Browns WI Tweedsmuir Community History, Volume 2, p. 6

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_ May wenever be hasty in judgnent and always generous + + Let us take time for all things: make us grow calm., serene, gentleâ€"y â€":â€" f KEEP us 0 Lord from pertiness; let us beâ€" __large in thought,in word and deed + ; _ L-er-usbedofiewl_fltfmfltflndhgmtdleavw off self seeking â€":â€" â€":â€" May we put away all pretence and meet‘ each other face to face, without self pity and withour prejudiceâ€"2 â€":â€" Teach us to Pur‘mro action our better Impulses straight forward and unaftaid â€":â€" Grant that we may realize that it 1s the little things that create differences; that inthe big things of life we are oneâ€"? â€":â€" And may we strive to touch and know theâ€" _ %eathumanhmrtconmntousall,md . Lord God letus not forger to be kind. â€":â€" 3 Collect For Club Women Mary Stavar OR many years, women‘s clubs in Canada, United States, Britain and other countries have used a prayer for the opening or closing ceremonies of their meetings. Sometimes it is simply read by one member, at others it is repeated in unison by all those present. They have usually called it Our Creed or The cm{, Women‘s Creed and as such it is widely known and popular on this continent, especially in small towns and rural districts. Widespread usage has resulteX in some changes. The author gave it a title: "Collect For Club Women," when it first appeared in an obscure corner of a well known American magazine. ) . â€" Mary Stewart wrote the é)rayer in 1904, while she was principal of Longmont high school in Colorado. We are indebted to a Canadian woman, the late Mrs. Alfred Watt, M.B.E., for a true and correct verâ€" sion of the prayer, as here presented, and a little of the author‘s own personal story. Mrs. Watt came back to Canada in 1939 to attend and speak at the eleventh biennial conference of the Federated Women‘s Institutes of Canada, in Edmonton, She it was, who had carried the Women‘s Institute idea to Britain and later became president of the Associated Country Women of the World. Mary Stewart, while visiting in England had spent some time with Mrs. Watt at her English home. Errors had crept into the various printâ€" ings of the prayer, especially in the first and secondâ€"last lines. These errors marred the beauty of expression and the clarity of thought of this prayer. The author expressed concern about the garbled versions which were being circulate)gJ In the studio of Robin Watt, the artist son of Mrs. Alfred Watt, Miss Stewart personally supervised his work of copying out the prag'er, down even to fine points of placing a comma or a period. Reproduced here is Robin Watt‘s copy done by hand, under Mary Stewart‘s close supervision. The title, it should be noted is set in type, to identify it. "It was written as a ?rayer for the day. I called it a ‘Collect For Club Women,‘ because I felt that women workins)together with wide inâ€" terests for large ends was a new thing under the sun and that, perhaps they had need for special petition and meditation of their own. This must have been true for the Collect has found its way about the world, especially wherever English speaking women gset together. Indeed it has been reprinted in many forms in many lands." It was officially adopted by the National Federation of Business and Professional Women‘s Clubs, meeting at their second convention in 1920, at St. Paul. It was read into the printed records of the Congress of the United States by Senator Tobey of New Hampshire, at the closing session in 1949. s % Mary Stewart held a number of special teaching posts in Colorado and Montana, In 1921 she became a junior guidance and placement officer in the pioneer period of U.S. employment services. She conâ€" tinued to write for American newspapers and magazines. Her Alma Mater, the University of. Colorado, in 1927 conferred upon her an honorary degree in recognition of her distinguished work in education, social and civic service. c 2

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