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NO "CAUGHT AF DOOR | a * # and Kept Watch for “after her wosu * lat absence from the Mayflower to AX honeymoon, F'Mar {(@eetoreut in Indiana, and, personaily, { 7 ndyS govting against , hie. | quite Wandsome,” said Mrs, Flower, - 4 M AOPING YARN | + OF THE PARSON Mother of Mand Flower, Who Would’Have Wed Youth- fulsSJilor Is -Lenient. GIRLAIS ONLY EIGHTEEN. Segvanis ‘Assisted in Runaway | J " Meyou sep cupid looking dinconsolate | @n@ hanging around the Pennsyivania setation this afiernvon you will know The Is waiting to sy.npathize with pretty - teighteen. ta Fiower of No. 4 Central Park West, whose father le “bringing her back from Washingtca ‘easful attenrpt 10 elope with her allor sweetheart, nineteen- year-o, Larcy B, Collins, a yeoman on “the Préstdent’s yacht, Mayflower, Miss! Plowe: and her youthful satlor boy were almost married when an unfeeling pos | lcoman caught them on Pennaylvania ay to the minister's Clear Coast. eda fiftoon-day leave Iverything waa departu f#* with Miss Flower, away from her parents’ . 414-Central Park ‘day morning. Her fathe! loWer, a wholesale drugeist, 2 description of her to ington and had a watch #et on young Mr. Collins. AGERLY AWAI AND PROMIS! father is without sympa. er will be waiting to re. hter with & full under smtanding of attempt to elope. An Evening World reporter found df. Plower eagerly arpiting news of her aug! a t heart @ word from my . fruaband since he started away early .-40-Gay, but I do hope he ts not severe on Maud,” said Mrs. Flower, with a @ar away smile. “You know thi WOULD-BE SUICIDE any serious objection to thi except that both are so youn: Collins boy has no,real appreciat tthe responsibilities of marnage. He ts @ doy of good family. His father ts a HAD LOST LOVER AND SOCIAL RECOGNITION 1 have even @ photograph of him and he is ‘with a twinkle in ber eye, “and 1 eup- Peee Maud thinks 90, ‘too.” ; ‘Mrs, Flower grew y ‘I have thought it all out and have thmown of the attachment for over & . Maud will come back now and ‘es she is a girl of determination she rwill probably take the next Se repeat her endeavor. I heve tried paleo her to wait @ few years until| arab Levine, who tried to commit they are both better able to Itve, but | suicide last atght by jumping imo the © dactn't sperma to 4d ny Byee, East River, came to thts country @ has nothing except what hie father Stvoa nim and he heen't shown any|¥eer ago with the prospect of love ‘keible ability to make money so/and riches. Within a short time she Ger. He used to be in Culver Military |togt both, Lest night et about 8 o'clock Geheol and Maud met him there about | ner ody was geen floating in the @ year and a haltag o when we were | stream by John Hastings of No. 266 jaraveling. Since then he hae joined | avenue C, and Edward Herman of No, “tee yoomanry service and I don't SUD | 997 Avenue C, who were sitting on the Bs. he makes over seven dollare ®/ mast River Recreation Pier at 6 eu When they caw that the East River Will Be Deported to Russia. ‘ teenth street. "BROTHER OF RUNAWAY MAIDEN | she was alive they plunged in after ~ BREATHES THREATS, her and after a tremendous at! * Maul'’s brother Walter, who ts just/in which the woman desperately "he age of yooman Coline, felt eure) to resist her rescuers, they ‘Qo-day that he'd tke to meet him. life with the assistance of Cap’ 9) “Ft 1 ever do"’— he eald ominousty,| head of the tugboat, “The New Y: 4when tis mother interrupted him to Had it not « thet “‘probebiy Maud woulda’ yRkenk him.” “*"1t'a wonderful how much craft a girl Fi jay when she is planning to run “away,” sished Mrs. Flower. ‘Just think | three would have probably gone down ‘ef it! She took every picture of herself | together. ‘apd all her letters and the young man’s) Qfiss Levine and her two rescuers @iotures. She even had the servants|were taken in an ambulance to the BOsted days ahead, and they helped her.