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The Evening World Daily Magazine, IThe Million Dollar Kid love 0 Garibaldi, Washington, Frankitn, jc.) and the history and pi ing Company, N. Y. World.) CHAPTER U1. (Continued.) Lovers’ Kk Others. ND if Viceroys tell gour countrywomen t ; the King of England has given a r kiss to a Yankee bart not known the in the dist! barber did and, helping his foot, exc and tell your Yankee barber k to the son of the King of E A Royal Kiss. Equally amusing !s the story the gallant Cardinal Jo When the Cardinal wa the Duchess of § her hand to kiss, Nation of the irate ch ve lad It is known t ction w, that d s presen gave greatly to the rohman handsome ladies and ‘of as great greater family than you!” Wher ne made for the lips of Portuguese Princess, and despite resistance Kissed her thrice upon mouth before he released her with exultant laugh. ; In Iceland, according to the ! Dufferin, the practice of Kissing fi {shes much as it did in England @ centuries ago. chilly land His whispered to Fritz tiow 1 understood it was the propel Loniship wrote: journey to kiss the food enough to entertain imaxining that my word, Guess my saw him, them, horror, mamma, by way of prelude, and proceed, gible, to make the vances to the daus’ with consternation; same tender er. 1 expected and crop, into the street, and young lady would have gone off ‘humor, she met him half way him a hearty kiss. From that I determined to conform to the cus ef the inhabitant: One Clever Ruse. Ruskin, ysophy of ki (Copyrighted 1908 by the Press Publish- sses—and Some iy kiss, why not, in the name of jam 1V., ence. while trav made an excursion Q o Cemada he crossed 0 o the §S of Vermont. There he stopped a barber's shop to barber's wife, a chanced to en ju ation was complotec Pr nF with the remark, w It rejoloed at the Prince. with al Kick y told of of Lorraine dig “How madame!” exclaimed he; “am I to eae ate yt treated in this manner itn queen, my mistress, who 1s the greatest queen in the world, and shall 1 kiss you, a dirty little duchess? 1 would have you know I have kissed & 1pon the proud the late Lord While travelling In that had always x thing ave jeparting on nd for travellers depart! Haak ladiés who had been little he would take me at when with an intrepidity 1 envied Dut dared not initate, first embrace in the most natural way pos- I was dum) next minute be packed, neck ee that the hysterics, It turned out, however, that such was the very last thing she was thinking of doing, With a simple frank- ess that became her more than all the poarding school graces in the world, her eyes dancing with mischief and good nd gave moment toms Even in France it appears to be more ° “fm favor than in our retrograde coun- Unusual ways of winning wives. ==Love-Making By Thornton Hall. SYNOPSIS OF PRECHDING CHAPTERS.) ribed the ro: of famous G COOOOOGULOEE No Conqueror in the World’s History Has Been More Daring, Dramatic and Unconventional in His Methods ‘Than the Mischievous Little Despot Cupid, Conquests Are Here Recorded. The Romance Of Whose — CROOOME try. If one may fudge from the fol lowing amu anecdote: At Bou- during the recep! Quee June, 18h, a namber ladies, in their anxiety to ng. pressed with such for t the soldiers who were keeping the line that the latter were in som instances to give way The officer nd, observing th state of affa ed out: “One roll of 1 don't keep back, kiss allt the first sound of e isa ladies took to g ad been French,” wat the 1 of a Parisian journal, t would have remained 4 4s its penalties as well as its is ed by abundant evid mom: countries and tn mar As long ago as 1660 we ud that Jacobeth Marline and Sarah Tutt re prosecuted for “setting doan on a cheste together, his arms ubout her waste and her arme upon his $5,000 Risses. Fven worse ar, in wh his neck, and con- 11 posture about foh time he kyseed