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HE LITTLE OLD NEW YORKER. ORACE THE HOG. Hoes newisnecnes Gat By T. E. POWERS. By FERDINAND G. LONG. The Evening World about it. ONCOL OEE HEDEHEAEDEEOOE EEN POAREDDIG ED 29 ODRDEL1619009O46-00 —Fiblised by the Proee Publishing Gompany. 8 to @ PARK STS ke QEEICES*OF eo annERG Chee Ee ETS z| Entered at the Post-Ofce at New York aa Second-Class Mail Matter. Lit TEEWOLD Hain EP) 21A KING'S FACE, .A COUNT’S FATE, DONT BE fa WCE EET Vouk RINE! [GO00 CUHK 7 OL, [Quer E INTAD 000 TRY OUR /youR MONEYS) ecb Wop 8 [Biase resid STINCABORAS|worrt Xx* AND OTHER MATTERS OF CURRENT INTEREST. You have looked at scores of pictures and sketches of King ward VIT. in the past week; you have read dozens of descriptions $ soveeeeetieers Of his porsonal appearnnee. § \t he tg ok | Havo you noticed that you have not caught 3 |} KING. a glimpso of his projile? $ | Sates, No one draws it. No photographer has $ caught it. No describer gives any account of it. @ Yet his profile is the most striking, most “never-to-be-forgot- % ten of his person. In the front and the three-quarter views Edward is a fine-look- ing man, kindly, dignified, almost hundsome. Not so his profile, It is what is known as the circular profile. ‘I'hat is to say, if you were to put one leg of a pair of compagses into his ear and set the other at the top of his forehoad and then begin to circumscribe the MINCE FE ARCHITECTURE: ThSeGe SedeSndeSedi8-5 igre Sd ORT Sarovgrdvdeo Mares PRAHA DDD <ALITTLE ; 4 «| 4 Nb caguenvemita :| cirele, the moving leg of your compasses would Serape along his :| forehead, along his nose, jump immediately to his lips and curve ‘tj around upon the surface of his retreating chin. The moving leg b 2] would not have left the face, yet would have touched every part of z i] the protile. You will find very few such protiles as you look about S among your fellow-Amoricans. Yet, taking in the whole world, 23 + | civilized and savage, it cannot be said that these circular profile are rare, Where is thero the parallel to the tragic fate that has befallen the Boni de Castellanes? Their creditors haled them to the Su- premo Court of this county, and the Court cx- amined into the facts. It found that their creditors had been “despoiled’’—what are the creditors of a “gentleman” and a “ honor” for but to be “despoiled?” It found I he Castellanes had itted such indiseretions as “broke Fle val comrmare saben Oot or iter tet HARRIET HUBBARD AYER se A be Quan, naky 32 Seekers. : B4-D-6-4. Bas aa He must live to the wind he carries Into a car emits an ird of Barren Island, for he never seems to understand that the lighted cigar ‘oma that almost stifles every one of the other paeecn acre HOO ry man of 329002 0-06 fake Of Sears, a Aponge once or twice a day. ‘Ths 7 lotiun 1s especially good for very @ry hatr. Court condemned them to the degradation, the squalor, the misery aw es Dear Mrs of living on a paltry pittance, a mere $200,000 a year, until their Pant kind of olf will] take m) You gave tie} To Whiten Her Neck. Dear Mra. Ayer: Kindly let me have some remedy for, }my neck. Something that will whiten 4 It, It has become very yellow trom { wearing tight collars, tht Mv GIVE you a lotion which te useful for =| ‘ creditors shall be paid. Certainly punish toa tradesman, for taking his goods without paying for them and t| then reselling them privately and pocketing the money—starvation nt here far outruns the crime. For lyin. He’s cramped for space in his “spacious" flat, ‘ on $200,000 a year! He's cramped where he does his work. L vif i »e ilty i ittle ne . | | freckles. It will gradually fade the 3 : Still Joy is rife In his 2x2 life ow, if Boni had been found guilty of doing a little honest Naetncinek necciicae: |” stain away. It