HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1924-10-22, Page 6GREEN TEA
The exquisite flavor indicates the
perfect blending of choice teas.
Asti for a package today'.
FREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST, "SAUWA," TORONTO
"AN APPLE A `DAY—" oranges, Pare and dice apples. -Re-
Apples are a rood necessity—nota move peelingof oranges and put
luxury, and if we consume even M
than the proverbial one each day
keep the doctor away, we are o
eating for better health,
The ever popular baked apples as
ore WATCH YOUR STEPS:
t
to
p
es,
d
St
en
t
r
light. Arrange apples on top sliced,
sprinkle with powdered sugar and
cinnamon and bake half an hour.
Grated Apple Pudding.—7 apples,
% cup sugar, 1 dozen lady fingers, 7
eggs, r,4 cup chopped almonds. Bea
yolks of eggs with sugar until ver
light, adding the crumbled lady fi
gers, grated apples and grated rin
of a lemon. Then fold in the beaten
whites and sprinkle top with the al
mends. Bake three-quarters of an
hour, Always use as many eggs as
apples. Serve with whipped cream.
Steamed Apple Suet Pudding.—rt
cup ground suet, 1 eup sugar, 1 egg, 1
cup sour milk, 1 cup dried apples, 1
tsp. baking soda dissolved in 1 tbsp.
hot water, Use any other candied or
dried fruit you wish. 3 tsp. cinnamon
and cloves, graham flour to make stiff
batter, Steam three hours.
Apple Fritters. --Slice apples and
dip into batter made of two table-
spoonfuls of sour milk, two table-
spoonfuls of sugar and half egg yolk
and pinch of soda. Add flour to make
a batter a trifle stiffer than pancake.
batter. Bake in hot deep fat.
Apple Cream Tarts -2 tbep, sifted
flour, 4 tbsp. confectioners' sugar, 1
large tbsp. butter, 1 cup rich milk,
Rub flour, sugar and butter to a ie'l>�i� too
smpoth paste, add milk, heat slowly
ore
to
my
dessert is a}ways inviting, but the
are any number of ways to entice
family to eat more apples. Here a
sortie which perhaps may be new
you;
Delicious Apple Filling for Cake.
2 medium apples, 1 lemon, 2-3 cu
sugar, 1 egg. Pare and core app!
and •grate. Add juice of lemon an
grated rind, the sugar and egg. S
over fire until jellied. Spread whe
Apple Coffee Cake. ---1 eup yeas
1 egg, 2 tbsp. brown sugar, salt, flou
to make thin batter, Let raise unt
through meat grinder, and cut oranges
into small pieces. Cook for one hour,
adding nuts five minutes Before remov-
ing from the fire.
e How many times one needlessly
re goes back and forth while performing
the daily tasks. Not long ago—before
I realized I was using my legs instead
of my bead while I worked—when I
tidied and eleaned each room I made a
separate trip to the hall with a boy's
cap left on the couch, to' the bathroom
with a bottle of salve found on the
mantel, to the basement with the old,,
newspapers, and to the same rooms'
I again and again with other articles
out of their places.
Now I carry a large basket when I_
go to the first room to be straightened w
or cleaned. Into it go the small things, J
belonging elsewhere, and wizen the' w
room is in order I carry the basket to't
the next room, leaving anything be -I
t longing there and placing it in the. a
Y articles to be taken elsewhere. By the:
dtime I have returned to the first room' fi
after making the one round of all the'h
rooms, the basket is empty and I have
- been spared the twenty or thirty go-!
ings and comings that the task would` s
otherwise have required.—Mrs. F. E. h
0
ti
.Dewberry Mary
By JAMES RAVIiINSCROFT.
PART I. "I'm going to' pick dewberries," she
When Jeff Riddle was twenty-one answered lsim, „
andwent I want to go with you, Amory, Jeff
off a distance of three spun-
;said,
ties from the old bane to hire out, hot +sCome on,'" Mary said, "but I'll
was not a bit handsomer than be was make ou do all the ickin ."
when he come back two yeare later{ r y P
and bpught forty acres near his pap's• From that mornin'dewberries was
place and started in farnrin' for him,rJoff { favorite fruit, They picked a
self And.keepin' bach; and Mary Mac -1 horn -gallon pail full, and he walked
Morrow was not a bit punier than, then with Mary, earryin'ft; and from
then on he hung areund the 11mae
she was when be went away, though'; Morrow place like he had no home,
she had grown a little taller and had,and he eould not think of anything but
filled out considerably. Mar Every hill of corn he planted,
But somehow the two years made all' every potato he dripped and !tic -
the difference in the world to them. ered, every rail he split—everything, it
When ,Teff went away, Mary Mac- was done for Mary.
