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‘TRevEVening” World's Home Magazine, Fridey Evenings July™28, 19085 00 1 HE NEW The Girl from Kansas Goes on Ni aaah aN ARM ental ie ata tonseseecsoooesereeees | SONGS OF T a Vacation to Escape Friends./; How Would You Like to Referee the Peace Conference? : PaO 3 A “ : By J. Campbell Cory. 3 The Charge of the “Strike” Brigade. ; FOSS SDEDOTS 690.G19SO69009- 4O- SOF SHS HOH By Alice Rohei 2 ‘VA been on a vacation,” sald the Girl from: Kansas, 3 By Nixola Greeley-Smith, ? ‘ 3} “Why did I #0? T had to in self-defense. Yes, the 4 NE thousand!—$5,000!— Some chance, escaping watt 4 Kansas ‘invasion. fas begun, and I’m afraid it will be $10,000!1—onward! Might tell your etory while a ; t of { Thue did the “Strike” Brigade All the world wondered. % & Sha TAP -sienibieneing oly, Of our littlerHariem, Noms BREA K AWAY ¥ Charge the Four Hundred. ‘Though {t take all you've got, i neh gearing Wry it that tho “Fovlions THE KNOUTOVITCH $| Not for the\book they pald— Let “the boys” have your yacht chnae off to merry summer resorts ‘for 14 to escape the . FOR HIMSKY! 4 tt He Rabe tb tisha Moignart ~ corde influx of cheerful friends from the provinces who are if the unpublishe: is 80 Lisi pron , \oing to see New York ‘at any cost.’ You know, all this talk about New Of the Four Hundred. pact ey blundered— ata York being a great summer resort-is fine and dandy for the hotel business, Forward:the “Strike” Brigade! or the Woeassamtanral : rs but it comes pretty hard for the humblediat-dweller with a condensed: dom- Young men, who, undiemayed, Knew just who was afraid, , And seldomblundered. Scandaletoright-of-thom? Knew who, without reply, Bcandals to-left of 4hemi ‘ And without asking why, Scandals behind them! Would “Fads and Fancies” buy— ‘Threatened and thundered. ; Knew whom to call upon Merchant and Titan crook, NG ae folle that looks like a dry-goods+box: divided into: sections. “Why do I think New Yorkers only go eway on: vacations to-escape fhetr ‘friends? What sort of-a restsdo;they get whenethey decamp-to the bustling summer resorts? I knowsall-about this thing of parading round hotel porches and dressing four andifive times a day. What iind of a va- @ation is there in that sort of a game, Husbands of' wives bereftt Nothing but money left! “The vacation habit 1s only @ result of the law of self-preservation. In the Four Hundred. To the last man they took Daisy and I found it was vacations for ours or running a summer hotel on Senndaa tb sleet Ae themat The “Fads and ‘Fanctes” book, (One Hundred and Twelfth street for our Kansas‘friends, so we determined Gcaritain to feted dha F Baeder| biredleternist bo etd aaa che game by the Lisson No fancy summer Bean a iy front ot ‘hen ‘When “the bore” wrote ahoat “You know since.I've come-back*fve almost made upmy-mind that the ‘amilies sunder: The noble-Four Hundred, ~ eimple Joys of country life are all rightdn their/place,-but that-the comforts of an elght-by-nine Harlem flat‘have all the rural inducements beat to Geath. ' “Nature {s all very well, but when you escape the trammelling conven- tons of garish hotel life you are liable to run up against a few old-fashioned oil lamps and a scarcity of water supplies and the time-honored bathtub. “Oh, yes, Nature's bathtub is all very well, but you ought to have heard the boarders congregated on the porch of our little. boarding-house by the wea discuss with pained faces how they missod their private ‘bawths,’ when it ‘was ten to one that they had to line up and wait the pleasure of the land- fady every time they got near the bathtub. “Oh, yes, I had a fine time. I enjoyed*thinking of all those visitors I tissed., J “You didn’t think Kansans had‘the price to get to New York? Say, Right at the mouth of hell— Dalrrepabiced ncaa dtid eet! ‘i Oh, the ten-strike they'made? ‘Who wouldn't pay up well Nobody dered: Like the Four Hundred? tat all the thousands pald— Pay up and cease to chafe, Paid to the “Strike” Brigade Lest from the Colonel's safe By the Four Hundred. Bobby Gerry’s Gee-Gee. By T. O. McGill. In spite of the cppositson, of his father, Commnvoriore Elb: o there isn’t a village merchant in the Sunflower State who wouldn't make I. Gerry, known to nis int! es As % ® business trip to New York and pass Chicago by if he thought he could eee gar in fe ene aaa ron f Jand a free meal ticket and lodging-house from one of his childhood’s » | of the sport of kings.