..to j wsrpv.**?- ^v;Y/cv'*-: ■ ?.• m o* *¥**•#* vvt.v* lt;v •».'»•'*Vj£4I'V'r ^#*•••• 'I5WYyA49[gy$Ilt;?itdancO jof theSagambro Oliib at the St. Gob fed Hotel, in Brooklyn. Miss Burns •Treat'd of it. and the next day she sought Brooks at his,office In Jay street, Manhattan. Thera was an angry scene, but after a long talk the matter was hatched up for the time.Harold Thcall, now at Yale, was Miss Burns's first serious gallant, and it was not until after ho had gone to Yale that she fell In with Edward Watson.■ Mrs Burns did not approve her daughter's acquaintances and sent her to a convent in Montreal. There sho was taunted by the other girls, and finally ran away and came to New York, Sho had only a few cents, and to this day her friends do not know how she managed to get to New York.Her .mother insisted that she should return to Tho.convent. Florence thereupon ,went*~To live In a furnished room at No. ,112 Willoughby street. While there she became acquainted with a girl named Blanche, who lived over a cigar store In Reid avenue. The two became chums and frequented the' nearby seaside resorts. They were usually escorted by well-known young men.On one occasion her father got one John Walsh to hunt her up. He found her at a dancing pavilion at Coney Island. She was persuaded to go to thehome of her aunt, Mrs. Caswell, in Romsen street. Thence she was taken homo. Later she was sent to a farm in New Jersey, where she horse whipped a fanner and was obliged to ffee.It was soon ufter this that sho met Walter Brooks, through Harry Casey, ai a road-house.John Eyre, of Bayonne, father of Frank Eyre, a friend, of Walter Brooks and a witness In the murder case, was a. police-court prisoner in Jersey City yesterday, charged with insulting a woman passenger in a trotllcy-cnr. Iho complainant did not appear, and Lyre was discharged.Cl* *p*nm rln I l-T III! IIT