will not do {tin a few In “Httle old New Yor ke B or by some similar degradation of himself to the level of com- MrewAye = ldays. If I were to give you a lotion wtrong enough to do that {t would tak Gio skin off. and before the skin comes off there ts ac "48 or the shed a lotion | During the latter part part of Beas eb inbarieame ned the eseutcheon of his haughty house, jusiic Pa ena) ' D his severity. As itis, Boni will have the sym lag chappe 1 . Yes, s Says “Ethan Alien, o * ped this reclpaawlinananaee ox. | mation and redness, WILL KINGS DISAPPEAR? * Who Gives His Reasons sntlemen”’ and all capable of understanding the *feel- Nut tt hax teen mis-| HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. _ jittton for, Drecklca elcbloride of met uohave the Kinduers to ings ofa gentleman,” ol ICAL AP ah pa ae foue Be pis eeners Ny araarat ‘trails ‘ef after averthrow of monarchy begun “ ct hatzins a0. ax a normal elreulation | tract of witch hazel, aourcest rose wa- t Way from the loweat round of the| ward) softened vy conmtitutior entur stizely arauites weet | Sareea reels aeatecnian ews NseHote ati ter 2ounces, Agitate unti} the mercury ; ladder of social control to the! Visions as man began to assert lil po the century toccnme: | Evo! 4 7 finest es i Mine waa rerer to.| Halt tonte—Phenic ack), 2 grams: lin dissolved, Mop over the face night ) 1:2 hignest, and to-day that highest ts re-/ nat the inaolence of kings. Then fc kobut forward; and He was a lady,” says the Coroner's jury in the ease of Murray i Ynow and {| tinclure mux vomica, 71-2 gram; !and morning. Blchloride of mercury {s. a or the reign of Inw as/!owed the * for tincture red chona, ® grams; tinc-ins you know, a dangerous poison and last andl grandest achlevement/ the revubl! “al progress, the American Rev=| his own prop publican ul commanded by the people. This means| for pollt Hall. will Took 4 To S¢ hody know Can anybody tell. Dear Mra Ayer For the past year [hav my hatr in = ho 4 sway was when the world was young, we advanced to the “Patriarch,” whose| the thrones of Eurone Ike vo! w to many peoples. Follow-! within the pl vines from the ‘ale anging experiments of Exypt whieh this Republic inspires, thal crowns | Rerous fo 4 : and of Greece we ho the absolutism|and coronets should go to t in, | portunity of Imperia) Rome. ‘The Caesars, broken | with thumberorew and Christianity E by thelr own tyranny, the “Feudal Lord" | manta of suffering which were once the jishest SS as their successor waa the legalized| safeguard of the thrones of the entire pls Pirate of the Middle Ages, Then came) world. The trrepresd , The unrest which now surges under rown one sitced onion] vinegar, two ollv and @ spoonful of; tablespoonfil of capers, chopped fine. ©. Add two| Chop enough parsiey to make a table Ad. | pee spriza of parsley, vay| spoonful; rub fine; work this Inte the ne sou leat fo half can of tomatoes, cayenne, | sauce; add half a teaspoonful of salt, @ | ) Neate 4 Y rope: Exest- : ‘ 11 phneiee ead liee { ‘This sounds well. But is it conclusive? [and Whi irlles, 2 grams; cologne, | while perfectly proper to use as suggest: i that kings must pass away olution and the Inauguration of (he great] ot a special class, expanding and con Wis sounds well, ut is it conclusive ¢ aman mond off, 6 grams. }ed should be kept out of the reach of The steps of the marching millions of! Reputdic, which, by Its example, lx to- | quering civitization and aris ae ” Whe a “lade?” mana roots of the halr with a|tgnorant persons and children, p the earth up to Washington are politie-|day teaching the nations of t France ts a re Why not a “woman? Why a “Indy ¢ von BG van npniyiwhien 4 f ally well defines, Reginhing with the|that kinge are Dut imposters who have | What is a “lady” anyhow? Does any-|or°?. * : z Peng % tf ot ti rf : : ¥ .: tr in ¢ 7 paternal head” of his tribe, whose|outiived thelr day. Mer Mate in Qua SAUCES AND HOW TO MAKE THEM F When is a “woman” nota “woman” but “but a “woman ?