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ae ———— 10 Rules b Co Pick H Himina ROVING GIRL JUST: LONGED 10 WANDER ALONE IN BIG CTY Elvira -Guidone, shove, Bick in Hart- ford Home, Tells Why She Went Away. Mi | “Nn “College Girl” comes to the front with an expression of opinion that is intelligent and human, proving that a girl can wear a cap and go’ and nevertheless look upon marriage from a height considerably lower than the clouds. “M. D.,” who stirred up a hornets nest in a former tle, | takes a whack at some of the replies. Isn't he the cynical creature, though? FAS IDEA OF THE "UCLASS TRE MAW A PeRFECT WUSBAND ‘Foo. who MARMET A GIRL WITHOUT AW OUNCE OF oRAmS* waives “COUMZGE GIRL” ; | AFRAID OF NEW YORK. So She Chose Boston Instead as the Scene of Her Adventures. HARTFORD, Conn., Aug. 14—After having been sought by the police of every large city in the East, tn the be- Hef that sho had been kidnapped, El- vira D. Guidone, the sixteen-year-old daughter of Dr.\Ralph Guidone, who @isappeared Monday on a train bound for New York, js back at her home !n Washington Street here to-day. The girl was found in Boston yea- terday. Sho had gone there instead of coming on to New York after yield- ing to a desire to wander about in search of adventures. “But I got awfully lonesome,” she #ald to-day in telling how she de- liberately went away, “It was fun at first. Then I grew homesick and yesterday 1 telegraphed home, I just ran away because I had been stady- ing and working, and 1 thought how nice it would be to go somewhere where there were plenty of lights and music and just see @ moving picture show, “Now, I'll fust tell you all about It. & By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Enter the college girl and her idea of perfect husband. She enters by way of a spirited response to “M. D.,” the young man who stuck his pen into # hornets’ nest when he wrote, “The girls of to-day measure a young man by bis money and social posi- tion,” He told in great detail of his difficulties in find- ing somebody who would love him for himself alone instead of for his $20,000 a year, and his apparent con- clusion was, “It can't be done.” ‘That isn’t the conclusion of American girls and Monday morning my father put me American women, and with firm, incis on @ train for New York, | was go- typewriters they have been denying “M. D. ing to visit Mr. John Gutdone, a ever since the publication of his first letter. (i say st” because I've just received another one from him, which is published below. You'll see that the determined creature hasn't yet ch: rabies ALA ten Boreal is cynical mind!) But now for the college stl. Wee te he era describes herself as “neither over twenty-five nor unattractive.” “Mo. D. makes me tired,” she begins brisk- ly, “Because I know some men who are looking for a girl with moncy and who don’t care anything about any- thing clae 1 don't think all men look for that only. Because 1 know some DR. M’LEOD, 70, SAILS tive who lives in the Bronx. the train started 1 began feeling mighty independent. 1 had $7.50 and my railroad tickets to New York. “Then I thought of books | had read telling of girls who were all alone in a big city, and | thought I'd like to be alone in a big city and just tiptoe around and hear the noise and watch aul the interesting things. I thought of New York, but I was afraid of New York. “KX! 1 thought of Boston, and that more replies to my first letter would be sent to this paper 60 that we may see what the general unbiased opinion of the writers towares their sisters may La D. Venerable Brooklyn Clergyman Is Sorry That He Can't Fight in the Trenches. ‘The Rev. Dr. T. D. McLeod, more than seventy years old, and until bis retirement three years ago pastor of the Clinton Avenue Congregational those that she would tts to be- gome accustomed to. find many young men | character atill bachelors, because the objects of their affections had ig of marrying @ good income, TEN RULES FOR THE SELECTION OF A PERFECT HUSBAND. “M. D." asks for more replies to his seemed awfully nice and quiet, and it first letter, Here are a few more of apartment (witn no house- sala city, toa. eX egot ett tha] ek, WhO Marry a girl withows ne the many I have received, in each of ieeping ing for her) and a good time, | Church, Brooklyn, salle to-day om the + too. Keo ounce of brains