effective ax the simple white dresa or the bl ching awkwordness of out y of the ma. , to subway —_—— DENIES HER DAUGHTER IS TO WED NAT GOODWIN, tie professions: any protty girl graduate o: elghtcen, Tho homage of the youth of reyontee Mise Marjorie proves no more than te love of @ to be abou young and untversaliy friendly puppy at Goodwin No, so that's why they call It pupvy + Marjorie Parrot a. No, 120% Asquith Jtove, Otera aim | # that the man of : # the young girl, And hef*reat, tas chy, Bho ie « daughter of, 49 of dserimination, |e Jato ¢ so W, Darrott, whe died a fow weeks ceo, woke, 4 nother of Miss More- ve ja a@ great dea! to be that her daughter | atractivensss of the | \ but that is not beauty who {3 4 graduate | and > i by an ambition to go she had shown histrionto | to the nota our own day, the ma he the most damage the nu Worn, [talent in an amateur Way, and her has broken the tout hearts, "Women, | ing, (ook her ta New York and pro Like pineapples, ara sweetest Just be | cured an engagement for her ag the fore they begin to decay,” said the]artisi's model in The Devil” under the Autocrat of the Breakfast Table. And)! savage inaragenent % % ‘" ntinuing ngton ave Otero gives Away ‘ wh leche of idee ctps el nig her beauty of forty she says Nt eta oon with nea }has “beauty and nd knows Away ling HOW TO USE TH hat's the ninth atreet 1 t > Bridge was ref. path part of it much | ¢ \ | more beautiful when they are not mak- | Tra wee, of which the Mayor | ing eyes, and I know of no spectacle n yr consideration and re- | j more pitiful and at the same time move at eee ae | ludicrous than that of a middle-aged ar ee ee ae t again siren blinking coyly and persistent y mmer if nec C4eROLINE OTERO , LEAPS FROM LINER INID-OEAM AND HTS RESCUER Brooklyn Man First Hurls Watch Overboard From Majestic, Then Follows, The White Star liner Majestte cams into port to-day from Southampton wiih a thrilling story of the rescue in mid- ocean of Patrick Drum of Brooklyn, a second cabin passenger who Ju 1 overboard while suffering from delirlum, Drum was first noticed acting strange- liyly last Saturday, when the ship was two days out. A deck steward saw him throw his gold watch overboard, When asked why he had done it Drum talked incoherently. The steward reported the matter to Capt, Beadnell, who ordered the man watched surveillance Late tn Drum was kept under all day in the smoking room. the afternoon he came on deck and sud-} denly ran toward the port rail and sprang overboard before the stewards | could intervene. The ery man, overboard” sent | Capt. Beadnell flying to ridge and | the ship was slowed down and turned! about, The passengers and offic swept the sea with marine glasses and finally detected Drum swimming for dear Ife. | ‘A boat in charge of Thint Officer Fred M. Brown and manned by a crew of six men was lowered and got close enough | to Drum to touch him, but he resisted | all efforts to pull him aboard though he kept himself above water. # grabbed the side of the boat and put his knees un In such a dragged manner that hi aboam, Final gripped through hauled out of th screaming like a Dr. R. F. 3 treated Drum in the vita 6 was fighting and madman shwoman, Miss ed acting When there is need of protec. tion from any contugious disease or to destroy foul odors and gerins rely on It is an edorless, colorless liquid dis- infeotant and deodorizer, powerful, sufe, onons Sold every JULY YIAXMIN. ELLLIOTT, 27, 1911 LOST YACHTSMAN'S BODY DISCOVERED: GIRL IS MISSING Boat in Which Denike and Miss Sawin Vanished Is Found Intact. The ody of Lorimer Denike, twenty= one years old, of Mount Vernon, who vanish « Tuesda night with nine- t year-old Lillian Sawin, also of | Mount Vernon, after they had set out for a sail in his little knockabout Jig- er, Was washed ashore at Sea CHft, L. | I, to-day. ‘The boat was found in # narrow arm of the Sound above New Rochelle. ‘The girl's body has not been red, of restdents of Mount Vernon 4 New Rochetle have been searching | for the missing couple since Tuesday night. How they came to thelr death a mystery, for the boat was found side up and the weather was per- y ealm when they were last seen, They sailed w oon. Two hours 1 CUM and had Shortly before eu » return to New ned in the ot was ob body of young ind to-da ody was clad only in unde ks and rubber-soled shoes Drowning — hac death about thirtyesix the bedy was Washed asuore. There were no mark Vth y Has Sawin was « daughter of Frank | | CANDIES OF RARE QUALITY avenue, Mount Vernon, Young Dentke lived alone with his widowed mother, Mrs. Florence 8. Denike, at No, 414 South Fourth avenue. The young couple had been sweethearts for years. Den- ike was a member of the New Rochelle Rowing Club and had the reputation of being an expert sailor. pi tela MISS POILLON MAY GO BLIND. Dust Improper Blamed jr Allment by Sister, Katherine Poilion to-day said her sis- ter, Charlotte, who posed as the cham- plon heavyweight woman boxer of the United States, is threatened with the ‘Treatment loss of her eyes, and added: “You know Charlotte 1s noted for her beautiful eyes.” ‘The sisters fo West Foi says that Charlotte was walting for @ r last Sunday when dust flew in her eye. A druggist attempted to give re- Nef, and the instrument he used was not sterilized, so that Infection occurred. Charlotte In 1 rk room and under care of two Miyle3 “MY FAVORITES NUTILD CHOCOLATES ONLY Ondy Mater Highest Grad Scient call Blended are Franklin Simon & Co. Fifth Avenue—37th and 38th Sts. Final Reductions FRIDAY, JULY 28TH Women's Summer Dresses White Marquisette Dresses Of white Prench marquisette, yoke and belt of real Irish lace. Heretofore $14.50 to $18.50 9.75 White Marquisette Dresses Ot French marquisette, hand embroidered in white and colors. Heretofore $18.50 to $29.50 Real Lace Trimmed Dresses Of French linen, button front, real Irish lace collar and cuffs. Heretofore $1 12.50 12.75 14.50 29.50 Summer Afternoon Gowns Of striped voile, Dresden tissue fabrics, or marquisette, richly emb'd. Heretofore $29.50 to $39.50 Real Lace Trimmed Dresses Of white washable voile; waist, skirt, yoke and cuffs trimmed with real Irish lace. Heretofore $49.50 Silk Dresses Of foulard or silk chiffon. Heretofore $29.50 to $39. 15.00 ‘B. Altman & Co.’ WOMEN’S PUMPS AND LOW SHOES COMPLETE STOCKS OF SUMMER FOOTWEAR ARE SHOWN INCLUDING VARIOUS STYLES IN BLACK OR WHITE BUCK. SKIN, WHITE CANVAS, GUN METAL, PATENT LEATHER | AND TAN CALFSKIN. TENNIS OXFORDS OF WHITE CANVAS, WHITE BUCKSKIN AND TAN CALFSKIN. EVENING SLIPPERS OF SATIN, SUEDE AND PATENT LEATHER. BOYS’ CLOTHING BOYS’ WASHABLE SUITS, IN RUSSIAN STYLE, HAVE BEEN MARKED AT SPECIAL REDUCTIONS IN PRICES. BOYS’ WASHABLE BLOUSES WILL BE ON SALE TO-MORROW (FRIDAY), AND UNTIL NOON SATURDAY, at 50c Each Fifth Avene, 34th and 35th Streets, Nem York. Lord & Taylor Founded 1826 Musses and Children’s Dresses At Reduced Prices Children’s Tub Dresses Ginghams, Lawns, Percales and Chambrays have been reduced to $1.39, $2.50 8 $3.50 Misses’ Tub Dresses Sold by our Sales Agents Everyw! in ¢ Sizes $100-50¢2: re QUR Half-yearly Sale of Manhattan Shirts Begins to-morrow (Friday) morning 1,50 and 1.65 quality reduced to 1,15 2.00 i 2.50 « 3.50 8 00 " “ 1.38 Md 1,88 8 2.68 ® 4.45 .e largest distributers of Manhattan Shirts in America Weber 4 Heilbroner Nine 58 Nay 369 Broadwi Nassau New aT Ne san dad ed Fad Reonue Stores 20 Cortiendt 146 Broadws 185 Broadway Ginghams, Lawns and Linons | Special at $5.00 | Broadway & 20th St.; 5th Av Always Uniform In Composition and Quality Has No Equal For Infant Feeding Borden's Eagle Brand Condensed Milk |MANY A MAN HAS BEEN STARTED ON THE ROAD TO PROSPERITY B¥ A LITTLE WORLD “WANT" AD, —tt, Sarre cere a ee