86 Woodcraft Bfanual for Girls My Vacation Make booklets with the pages entitled " My earliest photo- graph, "My latest picture," "Who went with me," "How we went," "Where we went," "Where we lived," "Some people we met," "An accident," "How it turned out," "Our happiest moments," "A near tragedy," "Finis," etc. Give each girl an old magazine, a pair of scissors and paste and she is to cut illustrations for the pages of her booklet from the magazine and can make some very amusing combinations, adding poetry if she is clever. NamM by Topics " What names suggest birds? " Drake, Partridge, Hawk, etc. " What names are part of a house? " Beam, (^urett, Lodte, Key, Hall, etc. " What names are part of the body? " Hand, Foote, Hart, etc. " What names are flowers, shrubs, or grains? " Lily, Rote, Cotton, Marguerite, Rice, Berry, etc. "What names suggest occupatimis? Miller, Goldsmith, Butler, Shepherd, Cook, etc. "What names suggest geographical formations?" Dale, Beach, Ifill, Brooks, Stone, etc. Fortune Requiring two sets of numbered cards, the players are given these cards of one set only until all are distributed. The other set of cards, corresponding in number to those given out, are played face down on the central table (or 6oor if desired). Each pliyer in turn goes to this set, places her hand upon the topmost cards and says, "The girl who has the card corresponding to this is generous, kind, and true, though perhaps too quick of temper. She will be a settlement woricer." Or, perhaps, she will say something humorous, or impossible. She then turns the card over, holds it up, ant: rinds the owner of the corresponding card. Mudi fun may be had if the description given was exactly opposite of the truth. The game continues by having the owner of the last card tell some one's character or fortune. Sloping The playws are seated in a circle. One of them begins by laying: "I went to the grocery this morning and boi^t mmt"
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