Morrow was just out of shoe -top Now, Mary's pap—"Doe Mac," they
dresses, and was so shy and bashful called'him, because he was a horse doe -
that she would blush clean down'into tor,—had no reputation at all with
the neck of her dress if a feller ;poke pious folks, They said he was sacri-
to her. legions. One spring there was a flood
But that was back in my ownithat washed away all the fences on a
sparkle days, when"a gal's face anti low part of his farm, and Doc said he
the neck of her dress was not so far would get even with the Lord for dein'
apart as they are now. Think of a gal) him thataway, so he built all the
these days blushin from her•face tolfences back on Sunday. Another time
her nearest clothed The blush would there was a heavy hail in July, and
have to get its second wind to go that when Doe saw it was beatin'.his corn
distance. l and wheat all to pieces
As Jeff had last seen Mary, before Ui eo the was so and
leavin', she was just an ordinary that he went out into yard and
chunk of a gal with brown hair and stood there bareheaded, at
the
I ,
I
Ai
mn t
h
and n hollerin' g Y e s u
bi
, the sky:
brown eyes,� UY
g. and a few. freckles "Peck away, now, just peck away!
sprinkled about over her face, and 'she' I ain't afra' "
was not purty and she was not ugly; nd of you! wile the big
g erIhail stones spatted him in the face
but the first time he saw her after! and bounced off of his forehead,
he was back he had a feelin' that give Of course, Doc was a mighty misery
him a start, like somebody had called, to Mary and her mother; and on ac -
him sharp and quick when he was' count of his clout's they Lever went to
not expeetin' it + meetin' and 'did not belong, to any
He met Mary' in the road a little • church. But Jeff soon found out that
ay from her home. It was early in i Marystuck u for her pap.
une. She was welkin' and he was, ,,e's good to me and Ma, anyhow,"
alktn , He just stopped square in his she broke out to him one day, when
racks right in front of her,
"Good mornin', Jeff," Mary said. "I she was worked up about something
in't seen you for a long time s 1 some girl had told her when she had
She held out herrhand to shake. Her l been to town to get the newspaper and.
nShes were slim and white, Her,
the letters. 'You never see us workin'
rid on black hand teand she round the place, feedin' the stock and
made her fingers look all the sliwmcr' choppin' wood and breakin' our backs
amen-
nd whiter. Her hand squeezed up, tionrn'whoo havee wmighty Ipiousd hus-
oft and warm in his, and it come to bands."
im like a flash that he was gazin'I But Doe's reputation was not
n the purtiest thing, to him, in alit troublin' Jeff. Anybody any kin to
,cation, i Mary was plenty good enough for him.
Jeff was mystified at the way she And then right in the midst of his
ad changed. He saw that she had good luck, just when him and Mary
of only got taller, but she was trim` was thinkin' of breakin` the news to
nd round, and her lips were red, and her folks, what do you reckon hap-
he
eyebrows was high and bowed, and pened? Doc jined the church! That
r ears was small, and her neck was ought not have caused Jeff any
11 and round and white as milk, and trouble, but it did.
r voice was as sweet as the songs A preacher named -Maltby, from
a whole flock of medder larks in Baltimore, I think he was, come to
ring. preach a week at the association camp
Jeff told me all this, more than once; meetin' as they called it, and in a few
I'm tryin' to tell it just as I heard it days everybody was talidn' so about
from him.
"Where are you goin', Mary " Jag what a great and powerful exhorter
asked her, and something must have he was that Doc sneaked off one night
happened to his voice all of a sudden, without sayin' anything to anybody
about it and went to hear hi
A COMFORTABLE "SLEEPING c
GARMENT."h
fu
he
he
of
sp
Intl then bring to a boil, stirring the
p�bile. Pare and core and quarter one
large apple. Bake until very' tender
and rub through the sieve. Beat into
cream filling and fill tart shells. Add
whipped cream.
