StNicholas [serial] . H^m^ CONVENIENCE AND COMFORT YOU RE SURE TO LACKUNLESS YOU CARRY YOUR HOUSE ON YOUR BACK. But the tale of this project I really cant tellUntil the next timeWe take up this rhyme,And then you shall learn what befell. AS TO FAIRIES AND PIRATES (A little childs answer to the question, Do you believe in fairies?) BY J. WARREN MERRILL No, I dont believe in fairies, but I watch close when I passThrough the woods and all the meadows and the flowers and the if there should be fairies (and the old folks may not know,And it seems as if there must be) I should love to see
StNicholas [serial] . H^m^ CONVENIENCE AND COMFORT YOU RE SURE TO LACKUNLESS YOU CARRY YOUR HOUSE ON YOUR BACK. But the tale of this project I really cant tellUntil the next timeWe take up this rhyme,And then you shall learn what befell. AS TO FAIRIES AND PIRATES (A little childs answer to the question, Do you believe in fairies?) BY J. WARREN MERRILL No, I dont believe in fairies, but I watch close when I passThrough the woods and all the meadows and the flowers and the if there should be fairies (and the old folks may not know,And it seems as if there must be) I should love to see one so!And I dont believe in pirates—only sometimes in the night,When the house seems strange and silent, and there is nt any light,I creep down in the bedclothes and I feel a sort of thrill—?For grown folks might be mistaken and there may be pirates still. HINTS amp HELPS for MOTHER 99. Raiivy-I>\ts iitthe Nxtrseiry-FOURTEENTH PAPER BIRTHDAY PIES ORIGINATED BY ADELIA BELLE BEARD THE MAY-POLE PIE The foundations of most of the pies are thesame. First you must have a large, round, tinpan, about three inches deep; then a number ofsheets of white and colored tissue-paper. Cutseveral strips of the white paper five inches wideand as long as the width of the tissue-papersheet. Paste one edge of the paper inside the as you like. For the May-pole Pie cut strips ofapple-green tissue-paper, three and a half incheswide into fringe, and paste the top edge of thefringe just inside the top edge of the pan,allowing the fringe to hang down on the out-side. Then cut strips of olive-green paper, fourand a half inches wide, fold each strip andcut into a fringe of leaves. (A and B, Fig. 3.)The leaves should be almost two inches wide at
Size: 2354px × 1062px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookauthordodgemar, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1873