or love of anything| wren fivening World readers. will ove among your corres steamship St. Paul for England to) trofa at New Haven and changed my tlckeis there, A lady in Now Haven told the reporters she saw me walk- ine up Meadow Street. That is all dents who say otherwise, eit! ther are exceptions to the general type or do not mean what they say. My opinions have not been formed through association with any one class of girls, for I have except finery and parties, and tl expect her to be a genuine wife, do I class all men as fools? Yet that's what 'M. D,' is doing about us, find somebody's answer to the qu tion we haven't yet settled—What Isa Perfect Husband? Dear Madam letter written speak in English pulpits in an attempt to furtber arouse the people of that preg to the work of overcoming Ger- “the “Doctor has hoped until now a In reply to the ‘M. D..” I would true. “As a member of that much-ma- like to state that the girls of to- the United Btates sone “At 10.20 I boarded a train for New| jigned class, the college girls, | | day are not money-mad. His ex- mere fad the laboreve dough: | sides against Germany. W Retort London, but while travelling T| must protest. The man I'd con- periences, as he writes of them, ter looking for a Hope cf that be decided to do what are laughable, The next time our friend, “Baby Paul,” goes in quest of a wife | would suggest that he he we personally to pep seanes aay, ‘at would chanic, while ¢ thought I'd like to see Norwich, ao T went there, had a colored ice and seriously must have char- ind brains. The money is act erence aa went to the Waugeran Hotel. I regis- @ very slight side issue, for | re- forget Lente bad ous, ue ee England's defenders, who name, wonderful ysique an att fered vader. 80 assumed name. It] lize only too well how little it | ee Te ee eet try. to fee eaeee ike oaks Das placed a done in Be elt med aufully bold, and I shivered He needn't be lly counts, think of being pleasant and so- the war, by whal ane has When 1 registered, but I liked the college man, for I've known men clable, and I'll wager the young gium, by her at adventure, which was to wind up in| without any letters stuck after jadies will find no cause to knock and by her killing ot areceaeatant Moston, where I was going to se she! ¢h ho were really men, him, even though he might mas- civilians their names who w ly men, querade as a truck driver, But news. hi When the minister retired from ac- | movies, and Ph. D.’s who weren't. He ‘who can you blame for knocking truths through observation. tive pastoral work three years a: “In the evening I went to a movie] must be a man and bring as much @ man who, would write a let GERALD, | his congregation provided a. ghow at Norwich and slept until late} te the partne as ido. We like that, It's bad enough to mi How many women readers of The| would enable him and Mrs. McLeod to a girl like that, but a man——, I don't think the “underlying cause" of all his trouble at Lakewood had anything to do with the ‘hotel Evening World agree with “Gerald”? ——— live comfortably for the rest of their Tuesday morning. After breakfast T fives, rede to Putnam and there caught 0 in every way 3 will take whe train ourselv: we can to he true mi —»———. TO HELP THE ALLIES): THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1915. by Which 9 Girt Girl |PAWNED HERBRIDAL WELFARE BOARD @ TOGSFORS13AND ABANDONED GIRL ica Who 10 Decthids Stenog- rapher Comes to Grief in Court. SLEUTH RAN HIM DOWN. | Took Her Rings and Clothes | and Then Sent Miss Slee Note of Regret. If Irving Moyer, a temporery guest @t the Manhattan Hotel bet not Pawned his prospective bride's $400 trounseau for $13 yesterday, Friday, the 13th, he would not be under arrest to-day. When Meyer dared the jinx of hard luck on his natal day Dan Cupid was given a solar plexus, Meyer's careers from the day he met Miss Frances Slee, a stenogra- pher at the Irving National Bank and Uving with ber parents and as interesting as a movie drama. According to Detective Charles A. Mulligan of the Fourth Branch De~ tective Bureau, Meyer was introduced to Mins Slee about four months ago. Meyer was ther supposed to be a private detective. He made a good impression immediately, Short, nat- ty, velvet-voiced and persuasive, Meyer soon captured Miss Slee's heart. During the courtship, Mulligan says, Meyer