living by palmistry. She never asked for 

 help nor for sympathy, even when the tempest 

 destroyed the fabric of her humble home, but 

 "the radiance of a noble soul" discovered her 

 sad plight and brought new hope into a dis- 

 couraged heart. 



"They were tempted, * =f= * ^-j^gy 

 wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, 

 being destitute, afflicted, in deserts, in moun- 

 tains, in dens, and in caves of the earth." 



From a circus in a far-distant State the lion- 

 tamer writes of her friend as follows : 



She was a ministering angel in earthly 

 form, graciously kind; to know her was to 

 revere and love. I count myself greatly 

 blessed in that I was permitted for a brief 

 space to enjoy her gentle presence and feel 

 the radiance of her noble soul. All unworthy 

 to her dear memory, I offer this humble trib- 

 ute from one of the many whom her true 

 Christianity benefited. —Isola Daniel. 



€riBute^ from Cotonial 2Dame^ 



"Consilio et prudentia." 



In the death of Mrs. James Sprunt this 

 community has suffered a loss the full extent 

 of which will be revealed more and more with 

 the passing of years. Not at once can there 

 be a realization of what it means to be cut off 

 from such a forceful personality. In her 

 home, in her church, in her town, in her 



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