Apple Muffins—% cup sugar, 1 egg,
1 cup milk, 1 cup thinly sliced apples,
1 pint flour, ee tsp. salt, 2 taps, baking
Powder, ae cup butter. Bake in muf-
fin pane in quick oven.
Apple Relish -3 lbs. apples, 3 lbs.
sugar, 1 lb. raisins, 1 ib, pecans, 2
Dusty hands are
germ -carriers
verywhe e, every day, the hartde
ee touching things covered with
net.
ouptless times those dust -laden
ends tettels the face and the lips
tri the course of a day.
pOnsider—dust is a eource of tit-
lection and danger.
Lifebuoy Protects
Take no chances — cleanse your
hands frequently with the rich,
dreamy lather of Lifebuoy. Life-
buoy contains a wonderful health
ngredlent Which goes deep down
nto he Pores of the skin, purify-
ing their of anyforking infection.
g g u action.
The. clean, antiseptic odour ven-
ishee in a few seconds, but the
protection of Lifebuoy remains,
HEALTH SOAP
Moro than Soap - a health habit
1,18VaR BROTHERS" UNITED
TORONTO ib•h-08
ISSUE No. 42—'24.
4911. This is a good model for cold
days, and especially for little ones who
"slip" their bed covering. Donnet or
outing flannel, crepe, cambric or long
cloth may be need for this design.
The Pattern is cut in 6 Sizes: 2, 4,
6, 8, 10 and 12 years. A 6 -year size
requires 2% yards of 86 -inch material.
Pattern mailed to any address on
receipt of 20c in silver, by the Wilson
Publishing Co., 78 West Adelaide St.,
Toronto.
Send 15e in silver for our up-to-date
all and Winter 1924-1925 Book of
p sshtens.
WHAT CAN I DO?
for she looked at him u' k ' m'
then looked down. time I was laid up with a spell of
ague. But he must have been a great
preacher.
At the end of the sermon that night
the preacher called on all who felt
convicted of their sins to rise and
confess it. And Doc got up. It was
like techin' off a stick of dynamite in
a rock quarry. The meetin' blowed u
q ie , andI never heard him, because at the
becomes work and the interest in it
soon departs.—Mrs, L. M. D.
WAYS TO USE CABBAGE.
Red cabbage is very adaptable to
salad. To one small head, use one
onion, two small carrots, one green
pepper. Put the onion and carrots
through a food chopper together with
the green pepper. Shred the cabbage
and mix all with a salad dressing
made of half cup of cream, half cup
of vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of mus-
tard, two tablespoonfuls al hot water,
one teaspoonful of salt.
Stuffed Cabbage.—Select a medium-
sized head of cabbage and wash thor-
oughly. Separate the leaves and re-
move the centre. Fasten into shape or
with joy. The vilest sinner had re-
turned.
Then Jeff's troubles begun right
away. Doc was no different from
what I have noticed lots of people are
when they first :get religion;. he got it
so hard he could make no allowance
at all for pore, weak, sinful mortals,
and was a stickler for inakin' every-
body toe the scratch. The very next
Sunday mornin' when Jeff went to see
Mary, as usual, Doc took him out to
the barn and told hi
tie in a piece of cheesecloth and steamgodly man, lost In sin ane lust AS her
or simmer until tender. Fill the centre father, his duty to his Maker would
was an un -
with cooked hamburg balls and sur- not let him allow Mary to be in such
Found with tomato Bailee. company. Doc told Jeff he woul" have
to repent of his sins.
I believe we should all stud our NOMOGRAMS• Jeff` said he Almost got mad at that. be
children, watch closely and observe Tight shoes and worry are the two. But he loved Mary too much to'get ter
the things they are particularly Inter- worst foes to a woman's' beauty, mad at anybody, especially her pap,' is
sated in or show a special talent for, Overcasting can be done by tyro so he told Doc he was not a' ' ' to d b
THE IE CENTRE OF
INTEREST
A Little Lesson In Living
7-.i Ws the lonoe$t-'pasil ag
After 'very Meal
I enjoyed a great privilege
Summer. I wan allowed to aoeo
for a part of my vacation with
artists' colony whleli ovary summer
gathers sit the CM Bow of the Halama-1
zoo river, ser Saugatuck, Michigan,
I, want to paw on to Y011 a tittle les,
sen in living which I learned while
Idling among the busily aiappy war•
shippers of beauty who spend their
holiday working with brusls and Pas
!elle, amid the endlessly varying
oharme of light and shadow ou the oak
clad sant! dunes and mirroring riser!
surtaoe.
