The evening world. Newspaper, July 20, 1914, Page 3

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Se ei lace el A LOSTGIRL'S BODY |The Tango | FOUND IN ILLINOIS ERNATION HUNT * (Catherine Winters Disappeared | More Than a Year Ago From Newcastle Home. | Carl E. Ackerman, Editor Says Women Take t >_——. Have you a tango face? Look in the glass and sce. |dervisheg, American model, you, ACCUSED HER PARENTS. | Body Had Been Shipped to Florida and Then Brought Back to Urbana. The tango {a now being bro the American wo News, possibility, At ti CHICAGO, July 20.--A body believed to be that of Catherine Winters of | 35 conceivable mishap, homes, but perhaps the most portentous charge of all I asked Mr. " HE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY #0, Face , Spoils Women’s Beauty, | of the Photographic News, | he Pastime Too Seri- ously, and Hence Wrinkles Appear. | By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. If you are numbered among the dancing 1914, the chances are (hat your face‘ {dentifies | has been blamed for almost every from broken arches to broken ght against it. For on excellent au- thority the tango fs accused of spoiling the beauty of Carl BE. Ackerman, editor of the Photographie! is the person who calls attention to this tragic) ie convention of the National Associa- tion of Photographers, who met recently in Atlanta, | even as the speed) the “tango face” has! an declured that, “auto face," been forced on the American public by the craze for modern dancing. As! proof he adduced the fact that photographers find increasing difficulty in! Ackerman When [ called Newcastle, Ind., for whom a nation- | 9% MF ah tal s wide search ha» been made for more mania produced the th. 4 year, Was exhums! in the Potter's Field in a cemetery at Ur- basa, y, ncourding to a| making satisfactory pictures of feminine tangomaniacs. Y ort rec to-day. “But what Is the tango face?” Two weeks ago charges against Dr.! on him in his office at No. 42 East Tw W. A. Winters, bis wite W. it, Cooper, « roomer at the Winter's home otha tange't Be ereate in Newcastle, of conspiracy to murder! and burn the body of the Mttle girl" THE PHODGRAPHER Who disappeared from her home on Mareh 2%, 1915, were formally di oF missed. ‘The charges were fed on iu-| forination supplied by Kobert Abel.un | Indianapolis private detective, and J “I'vo been treated so badly vy these tin star detectives that 1 take very littie faith in their discoveries any more. There's no use of my going to Urbana, but 1 have sent an officer over there just to make sur Detectives caused the body to be ex- humed. Every detail of the descrip- tion of the missing nine-year-old daughter of Dr. William A. Winters, B& dentin of Newcastle, Ind. tallled with that of the body, it was reported ‘The clothing she wore on the day she Ginappeored also was identified, it wax good looks of American women. It is characterized by deep, dark ners of the mouth, by a numbe of fine lines on foreh and cheeks, and finally by a wooden wad. ; According to the account of the} [Xie unmove and meaningless. finding vf the body, It bad lain for] 4. vom" ,4on't make me opposed to tuirwen months in the receiving | 4n¢cing,” he added, hastily. “I can't Vauit of tue cemetery and then hau] do the tango myself, but I enjoy been buried, unciaumed, in the Pot-| watching it and I think it an excellent ters biel. orm of ein ‘Yue private detectives arrived in form of soctal diversion—taken in Urbana two ways ago. They told Cor-]™oderation, In the cities, especially, oner J. J. Hanmore and Sheriff Davis] !t establishes pleasant social rela- that they tud traced the body of] tions between young men and women Catherine Winters to Florida and who would otherwise be deprived of them, The young women have no place at home to entertain thetr men friends, and the many dances give them a chance really to enjoy each other's society. WOMEN TAKING THE TANGO TOO SERIOUSLY. “But women, especially, are taking the tango too seriously, They seem to want to do nothing else, We've had lunch tango and tea tango and dinner tango and supper tango, and now at some of the shore resorts I hear they're introducing the break- fast tango. much of a good thing.” “But why does the tango affect the face in the manner which you de- scribe?” I inquired, “The real reason why many women tango dancers have such a strained, unnatural expre: Is because they are continually trying to look proper while doing what