| Bellevue Hospital. The two boys re- I don't know but I ought to do some-| covered in :wo or three hours, but Mise hing about that part of it,” oald Mrs./Levine tp still suffering from the ef- Flower, looking severely at ao fright-/ fects. Just six monthe ago she tried to ened maid who passed down the hall-|sephyziate herself, but wae saved just way. “But it's over now, and the oply|in time by people Hving in the house thing to do is eee that It docs’. ‘Baive gone on vacation to Meine this| who ise banker in ~ a her family refused MTUT, TUTI” WILSON SAYS | ecnanic, whom they” © OVER A BAD PLAY tN. GOLF whom they sCaddy Who Has Heard Cuss Words her inferior. The couple home and decided that A © om the Links Tells the could earn enough to g , Sune 9. — President Qéies Levine got @ Jod in a white factory in thie city and her lover | ukuison nas introduced 8 new form of ‘ explosive expression inte offered @ ehance in Philadelphia: @ time her friends joked her about daly letters which Dore a @htlade'phia Postmark, Guddenly the jetters ceased and Miss “evine, who was boarding at ‘Administration circles. Where Presi | ‘be Home for Immigrant Girls, No. eyes ee ager vr Te en Tr THE EVENING WORLD, THUNBDAY, JUNE 26, 1913. Copyright, 4913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). = THE AMERICAN GikL 1S THROWN IN AT SQVENTEEW AND LEARNS To FoR But One “Confirmed Flirt’? of Thirty Says She Will Never Marry Because She Would Have to Give Up Pastime—“Kindling Fires in Hearts” for Fun Scored as Firebug’s Work by “Anti-Flirt.” By Nizola Greeley-Smith. “The person who goes cround kindling fires in hearts for which he has no serious purpose te no detter thon a frebug.” . So @ vigorous opponent of Sirting at any and all seasons launches his Woman Saved From Death ‘in| married there would be fewer un- happy homes. She denounces the social custom still generally preva- lent that a husband shall not de in- vited without the wife, nor the wife Didden to a party which the husband Goes not attend. She is a brave young woman. There are few of us, who have cour- age even to question the popular be- Mef that a husband and wife are social Siamese Twins, I am sure that a popular majority could be had for the proposition that a wife has Ro right at all to masouline friendship, that e husband hovers on the verge of perfidy when his conversation with any woman save his wife diverges from the weather and cautious replies to inquiries after his spouse's health or the progress of mumps through his six children. Properly a subject of debate, for there can be only one opinion among Properly brought up people. It is ‘Wreng. The person who goes around kindling malicious fires in hearts for which he has ne serious use is no Detter than a firebug. He is en in- eendiary/af the best and most sacred feelings ‘of humanity, It*te because firtation ie tolerated and mae the subject of humorous Giscussions that people do not re- lize its deplorable character, The Ufe of many @ man and woman bas ‘Deen ruined because some flirt, with nothing better to do, pretended to an een he, sometimes she, did not Our young girle flirt, it ts quite true, That is why they do not marry so early or so well as the women of countries where chaperon- age ie never relaxed and where fir- tation ts impoestble until after mar- riage, There should be laws agninst Mirtation—partioularly the obnox- foug flirtations eo much sought by the mashers with which New York abounds ANTI-FLIRTS, PREFERS JOVG OF FLIRTATION TO MARRIED LIFE, Dear Madam: I am a confirmed firt. I flirt with boys of eighteen and boys eighty. 1 flirt for the aake of jame, not the man. I think it 8 the most interesting and exciting pastime known to men and women when it ie skilfally played. T am thirty, and the only reason I have not married te because I would tion at all or the woman of the world who with a boy's first love, ts indeed “firebug.” But there are game protect the immature from Any sportsman who finds amusement in fishing for hearts knows emough to throw back his catch when- ever it is under the legal size. A third reader of The Bvening Works ustifies flirtation among persons who know each other, but denounces the street masher and girls who encourage him, Opinions differ as to whether the Fy] ax? t Roosevelt relieved his feelings by Seovins out, the ejaculation “By god- er!” President Wilson !s sald to sect @he same reliefe in the exepression ‘Tut, tut!" But {t ts said to be no molip codd) “Tut, tut!"’