Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
S4 iy World Daily Magazine, Wednesday. August 26. ann anole The “Goose Step” ).r8#%xx,}€ By Robert Minor{/}| The Love Stories Of Great Americans By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1914, by the Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) No. 88—BAYARD TAYLOR’S TRAGIC ROMANCE. ' NINETEEN-YEAR-OLD BOY—son of a farmer's widow—tramped nN AS ek _ ee OE Ses Eee hee, __- jane Matter. - SpFoEeTathand toa the, Continent and ‘All Countries in the International tal Union. are » VOLUME 55.......cccceccseeeeeseceeesessseees NO, 19,863 ene ERS WHAT IS CONSPIRACY? | ‘Half a million dollars cleaned up in a single grain deal on the New leek Produce Exchange! | Half a million helpless people on the east side watching their loaves | MA bread grow smaller and smaller as the price of flour goes up! | P to New Yorkers—not because of fight- Park Row in 1844 looking in vain for work in the newspaper offices. Thirty-four years later his body was to Ile in state im New York City Hall, just across from Park Row, and the world of letters was to mourn him. . The boy was Bayard Taylor. At fifteen he had be self-taught linguist; at sixteen a schoolmaster; at seventeen a printer, and at eighteen & full-fledged poet and newspaper writer. . And from early childhood be | had been in love. | ‘The girl ho loved was Mary Agnew, a neighbor's daughter. Hé an@ | Mary had been lovers since they were mere babies. They bad grows | with the unshaken intention to marry as soon as Taylor could support wife. “She was an intelligent and beautiful girl,” says Taylor's biographer, | “and to him she seemed more angel than human, with her dark eyes am@ soft brown hair. She was his inspiration.” + b | But Mary's parents dl4 not Ike the tdoa of Ler werrying « lad. who hid no money, no profesaluti, iu prospects, fn fact, they positively forbade any | engagement between the two young people. And, to earn money to marry on, Taylor caine to : New York to look for work. After much troubl % ‘Too Poor secured orders for European travel lettérs from to Marry. \ eral newspapers (at $50 for an entire series), and “he 3 2 set out for Ger It wag his chance to muke good. | And he took that chance, even though it meant a long | absence from his sweetheart. vantage of the war to pat up| mdered the public for exactly two days, Then the Govern: and forced them to restore to their customers the money exacted in overcharges. When market keepers in Holland tried | game the Government promptly shut up their shops. De Ue re a rata e can cusvuare| i \ art un tay: to let light-fimgered experts on age and elsewhere Aa ee eee eo aha wi ) him while he was with talk of war and famine while they go through Its pockets? : , ? 4 oN {It vas hile easton, ¢60, she easaned to ‘cettin the hearts et tae Relawe toward her son's suit. Taylor's travel letters scored a great success. When NA E M D RS he came back to America, at twenty-two, his feet were already on the rugge of the success ladder. And, with the consent of her parents, Mary became T ROUBLE-MAKERS outside of Mexico who will profit by inter- engaged to him. \ But, though his name was beginning to be known, he was still poor and vention are trying to set Carranza and Villa against each other, declares President Wilson. in debt. And three years of grinding work passed before he wasn a posi- tion to marry. At last a date in early May, 1850, was set for the wedding « Why not name the intriguers? Last June, when Mexico was in ) ‘arms and shiploads of American rifles and cartridges were leaving day. Travel and absence and experience had not weakened Taylor's love for his childhood sweetheart. One of his letters to her, written at about this oe : . | ‘United States ports consigned to the various Mexican factions, The critics in the land!” _ Evening World ventured to urge that Just before the day fixed for the wedding Mary Agnew fell !ll. The cere- sche Adesiassirelion’. wre to wee the Gecret Service to mony was postponed until she should be in better health. But she grew Tin . ber Mary died. learn something to its advantage. x ye J babe is ‘ ‘ | . For months Taylor was a mental and physical The advice is still good. x ee) bd AOPPLPLPELELEL wreck, The loss of the girl he had loved from baby- pei ee , burden of life again. T ahall go on a journey somewhere—no matter where.” ; He went on the journey—then on several