19591 6ato(i| mis.r ers- nuiiyl and! Willi s de-| aiidl Lel’sl nutej thisp r fori lake.'^l Beatl pricel were I 'Oiildl next I Friday, September 4, 1959 THE NEW BERN MIRROR, NEW BERN. N. C. Page Three of Buds AND Blossoms By MAMMEMIUER “He did not leave himself with out witness, for he did good and gave you from heaven rain and fruitful seasons satisfying your hearts with food and gladness.”— Acts 14:17. The bugle weed or Lycopus Vir- ginicus, or Gipsy wort is an herb. It is used as a tonic and astringent. Candy tuft is an herb. It is an an nual and blooms in June and July. In ancient times it was used to, cure gout and rheumatism. Some times now it is used for bronchial irritations and asthma. Night-shade is blooming everywhere. It is from the potato family. It is also called thorn-apple, stink weed and Jem- son weed. The leaves and seed are used for medicine. In some sections of the State it is grown as a money crop. The yellow goldenrod is bloom ing along woodsides and fields. It is an herb, and the root is used for medical purposes. It is used sometimes in place of sarsaparilla. DONn* SETTLE FOR LESS THAN THE BEST Robertson's Welding Service 1107 N. Pasteur Street Dial ME 7-6909 Night; ME 7-3820 Evinrude Outboard Motors MFC & Cruisers, Inc., Boats Carolina Trailers Boat Supplies Kimbrells Outboard Service 1305 Pembroke Road ME 7-3785 Where Quality and Experience Save You Hours of Boating Pleasure Plan yoim garden to bloom all season. Beginning in the spring when most all danger of heavy frost is over you may have plenty of goldenrod or forsythia. with the gay colored tulips and dusty Mil ler. Scatter in your border hycianth and the blue dwarf phlox, colum bine and iris. As the weather grows warmer, we have the beautiful pe onies, lupine and Morten’s pinks and daisies. Big masses of blooms come from the tall phlox and hibiscus, and the multi-colored day lilies. All the dif ferent types of lilies come into bloom as the watermelon ripens, along with the many colors of crepe myrtle. With a planting of chrysanthe mums within your border you may have a complete blooming season of the above plants from the be ginning of spring until frost. These plants will come up each year and multiply. Plant evergreens for your back grounds, and enjoy a year of color and leisure in a garden easy to keep. We love to think of old fashioned things we remember, and always love the spot where we quenched our thirst. The Old Oaken Bucket How dear to my heart are the scenes of my childhood. When fond recollections presents them to view; The orchard, the meadow, the deep- tangled Wildwood, And every loved spot which my infancy knew. The wide-spreading pond and the mill that stood by it. The bridge and the rock where the cartaract fell, The cot of my father, the dairy house near it. And e’en the rude bucket that hung in the well. The moss covered bucket I hailed as a treasure. For often at noon, when returned from the field, I found it a source of an exquisite pleasure. The purest and sweetest that nature can yield! How ardent I seized it, with hands that were glowing. And quick to the white-pebbled bottom it fell; Then soon, with the emblems of Check-Up on Your Medicine Chest! Throw-out old drugs, nevtr use another person's medicine, and let us help you make a list of "needs" for emergencies, and to protect your family's health. And remember, your pre* scription is carefully and quickly filled. Joe Anderson Drug Store ME 7-4201 8 A.M.-9 P.M. on Weekdays ... 2 P.M.-9 P.M. Sundays Spencer Corsets & Brassieres Individually Designed "CAN ARRANGE EASY TERMS" MRS. JULIA BOYD MULLEN Rt. 4, New Bern, Box 264 — Dial ME 7-6508 . truth overflowing. And dripping with coolness, it rose from the well. How sweet from the green, mossy brim to receive it. As poised on the curb, it inclined to my lips! Not a full, blushing goblet could tempt me to leave it, Tho’ filled with the nectar that Jupiter sips. . And now, far removed from the loved habitation. The tear of regret will intrusive ly swell, As fancy reverts to my father’s plantation. And sighs for the bucket that hung in tlie well. —Samuel Wadsworth REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS M, H. Askew and wife, Sarah C. Askew, to Milton H. Askew, Jr., property at Pollock and Norwood streets. Charles M. Hines and wife, Isabel