—News Item. F happy-day friends in the Empire State metropolis, Y “Do I think it is a joke to come from Kansas? Well, not that you would L beh bienang tet ary naiisied ; Rotice. Yes, I may have to take a vacation again when the fall buyers come And the chaps that trade in horses . ’ on.” Blyly wink the other eye. fi a+ Bobby's got a Gee-Gee, : ’ s A | And his pa's as mad as thunder. Little Willie’s Guide to New York ee te ere = bm Wile the “bookies” think of plunder. i i | Bovby’s got a Gee-Gee, Bobby's got a Gee-Gee, San Juan Hill, 3 To which the Johnnies drink a bumper. | And the Commodore looks glum: AN WAHN HILL is a hard plaice to get to but It is a As a horse it isn’t such a much; Kitts have always given him trouble * 4 lead eezy pinive to bi bigod from fot pe, axibulaaaes % It's only an old Jumper. And kept him going some. : Tun evvery fiftean minnutes ani you miss one you Bobby’ (c) 4 Bobby’ Gee- can get the next just like a ferribote or a summer ‘And. tanioead fobs @ sport, ‘dnd tell play patie ath of kings, flertashun. the reezen ean wahn hill is so hard to get And with the othen rich men's sons ‘We hope he'll keep the level to is becawse noboddy who liyes in that naberhood knows whare it is and thay tell you Oh yes t’ye herd nthe: Seca ia yee tee Ana Belb OGat thie RORDS: eaee, of san wahn hill it begins just one block beyond my ei noes! poate! no hill at ean wahn hill and thare is mo san wahn thare eether and that’s how it got the naime. if you want 0000S DOOOPP OOOO: to find san wahn hill get off the amsterdam aynoo car annywhare between ese eeestes 60th and sixty-fifth streats and follo the patroal waggon. mayby if you show an acktiv intrest in your surrowndings you can get a free ride in it.| @{ Ss ome wo f away bak in ateen ninéty 8 mister roozvelt saw a prezzidensy on top of san WGOTOET EES HG9GGHO5-GO0-9O IGS TGGOTOHETF-COOGHDIHEDVHHIOSS GOSS: Tey = $ 004 23-0965.9$. 6 $D $8000 00540609090909080906-04000640F09050006-94990O00 Paragraph Sermons. : i © grow strong through a-suming daughter of her father, just as strong the w Best w Jokes w& of # the w Day. so|W responsibilities—by bearing bur-| men have moble mothers. dens- end doing things we.Ae-|) 4) man ot mentiw conceives: ‘things; a wahr hill in kuba and he ran up the hill and got it and evver sinse that] ‘I see your hair is falling out, sir,"") jobbleton has @ disgusting habit of; ‘Mr. Buggins,” sald the attending} ‘What are you studying now?" asked | Wite Power. pass *. man of talent carries them forward to time evvery tuff plaice whare hoalsail ruffhowse abownds is calld san wahn| sald the hairdresser, pvho was gotting | answering a question by asking another. | physician gravel: am afraid your| Mrs. Cutnrox. Reserve your best thoughts for the) completion. DMi and thus does a greatefull nasion honor its heeroes’ ecksploits. pa was| ready do work the hair-tonic idea on tie | Ever notice it?” mind is gone." “We taken un ‘the subject of| etect few, ‘The fallow years are as good as the @t san wahn hill in kuba but just as the charge began he stopt to tle his| customer. "Why, no, not particularly. Let's try ['m not surprised.’ replied{ molecu! anewered her son. of Bient, winter pre- awe "3 ; Se ee years of plenty—the |him; there he comes, Oh! Gobbieton, | Mr. 8. ‘She's ‘been giving me a plece| “I hove you will be very attentive nnd | Blessed te that man who has found! Dares the goll for spring. shoostring and by the time it was tide the war was oaver. ma has maid " is of the sor’ 5 ractise constantly. I tried to get YOUF | nis work. a him ware kongress gaiters evver since. good oald san wahn hill, at you see is | can you lend me $5? of it every day for twenty-three years, | PIRES? Conse y ‘but he wouldn't | Me . 7 xi wequel to a falling out betweon ni “Sake me for an easy mark?’—Cleve-|and she didn’t have a whole lot to % hi ve,'—Medical reat indness is something we receive and \ A. P, TERHUNE, wife and myself.""—London ‘Tit-bits, | tend Leader. a Start ‘on! Waahingon Life, male Sid REY GS Ie Ore eee A splendid woman fs generally the! have to pses along in order to keep it. The ~ ~ Woman’s ww Corner # wo 2 in Which Much Will Be Found to interest HHome-Makers *. ANY ROOF IN NEW YORK MAY BE MADE INTO A PRETTY PLAYGROUND. |Housewife’s Thumb-Nail Cyclopedia. Boiled Salt Cod. Supporting brackets and the dust U™ for this what the grocers call Newest and Daintiest Sandwiches for Summer ata RR RETR rermaranae _ Picnics and Lawn Fetes. en ee Be : ne, ene By Elizabeth Py ewell. ’ H= are some delicious and new sandwiches eminently sultable for picnics, “middles,” the thickest best cod procurable. Soak in cold water for a number of hours, cheer, the | Hint for the Heels, water four or five times. Place in @ % eaucepan of cold water and heat very | noc belle re giataaiftek eign slowly to the steaming point; drain, add je the heels of shoes. This will, by more cold water and heat again. If not | preventing friction, save the “PS tender, repeat a third time: do not boll | stockings immensely. Mothers _— or {t will -be toughened. Drain, dip in ®) and girls should take advantage pH