The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1945, Blaðsíða 11

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1945, Blaðsíða 11
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 9 I could do, and I couldn’t think of a thing, for a girl can’t do the things that a fellow like Leland can do. “Sometime in the night though I thought of something, and next morn- ing I told Daddy. You see, Leland played the trumpet and he was really good. He wanted me to play it too, but Mother didn’t think that was an instrument for a girl. But when I thought of all that Leland had done with his trumpet in the Sunday School orchestra, I made up my mind I was going to play his trumpet for him. Mother said it was all right when I told her, and I’ve already taken some lessons and I can play the scale. I’ll bet Leland would be proud of me if he could hear me. I like to think he knows that I am trying hard. “And then something funny happened right after breakfast. I was going past my door and I saw the bed wasn’t made up and the room wasn’t in order. Right then I said to myself, ‘There’s something I can do. I can make up my room every morning and that will give Mother time for her Red Cross work.’ And I’ve done it every morning since then. Leland knows how I bate to do that sort of thing, and I know he would like to have me do it so Mother can do more for other soldiers. “It’s wonderful all the things we have found to do for Leland. You’d be sur- prised how much of his work we are doing. “Just the other night when Daddy bowed his head to pray before dinner he said, ‘O God, we thank Thee for giving us a chance to do our boy’s work. It has helped us to do our own. All the time we have been doing it we have felt that it was thy strength we were using. We were sure we would be given what we needed when the time came, and now the worst has come, and we’re standing up all right’. “No, I don’t agree with the other girls. I don’t believe we ought to pray that God will take care of our brothers, and then say we will not believe in Him if they get hurt. I think it’s all right to pray that they will be protected and brought home safely, but at our house we prayed that way and Leland didn’t come home. But we also prayed that we might have what we had to have to take it, and we have had that. I know I couldn’t have taken it if I hadn’t believed that way. Daddy taught me how. That’s why I believe in God. He gives us what we need when we don’t have it in ourselves.” When the boys come home Judy will feel that her brother is near her and her father and mother. —W. J. L. The Icelandic Canadian j [ Published Quarterly by the Icelandic Canadian Club of Winnipeg, Man. 1 Subscription Rates for North America: One year SI.00 — Two J years S1.75 — Three years $2.25 — Payable in advance. i BACK NUMBERS AVAILABLE. ] I For subscriptions write to: 3 H. F. Danielson, 869 Garfield St., Winnipeg. j j Bjornsson’s Book Store, 702 Sargent Ave., Winnipeg. '

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The Icelandic Canadian

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