m, or they k sed al ; rse was the fate that over- took an alian who in a moment of frresistible temptation stole a kis from a pretty girl in the first in- stance was haled before a magis- e and heavily fined. Then he was ewhipped by the gi brother and d into a fever by his own wife. lergyman of his parish based a s mily on his labial lapse, and the local press condemned the act !n several thing colum while, as a final retribution, the caterpillars de- voured every blade wheat ‘crop! of the malefactor's From the fines inflicted on unlicensed kissers we get strangely conflicting estima‘es of the money value of a stolen salute. Thus an amorous man- 7m ner of Parts was condemned to pay £15 for kissing twenty of his work girls, a penalty which works out to fifteen nillings a time; £1% was the (for a similar robbery per- not young lady mald-of-al three her consent by the R—, her emplc long on ee wh n they on in Chicago, E of Strabane, rk set a Kisses admi ago on a pretty while an Ohio alue of £1,000 tered without Oliver W. Hon. Re ‘Ladies Fined for Kissing. ‘or are the ladies allowed to go scot | different employments. take similar unprotected males. liberties Quite recent! ne Nelson was fined § for kissing a clergyman without nis In Engle lows fined Miss kissing her for wood J., Mayor Emma Marshall #10 sweetheart, and Wichita, Kan., Etta Ashkraft was tined a tatlor. From those deplorable examples of Jersey City Nurses. is a relief to Dear Mrs misguided turn to few yea the ago, at ance held at the Lyric Theatre in ald of the South African war heroes, one think two years in high school suf- of our most charmiung and beautiful | ctent educationally? J. M. actresses had recited ‘The Absent-| Jersey City Hospital, Baldwin ave- minded Beggar’ when a tambourine nue I doubt {f two years’ high school Was put up at auction The bids rapid-| training {s suffictent. A nurse has to amounted to £17, at which sum the be a pretty well educated woman. Part osculation it following owing a kiss to T. A. Fawcett, little story: A a matinee perform- ffers came to a decisive halt. ‘Make ft twenty guineas," sald the fair re- iter, “and I will kiss the buyer. ty gu * gentlem: g én to money, recel\ ju the ath Jamid thunders of ap promptly shouted a from the stal! he paid reward and retired use, a The next Instalment will tell about Per TON FASHION BUREAU obtain f -York These Skirt with Tucked Flounce—Pattern No. £970. Call or send by mail to THE EVDNING WORLD MAY MAN No. 132 Hast Twent |e skirts Mr. Show are alw pretty and al- Ways charming in Un materials, and dust now, when al- Most everything tashionable answers to that deseription, Ubey are in great de- jand. This one is adapted both tou) juvey lingerie fab- nes and to the shin silks and light Weight Wools which are treated in linge- rie style, so teat it becomes very gener- aily useful. In this instance — embroid- ered batiste is trim- med with Valen- ciennes lace, and the lace is, perhaps, one of the best ma- terials for washable wows T quantity of material requ.red fo. ihe medium si 4 oy yards yards with tion. ern Ne avy y-third street, Nev Send 10 cents In coln or stamps for each pattern ordered IMPORTANT- Write your name and address plainly, and al ways specify tine wanted in umbers of the series “Fifty Ways for »s Women Who Must Work. i friday’ 5 POUNDS OF CHOCOLATES Fo’ you, Miss! V ORDERED THAT SENT uP FoR You! SLAD You uKe 1T! HOW SWEETOF You ,MR. Monk! OW, How DEAR Wark! MY OF You, MR AUTO WILL BRING us HELLO, MAUD! How HEY! AIN'T Y iS Wy ARE You 2 GOING WITH ME IN THE AUTO? | ORDERED THOSE, Too! YEssirn! You SAID HALF Past ‘THREE, SIR! How KIND OF You ARE RIGHT ON TIME , JOE! STEP IN, MISS SMITH! WELL, CAN YoU GEAT THAT, SADIE? 