. It ts enunciated with emphasis and deep earncstness of feal- ae bert Emmet Taylor, a fourteen- Washington to-day. In- work. He on the quality of golf form, “The President struck the ball," eal “and it rolled right to I sneaked over it they usually’ say happens on the looked very Second avenue, learned that her lov had married an American girl. She eaid | !arge Number of mavhers in New York zaid nothing about {t ¢o her friends, | #F@ 8M effect or @ cause. ‘We hear trom but one night she was found in her room | Men that they have lost respect for the nearly dead from asphyxiation. Teserve of women because of the loud As #00n as she recovered from her | costumes and brasen manners affected struggle and immeralon in the East |>Y the leas conventional sex, Girls, on River last night she will be deported to | the contrary, urge that the attire and usete. makeup for which they are criticts ——— are amsumed against thelr better judi ment, and golely to please men, who. BANKER KILLED IN AUTO, they say have Mo interest in the sober, rg a ible woman, Palle te Heed Warning and Drives ‘But mashers are not properly fiirts, 1 ‘Through Open Bridge. don't think there can be two opinions UPPER GANDUSICT, %4,—| 48 to the despicableness of men who Not heeding the pon Hed ihe bridge make a practice of forcing thelr ao- tender, it 1# alleged, Harry Daniele,|Waintance upon young women. And eed ‘fifty-four, wealthy banker and| Whether or not thelr boldness is the re- business man of this city, drove his| sult of am unfortunate success is beside rough an open bridge at| the question, The letters to which { have referred return to| QUESTION night is have to give up filrting if I did ao. Men are so unreasonable, and { am sure no man I could marry would be PAs J do let me amuse myovif by Sirtat! an I do to-day. Flirting is @ craze with me. No ‘man ie so old or #0 ugly that I don’t want to see what I can do in the NOT iN DI ABLE IN “ANTI'2” OPINION, ing him, You say flirt after marriag> and Americans before, It is my thing wrong if talking with Mi Brown ts what makes things wrong more than half if married people were Third Article Of a Series Flirtation Is Affection’s Small Change, And Jingle of Pennies Is Apt to Pall Gre learning that it is very bed jusband and wife to tag each other all the time, man ts invited to wife attends an- has not been bid- Matrimonial freedom prevails and I epprove of it. Among the people I know {t ts considered the proper thing at @ eecial function for the married men to herd together and tinuing the perfectly innocent pas- time of flirtation, I would be giad to do eo, But I am not going to get caught in the matrimonial machinery #0 long as middle class ideas of mar- tinge prevail among the multitude, A CONFIRMED FLIRT, WOULDN'T MARRY A GIRL NOT SKILLED IN FLIRTING. Deer Madam: I am a strong be- Hever in fitrtation, of course within Umite, I think it is right for @ young lady to filrt with any man who has deen properly introduced to her, but exceedingly ill-bred for her to notice the attentions of ‘masher” in any way. I think that many girls in America are not care- ful enough in this respect. They think there is no harm in what they = “atreet flirtation.” ere would not be if they were deal- ing with men who understood ph respected the innocence of thelr in- tentions and actions, But foreigners respect only young ladies who have been very strictly brought up and who are always chaperone. And there are eo many foreigners, par- ticularly in New York, that I think girls have to be more carefm@ here than in the West, where I was born -“ brought up. it @ girl has eve; rhe with her friends ren uae Prdiag capa, if there is an age at which marry any girl I didn’ know was @ thoroughly skilled dirt, ‘What's the use of having what no- body else wants? 