° ehand “lad. nds” respectful ¢ Did the Coroner's jury indulge in a covert attack upon Mu sia j Hall when it saw that She” was a “lady? Or was the use of the 4 HOW LONG SHOULD A KISS LAST¢ | PRINCESS GOWN — | word “luly Different Kinds of Kisses, dom, could ans Wo the Editor of The Evening World: it One Annabelle Currier asks, How long | om should a kiss last? Should it be q mere} a touch of Ups to lips or should the con- | B tact endure for a second or two, or—how Jong? Let me say might aa well ask, “How long should a coat I @ frock coat ts of one length. adres, coat of another and a coat of an- other, It all depends on thy Klesing point all depends on the kiss. The f yeh ath of the Mpa: the Kas ofl uch ak raction longer. the Kiss of affection 1 fraction longer stil, the kiss | In a tabl melted but think, most dan | aslady 2) Whe | Is “woman” aterm ofr isasla aterm of respect ¢ walt an © teaspoonful of sugar. Doll; dash of cayenne. Use immediately. rapidly, th and atrain. Or is “woman” disrespeetful and Sauce Bernal jerved ee Pat the yolks of four acacia? With hot beefstenk. Heat 4 * condi ie ceges. four iablespenntula ® granite saucepan alight= skin of the The be ; ton Is by a picee of quaint politeness? sage remedy Ml ac <p mas. f water and the same of ty and break Into It ¢o1 ‘oll into a bowl, Mix] *—~~~~—® exgs, eat the weces horeughly, Stand the] briskiy over a siow fire, but do not tet water, stir constantly] ‘hem boll, Mix four tablespoonfula of Remove from] hot water and two tableapannfuls of exe ful of tarragon} tract of beef, and as the egR begins to cook stir in the mixture: add the juf€ of one lemon, a tablespoonful of garile oe OOM” PAUL KRUGER’S HAND READ, [280 274.0 Censpoontut of tarragon vine } ear, salt and cayenne. When this is non 0na nt 0- 0-0-0 8-8tn bod tate, Y oA. Partatan ex-| weil mixed and cooked, but not curdied, pert has been giv- a few diin of chopped tarragon and By ing her opinion of nerve, Mr Kruger’s hands. She saya [sieane hia nalts are broad ‘Tartare. lotion for falte| $a tuk that any} bowl tn boll (tie #0. ton, nas thes are, | the : MWogive vou a erthat. I axtould aay hypoerttical Kise (sus Voften greet exch ot noturn and say unkind ofeach such a kiss the hatter would doy Ity of @aid rents ant chil td manners of gripmen and car conductors and elevated guards, And there is| not the slightest doubt that the manners of | these worthy citizens do not show conclusively that they spend all their leisuretime over the letters of Lord Chesterfield to hfs son. i UATIONS., ¢ But—— + eenenene- erenenenaner ef From time to time we receive complaints of the | ° frit 4 on the in en) any as tryin 7 Tht ful of butter in a Place one iblespoon- Saucepan and when {t Is not the failure of these public servants of lo ov 1 Nethersotian ichVal NianTaliOulditewtarF due in large measure to the manners of the class of people with and indicate action unsere setae eal q 7 yt take it thy 5 x ‘ 00) 5 Bs prvsiaeey = Ite whom their business compels them to come into contact daily and and force. The |sult, penner and one and one-half cups ‘ Jo the RAltor | thew, white i forefinger Is jong- [fF stock. Cook five minutes, stirring «4 The readers of Tho Byening World) Tien ler h hourly ¢ : beslbaeaeeah a " 06; og arocasked! to Narpaerigualsmeuneene| 2 y 5 er than the others, | conmtanty actenfa one-half cup of ; Question, “How ‘ong shoud a kise fast” | 048 By “class of people” we mean all these who push and jostle showing a terrible | rsh mes rooms, but in small pleces, 7 Tdount it smonteatthrallthlatets Wiel : FAIR CaraniTs | Authority without [Allow the mushrooms to cook till well and squeeze and elbow and kick and trample and otherwise comport} heated, tnke.them from the fire and ate reasoning, a desire to command every- thing by brute {Ml of butter. When the egg ts set add foree, a primitive | Pris of chopped pars'ey and serve, here aa A eve cn | fe Mx one table a man of inatinct, Sanco: spoontul each of bute Mol ec. ter and flour in ay ; : undisciplined—in a ~~~ faticepan; add grad. J In the yoik of one egg and a teaspoon- j themselves ina manner—well, it is a manner in whieh certainly no adder of this article has ever caught himself or herself, no matter \ in how mneh of a hurry he or she was. te, and it to an unattra) t Just am short a sowhich it ail, alwo, ELOVED, as the lend To bares And on | As on #6 Have vou read “Chestertield’s Letters to His Son?” | It isan old book, but mighty interesting. Tn the e¢ word, « free man, vaucovens adds grad. vem th 1, pint of elie ° ao, |bolling water, Stir until {t Just reach irse of the ; . too, doth Lave hia evening gon tt . 4 - he loves hia coun- : Eun ea a pT eh next few days some quotations from it will be try.geand (under. .u0, Hollins points” tales trom; the) ar 3 i x 5 ae add the yolks of two eggs, In another ; AVRareoiTeLaEn Iiiever i enoras and senoritas dy os eliicnes srinted in this column—for the benef 9 stands, nothing For hls unmeasu + }is simply to touch both cheeks wit ery I a for the benefit of any clse. Her reading |#ucern Dut a slico of union, a bay leat —Hildegarde Hawt gan | lt would be harmless rive lause voiced te who may have acquaintances among this shock- of Mr. Krugera | 2? niolous of garile; add four table- Deas inee Linnie | gone AC would wet advorats ee ite, ingly ill: motel f : hands Is that they ["Poonfula of vinegar and stand over che : ‘ Lihat He ingly ill-nannered class of people which sets are handa of brasi pee until the vinegar Is reduced one- 16 OnE beret St Tine . CHAGOO CHAR Ma gripmen and conduetors such a bad example. not hands of clay. |a"moment; strain ehrough a fie mlavecy WRITE AN | nrenests LETTER TO “THE PEOPLE AND IT Wikk BE PRINTED ON THIS PAGE. — Overorowded Train, I¢ | ever meet nim on @ dark road one ‘To the Diltce of The Rveuing Wo: dark night there'll be a strange (ace in Iam an American not tied to gland by birth, cholee. or clreum- stance, ALA, m varioun pitta! hot borrow from others, and yf never saw a red-b: eydes would not a rd girl thac was, Men cannut have much respect far) ho’ wople who thr Bi do not « walks Rings oy tL coul brains and comme the ance{real homely, In my eyes they are the | women when they have to come hone | orn advle T notice during the hours of 7.4 M whether stv How ma conte ton (oo me money during the week) took ad- etiest of all girls, and jun ‘1. do women's work every s re Heaven, BL 1g00A.M. and 420, Mocs. Mt shal eaenitE Se ilese tenah canse of all this, and charged. me lamipered aivtisneven have coseden aa [andl emenererakisrwhen ahellatwe CT) OE OC eid ! Te Cc Taceore: ira ppocraths ssocsemedenenisionithe Thi) pa e Xe UMN! ON 1 Wan patssig (rom 23 10 W per cent. speak to one I make a note of that. 1am {do all of her housework. 1 used. to| 78 the Editor of The Evening Wor avenue “T.” road, T have often seen 1 eterna Mot Pouce rnchiaitace hail Wan for a few days, Une a young man, If I Intended courting a{ hurt me very much if my hubdy dtd nor| ‘Te melodious clang, clang, clang of; To the Biltor of The Evening Worl wo ple faint from being bundled + Neayen help. youth) cresily. eh IRSA wontunlenatieel Pihnetenees, Towa compelled (0 AY et ee eae ein eee ieee so walt on alm, The troubie te | the bell of the cable car, at the rate of| “Bmoklyn Boy” wishes « cure for taste ! Uke # lot of cattle, Im there no» Ps tee Re Barly