2 = -- By R.W. Taylor CANDY ? FOR ME? LIKE FLOWERS? \ [OH MR MONK! 5 SUQUET FO You, miss! To ——~\ Soe rrr ox: =x Mrs. RHETA CHILDE DORR here replies to questions about girls’ work| examine yourself carefully what you are fitted to do. husband is an invalid, why do you not) the from Evening World readers, and gives advice and information concerning write a good hand and your English ts excellent. Evidently you are fairly wel! educated. But you have no trade and you are not strong. You must simply Back Numbers. ) E. V, and many others: W: to the Circu Department of The Evening World for back go York and try gardening, poul or something of the sort? nake a good living, and your expe vould be greatly Mrs. J., Mrs. W to some country lessened. K. K. and many oth- | ae ee and find outjers accept this as an answer to thelr stuffed with reflection that qualification Since your | letters? If they find on y have some town near New|and will write again ry raising You might to be mor helpful. Will not | Dear Mrs, Dorr: Girls to Earn a Living." inclosing a stamp for each paper desired. Dorr: HBRE can I inquire tn Jersey City in regard to opportunities to be- come a trained nurse? Do you of her training 1s the study of chem- Uy istry, physiology and other studies UY which require a mature mindyand a Yyy Wi solid Intellectual foundation. Y husband has been sick fer TI tier sears “Our savings: nave g.ven out and I must seek em- Warween Puzz1e siressmaking, perience in design but I don't k to take your tablishments and ask for underwe ur, outer shirt ork under r Mra. Dorr fairly good educ Write or apply special line to be @ tenement-hi to me I w Designers’ Chances. 11 for wa Civil Service Vacancies. {) PEN do Civil Service examin tuke pace and where? jon use 1 personally to ployment. I am not strong enough to HE Professor's problem consists in coundng the number of wulcrcic says | 3 wa) Civil Service Co go back to my old work in a depart- T in which the total of 15 may be reached by adding from block to block in No. 2M) Broadway, for all ment store. What can I do? C. M. a eontinuous line, which may run up and down, right and left or diag- about the Civil Service, The Every mail brings me a letter or two. onally, but not crossing through a block twice. For instance, 1, 2, 4, 5, 8 equala amination. 1 be Ut oe Mawar like yours. How can I mivise How I do not know your qualificati ou When | 15, and again, 1,6, 9 equals 15 produce 15? many other lines can you find that will but whether the u ri We in Oc vacaneles in 4 Tenement House Department 1 do| ticle putting the blame on poor Escof- xxx0 1 try HAVE recently finished a course in | feren signing and thoroughly understand I have had no ex- ng. Ci silion as assistant designer? seta A. BL yw exactly what you mein when you say that you have completed a course in designing, aml yet have no experience. Have you been studying designing by mail or from books? Otherwise you must have had expert- ence. If you mean that you have not yet been employed. the thing to do ts designs to the various es- position, Large houses employ several designers garments waists, the criticism of experts, &e., who ations I have a 1 would nspector LM the mmission, information THAT CLOCK HAS BEEN OUT OF F/xX FOR A WEEK. SHAUL Z SEND FORK A CHEN, TO. LEAVE /7 TO te! ( A (WS th emhow Repairs a Clock :?-: By F. G. Long, BE CAREFUL! WHEN L_GET THAT BERN SPRING BACK AGAIN—) NOW OONT / DISTURB PIE: Ita GETTING /T ADOOTOEDOOVESIOVOOS 3 Escoffier’s L 2 By Henry Tyrrell. w harmed the digestion of the great Auguste Escoffier. He is an alert, bright-eved. white mustached French man of medium height, with a Southern Vivacity of expression—he claims that} all great cooks are from the South—and wears on his lapel not the traditional rdon bleu. but the red ribbon of Officer du Merlte In brief, this king of Fren who has also bi kings one we h culinary en chef to C looks the artist that he s. d take him to be seventy- old or believe that he habitu- ully ate pie for breakfast. Well, he does not—though he ts “Will you