FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   >>  
surely please the dolls. "Even in the parlor we will not have a single chair with plush or velvet on it, for, Uncle John says, such furniture collects and holds germs. The plan for the kitchen is a beauty. Everything is white except the stove. There is a nice little table, and a cupboard, where the pans and dishes are to be kept. The table is covered with zinc, and the floor is covered with oil-cloth, so that it will be easy to keep it clean. A shelf, on which are fastened hooks for spoons and forks, is near the sink. "The windows will have white muslin sash curtains. Mother says it is just the kitchen to delight the heart of a neat little cook, with 'a place for everything, and everything in its place.' "Look at the cloth-covered broom we are going to use for sweeping, no dust and no feather-dusters in this play-house. "We can put the well here, this is near the house and on a hill above the barn and chicken houses. We can put a little gasoline engine in, to pump water into the bathroom and kitchen. "We will plant some roses in the yard. "Well, Stuart, we have worked hard on Mary's doll-house, and, now that it is finished, I am sure Uncle John will take us on the promised trip." "I showed the house to Uncle John to-day, Jack, and he said he wished that some of the 'grown-ups' houses were as carefully planned for sunshine and health as Mary's doll house." QUESTIONS 1. Why did Jack and Stuart build a sleeping porch to the doll house? 2. Why did they put the house on a little hill? Why did they put the barns and out-houses at the foot of the hill? 3. Where did they place the well? 4. Why did they use a cloth-covered broom for sweeping? 5. Would this be a good way for grown-ups to build their houses? [Illustration] A NEW STORY OF THE LION AND THE MOUSE A long while ago, so the story goes, there was a time when the Lion, King of Beasts, had a little mouse at his mercy. The Lion was about to crush the mouse with his paw. The little mouse begged for his life, and the great King of Beasts spared him. Not a great while after that day the Lion was caught in a net. He could not get out, and howled with rage. The little mouse heard him, and ran to help his old-time friend. The great King of Beasts did not think the little mouse could help him. But the mouse gnawed the cords
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   >>  



Top keywords:
covered
 

houses

 

kitchen

 

Beasts

 

sweeping

 

Stuart

 
wished
 

sleeping

 

planned


sunshine
 

health

 

QUESTIONS

 

carefully

 

caught

 
begged
 

spared

 

howled

 
gnawed

friend

 

Illustration

 

gasoline

 

dishes

 
cupboard
 

spoons

 

fastened

 

single

 
parlor

surely

 
velvet
 
beauty
 

Everything

 

furniture

 

collects

 

windows

 

muslin

 

bathroom


engine

 

worked

 

promised

 
finished
 
chicken
 

delight

 

curtains

 

Mother

 
dusters

feather

 

showed