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Evening World’s Daily Magazine, Monday, June 168, _ 1906. 4 a fhe } Agora ‘ Entered at the Por © at New York as Second-Class Mall Mactee. oo = VOLUME 436...... _—— i ) if AFTER MANY Y 4 The © Ss; measurably near. Pro’ i} to impede progress-again. ( t is due Commissioner Ste- § ergy and activity ‘% ¢ things © sith the vigil: work. It's expected : This will r ! utterly wasted on a necessary pany or other corporation y {involves no great engince tunnel construction w interests have \ { ministrative methods. Six 5 “to build it, and the net ¢ © foundation piers. The is a st of pre new ideas of new comm ers and of resulting court controversies, nent to official inefficiency, the y by openin contra problem such as h ave elapsed PROMISES IN ABUNDANCE. Advocates of an elevate. p line through Delancey street are generous with promises. g it wih “afford an agreeable Shade” for a sun-baked tt s made some time ago. But former Borough Preside urther than that. He foresees a “Ssoundless and ur ch a plays way,” can be placed. een successfully operated in. Berlin. 2 when the Board of Estimate pre- line. If the city is to commit d insist on an elevated . New York should not lag be- treet, so far from suffering incon- ume some of aspects of an structure would not temporary” means in These promises w pares to give its for itself to the project, as a structure with all n hind Berlin. In tl earthly para Justify the ex; a traction compar At all ev sistent with the c interesting precedent in that respect. ental as is con- iseless as well, an ¢ the existing lines Tt ts a sti ggainst a five a much less des Thi Ys touc’ land's frequenters in a new and unsus r the possession of ite of character which pected role. 4s two nickels must be rei the possessor of @ sing BARTER LD las then CHAPTER 2 nee UT the t checked nd," he ad wish yc I wa » than five! sate. the upon “I'm gett nvouldn’t jar me with fn the study more than a or six minutes’— His votce @train of the connected recit end of » fo § eight r stairs C: { that Lun me, Andt at he had shown her !n “The morning-room?” Loder suddenly stepp wann't there!’ back from the table. “The m your telegram i on the bur: | His endden speech and movement startled Chil- cote. The blood rushed to his face, {heaving !t ashen, “Dor do th ra moment y a sudde: e, shaken and me to * be a se ene’ {i “But the tel Neote paid Ww Bs rw in had come to « be a scex fo hand wa Kthe handle | boner in to Loder’s “You s svanted to be ni there, We taike quite an a 1 | ehe'd cal Va theatre party at the aa TO SOLVE THE PEEK-A-BOO PROBLEM iy Caer Cory. Poonsnes py the Press Publishing Company, No. & to G Park Row. New toe | for the steel oon tan Bridge ided, is, no new legal obstacle is in- | on. His Will be recalled in connection s and starting ected within four years. ars expended and fully three years i a-railroad’ com. | d long ago have finished. The bridge een raised by the ia Railroad and the Belmont m entirely one of ad-| nce the city got ready to date is represented by two stone) fitless wrangling over the} it for traffic on the NANAAAAATAS ERASERS, AAARAVASATAVETE TET SSSR TDETAATAST ESTEE ESTEE ES RAAASRAAAREARA RASA TASES EA ERAT CUAVANA AAO RNSEADVAAALOVAA ONSEN AAAA UALS EAAASDAAAERSAN IRATE ESTATE ESSE TTS OO AEUSALD USES UTERUS TERE SGA TE 98 | He passed his h e talked for ten then Lillian left. I went with her to the i ‘ door, but Crapham was there too—so 1 wns still She laughed and chatted and seemed in high spirits as we crossed the hall, and she was still smiling as she waved to me from her motor. But him, With nervous haste he if ush for the then, Loder—then ns I stood In the halt ft all came to me suddenly. I remembered that Litiian ost | tone tn the morning-room before Eye 1 remembered the telegram! cle to the room, meening to question Eve as to With that etrange sensation 1 Mved through the scene before Loder| room hic had leisure to look about him. It was a cab and walked up the