favor The Evening Worl I asked him, “with a few moral reflec- tions on the rele ti ma fve yea: on between cooking and crime? That 1s to say, the Influence which cuisine may be supposed to ex- ert upon the ethical conduct of 1 As a Man Eats, Jay “With pleasure, responded the amia- ble M, Escoffier, as he seated himself | Quinz ker | with leisurely ease in the Le salon of the Hotel Knickert What ts 1 ori |The King of Chefs==- - on Pie and Piety on [Morality and the Menu Kk of New York dinners and | tly | an] Agricobe. | ittle Sermon CHEF ESCOFFIER. is a mere prelude—a tuning up of the system, Cocoa, or cafe au lait. with a roll, and possibly a soft-botled exe. do very well to begin with. The |defeuner a la fourchette—that 1s to say. the breakfast, that has al, substantial lity, eh? It is simply a matter Sessaninecenieion to be negotiated with knife and fork— (amteWiinil thawaclectloxe ori rhed’ tr 1s properly the best meal of the day. reparatloniranialiasrvinies/andha | » it falls at hich noon, It 1s not he eating of it, all makes dire Wad de Bae SEG Oe tection, Oe morality. According as a man ence, {te couple of hours which normally {t sv he feels; and as he feels, so he| CuPles well spent. Buc I am thinks and behaves. you see, gas-| AU TETAS Geen CE 0 onomy tives at once to. the impor {Mn of leisure, The business man must ce of a Itberal art jMostpone his heavy eating until 6 or 7 Why," he continued, “the culsine |b; “When the day's stress Is over. fe to us all what a mother is to her|;re NOTKIN® man. on the other hand. child. It nourishes us, it rears us, qt) "88 {0 fortify himself with sold food Ss. The cooking, alee te ay | {in the morning, before his day's work Index to the nationality. France is pre-) °S'"S. Three full meals a day are all rho, neose: (Tent for him in the art of the kitchen, as in| “With pie?" all the others, she {s a delight and an example. But then, that proposition rtainem: nt, yes—If he wants it and can manage it. Why not? There ts works both ways: I might say, per- |? essarily any i{mplety In eating laps with equal truth, that if Prench-|Ple. We have it, or its equivalent, in men—especially those trom the Miai,|France, though not in such luxurladt ike myself—have more palate and a|Y@riety as here. Strawberry shortcake, lighter hand in cooking than our neigh-|#!80, makes a hit with Europeans gen- bors, it 1s because we have been for) ePal ations past f by the Old Mas-| “I now make an astonishing con- ters of culinary art And that brings) fession tu you. It is this: My fellow- back to the morale of tue cuisine | Countrymen who come here to New again.” | Yor ing all their ‘foreign’ tastes “Does It uplift you some,” I inquirea| #84 prejudices with them; but tn a very of Escoffier, producing an articie| Short time these wear off, and then ‘ d from an uptow wspaper, “to| Your Parisian bon vivant becomes attend a gastronomic three-ringed cif-| WOr#e—I mean better, more American- ike this? Here ts an article—not| !zed—than the New Yorkers themselves, tbes you| NO: I haven't reached that stage yet as dining with a Tellow chef, the other ™¥self, but—who can tell? I suppose day, on fifty-seven varieties of fancy | ¥0UT hospitality has something to do ha as Lynnhaven oysters | With throwing a glamour over it all. ve crabs, bisque of terra.| But the fact remains that your mar- pin with cheesestraws, turban of piiarr,| e's “re the most bountiful in the truffles stuffed with peas, flutes of rasp-| WO". You have better raw materials berry juice a la Tiviera, steamed mile jr Food eating ond in greater variety pous' radise salad, a chaud- Tadgon Parent caleontines frold of livers en bianc, pears Ure aean svoUl Lebal bee or stuffed wi cheese, etc., etc. | der, for example, supposed to the whole swamped in avout ita |e ve glory of Marsellles. brands of wines and cordials, In-| |)” ese. and do make it just as Os a “Does {t taste the same here. on How Artists Dine! Fifth avenve, Manhattan, ng it does an “Stop! 1 beg of you, monsleur; spare| yy, A pak Pe eee ale mo the shock of such a recital. ‘The!lpavant the ats whole thing Js a fabrication—a fantasy, Be ths Mars tr alr. But that's absurd and barbarous, 13 it possible | Quunt wou have Hen GHEE that the intelligent American public pars ul es 8 I can bulieve me, Escoffler, capable of | "Ot better. The American clam ts cer- such an orgy? Jamas de la vie!