they secretly believe to be improper. The set emile means that they are endeavoring te | happy when they have lost all epontaneous pleasure and are only oraze-driven. “Of course, too, the life of the tangomaniac is not conducive to good health, the foundation of all true beauty. The late hours, the nerve-strain, the excessive exerci: in tight clothes are all bad for a woman. She becomes tired out, if thence to Urbanu, where it had been buried. Hanmore and Davis were given a minute description of the child's clothing and person. Theodore Brown, sexton of the cemetery, then was ordered to open the grave. Brown told the detectives he could identify the stranger who brought the body to Urbana, and he and the two men left immediately for Newcastle. When tho body, thought to be that of the Winters child, was first brought to Urbana in April, 1913, it was given by the nger to Guy Stewart, an undertake told me to take @are of it for a few days and have it placed in a receiving vault and that gome one would be along to claim it,” @aid Stewart. ‘The stranger and Stewart then took the body out of the cemetery and placed it in the receiving vauit, ere it remained for thirteen months. No one came to claim it. Two months ago it was removed and Placed in the Potter's Field. ‘While the detectives talked with Bheriff Davis and Coroner Hanmore gomething was learned of how they raced the strarier and the box con- taining the child's body. The man ‘who was transporting the body regis- tered at various places, it wan said. According to Sheriff Davis they had a complete record of all his movements. 2 geen the papers they exhibited and their ledge of the case I judge that oe on the right trail, The mya- appears to be solved.” Rvinters child disappeared after had gone out to eell needles for a society, Her picture and de- jon were printed and scattered it, men and Dr. ‘Winters rateed $2,000 as a reward. \ garowetzat tne ‘one without Tes 0 e country out re- guilt. Mrs. Winters, the girl's step- mother, expressed the belief that the it had Deen Kidnapped and killed, be the father sald he Yelteved ahs ’ not actually ill, and her exhaustion shows in her face.” “I am told that physical weariness ign’t the only sort from which the tango fanatics suffer," I observed, The Famous Chocolate Laxative EX-LAX Relieves Constipation Helps Digestion pore the Blood Pure is id yet at Deeltire remedy for ponciiontion in at, Eek has made its value—at all bo That is certainly too| Ea-lonte ‘ise delicious chocolate lazative recommended by | She said in h enty-third street. jed gravely, “is a real menace to the 'S CUPID'S FRIEND s Xs : were baved on the finding of articles} ee Ne “4 ee Bene ce of child's clothing in the cellar of the! = — Pepe apr hiatal Winter's home. Abel failed to push | we oo the charges and the three defendants! ee ‘es wore freed. Dr. Winters, father of the child, td suid the hair of the dead girl did) not correspond with that of the} — daughter. | “L don't think she ix ttle girl,” asserted Dr. Winters over the Tong | distanc telopnone, “My girl brown hair, while ¢ ittle girl wh body they exhumed had very lght} blonde hair. “They say that the steps ohange levery fortnight or so, and that their \Drains are weary learning the new ones and forgetting the old?’ Mr, Ackerman laughed. “Just what I said—they take it too seriously,” he commented, “But if photographers find the tango face ‘takes’ badly, are they not recompensed for their extra trouble by the tango figure?” I suggested. “It's so nice and slender that it surely doesn't need much retouching.” “That is doubtless true, but, you see, there are very few full-length photographs taken nowadays re- plied Mr. Ackerman, “Brides have them, but nearly everyone else prefers heads and shoulders only. Such a Photograph is less likely to date, par- ticularly if drapery is used. TANGO-FACED WOMEN HARD TO PHOTOGRAPH. “At least twice the ordinary num- ber of negatives must be made of the tango face to insure a good print. Women insist on attractive pictures, “Every worldly mother is more particular about her daughte~'s photographs than even about her clothes. For the photographer is one of the best little first aids to Cup’ A man takes home ture of a pretty girl, pulls it out of hie pocket, instinctively kisses it, thinks how nice it would be to Lil @ girl—in six month married. A girl shows @ young man's picture to her mother, who says, ‘He locke nice. Why don't you have him at the house?’ In elx months the girl's a wife! photographers work for their laurels as matchmakers, And nearly every woman seems to have it, whether she's a grandma or a schoolgirl. The tango craze certainly hits harder than the craze for bicycles or automobiles ever did.” “Do you find the tango face among men?” I asked, “No chance for it there," Mr, Ack- erman responded promptly. “The ticker face, the subway face and sev- eral other varieties, leave no room for the tango countenance, But from @ photographic point of view men are only about a quarter as impor- tant as women,” The camera eye is on tangoing eienmewite, @ disapproving glare in it pa a WIFE’S FAMILY NEGLECTED. Ne law Keown Compet Him “I know of no law compelling # man to support his wife's family, but L suppose that this case will have to go to trial Meanwhile, the lady will be awarded alimony of six dollars a week.” This te what Justice Blackmar of the Brooklyn Supreme Court said this morning in answer to the application for alimony of Mrs. Annette No, 2105 Beverly Road, Flatbush, who is eecking @ separation from her husband, Charles, to whom she was married two years ago this month. Mrs. Neldig had for alimony of Mi Genes dig had ing the trial. ehe mar- press un, aw im her com| eine ¢ tet mied Mr. Neldig with the Gerstanding thal he would her mother and two daughters, the ‘ate being seventeen and nineteen years “But thia tango face is making the| Neldig of | THE Ob AND YOUNG WA 7 Lame AESITATION puck WRINKLES eves ~ ! | CARL ©. ACiKERMAN RICH CHICAGO WOMEN RAISE SUFFRAGE FUND BY WASHING CLOTHES Others Adopt Varied Means of Helping to Gather $50,000 for Vote Campaign. CHICAGO, TL, July 20.—Chicago women, many of them wealthy and leaders in society, are taking thelr suffrage zeal very seriously, They be- Meve it is up to the women of this Btate, being the first east of the Mis- sissipp! to obtain general suffrage, to the lead 11 gathering $50,000 for the ause” by Aug. 15, which has been designated “Self-Denial Day.” ‘The proposed $50,000 is to promote be immediats suffrage camy aligns in North Dakota, South Pakota, Ohio, Missourt, Nevada, Montana and out the battle at the poils in the autumn. Mrs, Medill McCormick, head of the campatgn, has denied herself a vaca- tion, and is working day and night for "Self-Denial Day.’ “Suffrage shop” was opened In the loop to-day. Articles to be soli will include “white elephants” of hun- dreds of households, Mrs, Mary Chandler, living near the lake shore, on the north side, has thrown open her uome for girl bath- ers to come thither and make and unmake their beach bathing tollets Yor twenty cents each, Her home has been full of sand and damp rugs for a week, Mrs, Kellogg Fairbanks {s sponsor for a acheme to make money by de- livering goods in automobiles. She Mra, Leonora Meder, Mrs. Mary Hight, Mrs, Grace Wilbur Trout, Mra, | Paul Gerhardt and Mrs, George Bass | are arranging for a great field day, when Democrate and Kepublicans will| play baseball, with Bull Moose lead- era as umpires, Mrs, Charles Keyser will haul vege- tables and fresh mushrooms dally to the “suffrage shop.” Mra Tindolph and Mrs. Marion Hitt, able to have half a dozen maids, will do thelr own washing and turn | over the money saved for the oT Announe . able tie Londen office of The T Company that Mr reo has jed in arranging a contract with the youngest English beauty of the English stage, Miss Phyllis son-Terry. Miss Phyllis Ne Terry is u niece of Lyell ACLIOES suce He; mother, Julia Neilson, @ grease! favorite on the London MOTHER Nebraska, all of which are to fight! is in charge of that work, and has| tenders of all the necessary machines, | Mabelle | well | nip DavawrEer Maye Ome “See Gets THE “TANGO FACE * TRYING TO LOOK PROPER WHILE DANCING IT * ELDERLY WOMAN IS STRANGELY DESERTED; MAY BE MIME. STEIN) She Is Left in Berlin Store With American Gold and New York Address. BERLIN, July 20.