her lifelong habit of bearing the burdens of 

 others, of glorifying God In her body, which 

 was His, and which she confidently expected 

 would bear the image of the heavenly even as 

 it had borne the image of the earthly. 



— Jeanie Dalziel tVood. 



"Fold her, Oh Father! in Thine arms, 



And let her henceforth be 

 A messenger of love between 

 Our hearts and Thee." 



I have come to the conclusion, remember- 

 ing all I can of her remarkable personality 

 and wonderful life, that she was, like my 

 m.other, one of those "women who ministered 

 to Him." How different they were, those 

 two, and yet how alike in purpose. To each 

 of them belongs every word of Solomon's 

 inspired description of the wise woman. Each 

 of them, while she strived for the noblest 

 and gentlest virtues of the woman of yester- 

 day, devoted to her home and family, con- 

 servative and domestic, had caught the far- 

 thest vision and entered into the highest tasks 

 of the woman of today, who is a gracious 

 elder sister to all the world. Do you remem- 

 ber how Aunt Luola thought of that unique 

 plan of sending hundreds of yards of cloth, 

 with needles and thread and patterns, even, 

 to the Belgian women, who were without 



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