|‘#nly more dainty and toothsome than Nevalre on your life! Now, if you care | the French clovis. to know how artists really dine to pother, I will show you here the menu {Famous Peche Melba, of a Httle dinner. whieh I enjoyed last | ahe conversation drifted : evening with my friend Jean Baptiste versation drifted naturally it is Kc Martin, You s the best: Litt simple, yet ams, a potas St. Germ chicken ala and a That's Alsatian to-day L stion If in that even varleties Alderman banquet your esteemed contemporary Journalist imagines wi. so much gusto, where would 1 be? Ah! I think | that bold gentleman must have tried | to eat through such a menu himself, | and it made him go and write the ar- | fler. So there of the relation and crime.” “How do you do to keep in the right path?" “Well, my personal tastes and habits are simple, and they are also regulated you have an between example gastronomy | nary M. Escoffier's world- ‘reations, and he told me the true story of the Peche Melba. Tt was at the Motel Ritz, in Parts.” The, “that Mme. Melba was sing- {nz the pratses of the legendary Cardinal. or peach in a rad Tobe: raspberry Mquor, and she begged me to elve her the recipe. In nplvine with her wish, I conceived {dea of ating a Peche Melba which should have an element of novelty. and yet preserve intact the exquisite raspberry flavor, as well 6s that of the peach Itself. I found that nothing could come nearer to abgso- lute perfection than to lay the delicate peach in a bed of mousse, or vanilla flavored snow, and then cover it over with its original cardinal-red liquor, the coulis de frambotse. That was tho Jorigin of the Peche Melba, but tte jpublic debut was made at the open- ine of the Carlton Hotel, London,” to sult my age and occupation—as! ‘Since wiloh time, {t nas gone all every one’s should be. For instance, I) around the world.” don’t smoke, and I drink only a ttle; “The name has, at least,” rejoined light wine. But then, I am seventy- | Escoftter ha smile and a shrug. “T five years old and threatened with!am told that since my arrival in New eumatism, York, they have got the ‘Peach Mel- " ba’ on the bill of fare at most of the Three Meal, and Pie. (ite restaurants—or {s {t beanerte, “The first breakfast, beginning the you call nim Reflections of a Bachelor Giri, By helen gins to look hammock gir As lovers men rather than special! a woman fastens are broken, God made the mistake, for hing old fruit basket A woman may scoff at her husband income and pry into pipe and razor as % Before marriage a man terward, “What 1s that sickening stuff? Once a fool, twice marries A man's idea of keeping up with t put on his coat in the latest way. Divorogie the one enary of CAS Flee A marrage of convenien A man’s {dea of a thrifty wite lobster salad out of left-over veal and a new hat out of an xowland, forward to~@ restful vacation and the ds up its loins for double work. are inclined to be general practitioners iets. T HIS 4s he time of the year when the Morris chair be- is the safety-pin with which on her self-respect when the hooks of first man; but He must have seen His the Scriptures say nothing of his having had the rest of them. one who can make 's religion, insult his friends, absord his secrets, and still retatn his love, i¢ she regards hla ered from her touch. , Inquires, “What is that fascinating perfume?” Af- he styles is always having the buttens aa