MUttle meted butter, dust with pepper |nint,’ for it will spare them and broil over @ quick fire, ‘Transfer to| stitches. ey, a hot platter and spread with butter, lawn parties and other summer gatherings. Four new sandwiches heve made thelr appearance on the horizon, all being appropriate for this season, Bridge and seven-handed euchre are as prev- alent in summer as in winter, and it is for these occasions that the eandwich be Gomes a leading feature on tho afternoon tea table, Frozen cherries and peaches would not be out of place, and home-made wafers. ere Car preferable to those bought. > ‘There need be no dearth of flowers; even ‘the wild carrot has been pressed nto service at feahionable dinners, and when massed in a large cut-glaas bowl they assume a dignity that {is foreign to these modest weeds when blooming neg- fected in a nearby field, says Elizabeth Pyewell in tho Philadelphia Press, Cucumber Sandwiches.—Cut the cucumbers Into thin slices, let them lie fin cold salted water for an hour, then place them in French dressing for half an hour, Cut sandwich bread in thin, round slices, spread lightly with mayonnaise, * then dip.'the slices of cucumber out of the dressing and arrange them on the pleces of bread, cover with a slice, spread also with mayonnaise, At ali the principal bakeries a special bread {a sold for this purpose, Clover Leaf Sanfwich.—Butter slices of bread and cut Into shape with a clover leaf cut pread lightly @ thin layer of cream cheose. Slice a radish in small round pieces, laying a plece on each scallop, Sandwich of Chicken.—Between layers of buttered bread place some cold dolled chicken which has previously been minced fine and seasoned with white sauce and a little French dressing. f Tomato Sandwich,—Cut the buttered bread tn thin round slices, put a slice easoned with a little mayonnaise dressing. Cover Rules for Sweeping. One cup cold dolled ham, chopped .N sweeping bedrooms the bed should | fine, one-half cup cream, three bemd- I first be dusted, then made and cov-| botied eggs, salt and pepper to taste, ered over with a large sweeping|Scald the cream, rub two cloth, Rugs should be swept and placed | eggs smooth with a little of the cream, over the clothes-line outdoors for thejadd to the cream in the farina doller air to freshen. Portieres shoud be un-| with the ham. Press the widtes of twe hooked from the rings, brushed andjeggs through a sieve, add to the mix | shaken outdoors, Muslin or Jace drap-|ture, and when thoroughly heated pet! erles at the windows should be iifted/on @ hot dish. Slice the remaining i and removed with the pole from thelover the ham and serve. | May Manton's Yokes ad sivevon are always in de- mand for girls’ for they, & ; Daily Fashions. Wafers.—One pint of cream, half a pound of flour, half a pound of sugar. sy E . “@ ane Gtir the cream into the flour by degrees until perfectly smooth; then beat in the, . cece} é , a ® of wearing om ued sugar and many bitter almonds pounded to a paste as will flavor it. If too’ E s . 5 sacs - % before the sg ‘Mick add a little more cream; the batter must be very thin. Heet the irons and . fe i ‘ proper bas done tis Grease them. with butter; bake @ light brown and roll them as goon us they are . i duty, Ilustrated taken out of the irons, : ug are some most ao- tee , ay 3 : ceptable model . \ which equally well, and which allow w cholee of various styles, The square eed "© fastened to the foundation of stone bulit with high parapets completely) work with fron brackets, To these urrounding the roof, #o there will be|stout poultry wire j¢ attached reaching no danger of falling off, To make the|to the desired height. s foot garden absolutely safe uprigits| Boxes with growing plants, or betior tes Girle’ Yokes—Pattern No, 6,097. = still, boxes filied with dirt in which the} ¢4, tity af material requlred for th jum size (eight years) te for any children can plant thelr own gardens, | gty feel vaedy @ 7. bl 18 “« yi “Out fare sot in the shadow of tho parapot|"’ Patterm pr cut in sikov for wirla of Cour, alx, elght, ten and twelve years. i Miuere, they wet the sun for part of the a (90h Pa i ie J ‘tho four-year-old son of G. BP. ‘Van ‘Tansel, of Tarrytown. de oe cond ine shattow, wide box How to Obtain These Patterns. yes { , 4 Y front stocp by [| , sure of sinuses i sects we ‘ i : , Sutprised his father while Gey were altting oa the front stocp by ian ie she yee thtared Ress Call or Send by Mail to the ot srw tt eh yn caer Evening World May Manton Fashion yn Moke oe tha robe Said be ganeetal Bureat, 21 West 23d St, New, York. ‘Phe simplest to aay wor + fend 10 Conts to Colm or Btamns for Pattern Ordered. and she showed tim the high hotel ¥ Wel " ih ose RARE ; ale a ot etn overt IMPORTANT—Weite your ste ad se ph, aod mS ; ng