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Life, 1900-08-02 · page 19 of 20

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DENTISTS FAVOR IT. Order some “alub (elocktails” Sent Home To-day. You will then have on your own sideboard a better Cocktail than can be served ‘over any bar in the world, A cocktail is substantially a blend of different liquors, and all blends improve with age. The “Club Cocktatle” are made of the best of liquors ; made by actual weight ‘and measurement. No guesswork about them, Ask your husband at breakfast which he prefers Martini, . Holland Gin: Gin, Vermouth of York —and' then surprise him with one at his dinner. | For sale by all Fancy Grocers and Dealers. G. F. HEUBLEIN & BRO. 29 Broadway, N.Y. Martford, Conn. UNDAUNTED, Sympathette Friend; wox't You COME DOWN To LUNCH? SHALL I BRING ANYTHING UP FoR yout Seasick Sufferer ? THANKS. NO, 1 CAN DO ALL THAT FoR MYSELP. There is no other leader in straight Rye Whiskey, or ever can be, than It is a HAND-MADE SOUR MASH, and equalled by no other. Sixty-six years is a long time to hold the belt. : H. B. KIRK & CO., Sole Bottlers, WY. 'HERE can be no doubt that the curly- headed and scantily clad young gentle- man who poses so gracefully in the illustrated head-line of Puck was the responsible creator of the summer girl. Out of the stray newspaper paragraphs he composed and em- bodied the fascinating creature all men now know; he gave her a name, a certain tone of mind, a face and form that were easy to recog- nize and remember. She was at first, it is true, rather a questionable character, but her growth has been rapid and her place in litera- ture and art is now assured. She walks by the sea in fascinating bathing costumes; she reclines in hammocks, while adoring youths cluster about her feet. We all now know her in fiction, and the greater number of us have known her in fact. If we are young we still adore her; if we are middle-aged or old we look on her with cynical toleration. And she has come to stay. If Miss Daisy Miller had not died of Roman fever, she would have made an ideal summer girl; and if anyone wishes to know precisely what Puck's earlier creations were like, ho or she could not do better than read Henry- CHARLES DANA GIBSON DRAWS EXCLUSIVELY FOR LIFE. Comicbooks.com both youth and age now recognize the fact that | | and he would be | attempted to treat her with any lack of respect. SUMMER GIRL. (From the Philadelphia Record.) James’s once popular story. The description of poor Daisy might stand for a description of the first summer girls; she had the illusive prettiness which fades so soon, and which leaves nothing behind. But, thanks to the fact that she stepped out of the pages of Puck into those of Lirr, the summer girl is now a most dignified and impressively beautiful creature, a bold man indeed who In aword, the flippant, rather ill-bred maiden of fifteen years ago has now become a Gibson girl. It might have been said truthfully of the earlier summer girls, who appeared under the patrenage of the mischievous Puck, that they had no character at all worth speaking of. They were bold, flippant, heartless; they played with men’s hearts for a pastime, and were never engaged to less than three men at the same time These engagements ended with the season, and the poor boys were not only left heart-broken, but were also robbed of the engagement rings and presents they had given to their divinity. But this was all years ago, and Charles Dana Gibson would be shocked indeed if any of his girls attempted to act in this manner. She may still play with men’s | well; and any allusion to a Gibson girl should | be as readily understood in London society as hearts on occasions, but she does it with the calm repose of a highly bred young gentle- woman, not like a petticoated highwayman. Without the aid of Gibson’s skillful pencil and ready wit, the summer girl might never have passed beyond the earlier stages of her development. Puck's draughtsmen, however clever they might be in broad caricature, could never have produced the majestic creature we seo in tho pages of Lirz. This beautiful young gentlewoman has not only conquéred the New World, but has laid successful siege to the old as it would be in Philadelphia or New York. She has ever had an effect on her English cousins, and another variation of the summer girl is becoming known to the readers of Punch. But it is the actual American Gibson girl who has appeared at English races, who has ridden to hounds, who has danced at hunt balls, and who has attended a Queen’s drawing-room with ostrich feathers in her hair. But she is at her best and her loveliest when at home, and no true-hearted American could bear to see her pass into permanent exile, even if she won a coronet by so doing. j i