Oslo of my 'drat irieeds was Pratt
Ing itis niagao upon an oaselgd can
ou the river bank. His subjeet wa
group .of frame buildings—the
this coinfection �'OU ci,1x1 buy
urn---almd alt's 31 Aselli' to dl-
the gibes' and A4 clletaliaser
for the mouth
and teethe
woe:tees menus
li¢zteli t sea well its
'_— tilieasure.
is -1
vas
as a
Ox'
ow studio.–against a background of
trees. 'Phe sun and shadow op the
sloping roofs of red and 011 the green
walls constituted the lure for his
brush—or rather for his palette knife,!
He explained to me that he preterred,
the latter to any brush, and I mar
ed as he spread his oily pigment, b
tering his canvas as I might butt
toast, and evolving from this seemin
ly primitive process a wonder of h
moue In line and color suet. as
mere toast butterer eve: dreamed
achieving.
Between him and his alibied sto
another artist at another' easel, a
my friend had put him le his pletur
atrthe edge of his Canvas, looking o
toward the' edge and away from til
group of studio buildings.
Presently came by.a third memb
of the colony—one whose ability an
attainment had given him the right
comment upon the work of others, en
whose criticism was valued as that
the seeing eye and the understandin
heart,
He stood for a moment watching the
palette knife as it spread the color,
strengthening a high light, deepening
or subduing a shadow; and then ho
spoke:'
"So you are trying to do what can't
be done!" he said. It was said half -
humorously, but with a' kindly posi-
tiveness.
"But I think It can!" answered my
friend.
Yes," continued the critic, "We
hada student at the Art Institute last
year who thought it could. He took
three months to learn he was miff
taken."
My uninitiated mind became curious
to know what was the impossible
which my friend had undertaken to
prove possible. I waited eagerly for
the argument to disclose the cause of
the controversy, unnamed as yet, but
evidently understood by both.
"You cannot put a figure In your pic-
ture, on the edge of your canvas and
looking out of it, and preserve its
centre of interest. You are dissipating
interest," said the otitic.
"But this and thls.and this," replied
my friend, indicating with his thumb
the sweep of line, the massing of light
and shadow in the composition of the
picture, "all contribnto to the interest
centre, and 1 will tone down the figure
a bit,"
His defense was in reality an admis-
sion, and being a very wise man the
critic knew It, so be spent no words
in further argument,
"Very well," be concluded, "go on
with your experiment; but it can't be
done," and wandered off to speak
words of wisdom to Some other adven-
turer in the enchanted realm of Art.
Now being no artist myself, ail of
this might have meant little or nothing
to me were it not for my habit of look-
ing
for the life lesson In such things.
But the making of a life is In many
ways like the making of a pioture; and
in this way as much es in any other—
}f life Is to be effective it must havo a
centre of Interest, and everything
must contribute to it. No:life can be
really beautiful without such a centre,
and Its beauty can never appeal and
satisfy as it should if there be in it
rivallingelements which divert and
distract—figures looking out ofthe
canvas as If there lay elsewhere no
equally or more important interest.
Many lives are marred In both
boa and usefulness by 'allure to ol•
ve tele fundamental •principle. Il'
not that there may be only ono
autiful thing, one worth while thing'.
In life, but that there must be one
thing which predominates, and to I
which all else that is lovely and worth
while contributes interest and value;
from which, in truth, all oleo In the I
mary
er Pieturo derives its measure of charm
g and significance,
I So as the artist must chocsewhat ho
noE will have in his picture and what he
of will leave out, you, whc would make
a life, must choose. First, what is
od your centre of interest; then, what will
contribute to it—so the picture, and
ad so the life, is made,
e' Anti as I watched tinese artists, 1 no-
un 'iced this—None of them was taking
himself for the centre of interest, but
everyonewho showed any sign at all
er of painting good pictures was putting
himself into his painting; expressing
and interpreting himself in terms of
the world of beauty about hill, 1a
d
to
d
of terms of the interest to be found, in
g other forms and other faces.
