The Sabbatb
THE EPITAPH. When from this good world I depart, I fain would leave behind Some record of a grateful heart To God and all mankind — For love of blessed home and friends, For health and work and prayer. For all good gifts our Father sends, For kindness everywhere. The broken word, neglected task, Hid talent, I confess. But more than all, I pardon ask For all heart heaviness. If I have failed to give God praise Alay my dumb lips be shriven. Prepare me, Lord, some lowly place To sing Thy grace in heaven. J.A.8., in Church Times.
Stirring Up Europe And America to give to famine funds. The even more difficult problem of preventing famines has been attacked by missionaries, partly through improvements in agricultural methods. “If a newer and finer China emerges as some of us have faith to anticipate, it will be in part because in the days of its transition there were unselfishly labouring in it thousands of foreigners who sought to bring it in touch with the best that the Occident had to give. “The day of the missionary is by no means done. His position is more difficult and more fraught with personal danger than it was a decade ago, but in some respects the missionary is more needed now than he ever was.
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Bibliographic details
Waikato Times, Volume 106, Issue 17840, 12 October 1929, Page 18 (Supplement)
Word Count
222The Sabbatb Waikato Times, Volume 106, Issue 17840, 12 October 1929, Page 18 (Supplement)
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