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a large estate in Vermont, cottages once owned and lived in by  labourers, but bought and put in comfortable condition to be used as  overflow rooms for guests, in connection with the large family mansion  (once the picturesque village inn).    The art of making these straw awnings is not generally understood in  America. In the case to which we refer, one of the gardeners employed  on the estate, chanced to be an old Englishman who had woven the straw  window awnings for farm houses in his own country.    The straw awnings, with window-boxes planted with bright geraniums and  vines, make an inland cottage delightfully picturesque and are  practical, although by the sea the straw awnings might be destroyed by  high winds.          CHAPTER XXXI    TREATMENT OF A WOMAN'S DRESSING-ROOM      Every house, or flat, which is at all pretentious, should arrange a  Vanity Room for the use of guests, in which there are full-length  mirrors, a completely equipped dressing-table with every conceivable  article to assist a lady in making her toilet, slipper-chairs and  chairs to rest in, and a completely equipped lavatory adjoining.    The woman who takes her personal appearance seriously, just as any  artist takes her art (and when dressing is not an art it is not worth  discussion) can have her dressing-room so arranged with mirrors, black  walls and strong, cleverly reflected, electric lights, that she stands  out with a cleancut outline, like a cameo, the minutest detail of her  toilet disclosed. With such a dressing-room, it is quite impossible to  suffer at the hands of a careless maid, and one can use the black  walls as a background for vivid chair covers, sofa cushions and lamp  shades.    Off this dressing-room should be another, given over to clothes, with  closets equipped with hooks and shelves, glass cabinets for shoes and  slippers, and the
a large estate in Vermont, cottages once owned and lived in by  labourers, but bought and put in comfortable condition to be used as  overflow rooms for guests, in connection with the large family mansion  (once the picturesque village inn).    The art of making these straw awnings is not generally understood in  America. In the case to which we refer, one of the gardeners employed  on the estate, chanced to be an old Englishman who had woven the straw  window awnings for farm houses in his own country.    The straw awnings, with window-boxes planted with bright geraniums and  vines, make an inland cottage delightfully picturesque and are  practical, although by the sea the straw awnings might be destroyed by  high winds.          CHAPTER XXXI    TREATMENT OF A WOMAN'S DRESSING-ROOM      Every house, or flat, which is at all pretentious, should arrange a  Vanity Room for the use of guests, in which there are full-length  mirrors, a completely equipped dressing-table with every conceivable  article to assist a lady in making her toilet, slipper-chairs and  chairs to rest in, and a completely equipped lavatory adjoining.    The woman who takes her personal appearance seriously, just as any  artist takes her art (and when dressing is not an art it is not worth  discussion) can have her dressing-room so arranged with mirrors, black  walls and strong, cleverly reflected, electric lights, that she stands  out with a cleancut outline, like a cameo, the minutest detail of her  toilet disclosed. With such a dressing-room, it is quite impossible to  suffer at the hands of a careless maid, and one can use the black  walls as a background for vivid chair covers, sofa cushions and lamp  shades.    Off this dressing-room should be another, given over to clothes, with  closets equipped with hooks and shelves, glass cabinets for shoes and  slippers, and the
And they pressed sore upon the man, even Lot, and came near to break the door And all the congregation said, Amen, and praised the LORD 14 In the evening she went, and on the morrow she returned into the second house of the women, to the custody of Shaashgaz, the king's chamberlain, which kept the concubines: she came in unto the king no more, except the king delighted in her, and that she were called by name

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