in), P Unione te meet at hig Go tn-arder to meet the necenmuries Of [her hair, Glele with red hatr should not| glrla Want too much sowadays, ‘They | Micon hundred clangs a minute, ax it Ness. 1 think he ought to be ashamed ' Amproving this immoral state of affairs? | if btm ini” tin promise and| uke long, her mind Ms xort of thing, Ix allow a man who writes such nonsense | don't stop to think that a man ts work: | bumps into a truck ahead*laden with) to ask for a cure for such @ thing. A JOSEPH FALLE FARIA RETR eR penra eet teaacneaanuc eS CLL Ke se not on ths peaple who eam no way to atop Itt to worry them. It tan't worth It. Ing hard to keep ‘hit position so as to So ee ietiterety ter Rael Pea he iit healthy. ¢attow to get Stick to Your Promise, Boy. | friends, 5. 3. J Hit stood a chance of bettug tn Our Keee Libraries. ZAZA. | have the! mienins|to| take care of hie PAA ICRSIEGHE (Hunter pepaueineay ctcel| SOUTGUENITIOT have saya he coer why fv the Editor c! Evening Worl The Frult | J conatder It one Of the |y 16 pie of The Evening World +A Widow's Pinint. iy tes rails, jarring the bulldings tq their very|done by then. You must be a penny , A reader #4ys he promised his mothe: he lay Phar | one great advantage whieh has been! to the Raltor of The Evening Worlt To Honor the Queen, foundutions an it passes, sounds as| dude, or it wouldn't take you wo hours ' ten he was only five years old never|? it se Editor of The : Ff J, OSHORNE 1. werlooked by many people is thatct the] tam a widow now, but marricd | to the Faltor of The Evening World: sweet to me as the mocking birds a-sing-| to get dressed, as you confess it does, to drink. or smoke as long as she Iived, | 7!\* manner Inwhieh banana sicins and Scores Petty Usurers. ir Horartes, whlea are very conven: [three years and kept house, and s newt] One effecilve way to show to a friendly | Ing in the tree tops. Aye, even the sing-| You have no ambition. If you do really. qidnd now, at cnirty, he asks If he fs/ "Er peel are thrown lin sides b Let the public one at that, and walted on my husbagd | nation gn evidence of our feeling and|er in a Harlem flat and the plano that| want to be cured of laxiness use this Be Borally bound by that oath. | Walks of our city streets tn etching | To the F 1 Tor Bvening World more fully and edu: and thought {t.a pleasure 2o do do be-|to prove that the high-h: faction of | goes with him emit strains that soothe! recipe: Get up at 5 A. M., dress and get { ie cs ay ‘permit me to commend in the] Wd and terrible at the prevent day. I] 1 for socked dn a manufacturing | vutversal. cause T loved the ground he watked on. | a narrow-minded Mayor does not repre- . cheot ‘protector, But woe} breakfast all through by 6 A\.Ms And | formu the faithfulness of this} Cou! keep myself busy all the thine, 1 L] establin! owatown, and during the | © Defender for ed Halr.. | But ne was not so thoughtful of me.| sent the thy of ¢ ‘whom he} unto the nerve-destroying monster that] inatead of going to a theatre initheeven- | yo the vow made to his] Were no dtspoced, walking our main|week w impelled to. borrow money Sitor of the Evening Workt L have friends married, and (t makes me| serves would “be to display on Feb, 3] has the room over mine and comes home| abs h kind of an o to 6 youth, J dare say that] strostn and kicking these obstructiona| from a cr 1 person, also cmployed by | To say a girl is bad-tempered or cross | fcel ashamed to tliink how they make nerally us possible signs of econ-|at 2 in the morning and bangs his num-| ito b many times tn thel from the sidewalks. It peems to me thag|the mime fir. This man (who knew | hecause she has red hair ts all rubbish, tale huetauds work around the hous: fe at our private and bdusinese| ber nine pile driver shoes on the foor,|