Induced Miss Slee to have several of her rings cleaned. Some- how they weren't returned. Then Meyer proposed and was accepted. “Let's elope to Springfield, Mass. We'll make a splash—get our plo- tures in the papérs and all that sort of | thing,” suggested the “private detec- Miss Slee would ra- she decided to humor her prospective groom, who was just twenty. Mise Slee is twenty-one. It was planned that when they got to Springfield they were to telephone for forgive- ness. That meant another story in the papers. Saturday was to have been the day. Everything was staged for the get- away. Miss Slee’s folks, with the ex- ception of her mother, were away. | Wor several nights Miss Slee worked until the wee ama’ hours packing my- riad things of lace and linen dear to &@ bride's heart. Thursday ‘the trousseau, two trunk loads, on the advice of Meyer, were went to the baggage room of the Grand Central Station, Instead of departing for New Ei land with his prospective bride, Meyer suddenly discovered that there Ing | would be important business to keep him in town for a week. Under the name of Robertson, Detective Mulli- |gan says, Meyer ran up a bill for $35 lat the Hotel Antoinette, which he did 69 !not pay. Then he stopped at the An- sonia under the name of A. J. Roth. Meanwhile, at Meyer's bidding, Miss Slee says she wrote a note to her motber in which she said she and Meyer had been married, After Meyer had departed on a supposed business trip last Thureday, Miss Blee good hotet ind he told me to go to/earn a good bit in a pleasanter Way) though he owned the place, and OF TORPEDOED VESSEL Personally I think that’s about the again " psod an assumed name best workable definition of a perfect gusted with his petty conceit that ‘“T expect the other girls in the they. were obliged to snub and 2 i husband we've yet heard, Idon’t see| knock hin. Who will have the |Seaconnet Also Was Detained by p ¥. W.C. A. thougiit ! was an heiress | husband we've yer Bean At e—| nerve to say that tho women are Left Wing of Mydroplane Is Later or something. They asked me it I had come to Boston to find work, and when I yawned and told them no, I had just coma on to see the British and Part of Cargo Seized. ‘The American steamship Seaconnet, vain, after reading hin letter? If he is a surgeon he had better oper- ate upon some of his own vanity, for if I had that me I ‘would have it shot. unless, indeed, she bas already met “him” and KNOWS that he is 6 feet tall, has talkative brown eyes and chuckles over every play Bernard Smashed in Water, but He Plans Second Trip This Afternoon. city, they became very much inter- New, to get down te real facts larriving here to-day from Gothen-| lawrence Sperry, the Brooklyn ented. In the evenings T went to the] Ny Ver Te on rURNS on| Haste Some ale ee husband. [hurg, reported being stopped by af Svieton, whe has made numerous synvte: Soy. HIS CRITICS. CT British erulser on the way home and| “shts trom the Brooklyn Navy Yard in demonstrating @ gyroscope intend- just re “Tt was lots of fun, but Thursday ore i in, thet ite little Metd than But now “M, D." begs permission to| told of the torpedoing of an Ameri- night I happened to think that mamma Ls inks tt N ed to prevent an aeroplane from over- respond to some of his opponents. ust be a rker can steamer and several Norwegian was getting worried and Friday morn- Dear Madam: I agree with pe Cetin, a em oer vessels by a German submarine in pabigh Poesy! A ates ‘ines ing T saw a note in the papers signed | wyinoteen” when she anya, "The | home for hie wife as she latitude 67 longitude 12, Blidget Wig ap by papa and mamma asking ‘Baby’ to accustomed to "The date of the torpedoing and the js mac ent under Brook- best sort of woman is the woman who realizes that man is some- 3. If he ‘drinks at all, hy m lyn and M le to, vow wren he has ward the phattan Bridges out to- around Governor's come home. Well, I telegraphed to name of the American ship were not &c, But - F tyem right away.” thing more than a mint, enou NO WHISKEY. fj given by the British cruiser, It is| Island and the Btatue of Liberty and | “Captain Ralph Taylor, a friend of] ren't women of that rap Sey AONE sum het Ua tae satt-sen belleved, however, that it waa the|back over the bridges to the navy the Guldone family, went to Boston] hat ‘the class of women whose tori: His wife is human, ell | steamship Leslanaw, which was tor. | 7a". returning at 6.20. He carried and bfought Elvira back here, The ashe. : as tor-| ho passenger and the trip was with- one idea is to get something bd it pedoed and sunk off the Orkney Isi- ands on July 27, He must not expect his wife ecount to him for out incident, At 7.20 he took out the hydroplane will support them in ease is (72 left of the $7.50 in hi Ceidbcep hye ne coming eradicated, To MP In this way he can a y ‘out later and also his wife will have more confidence in him. 8. He must like children. 