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The Corner House Girls on a Tour

by Grace Brooks Hill

Other authors: R. Emmett Owen (Illustrator)

Series: Corner House Girls (6)

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There was a deal of bustle and a twittering like an eager flock of sparrows in the big kitchen of the old Corner House, which stood facing Main Street in Milton, but with its long side and rear yard and garden running far back on Willow Street. The four Kenway girls had the room all to themselves at this early hour on Saturday morning, for Mrs. MacCall and Aunt Sarah Maltby had not yet come downstairs, while Linda, the maid, had deserted the kitchen and pantry altogether for the time being. Ruth, the eldest and most sedate of the sisters, was filling sandwiches at the dresser-and such a variety as there was of them! Chicken, with mayonnaise and a lettuce leaf; pink ham cut thin and decorated with little golden dabs of mustard; peanut butter sandwiches; nut and cheese sandwiches, the filling nestling in a salad leaf, too; tuna fish, with narrow slices of red, red Spanish peppers decorating it; and of course sardines, carefully split and laid between soda crackers. What picnic lunch would be complete without sardines?… (more)
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Grace Brooks Hillprimary authorall editionscalculated
Owen, R. EmmettIllustratorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed

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There was a deal of bustle and a twittering like an eager flock of sparrows in the big kitchen of the old Corner House, which stood facing Main Street in Milton, but with its long side and rear yard and garden running far back on Willow Street. The four Kenway girls had the room all to themselves at this early hour on Saturday morning, for Mrs. MacCall and Aunt Sarah Maltby had not yet come downstairs, while Linda, the maid, had deserted the kitchen and pantry altogether for the time being. Ruth, the eldest and most sedate of the sisters, was filling sandwiches at the dresser-and such a variety as there was of them! Chicken, with mayonnaise and a lettuce leaf; pink ham cut thin and decorated with little golden dabs of mustard; peanut butter sandwiches; nut and cheese sandwiches, the filling nestling in a salad leaf, too; tuna fish, with narrow slices of red, red Spanish peppers decorating it; and of course sardines, carefully split and laid between soda crackers. What picnic lunch would be complete without sardines?

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Book description
The story of where the Corner House Girls went on tour, what they saw, and what they found.

Available online at Project Gutenberg:
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/36251...
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