Miami Daily Metropolis
Transcribed from the front page of the Miami Daily Metropolis, Home Edition,
Thursday, August 11, 1921
Note: Starting at asterisk* below text in italics is identical to that which appeared in the Noon Edition. The final sentence of this article
is new.
WHITE HELD WITHOUT BAIL,
BODY NOT YET FOUND
STILL SEARCHING FOR BODY OF GIRL
IN TAMIAMI CANAL
Companion of Miami Girl Whose Clothes Were Found Under Car in Canal
Locked Up in County Jail; Car is Removed From Canal and Authorities are
Now Using Dynamite in Hope of Finding Body.
No trace of the body of Miss Maude Gilbert, 29, believed to be in the Tamiami Trail canal, had been found at 2:30 this afternoon, at which time, E. F. White, her companion on the supposedly fatal ride of last night, was brought back to the city and locked up in the county jail, where he is held without bond.
Various articles of underclothing identified as that worn by the girl were found in and under the car in the canal by police officials who visited the scene at 10 o'clock this morning. It was thought probable that the girl's body was under the car, but when this was removed from the canal after several hours of hard work no trace of the form was found. At 2:30 the police and deputy sheriffs were preparing to use dynamite in the hope that concussions would bring the body to the surface in the event it is in the canal.
White told the police that he went driving with Miss Gilbert last night, that the car went off the road into the canal while Miss Gilbert was driving, and that he was unable to report to the police until this morning when a farmer brought him to town.
*The car, an Essex, went into the canal at a point about three-quarters of a mile west of the entrance to the trail and just a short distance beyond the place where the trail is widened in front of Glademoor subdivision.
Mystery Shrouds Tragedy
Mystery surrounds the affair because of the fact that the undergarments were found free in the car. It was not thought by the searchers that the woman would have removed these garments to save herself by swimming if she were drowning.
The first intimation of a possible tragedy was received by the authorities about 8 o’clock this morning when E. F. White, in charge of the ice cream department at the Southern Utilities corporation, reported to the police station that an Essex touring car in which he was riding last night with Miss Gilbert had gone into the Tamiami Trail canal at a point about eight miles from Miami late last night and that he believed the young woman was drowned in the machine.
Mr. White declared to the police that he had succeeded in freeing himself from the machine when it went into the canal and swam around for some time in a vain effort to locate his companion, after which he swam across the canal, made his way up the bank and staggered to the nearest house, near the Curtiss aviation field, and got a farmer whom he found there to bring him to Miami in a truck. He said he arrived in Miami about daylight and sent word to the station as to the accident, then changed his clothes and went down to the station himself.
On account of the clean condition of White’s clothes, his story was discredited at first by the police, but Motorcycle Policemen Beavers and Mitchell were sent out to the trail to try and locate the missing machine if possible to confirm the man’s story.
Questioned by Police
White was taken to the sheriff’s office by Policeman Beavers and turned over to Chief Deputy Jack Gay, who questioned him closely.
The man was so insistent that there had been an accident, pointing out his scratched hands as evidence, that a posse was quickly organized consisting of Deputies Gay and Kirby Clark, Detectives Starling, Morris and C. G. Pratt and a Metropolis reporter, who accompanied White in two machines to the scene of the supposed tragedy.
On arriving at a point just west of where the trail is widened in front of Glademoor, White declared that he believed it to be the spot.
Members of the party alighted and closely examined the roadway for possible signs of where a machine had left the trail. There was one place where weeds had apparently been broken down by a machine but the outer bank showed no signs of having been broken down.
Machine Found Upright
While the spot was being examined, Detective Pratt, who had gone a slight distance farther west, yelled that he had found a man’s straw hat floating in the canal. White identified the hat as being his.
In the meantime, Detective Morris with a large stone tied to the end of a rope was throwing it into the canal to drag for the machine from the bank. A few minutes later he yelled, “The machine is here.”
Quickly stripping off their clothes Detectives Morris and Starling then swam into the water and located the machine which was found to be upright. Diving into the water, they located the articles of women’s wearing apparel.
Said Girl Was Driving
White said that shortly before 11 o’clock last night he was driving down town to get something to eat, when at a point on West Flagler street near old Avenue O or P, he saw Miss Gilbert, whom he knew, standing on a corner. Driving over to her side of the road he asked her what she was doing there. She replied that she was waiting for a jitney to take her down town. White then invited her
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