9. He must bring his wife pres- ents once in a while, and try to remember anniversaries and birthdays. 10. He must not talk shop. He will be able to work better the slight. looking for that type of woman, Permit me, “Nineteen,” to con- gratulate you for the true worth of your character, because from humble experience it is not often found in the young woman of to-day. “Babe” seems to have forgotten that I am able to support @ Auto Overturns, Woma: Hart, Mre. Charlotte MeMonigie, wife of Mc- Monigie, of No. 26 Hooker Street, Queena, wes tnjured when her husband's eutomodile was overturned, last night, at the Valley and West Drives, Prospect Bhe was removed to Seney Hos- where it was eaid her hurts were left there for New York July 27 ‘WOMAN KILLED BY GAS. Mins Anna Sturtevant, Found Dead tn Bathroom, Miss fifty-one ta Are! Near Bloomfeld H ne body of Archibald A. Talmage, a Anna Sturtevant, out and bruised. thing else. Besides, sho; woman and give her most of the di his head well known insurance man of Bloom- » MeMonigle, who h next day, as his head will be | years old and tn 11! health, committed bidd Seine Mg, McMonigle, who was] Juxuries of life. | ven though | Clearer if he talks about some: |Juicide by. inhaling kas In the bath: | eld: N: J. was found to-day tn Greene 1h talk a good living. You room of her home at No. 66 Morning- possession when she departed from le to fly to Blue Point, L. 1, with ° gems to be augmented daily. On her outward voyage the Seacon- y, J * @ mov. Hartford. You say also that the ordinary he et was detained at Kirkwall by ing picture operator. As it floated past | “TL never eeck any more adven-| man wants the painted aol. It British authorities on June 16 and serie at Woes a Se Fusdies sot “"] there ° con oon new it was @ foolish) gbie age when there are ao many boys he Ito @ prize court. ‘The vessel was re. | axalnat a bulkhead, emashing the left thingyto “painted dolls” on the market? to work late |leased and allowed to resume her pas, - A Dy iM have It re- ———_——.. Because the ordinary man {s not pxouan of ia voyage to Gothenburg on July 9, She | Dalred this afternoon, as the damage 1s | ei ese FEARED ASYLUM, A SUICIDE. a A, Talmage Drowns Him.) wood Lake In shallow water a fow feet | isn't very pleasant for his wift 4 A from the pier which extends from hie} aay can you ame & girh wen Tam a modern young girl of |#ide Avenue. Her body was found ji oierty into the lake “It te, belleved twenty, and I don't think T have | t 680 o'clock this morning by her that he killed himself rather than sub- wot thin note: “Forgive me, Francis, 1 am going to boggy it all. There is no use petting ens inst fate.” It was at this ‘luncture that Detec- tive Mulligan got busy. He began to examine a suit case left at the Man- hattan by Meyer, In it he found two cobblestones. Then Mulligan learned that Meyer had been examined for the United States army crutting station at No, 129 nue, The papers show he pat flying colors. “did Bixth Ave- ngs with mean to noes’ trounser declared eee to-day. “It came over me all of a sudden after we had quarrelied, What did we quarrel about? Oh, about things generally, I got the trousseau from | the railroad baggage room without |much trouble, I had the check, you see. Meyer wan arraigned before Mag- {strate Krotel in the Yorkville Police | Court this morning and held for | forty-eight hours pending the quest for other evidence, Although in court, Miss Slee did not testify —_—. EIGHT KILLED IN WRECK Sections of Fast Train Are Derailed in Triple Smash. | NORTHAMPTON, England, Aug. 14.