steps. Instantly he beautiful room, large and lofty; luxury was eyi- pressed the bell the door was opened by Liliian's | et, deferential man servant. } that palls or offends. Each object was graceful “Ig Lady Astrupp at home?” he asked. The man looked thoughtful ‘Her Ladyship lunched at home, sir’'— he began cautiously. But Loder interrupted him. “Ask her to wee cacy {t conveyed. Almost at the moment of go {4 lscontcally, | Knowledgment the door epened to admit Lillan, vant expressed no surprise. His only ae SS “Why the United States Is What Tt Ts Co-Day. | | FOOISTEPS OF OUR ANCESTORS 1% A SERIES OF THUMBNAIL SKETCHES. What They Vid. Why They Did It: | What Came Of It, ——————eeeeeereer | By Albert Payson Terhune —————eeeeeerer + | No. 39-ZACHARY TAYLOR, the Man Who Didn't Know | When He Was Beaten. y OT st wate TAYLOR,” “Yea, ‘This bulldog quality, which waa not peoulinr to him. It bel 9 could not see tat hie cause was hopeloss in the darke H 3, who could not be made to climate and hostile sav- } for th In fact, sa the Battle of New Orleans; snderstand that bloak New ‘5 was won against overwhelming n 1808) and a captatn tn 1810, ade a major, and avon tts « Huwk and Seminole wars. When, ent with Mexico as a resuit of } A Desperate won, Col. (Brevet General) | Dash Into men to defend Texas from Hostile Territory. cnown dy the high-sounding tite | * | scurition;” Taylor cneamped on St sre, at his orders, the Stars and | ay soll. forward on his own | ‘eat River), opposite ) intention of n sctl, he calmly ut off from hits base was tn a desperate a safer postion. vined him, and hie ms on May 8, 148, nd ime oo eatet the warfare, as war, territory, rev to about ~| Monterey, eurrendeted mt work of the to act omy on the @ hacterida (farm) awated their the Americans m t ’ themselves: | “Americans Are { | Outnumbered Four to One. naa i She partie paing Mem and eoccned again oca off their gua But fa: The American fcans broke and lannais, throw the door+wide. aecumvion. * he sald, rte was evi- red visitor, Ladysh! Gently a frequent and a fay In this er Loder for the second me en- | the house so unfamiliar—and yet so familar all that it suggested. Entering the drawing- dent on every hand, but {t was not the luxury and possessed {ts own {ntrinsic value. The at- mosphere was too effeminate to appeal to him, Dut he acknowledged the taste and artistic dell- (To Be Continued.) ey 1 Lillian had deen alone, but she had left tng-room”—— the room. I ran to the bureau—but the telegram = foe eee ee [a ae LMI TE HE BETR confronted each other. Then, impulse, Loder pushed Chil- e room, An instant later | ing of doors, the hasty pull-| boxes came from {de and crossed th moving of LOVE MYSTERY INTRIGUE yons, stood for a m! his anion had left him; THE EVENING WORLD Beginning The first instalment will comprise a large, handsomety illus trated color supplement. ; “The Betrayal” is a story you cannot afford to miss. True, Eye too had bean alone by an un-| in the room, while Chileote had accompanied Lil- lian to the door, but of this ho made small nc~ Rye had been there, but Lillian had been Judging by precedent, by personal character, by all hunian probability, {t was not to de supposed that anything would be left for the gecon# comer, the, were long or ehort, ‘The Mysterious Mr, Sabin, ‘The Traitors, ud remained alone} count. 7 », either by request or| there first. had found her there, The facts re- into one question: What use olitary moments? 1s mind turned toward|, So convinced was he that, reaching ‘Trafalgar | un waa not the woman to lose’ Square, he stopped and hailed a hansom, > Whether the space at ber commiund ‘The Prince of Sinners, PRS plan of action was arrived .at before ached Trafalgar Square. cage were simple, Chilegte bad left an! an oppo: The facts. of|.one “Cadogan Gardensl’’ he called. AYAL A Thrilling Romance of Will Appear Serially in SATURDAY, JUNE 30. BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM, Author of and A Miillionaire of Yesterday.