—Strangely de- sorted in a haberdashery store on Ansbacher street, the police of this clty are holding a sixty-year-old woman at the almshouse, in Sophie Charlotte street, on whom were found two $10 gold pleces of United States money and a card bearing the words “Bureau of Deportation, Room 245A, No. 1 Madison avenue, New York City,” and the uamo, ‘Edmund Billert.” Tho police are puzzled to know who the woman is and whether they have not in their possession the notorious Mme. Olga Stein, who perpetrated swindies amounting to tens of thou- sands of dollars in Russia, f"1 to America and was there arrested and nt for trial to Russia, where in 1908 ahe was sentenced to sixteon months’ imprisonment. On Saturday evening a young man and woman and the elderly woman arrived in @ taxicab in front of the haberdasher's shop. The iwo young people escorted the elderly woman | into the store, sat her in a chair and then, to the storekeeper’s amazement, wheeled about, left the shop, jumped into the taxi and disappeared. The old woman appeared to be unable to talk to him or to tho police whom he called, and #0 she was taken to the almahouse. ‘To-day her only statement was that her name is Amelie Schmidt. At No, 1 Madison avenue, the ad- dress given on the card found in the woman's pocketbook, It 1% sald that no organization by the name of the “Bureau of Deportation” ia located there or known of Henry Bler of No. 286 Henry street, Manhattan, 1s of the opinion that the woman deserted in Berlin 1s his cousin, Yetta Klein, who until lust November was an inmate of the State | Hospital on Ward's Island. ‘Then, at | the request of rel Mrs, Klein Was sent, In the p of nu , to her home in Austria, but, according to Mr. Bier, she was deserted by the nurse in the at 4 of Trieste and | has not yet reached her home in | Jolynia, to whieh she was bound Mr, Bier himself went to Enrope in February to search for his relative Jbut was unable to find any trace of hor, ‘The description of the woman found in Bertin is identical with that of Mrs. Klein, says Bler Many New York hotels, principally the Hotel horeham, koew Mme Stein to their sorrow back 0s. She was in the heieht of turesqu career here, living ike a princess without ready money, when at was i from Fuss arked heck to 100,000 rubles ¢ $50,000 to Fer incom ed the “Rus. — lee of Beet in New crags ‘Demons Bord “th: septs \ basin ade! Toon "sans bat 1914, AGTRESS DECLARES This Is Latest Charge Against the Dance RICH SUITOR TRIED = 10 ASPHYXIATE HER {Sword, Cane, Blackjack and Gas Figure in Mrs. Hope | Loring’s Charges DENIES She Declares Derby Crandall Jr. Was of Another Man Jealous Crandall fr, wealthy and good looking, his mother, Mrs, Marlo {crandai, a handsome woman of | middie age, and Mrs, Hope Loring, lan actress and dancer, wore the cen- | Derby trat figures in the West Side Police Court to-day when Crandall was charged trying to asphyxiate the [actress last night. ‘The mother and {the girl ant together in court and Mra. | Loring would have withdrawn the had not Assistant District-At- |torney Coleman told her she must | make good the allegation she had | Crandalis lawyer asked for time to {consult with the young man and Magistrate Murphy adjourned the case until this afternoon, the mother | and the girl left the court together, | According to Mrs. Loring, Derby was angry yesterday because she re- | tu to accompany him to Long Roach and doubly angry when he dis- | covered her there with another man. | She declares he attacked her escort | and otherwise made himself objec | tlonable at the Trouville, and later, after she got to her apartments in the Hotel Margaret, No. 129 West Forty-seventh street, obtained en- trance, upbraided her and dragged her into the bathroom where, after | threatening her with a blackjack and | a sword cane, he bolted the door and turned on the gas, declaring: "We'll die together.” Mra. Loring eald she pleaded with im to let hor live long enough to write @ note to her little girl and this touched him so that he unlocked the door. She fled and had Crandall ar- rested. At Police Headquarters Crandall declared his arrest was an outrage. “T'm a gentleman and these charges are false, That -cane and ‘blackjack are ornaments Mrs. Loriug has, I never tried to use them and I didn't turn on the gas. The jet in the bathrom leaks and there's always an odor of gas there.” Crandall ta a Princeton man and a crack hurdler. His father was the floor member of the failed Stock Exchan; firm of Van Schaick & Co, of Wall stret. He ia separated from his wife, with whom the son livea at No, 790 Riveraide Drive. The young man fa tn the cigarette manu- facturing business. Business Bad, Tries to End His Life, Henry Zifkim tried to commit suicide by turning on the gas in hia room be- hind hie butter anu ese store at No. 727 Enat One Hundred and Fifty-eighth Hireot to-day, ‘The odor of gus coming from the rooin wan detect: | lah forand medical ald saved him. ‘Letters found on a bureau gave business trouble un the reason for