—-Eight persons were killed and | thirty Injured by the derailment of the Irish Mail of the London and Northwestern Railway near Sto 4 mother, with wham she made er home, commitment te Bloomingdale ‘oung man who is exceptionally 1 where he had been a patient | andsome?” Did ay anh pace it too diffeult for any ye man et husband. being shunned even when I mas- An ambulance surgeon pronounce e agc tien thie Summer have Mieraded under an assumed name? | irene ere some, rules, tor. the he Mise sturtevant dead: but her mother | “pars sighed. by Supreme Court Jue, your favorite paper mailed to t seems to handsome man, | dur we'll talk nbout the P, W. tae wer Dot convinced until the tlee Seeger of Newburgh were prepared ‘as long as he can carry the bluff on Thursday, but owing to some itreuu- b . en Meanwhile, here's « young man who hattan Avenue had *aeed you every day: tunnel to-day. ‘Three trains were piled up in col- lision. ‘The Irish Mall, running in | two sections, was carrying holiday | makers from London. The first ae “A Home With Mother in tt that @ home with @ mother in it, new Child Welfare Board, William H, it No, 624) adopted at yenterday’s meeting of the Amsterdam Avenue, is as crowded| board and it sounds a new policy, at the re-| OF THE IRISH MAIL; Thirty Others Injured When Two MAKES NEW YORK A FOSTER: NOTRE. Mothers’ Pension Law Be- gins Its Work. HUMANE PRINCIPLE WILL FIT COMMUNITY. wil be allow “ge undér the law. it is a humane principle that caré can be developed to the gain of the community, to or the Joy it will ing to widows and their children. York City Hoard of Child Wi fen portunity, which at a ao ‘4 4 ORABBED COSTLY JEWELS AFTER SMASHING WINDOW. | ANNOUNCES ITS POLICY. | a Fitter Place for Child Than Best Institution.” By Sophie Irene Loeb. “A policy based on the conviction In these words the Chairman of the Matthewa, voices the determination t te the anewer to the cry that would not down. It at once sounds the key- note of the temper of this board. To carry ont this plan the members yesterday decided that one of its fret steps would be to make a careful study of the records of the \d-car- ing institutions of the olty for the purpose of returning to their mothers all fatheriess children who have been committed to institutions for no other reason than that their mothers have been unable to pay for their support at home. This action ts well stated by the chairman: “The spirit and purpose of the widows’ Pension Act clearty con- templates that New Vork City as & foster-mother must alter her methods of guardianship of her dependent children. The strong public sentiment in thie sity whioh suaperted the movement te eatablish allowances fer widewed mothers signifies that the com: munity hae determined to estab- lish a new policy in the care of children. “The above principle was accepted by the White House Conference of Workers which wns called by President Roosevelt in 1907, and this represents the policy to which the City of New York is now com- mitted as @ besult of legislative act. This resolution the new Board of Child Welfare will bend every effort to carry out in an Impartial, consel- entious and efficient manner.” WHAT WIDOWED SHOULD DO TO GET PENSION. Having firmly put itself on record ¥ to its fundamental principle, the The prisoner is sald to have t @everal handfuls of jewelry tai Field Too Limited in Rhode Island, So Antonio Came Here - and Sneezed, 5 If Antonio Naderis hada’t tet @ | sneeze coming on as he walked down | Fulsie following are the chief points! the gangplank of the steamer-Oum= | adpoted by the Board: monwealth at the foot of Puiton Stxeet this morning he might now be com- pleting his plans to burglarize, sections of Greater New Yi and is Detective bod Antonio was arene hia search revealed a loaded aay, @ screwdriver and At Labi hopoatl Naderia was seventeen only and lived ae No, % Providence, Capt. Deevy it Wednesday y night in ir Crescent Park, yet been ap- propriated for the Widows. Pen- sion Law, It will practically be im~ possible to grant allowances until pplicationa will be received £., care of the Child Welfare Municipal Building. ation blanks may be so ousa by applying te Board. No charge of kind is made = Cay ot planks. y person representing himself omcialy ‘who collects any money from any widow for the service e wecuring pension will be proper- ited. Committee, consisting of Mra. J. Commissioner John A. Kin Edwin P, Maynard, the Rev. ‘A. Courtney and Sophie Irene Loeb! there was too Itmited, so |was appointed to begin at once the! down to New