others. And, during one ef : i them, in 1857, he married again. on Antwerp before vertical guns from the forts put the air- redbialint Bas craft out of business only confirm an anticipated horror of last month—July 13, 1808—was | Strand affirmed a tempe: the date of England's famed pital ei ateli eitte. GH hd unknown in 1808, and the statements : regarding the torridity of that famous| America has, come very near te the “hot Wednesday” may have-been ex-| noteworthy that on this aide of the time, begins: eadily worse. look about a little and find out how some of the various move- eects in 0 hood broke his heart and left him unfit to take up the be to ne? z a 3 oe g =. NARA IAE “Another such winter will kill me, I am certain,” > WHERE ARE THE SUPER-EXPLOSIVES? le 1. j ie scnauhere—uo ia The “Hottest Day.” “hottest day.” over 124 degrees, taken in Algeria, on aggerated, but it was doubtless the| Atlantic, as in England and Africa,.a Cann ; war. x But is the destructiveness of these explosives dropped from the > “blr as terrific as the world had been led to believe? During the last i we have repeatedly been assured that a long war would be orth impossible, because, owing to the almost incredible power Mf high explosives, an army or half a city would be annihilated with ‘Sp aingle bomb. 5 “One word from you is dearer to me than the cold praise of all the Early in Optober of that same year they were married. And in Decem- ments in Mexico are financed and where, this country might “I cannot work with any spirit. EPORTS that a German dirigible succeeded in dropping bombs NE hundred and six years ago, thermometer on Meteorological observatoriga were| the edge of the desert, on July 47, ‘ m,| majority of the “hottest day” records = If we may believe the reports, eight bombs only blew up a few Moria tak aan: and ) vi) eaep sotablianed in hes bees , oe in Antwerp. Nor does such news as we receive as to other fa Sceccececoesoooen sesscecesssooeoes seceeeneeeeseeeet | some registered as low as 96, while a! registered in ; of fighting indicate that, appelling as the slaughter has been, @ @ ; Z* so infinitely worse than in other ware as to promise a speedy of this one. a Have the destructive instrumeyte of modern warfare been over- pated? Or has humanity, through The Hague, limited their use? 69999099009099999 96999999999999990 99909909099009909 yy EE Te [The May Manton Fashions | Tp Ip Fighting a Fifeless Fire The May Manton Fashions a picity of tite P burn,” had called to take another victim. the window had knocked Mr. Jarr off costume unques- ‘And it the latter, is to prolong the killing really more humane? ow Ce eee ee earn ould ue po-| All this mear-conflagration and ter- | this chair into the middle of the room. tlonadly.te tts greatest a 4) l]o:| lice to stand back, and i be persisved| riflc exciement had been caused by The pouring water cooled his swollen chara. 30 consanae p ase Tr aeeetand back, and if be peroried| Wille Jarr bringing home a snake in and fevered feet delightfully, but be * READY FOR THE NEAR SIDE. » EGINNING Sept. 1, trolley cars in thie city, to conform with way to hi A iled| a box to play with, and then dropping didn’t appreciate it. Nor did he know Rreecte ‘was prompt clubbed (nto the snake on the floor in the dark. that, ere he could crawl out of the unconsciousness and sent to the hos-| His father, being obliged to go bare- waters of Lodore cascading upon him pital in an ambulance. foot because his feet had swollen to! from the window, the dear little snake, . ge ii ty it i 4 ; | i ‘i f jhape and size of sugar-cured | 1) f ti together, with blegm- Pp the ordinance which the Aldermen passed last June, will stop oontng Cae ae Ga eee still nee ebea ‘angolag 0 excens WHE |ins oresct wocken’ ne "eee tO ors that are worn be- on the near side of cross streete. The New York Railways |’ ambulances still going Harlem in the persistent dance-prize-cup con-| ‘The police and firemen on the roof neath. Mothers will be aye neighborhood of Gus's place looked ara Mudridge-Smith,| had cut the electric light and tele- quick to eee thet the pany hes informed acting Mayor McAneny that it is about to Pres Go, | like the territory around Liege at the the snake, and the phone wires. and the firemen in the a Onrriens 1004, WEB Eine Watts height of the recent muss. shrieks of Mra, Jarr had done the rest. ! cellar had turned off the gas. . cooperate garments are ’ notices in all its cars calling the attention of passengers to the —— Pry pe) ont muse | Rangle| Meanwhile, Mrs. Jarr was still o0| ‘Mrs, Jarr was in excellent volce on much easier to launder cE ARLIER in the day Mrs. block!"" the sofa, screaming, and little Wille the floating sofa, and Gertrude, the than ep entire frock had been complaining that! “Gittell out o' here!” replied a red-| was up on the plano, screaming, and jight running domestic, was being and also that the te for the near-side stop are al familii on hum-| necked cop and swatted him with his| the snake, now in his element, for he saved by Claude, her own special und Sar ome te 'y familiar. The two life in Iarlem was very ‘awished ‘happily Sarena) fireman j vil igost are (1) the fact that the law already requires the near stop | ¢rum- pienteriek in the daytime and on the| was @ water, sn pool on the floor | He saved her once, and she liked it the il Be it :, eg “Oh, dear, imply to vese-| “stick 4, J . and I'll give|that was being augmented from the 4 many streets in the city on account of fire crossings or proximity eat poll ey ‘oothiog ever | you ‘2 full load,” added’ the policem a2 pouring fire hose. \ fea ae pea. an net the skirt end 74 | $e school houses, and (2) that the motorman has his car under better | seems to happen!” to the hospital ambulance driver, who! The first burst of water throush| save me!” to be carried out again being of color, } ol when crossing an intersecting thoroughfare. Many other cities| But now EVERYTHING was hap- =x Oy, a aa aes Pangee cea Wants but for seston wont tried the near-side stop and stuck to it. Once New Yorkers get | "*rastreet below was fled with fire F iL E mouly Gaciled, St Gus's, CMOMR lhe of mrge ce at ctaae to it, they will find it safer and more convenient. apparatun, he engines ware, puting ae Wool material In bad weather the public is likely to complain at first because | smoke that filed the upper spaces . OF NANA O AAA AR AOOCOCOCEES blouses quite as rear platform of the car must halt eo fer from the cross walk— Gee aauad ot firemen were ralsing . *. Pop’s the" verte h may spur up the D. 8. C. to keep the pavements clean and go | ladders, anoeher equal aimOy door, f22 Mutual Motor Paya A ultimate good. and others with crowbars were prying up the manholes in the street, whilo By Alma Woodward. ones, for cotton to-day, seal | OVO the root, fremen ware hauling . @0 0 annnnnnnnnnnnenennnnnnnnnanes]y represents a wide ve great lines of hose. i‘ x ° ‘Copyright, 1016, by the Pi Oe, s i ‘The engines throbbed and roared - . ine ‘New York™zvesing’ Won) the 8 2 he great bi aletters From the People j|siidm irses wey By WELEN ROWLAND. al Tees wine fee noeetee rong water ‘yarde ” from th oupine ‘the ‘great. search- Copyright, 1914, by the Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World,) “ JO you know, I'm just crasy tac wide; to moe Pave: World made for the taxicab ordi. | lights played, and hoarse chiefs RST, you listen while he chats about bis motor car, about sandwiches,” sald a" cae ‘Bititor of The Evening World: Rance, that conditions now bawled through megaphones. dle his cigar; our neighbor, irrelevantly. re 37, 1% reserves formed llues Then you run and fetch a match and kindle his cigar; ee " are possible, I have taken cabs at| The police med ues o'm 1,” asknowledged white? the bisomene ttt Gierens Cienes, hone ones paid 18 | across Perk sods, oe A ng ‘Then you make @ rarebit and beguile his appetite, , 3 the bloomers: ‘and | an: another time 1 was oharged 60 cents| was promptly thrown into a patrol And let bim hold your hand a while—and then you say “Good night.” the any wid fed somethi rattorn Ni vght it woula| Pattern No, 8388—Girl's Drees With Bloomers, © cut in = tom a fi ‘What is wrong? and hauled away. And every Then you slip upstairs and put your “fish-hooks" up to curl, long ago if I hadn't th cut phe fis, wie, le looking after the ean! faent oe Tee ah ping home, Ob, isn't life EXCITING for a sweet, unmarried girl! ia tsa whee Ot Ha WAGE On Gun to 10 Years. and 10 years, about the city? Some of these in} pliable Di ada ha . neighbor. ‘You two have been so ‘ali at THE BVENING WORLD MAY MANTON Fi uy are in wretched condition and t! 5 Wi There are times when every man has the subconscious suspicion that] lovely to me with your car—but we've few $BUREAU, Donald Building, 109 West Thirty-second etrest (egpe- * Hits From Sharp