Newspapers / The New Bern Mirror … / March 2, 1973, edition 1 / Page 5
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Friday, March 2, 1973 THE NEW BERN MIRROR, NEW BERN, N. C. Page Five Buds AND Blossoms Br MAMIE MILLER “But we all, with open face beholding as in a glass the gloi^ of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory.”—II Cor. 3:18. An herb garden fascinates everyone. S^mingly everyone remembers something about herbs. An old timey remedy, a touch in food, or sweet scented ones for the bath. Most all old homes had the necessary ones for cooking and medicine. Chives are pretty in bloom. It is good for soiq>s or salad, and the flower is so pretty. It tastes Quality Shoe Repairing at Reasonable Prices IDEAL SHOE SHOP JOE HATEM, Prop. 903 Broad Street ME 7>501l PIANOS TRY BEFORE YOU BUY — - V-. $10.00 a Month Rents a New Wurlitzer Piano. Rent Applies to Purchase If You Buy. FULLER'S MUSIC HOUSE 2I6V2 Middle Street , New Bern, N. C. THE NEW I i^ir -^diagonal color portable from Sylvania Sylvsnl* poitible color TV model CC1154 with the Color Bri|ht lOO™ picture tube In the new 17''dla(onal size. Powerful GIbnIlsr 85>^'chiai> (more then 8b%tolld4tate)wlth Fetmt-Lock- th« sntl-goof color tuning system. Mstchlni stsnd optlonsi extn. Only •359“ Wyatt’s Electronics sir OEOROE NEW BERN MIRROR MORSELS like an onion. Sage is an old stand by. The leaves are whitish and thick, very outstanding in a border, and the flowers are blue. It is used for seasoning meats, and as a medicine for infection. Catnip is pretty in bloom, and is used for upset stomach. A tea is made from the leaves. Oregano is a plant that grows two feet high, and has thick, green, hairy leaves. The lavender-pink flowers are vary pretty. Italian dishes have a lot of it, from the dried leaves. It is also used in medicine. Rosemary is a hardy evergreen that grows three feet high. It has pale blue spike flowers. It is used in medicine, food, and perfumes. Balm grows two feet high, with whitish bloom and a lemon flavor. You may make a tea for illness, and bees love it. Herb seasoning makes coddng an art. They add so much flavor to meats, cakes and tea. In our grandmotoer’s day we depended on herbs as the prime medicine. We turn to the writings of Percy B. Shelley for this week’s Buds and Blossoms poem. Share with us Love’s Philosophy. The fountains mingle with the river. And the rivers with the ocean; The winds of heaven mix forever. With a sweet emotion; Nothing in the world is single; All ttongs by a law divine In one another’s being mingle. Why not I wito thine? See! the mountains kiss high heaven, And the waves clasp one another; No sister flower would be forgiven Have a purpose in life, and having it, throw into your work such strength of mind and muscle as God has given you.— Carlyle. At twenty, the will reigns; at thirty, the wit; at forty, the Judgment; afterward, proportion of character.— Grattan. With the wind of tribulation, God separates, in the floor of the sold, the wheat from the Chaff.—Molinos. All false practices and af fectations of knowledge are more odious than any want or defect of knowledge can be.— Sprat. The business that considers itself inunune to the necessity of advertising sooner or later finds itself immune to business.— Derby Brown. One of the things that is wrong with America is that everybody who has done anything at all in his own field is expected to be an authority on every subject under the sun.—Elmer Davis. There cannot live a more unhappy creature than an ill- natured old man, who is neither capable of receiving pleasures, nor sensible of conferring them on others.—Sir William Temple. If it disdained its brother; And the sunlight clasps the earth. And the moonbeams kiss the sea: What are all these kissings worth, If thou kiss not me? The good thin^ of life are not to be had singly, but come to us with a mixture; like a school boy’s holiday wito a task affixed to the tall of it.—Charles Lamb. Custom forms us all; our thoughts, our morals, our most fixedf belief, are consequences of the place of our birth.—Aaron Hill. Antiquity is enjoyed not by the ancients who lived in the infancy of things, but by us who live in their maturity.—Colton. God smnetime washes the eyes of hia children with tears that they read aright hia providence and Hia com mandments.—Cuyler. The brightest crowns that are worn in heaven have been tried, and smelted, and polished, and glorified through the Furnace of Tribulation.—E. H. Chapin. All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women in it merely players. Ihey have their etdto and their entrances; and one man in his time plays many parts.—Shakespeare. There are only two powers in the world, the Sword and the Pen; and in the end the former is always conquered by the latter.—Napoleon. Coiiat ^uneiaC cJiorm,, (Jna. “The Home of Dignified and Friendly Service” PHONE es7-si8t aaot NEUSE BLVD. P. O. BOX ES2S NEW BERN. N. C. 28860. BALANCING & VULCANIZING — TIRE TRUING FOR CARS, TRUCKS & TRACTORS. TRAINED TECHNICIANS. GUARANTEED WORK. HIGHWAY 70 - JUST WEST OF NEW BERN DUU. 637-6B30 Indispensables! Town shoes. The kind of shoes you want when comfort is as important as style. Comfort that lets you walk everywhere in total ease. Styles that are uncomplicated, with lady-like self- assurance. By Selhy, of course. Midtown DOWNTOWN NEW BERN CENTER
The New Bern Mirror (New Bern, N.C.)
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March 2, 1973, edition 1
5
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