York where preparation of an estimate of the) would not be wasted. amount that bic be “e to put the | — Jaw into operation, was agreed to devote the next four months to re- | WOMEN HELD FOR BURGLARY. ceiving applications and making in- | ‘ vestigations required "7, the law, with a view to preparing Itself to begin granting allowances on Jan. 1, 1916. WHAT BOARD MUST DO TO GRANT A PENBION. The two most important require- ments as atiplated in the law will be | found on the application blanks, They are as follows: “A Board of Child Welfare may, in its discretion, when f hi been appropriated thevet an allowance to any dependent widow residing in the county or city wherein she applies for Jowance, and who ls deemed by the local board of child welfare to be @ proper person mentaily, morally and physically to care for and bri up such child or chil- dren, provided such widow has been’ a resident of the county or of the city wherein the application for an allowance is made for a period of two years immediately preceding the application, ana whose ceased hushand was a citizen of the United States and a resident of the State at the time of bis death, “A person who shall procure or attempt to procure, directly or in- directly, any allowance for relief under this article, for or on ac- count of & person not entitled thereto, or shall knowingly or wil- fully pay or permit to be paid any allowance to @ person pot en- ued theret hall be guilty of a misdemeano: Deny Crime, but Ave Pinced andl $1,000 Bond Mach, “A man gave me the bundle raid he | Bi |was the oxplana' wenty-three years old, of @ne dred and ‘Thirty-Cifth Street and terdam RNa rigs Krotel yn ‘the Vonevitit & ond Bi ane ty wil Shirt Yat i Mes . whe, wa aie eens the women seen dmitied she cue but denind containin a t Joseph Ballerano, the burge Croton, tled up at last night when @ roll ae ws acveral “hundred trom ie the rushed aki eeiia ‘to his home, No. [St BELLA entity, is usually the No, 483M larity in them the asylum attend: Evening Worl, Ge par week | yok Mee] deeatlly. le yt | sarees with our disilusioned #ur- | two tanks of oxyien In an-attempt to were, comin back te Greenwood, ants: Hem On ine 6R Sve ated "L, 1" seems to be able to con- , jpbahie ea day to take Mr. Talmage in charge. | jouthbo n 4 week sisters from an impartial |MAN’S CHARACTER DOESN'T Mrs. Talmage has for several daya rod had snapped, The second avetion, | al 1 Man Who Dies On « been staying with neighbors, owing to i 5 Ww, and admits that | COUNT IN HUSBAND HUNT. gensite Mae) Wee Ries. oe [her fear of her husband, end for twa | following Immodiately benind, charged Sanday World, Se per Sunday some foundation for ideas n . An elderly man who dropped dead on) days he was alone in hie house, He! into the kage, Among the vic- aio, am serve 2 rete Madam: Tue subloote the staira if the “LL” station at Ninety. | was {eer years old, He leaves a| tims: were several soldiers: sadecribe for & week ih by many other “What Is a perfect husband?” {s Street and Third A: daughter a 400, Hi 4 L ce ee ae eed men of my acquaintance, | of great Interest to both soxes, aie ‘egret eee ye The Irish Mail ts the train which is yen ated fo far {t seems to me that my particularly to men, When a ‘ sPteaan gRe rad ig tl bay <p Drowned Reet ” takes aboard 4 do the pase ideas are also shared by those Question of this nature arives in | liled to-day. by Ws protherieigms| John Lapidus, a salesman of No, |sengers and th aise. Now young women who are of true | conversation, you can hear about | tundred nnd" Thirtennth Htreet 1 Diener Street, Rockaway Beach,| London which ‘ worth and who are brave enough | ony iri in this country speak of | an Greenberg, elghty-Ave, a cutter, | was drowned to-day while bathing | from the steamst xuries she ia accustomed ip reality, sbe means ot No. 2007 Monhegan Avenue, the to admit the truth of what I have said, I wish, bo rehat a few off Eldred Street. e whea, His body was not | Ireland. It is one of the fast wi [im the On account of funds not yet belng evailab! Deputy — Commissioner Dougherty will serve as Secretary to joard. Mr, Dougherty las had wi experience in (he study of di |pendents, and strongly sympa: | thetic to this new legislation. Jam glad the policy of taking stitutions and puting BELLA “Remo Indigestion. Onep proves it, 25cat all drug; epecdily 1d tor