And that Is also a little lesson in Hy-
ing* which ,:I learned this Summer—a
little lesson in beautiful living. For I
found that as these artists had been
making their pictures of beauty they
had also been making personalities of
wonderful charm.—S. 3, Duncan -Clark
in "Suttees.'
MInard's Liniment Heats cuta
then amuse them along this line. For
instance, 1f n boy likes to play with
tools let him have them and show him
how to use them. How muoh more
enjoyment my boy obtained from a
couple of pounds of shingle nails than
he would from the same amount of
money expended in candy. A block
('t wood or board would fairly bristle
with lla;is in a very short time. Teach
him to leave the head out a little way's
so he can pull them out and use them
over again.
Another child I know of would
spend a whole half day hunting for
hugs of different kinds to show mam-
ma. Let him make a collection of
them and show him their pictures in
the dictionary or a nature book if
possible. Find out what they live
upon and he will be very interested,
and incidentally learn a whole loot
about insects, good and bail. The same
idea may be carried out with planta
if they aro interested in them, also
stoats. The old saying that, "First impres-
sions last the longest," will be proven
wises you see how much of this he
will remember when he grows up, and
the little time spent by UR Is well
worth the while. Of course, a child;
should never he driven to do more of
this "play" the:: he wishes, as then It
ff O nmin o e
up the foot of your machine the same
a for darning, and Stitching down
the seam in a zig nag line.
Tell the kids to "comb" their teeth.
Thisa
s y dental experts, gives the
right idea on how to use a toothbrush.
A box top given roller skate wheels
and used to save that eternal lifting
and tugging around of the scrub buck-
et has proved a big help to many a
housewife,
BRIGHT COLORS.
It is not always practical to have
bright colors as the foundation of 012'
work clothes, which must go through
bard washings, but I have learned
that it cheers me to have a touch of
brightness 011 these garments.
A splash of red or orange on khaki
or dark blue relieves the drabness and
almost makee the stern outfit smile. Tt.
takes so little to put bandit on lrOeket:
a collar and wristbartle, •0r e'en til
the lower band of the '-sass, that w•:•
can well ;,fiord to hely nlntcrinl•of fart
color for this trimming, And if it
attraies the attention of our men folr
any wrong, but he did not feel any
icall just then to jine the church. And
then he diskivered that Doe's new life,
as he called it, had at least one left-
over from bis old one, for he got Mad
I and said Jeff was stubborn and willful
In his waywardness, and told him to
clear out and stay till he was ready
to renounce his sins, And .still Jeff
i did not get mad at him. He just told
Doc lie was sorry, for lie loved. Mary
better than anything in the world, and
went back to his bachin' shanty.'
(To be concluded.)
even to the vegnrtion that w
panne, "pretty' gay," tam, will he at.
twinkle with it-- and twinkles ,tlw:eys'
make r man better to look at. --L. ?1:1
far Sore Fedt--M'til'ard'e LThlnrent,
A Scotch Gift.
"Isere. Annie, Here's something for
your birthday," announced an old
Srotchinan, handing his servant a
cheque for its e dollars, but with the
signature line blank. "Keep lt, an' on
your nextbirtittlily1'11 sign it"
COLOR IT NEW WITH
''DIAMOND DYES"
Beant:Cul home dye-
ing and tinting is.
guaranteed with Dia-
mond Dyes, Just dip
in cold water to tint 11'
soft, delicate shades a 1•
or boil to dye rich I 1�"
permanent co1ors, i" es
Each 15 -cent package 1, ,li ▪ '
a s sec ons
a
Two.
"Boss, when do I get my vaca-
tions?"
""Vacations? How many vacations do
you get, huh?"
"Well I get one when I go off and
another when you got"
True hail falls only In summer, and
the hotter the weather the larger the
hailstones.
Russ "t,111sh,d 00 7o.a..
Please write for our price list on
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1111 OCARA\'TIO1 them for 4 peek ahead•
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TOILET FIXTURES
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Bowls, tanks, wash -basins, also heat -
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0
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(.t n. dye or lint 1}n•
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tTA'f €l;S SATAIkT PLANT
• rttgp jl
;r
S JN � TON CLU;
TO TOMB OF CHRIST
TRUE SITE OF THE HOLY
SEPULCHRE.
Discovery of Inscribed 'Hock
Reveals Importance of Gar.
dela Tomb Near Jesu alern..