Wits. |ine reason why a woman “never knows her own mind” 1s because she| never gone on a REAL picnic. It te ate Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-sccend etrest, ‘ “The H ie vik hasn't any, you haven't got an automobile you) $ Ovtale $New Fem 07 ass Wy mab se Feceipt of ten cents ia esin ep 5 ° Home “ . q stamps If everybody at all times said ory can't go on @ picnic properly, because thee : oitiee of The Bening Wertd: We! ae wee bo Bet Santee Funny how a man always loves best the horse that must be driven | YoU have to stick to the beaten paths. | § vatreres, PR ats ‘Add ples letter peopel pod , ‘the "Wants to Btop|,,_ Wish te answer Z. D,'s letter about | ¥° te He make FFMRAeDlD But with a car, why, you can pene- 3 ’ t, i " ‘on all Brooklyn Cars,” a the home girl. The reason why you In the striving for unattainable with @ curb bit, the man who can whip him in a fight, the lobster which y | lens practically unknown, don't often find the home girl now. ith him, the 1 which gives him a headache and the| ‘ate ‘© #! makes a statement teat sack adays 1s because you men criticise | ideals, much practical good that Is disagrees w! cocktat! 6! and” Tee overlooked —Albany “5 bi nd » I know from, experiance, © Rae, ta SAGE 7a0 MORN a rea te the vie reach : ae nn woman who makes him most miserable: mor eens AD OY nls motor. |q girl is forbidden to bring @ young It’s terrible to be eo near sighted.” | wasn't doing a could have cold fried chicken; “you don’t care if we begin to eat,| He raised hi Tottle ussicaats a and devilled eggs,” @uggested Ma,| do you, waver” Me called after jim, just then our neighbor thought to her ho does ong other things of which lives It takes two to make a happy marriage, but one can make a failure of] “ana"—— ‘re all so hungry, » a saws snake, 7 arts erctitited cate and tote hove she ts not Fespecting ner Goes not say| dvoally great men remind ua te that 4 aut by pimsclt, ' Stuffed tomatoes and jam tarte,"|10Ns as you are down there, just look) eithat, waan' maiko.” arrested, ‘Many women get into et le Rad hs Bie, talhing,: a5 supplemented our neighbor, “‘and”—| know where it is—maybe It isn't the eons P ‘space oats, whan Chere s yee. va Penh HO i It doesn't take much of an accident No matter how much a woman may despise men, husbands and bache-| “Beer! punstuates Pep, sonoleely, AE allen Oe 100m fOr ite pe ee see, you never noticed it, ST's ous woeen wowle ait to “Ragtime Weat to spoil, elaborate calculations.—Al- | 1. wit! still continue to be the two most vitally interesting things in the} 7. cot was on a wooded hillside,’ #!tting down on the ground ke thi oh 7e8 vere ly seats, thelr clothes would | ro ihe Editor of The Evening World: DORE SEUIREY, 6 8 world to her. overlooking & small, unexpected lake, , Fifteen minutes later Hop, tolled up| while you were belng such 6 saturated with fumes! ‘This summer hae surely shown us| The Chinaman’s definition of to- an The only drawback was that, the | the slope with be requ red articles, Utete bee I confiscated your f ragt! Beare: y ! "! 0088 ol . Cc. 0. M. dees eaceltenl tigyta tate brie ell ae Paige we A Of course polygamy 1s dreadful; but at least an Oriental wife knowe| Mor LD “ag whon you got up it! Jolnt and tongue sandwich. You could! snapa for chicken when A phis Commercial Appeal. just where she stands in her husband's affections and never stops to won-| was necossary to sit at an angle of tell he was about to spring on them. | stuff around. Isn't that eo?” { e e ° im Pave dseveas. | “Oh, you've been so long, naughty| “I can see you haven't a Official optimiam ts responsible for | 4e? Whether she ts “Number One" or only Number Twenty-one, ey Handed Pop # second joint) slowpoke!" crooned our neighbor. tite, papa,” sald M. es lea. many unearned victories. @ppet hand and a tongue sandwich| “And we've been up here waiting for hm with eudden pity. "But just “Ask and ye shall receive” may be true of most things; but when it in the other. But before he had a| you he beer; just choking! to nibble on this soda . Love languishes forlorn at many a to open the le the product| for # drink, after all that dry fo0d."| my aake, because ‘was |comes to a kiss it’ wise man who adopts the motto, “Take and ye shall our beigh bor a par we Pop opened beer all around. He] in your stomach a “Ob, ot to the , of matrimony—Bal- = acarringe a momento of love, f " "2 glide sale ot de xs Shi: ee