2; Eo. ie yy; wieh KS ANNUAL CLE. De Pinn: ‘CROWD AT MOVIES CAZES AS WOMAN BUNS TO DEAT Framed in Window Over Open-Air Theatre, Victim in Flames Seems Part of Show. An audience in the Nickelet, a Tremont avenue open air moving picture theatre, sew Miss Louise Moeller, thirty years oi, standing at a wimtow a few feet above them, her clothing afire, Jast alight, But before effectual aid could reac! the young woman waa mortaily bui . Ghe died thia morning in Fordham Hos- pital, ‘There were eix hundred and fifty hich 1s between ately above the open air partment ho nm Falrmount avenue backs up to the rear of the Niokelet. The picture spectators were startled by a @oream, When t Moeller was framed clothing ablaze, The audience stood up amd men scrambled for the fence in an effort to reach the burning gtrl. Baul Asch and Moses Gartonsteig, pro- prietors of the theatr:, shoujed te the audience to alt down and Keep quiat. They then selsed fire extinguishers, scaled the fence and ascended the fire eacape, Manwhile Miss Moeller’s mother, Mrs. was trying to aid her daughter. The people in the theatre mother frantically beating with ja at the flames in the gf dress, Then Asch and Gartensteig reached the window, They extingulaned the fire with the chemical apparatus they carried, but Mise Moeiler's clothing was burned from her by that time and her mother’s face and hands were seared. An ambulance was called from Ford ham Hospital and Miss Moeller was re- moved. She said she had been standing near the kitchen range when her skirt caught fire, Several hours later she aed. ————>_—_—. SHERIFF’S ARMY ARRESTS KEYSTONE STATE FIRST IN EUGENIC MARRIAGE LAW. HARRISBURG, June #.-—Pennsyl- OF GR KLLED ON os ACCIDENT COR FR pereen || Police Quite Sure She Is Annie Feeney, but Seek Rela- ~ tives to Be Certain. — Retaives of Mien Anoto Fomay of Ke perder by the police to identity the body of the young woman billed by @ Rorthbound Eighth avenue trolley ear ARTISTS ARE. ANGRY AT ALENSTS FOR CALNG THEM CRAZY These Specialists Should All Be fn a Big Madhouse, Chi- not been definitely established. In her puree was found @ receipt made June eited indignation rofied up today frem Cuteagele art colony and Seat upon the MILLIONAIRE DOWS. | >: Harburger Descends in Force on| tees Wall Street With Order in Re- porter’s Suit for $25,000. Bhorift J Harburger, fully armed and backea by « detach: it from his army of special deputy sheriffs, to-day moved on No. 46 Wall rented David Down, real entate operator, on an order signed by Supreme Court Justioe Glogerish, The order was insued upon the apptt- a Times re porter, whi for $25,000 for indignities ho alleges he auffered at Dows's home, No, 121 Geventicth street, March %, when he called by request to obtain detatle of ty man's attempt to ride e trick of $1,000 and was celensed, He was convicted of assault in the third degree when tried recently in the Court of Special Sessions, but sentence was jed,, Jobaston rent Gone for pabacdiiet? bose MOTHER TO MARRY COUNT, DAUGHTER WEDS AMERICAN, Mrs. Eben Wright of New York Follows Miss Leta to Altar— the Spanish Go ment hae decided to | end 10,000 more men there, a Fifth Avenue at 36th Street ARANCE SALE SUMMER APPAREL, Friday and Until Noon Saturday Boys’ Wash Sailor & Russian Suits “75, Formerly up to “ “ « $5.50. we he Y Men's. Suits SEE eu Wotan Giese 91 to 97 chest. Up to $25.00, Gale price $12.50 & 616,50 Formerty Girls’ Summer Dresses Broken \otayantens 4 to 14 + Formerly up to $6.00, i? "910.80, Misses’ Summer Dresses Linen and Tissue; cleo Vormeriy wp to 615.00, s 4 © ga8.Ee, We are Tea and Coffee specialists. Our experts buy bss | the best. Our stores are near you or connected with your home © — by telephone. One trial makes you a customer. Quali-Tea sm. | Duchess Coffee sa, 36c Ib. $1.00 The Best, 3ic Ib. 4.9 'S pecial Tea «s, | Golden Blend 5, _ Very Good, 280 Ib. $1.00 Very Good, 23c Ib. $1.10, VAN DYK Gon Wet ek et 262 f bracts ona Sls ae goods are guaranteed. Broadway, Strand Bt Ks. ' Just received, another lot of 1,000 beautiful Summer Waists and will place them on sale Friday and Saturday at 1.50 Each Values up to $3.00 NOT ONE COULD BE BOUGHT REGULARLY UNDER $2.25, THE MAJORITY $3.00. “ Alexander's. Shoe Sale Begins To-morrow Radical Reductions in Summer for Men, Women and Children