Important evidence oe the theory
that the Garden Tomb outetde the Da-
mascus Gate of•Jor:lenient was th0 real
tomb Of Christ has been brought to
light by the discovery of au Inscribed
stone soar the tomb's entrance,
Although the traditional site of the •
Holy Sepulchre is In the middle of
Jerusalem where stands the Church
of Constantine, the earving on this
slirine•stone gives additional support
to those archeologists who believe the
Tomb of tate Resurrection was outside
the Moly Citi•.
The stone attracted the attentions of
Miss Hussey, in charge of the Garden
Tomb, After partly cleaning' it, 0110
reported her find to the British Gov-
ernment Department of AntiquItlee
and a few days later It was examined
by Prof, Brandenburg, a high authority
on rock architecture In the Mediter-
ranean. He identified the stone at
once 08 "a shrine of the goddess
Cybele, or Aphrodite (Venus), with the
column and tree of Adonis or Attys
beside it," IIs added that such shrines •
wore found in temples of Venus. A.
snore careful cleansing -of the stone
bore out his first impression, more
carving being revealed,
Desecrated Hallowed Spot.
Now, the Emperor Hadrian, in a de-
liberate effort to desecrate a spot
sacred to his Christian subJeots, is•
known to have erected a Temple of
Venus on the site of the Tomb of the
Resurrection in the course of his erec-
tion of a new Roman city on the ruins
of Jerusalem about A.D. 135,
Outside the Garden Tomb aro dis-
tinct traces of a large building, but de-
finite proof of what the building was
has been lacking,
Writing of the discovery of the stone
in, the Times, the Rev. C, C. Dobson
says that those who' view the tomb as
the possible scene of the Resurrection
have always regarded the traces its
those of the Temple of Venus eroeted
by Hadrian, but It was felt that fur-
ther proofs of identification were need-
ed,
The shrine -stone is a small one,
measuring ten inches by seven inches.
It lay buried in the soil In front of
the rook -face containing the entrance
Go the Gallen Tomb, and about thirty-
five feet front the entrance itself.
The Garden Tonib Iles In the alone
of "the Skull Hill," just outside the
Damascus Gate. Attention was first
drawn to It by the late General Gor-
don a few years after its discovery in
1887. He had become convinced that
the so-called Skull Hill was no other
than the Hill of Calvary, and this con•
viction led to his seeking for and re -
unearthing this tomb. Owing to tate
publiefty thus given to it at the time,
the tomb and surrounding ground
were obtained by a Gorman as n Inet-
ter of speculatlon, and ho offered it
for sale for coos. A strong commit-
tee was formed 1n England to purchase
it. ,
Britain Preuerves. Tomb.
lever since the tomb has been pre-
served together with, the garden
around it as poeeibly the moat hallow-
ed spot of Christendom, although the
trustees have never dogmatized about,
it.
Sonic years Iater further remarkable
discovorles were made. The ground
adjoining proved to be an early Chris-
tian burial-greund, as one would ex-
pect to find near the Tomb of the Re-
surrection, and oontained the ruins of
an early church. In a vault adjoining
the tomb two tombstones were un-
earthed bearing inscriptions to "Non.
nus and Onoslm is, deacons of tho
Church of the Resurrection," and
"hurled near my Lord," although the
latter inecriptioe, leas legible then the
other, has been questioned, . But 11
should be added that those who imp -
Port this tomb do not dependonly on.
external evidences. They find 15 Its
form of construction many interesting
features,somo of thein unique, bearing
cul and throwing light upon the details
of the Bible story.
My Psalm.
I mourn no more my vanished years;
Beneath a tender rain,
An April rain of smiles and tears,
lay heart is young sgein.
The west winds blow, and, singing
low,
1 hear theglad streams run;
The windows of my soul I throw
]Vide open to 'tiro sun, •
Not ougee Mtwara nor behind
1' look hp
Ilut, grat!;intul,olsltee0r'lhefear; g00d I Ilud,
The best of now and here
1 plunge mentors a tlusert land,
To harvest weed and tura;
The 3lttuna dropping trent God's hand
ltcbuttes my painful cars, .
I Usual' ne: pilgrim staff' --I lay
Aside lito tolling oar; •,
The angel :ought so far away
!,
I 1 \'8!( 0111d et my door,
--J. G. Whittler,
1 .it,,} time is 0 good tune to start
carrying out a good idea,