June 30. 1987 THE NEW BERN MIRROR, NEW BERN, N. C. Page Three 1; Ik Buds AND Blossoms MAMIE MILLER "Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child, he shall not enter there in."—Mark 10:15. Daylilies have been beauti ful this year. They come in glamorous varieties. You can purchase them cheaper by walUng until after blooming season. Shades of deep gold and shades of pink have been exceedingly good this season. BEASLEY-K >Moc£a/ti- MtUMMS - MMTOM "SfRVKf-SAVINGS" *310 Bread Street—637-2131" Swlt ss TILE AND FLOOR COVERING le Ce scon, JRe Sometimes cannas are in fested with worms. You may kill this leaf roller by spraying every two weeks with Mal- athlon. Fertilize all camellias and azaleas. Don’t do this after the middle of July because they may get cold hurt. As soon as running roses finish blooming, prune them. Use spray for mildews or black spot on them. Put out cuttings of box wood and chrysanthemums. They make better plants. Put out second planting of asters, ce- losia, petunia, snaps, zinnia and marigold. This week’s Buds and Blos soms poem, from the pen of John Bennett, is titled "In A Rose Garden." A hundred years from now, dear heart. We shall not care at all. It will not matter then a whit. The honey or the gall. The summer days that we have known Will all forgotten be and flown; The garden will be overgrown Where now the roses fall. A hundred years from now, dear heart, We shall not mind the pain; Chick's Camera Center J "Where Photography ■ Is a Profession." | 706 PROFESSIONAL DRIVE | DIAL 637-3634 I THE BANK OF NEW BERN 313 Pollock St. Now Bom, N. C. "'Your Home-Owned Bank" ORGANIltO rttr MIRROR MORSELS One taper lights a thousand, yet shines as it has shone; and the humblest light may kindle a brighter than its own. — Hezekiah Butterworth. All who joy would win must share it. Happiness was born a twin.—Byron. He that rlseth late must trod all day, and shall scarce overtake his business at night.—Benjamin Franklin. To secure a contented spirit, measure your desires by your fortune, and not your fortune by your desires.—Jeremy Tay lor. The throbbing crimson tide of life Will not have left a stain. The song we sing together, dear. The dream we dream togeth er here, Will mean no more than means a tear Amid a summer rain. A hundred years from now, dear heart. The grief will all be o’er; The sea of care will surge in vain Upon a careless shore. These glasses we turn down today Here at theparUngof theway, We shall be wineless then as they. And shall not mind it more. A hundred years from now, dear heart; We’ll neither know nor care What came of all Ufe’s bitter ness. Or followed love’s despair. Then fill the glasses up again. And kiss me throu^ the rose- leaf rain; We’ll build one castle more in Spain, And dream one more dream there. Don't Got Hot Under the Collar at the Weather AAan . . . Ride as Cool as a Cucumber You Can Do It with an A.R.R. Air Conditionor Nationwido 12 Moe. Warranty PAUL'S KINSTON HIGHWAY Dial ME 7-4306 Floyd Paul, Sr. Things at the worst will cease, or else climb upward to what they were before.— Shakespeare. No heart is empty of the hu mor of curiosity, the beggar being as attentive in his sta tion to an Improvement of knowledge as the prince.— Osborn. The chief pleasure of eating does not consist in costly seasoning or exquisite flavor, but In yourself. Seek you for sauce In sweating.--Horace. The most original modern authors are not so because they advance what is new, but simply because they knowhow to put what they have to say as If It had never been said before.—Goethe. Circumstances form the character; but, like petrifying matters, they harden while they form.—Landor. Next In importance to free dom and justice is popular education, without which neither justice nor freedom can be permanently maintained.— Garfield. If we take Uie good we find, asking no questions, we shall have heaping measures. The great gifts are not got by analysis. Everything good is on the highway.—Emerson. As fate is Inexorable, and not to be moved either with tears or reproaches, an ex cess of sorrow Is as foolish as profuse laughter; while, on the other hand, not to mourn at all is insensibility.—Seneca. Truaf Yourtalf to the Best Steak Sandwich In Town at The Parkway SALE! Rubbermaid Safti-Grip* Bathtub Mats Buy now and save on the bathtub mat that helps pre vent slips and falls. Up to a thousand suction cups grip tub surface. 'Ibxtured top for safety and comfort. On sale now through Augus^^^O, 1967. 14"x 221/a" Bathtub Mat, Reg. $1.98 Now $1.66 14" X 253/4" Bathtub Mat, Reg. $2.49 Now $1.99 16"X 28" Bathtub Mat, Reg. $2.98 .Now $2.33 18" x 30" Bathtub Mat, Reg. $3.49 Now $2.66 18" X 36" Bathtub Mat, Reg. $3.98 Now $2.99 221/4" X 221/4" Shower Mat, Reg. $2.98.. .Now $2.33 Colors: Subscribe to the STIU $ 2.50 A YEAR