his desire to end his life. He i# in a horpital under arrest for attempting suicide. at 8:30A. M. Closes 5:30) P. -M. Closes Noon Saturdays. ie odd lots. GF L YHA YM THE MATERIALS are soft mercerized Crepe weaves and fine woven Madras. One-half the quantity offered is from our regular stock. We have all sizes froin 14 to 18. While the number of Shirts in this sale very great an early dvised. | ALLEGATIONS. | N N N N are fresh, clean, c N No “seconds collection nor jumbled up All packed in 14 dozen boxes and sealed, First class workmanship in these Collars. usually sold 2 for 25c. cli, ACTRESS AND MAN SHE SAYS THREATENED TO ASPHY XIATE HER, teee' PERSY CRANDaLesmE TIM WOODRUFF LEFT ONLY ABOUT $300,000 Debts of Supposed Millionaire Threaten to Eat Up Assets of the Estate. Contrary to the belief of his friends, Timothy L. Woodruff, once Lieuten- ant-Governor, did not die a million- aire, It was learned yesterday that his estate will net about $300,000. This doubtieag will surprise even intimate acquaintances. During his later life in Brooklyn, when the home on Highth avenue was only one of five residences he main- tained, Mr. Woodruff was regarded as a millionaire, Among his homes were his Adirondack camp, which Mr. Woodruff once sald represented an outlay of more than $400,000, and an @partment at Sherry’s in Manhattan. It was generally beleved that the maintenance of these places cost $150,000 a year. The executors, Mra, Woodruff, John KE. Woodruff and Rodney A. Ward, discovered that many of his later enterprises had drawn ao heavily on Mr. Woodruff's resources that it was not known for many months after his death last October whether or not the assets would greatly counter- balance the debts of the ostate, RH. tleraid Square, 4-PLY HAND- TURNED COLLARS, half doz. One-half and one-quarter sizes Collars, made by one of Troy's best known makers, p and just from the laundry. There are 14 styles from which to select. in the Collar size, They are Main c| STANDARD $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 SHIRTS These Are Soft Summer Garments and Are Offered as a Special Purchase in Conjunction with the Collar Sale Meey & Co.’s Attractions Are Their Low Prices. Macy’ roadway, 34th te 35th St. is non-shrinkable and absolutely correct as to The fact that the Collars are hand-turned in- sures their wearing quality. {00 TNS | FOR OLDEST MEMBER, ~—WAOISMISSINGAT 9] Jaquish Van Brunt stilwel Left Boat at Battery and Didn’t Reach Home. After nearty two days’ searching Edmund W, Stillwell of No. 4% Hill | street, Morristown, N. J., has fi to find a clue to the mystery of the | stappsahonts of bin father, Jaquish | Van Brunt Stillwell, ninety-one years old, also of Morristown. Believing for @ time that the aged man, whose eyesight fe poor, had fallen off a plier Into the river, the son {s now con: vinced that the elder Mr, Stillwell ts wandering about the city. ‘The missing man te of etrikmng ap- pearance, scarcely showing his great age. He has heavy white hatr and a white beard, parted in the middle, and dark complexion. The initials J. F. are tattooed on hie left hand and on the same hand he wore a afl- ver ring. He wore @ black sult, shoes and derby and a white shirt. Mr. Stillwell had been vistting @ married daughter near Red Bank, N. J, and Saturday night took @ boat for Franklin street, Manhattan, where his son was to meet him. The aged man was not among the passeme gern and it wan learned that a man answering his description got off the boat at the Battery. Several hours after midnight, it was learned, he anked a policeman at Greenwich and Fulton streets how to get to the Franklin street pier. But on @ sec- ond trip to the pler the eon failed to find his father. ‘The missing man has not vistted any of his friends or relatives in New York it was discovered and it {n feared he may have lost his mem- ory. He ts one of the oldest O80 Fello fm the country and several yoars ago he received a diamond pis on the fiftieth anniversary of bis in- {titation. Many Odd Ppl have been notified of bis and are aiding in the sea: Merchandise Here Advertised On Sale Tomorrow. S 49¢ Every Floor, ibith sf, 79° ALL THE SHIRTS are Coat models, with soft double cuffs attached, The patterns are light and white grounds with stripes of blue, helio, tan and black and white. Choice of 34 in. or 38 in. sleeve lengths. All gar- ments made according to Macy specifications.

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