Living on a Little
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Living on a Little, by Caroline French Benton
Author of A Little Cook Book for a Little Girl,
Margaret's Saturday Mornings, etc
Thanks are due the editor of Good Housekeeping for permission to reprint the greater part of this book from that magazine.
Mrs. Thorne laid down the letter she was reading and looked across the table to her husband, who, as he was industriously engaged in buttering a muffin, paid scant attention to her for the moment. Presently, however, as he became aware of something portentous in the air, he looked up and inquired:
My dear, you alarm me. What's the matter? Has the bank suspended and are you considering how best to break the news to me, or has Dolly eloped with the ice-man?
His wife did not relax her important expression as she replied, Dolly's engaged.
Engaged! Mr. Thorne assumed an overwhelming surprise. You don't say so! Now who in the world can she possibly be engaged to?
Mrs. Thorne regarded him with scorn.
Just as though you did not know perfectly well! Who could she possibly be engaged to but Fred Mason? I told you a month ago she was certain to be.
So you did, was the soothing reply, but I strive to please, and I thought from your manner that you hoped to astonish me with the news. So she's really and truly engaged. Well, I'm glad of it. Fred's a good fellow in spite of the fact that he has arranged to be a brother-in-law to me when he knows that I hate brothers-in-law; and Dolly's a great girl.
Caroline French Benton
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LIVING ON A LITTLE
CAROLINE FRENCH BENTON
Contents
At the Very Beginning—Dividing the Income
Saving for Staples—The Kitchen—Buying—Linen
Arranging the Meals—Cooking-Dresses—The Table—The Dinner
Soups and Meats
Vegetables, Salads, Desserts
Breakfast, Luncheon, Supper—Odds and Ends
The Emergency Closet—Winter Preserves—Cake
The Game of Menus
Two Dinner Parties
Reducing Expenses
Luncheons for a Little
In the Country
Midsummer Housekeeping—The End of the Holiday