R, Hines, to Hoyt A. Minges, prop erty in No. 8 township. Clifford L. Arthur and wife, Ar- dith A. Arthur, to William L. Spill man and wife, Mary L. Spillman, property in No. 5 township. C. J. Wynne and wife, Jessie Dennis Wynne, to B. H. Oates, property in No. 6 township. I. F. Holton and wife, Elsie Marie Holton, to Co-operative Livestock Market Association, property in No. 8 township. Sterling W. Ketner and wife, Beatrice E. Ketner, et al, to James Arlen Muse and wife, Kathleen Bal lard Muse, property in No. 6 town ship. Julian K. Warren, Jr., and wife, Mary B. Warren, to C. C. Culpepper and wife, Susan Culpepper, proper ty in No. 8 township. Louis Elden and wife, Ethel Ko- lodny Elden, to Spiro G. Predaris and wife, Mary P, Predaris, proper ty on Clark avenue. W. B. R. Guion and wife, Eliza beth Knowles Guion, to J. Thomas Bennett and wife, Virginia Lee Bennett, property in No. 8 town ship. W. S. Smith and wife. Merle Morris Smith, to Bill Cleve, prop erty in No. 2 township. H. G. Cahoon and wife, Eva Gray It is increasingly evident here that New Bern parents consider it wise to send their small fry to kindergarten before their entrance into the public school system. Those mothers and fathers who were slow in registering children for the various local kindergartens this year learned to their dismay that most classes were already completely filled. Few of us who came along in past generations received pre school training of this sort, and some will say that it isn’t neces sary. Supporting their contention is the fact that a great many tots MASONIC Starting Sunday MASONIC Sun. thru Thurs. AWONDERFUL nCTUREI Th$ laughtw... the loving... the happy living oj a wonderful guy! Danny Kaye and lovely Tues day Weld portray father and daughter in "The Five Pennies," Paramount's Technicolor jazz-fest drama, due Sunday at the Mason ic Theatre. Barbara Bell Geddes, Louis Armstrong, Harry Guar- ino are also starred in- the stirring film. in the old days seemed to have done quite well without it. However, there’s no denying that children who are inclined to be timid or uncertain experience something of a shock when they find themselves in the first grade without prior conditioning. Adjust ment isn’t easy. Just as much out of place, per haps, is the child without kinder garten training who isn’t timid at all but aggressive and domineer ing. He too has some adjustment to do, and getting him down to earth so that he dosen’t disrupt other first graders in his class is a burden that no overworked teach er relishes. Although the average looks upon a kindergarten as a place where children can be regularly entertain ed, that is hardly the whole story. There is instructive entertainment, of course, but more important is the discipline that a child learns. Much as parents hate to admit it, outsiders usually do a more ef fective job than mothers and fath ers in counteracting the spoiling that was done during toddling years. And until a child becomes at least half way aware. that he can’t do as he pleases in the world, the first and most important lesson of his life awaits him. Call us for free estimates on local and long distance mov ing. W. W. Ormond ME 7-5470 Cahoon, to Robert Eugene Cahoon and wife, Carolyn ’Willis Cahoon, property in Grantham Homesites. L. R. Sutton and wife, Lillie Sut ton, to John A. Kite and wife, Car rie Lee Kite, property in Vance- boro. R. R. Rivenbark and wife, Marie B. Rivenbark, to Marine Trading Corp., property at the intersection of Avenue A and ’Windley street. Leander Foy and wife, Maggie (Margaret) Foy, to Dainty Maid Bakery, Inc., property in No. 7 township. DANNY AND SATCHMO DaiYSRINS TSRRIFIC NEW S0N3S... SWINGIN' NEW EXCITEMENT INTO FA VORITE OLD'STANDARDS! HMTt ece teeci BMOllR-MlIIOMliO^CIIOSSY*™? M’llWiirSiM'JftllRSwfS-wS* SvtiniN Bf M kb »I m t«is WE LEND MONEY $25 to $200 CRAVEN LOAN CO. 305 Pollock St. COASTAL CAB ME 7-6131 Service on All Makes of Electrical Appliances Eubanks Refrigeration Service ME 7-2571 Vernon Dixon Offers Top Products and Superior Service to Motorists DROP BY FOR A VISIT Craven Purol Middle & Johnson ME 7-9726 For Weddings, Showers, and Other Special Occasions, Your Cake Problem Is Solved at CRAVEN BAKERY 325 South Front ME 7-3651 NEXT TO BRADDY'S LAUNDRY

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