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Sister WomanME]
READ MF FREE OFFER j
®T My Mission is to make sick women well, and I want to send you, your daughter, yout \
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I will send it to you absolutely free, to prove to you its splendid quali- flf
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I cents a week. Ido not believe there is another remedy equal to JKsBJSr vZ/jSsSSSj®
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[ MRS. HARRIET M. RICHARDS,? Box 248 D Joliet, Illinois.
Free for the Asking
Write today for illustrated Booklet descriptive of the most prosperous section of
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BUSINESS MEN’S CLUB, ... - HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA.
one and scatters sunshine everywhere
he goes. Dear Bro. Willie, how hard
it is to part with you as our leader.
You know how we all love you and
ask in a pleading voice for your same
interest and love you shared so abun
dantly with us, and also for just a
little corner in your heart to keep
these three words in the tiniest let
ters: “Voices of Youth,” so you’ll not
forget us. We all know you have a
great work before you, and are busy
all the time. I am so glad our dear
paper is to remain in Georgia. We
have been a subscriber to the Golden
Age nearly all the time since the first
publication, and are enjoying every
page in it. I am going to try to se
cure some subscriptions fcr this won
derful paper and would be glad to as
sist in any werk to keep up
WOMAN'S TRIBUTE
The following splendid paper by
Miss Bessie Butler, representing the
women of the church of which he was
the beloved pastor, was read at the
unveiling of the monument to Rev. W.
S. McCarty at Madison, Ga. We are
aware that we are giving a good deal
of space to this event in the address
of Hon. E. W. Butler last week and
also of his gifted sister this week, but
the things said are so true and so
beautifully told that we feel sure they
will make better men and women of
all who read:
AVE THAT no memorial
to him whose memory we
strive today to honor
would be complete with
out a word of loving grat
itude from the women of
his church, into whose
lives he carried such com
fort, inspiration and joy,
there would be no voice
S
to speak from them on this oc
casion. For while he taught us
that on the strong Christian wo
man of this generation there rests
much of the hope of regeneration and
reform; while he taught that her life
with all its boundless influences for
good is “as broad and general as the
casing air, as deep as the human
heart, as high as the throne of God,
and that in the sweep of its horizon
it contains all things that mankind
holds most dear and that most deeply
concern human existence”; while he
awakened us to the knowledge that
“from the time when she sings his cra
dle song to the day she wipes the
death dews from his brow,” the most
its progress. How many of us
are interested in prohibition? I
hope each member of our hap
py family is, for it is indeed a great
work. We don’t know how to be thank
ful enough for a good father and
mother, who loves and cares for us
and would gladly give all they had to
keep us out of trouble. Remember
brothers and sisters, our parents are
sonetimes strict, but it is only for our
good. We should thank them for their
tender care and love them with all
our heart. I enjoyed Agnes Tyler’s
letter and hope to read some more of
them soon. I have not written for
some time, but will try to write offer
er. Wishing our page and “Little
Mother” great success, I remain, your
sister,
MARY BOOKER.
powerful influence for good over man
kind is woman, he also emphasized
that this great influence should be ex
ercised not by making speeches, not
by delivering lectures, not by voting,
but that woman’s greatest and truest
power lies and ever must lie in that
“still small voice.”
This good man was our “watchman,
the man in the tower, and he never
quit his post of duty.” As our leader
and comforter, he spread before us
the love and fear of God just in the
shape in which w r e needed them most.
He endeavored to rouse into action
all of the best and highest powers of
our natures, to awaken a far nobler,
a far more earnest purpose in life than
to live just for self and today; urging
us not to permit the glitter and glare
of wordly vanities to efface the beau
tiful ideals of noble Christian service;
to strive earnestly and constantly to
develop into useful, cultured, Christian
womanhood.
Small wonder then, that with this
great debt of gratitude in our hearts,
we have come today, when by anthem
and eulogy you commemorate his
memory, to place our w’reath of love
w r ith the other offerings by which you
dedicate this shaft.
I can not hope to express the depth
of our love and reverence, but I de,
sire to speak simply and directly, with
generous appreciation, yet no idle flat
tery. I hardly know how to do it
rightly. I know how impossible it is
for me to do it worthily, but I shall
speak with confidence because I speak
to those who loved him and whose
ready love will fill out the deficien-
The Golden Age for December 10, 1908.
cies in a picture which my words will
weakly try to draw.
No words of mine can adequately
express the feelings of our hearts or
do justice to the beautiful tenderness
and strong helpfulness of him who
for ten years was truly our under-shep
herd, “our blwark in trouble, our guide
in peace.’’ In sorrow he taught us to
bear the pain submissively and to see
the “golden ladder reaching upward,”
through many an hour when our
hearts were dark, he cheered us with
sweet sympathy. His liberal heart,
his liberal hand, his liberal mind, were
ever ours. When joy filled the pulse
his smiling sympathy intensified the
happiness. In terrible ordeals of pain
and bereavement we turned to him,
and when these sorrows swept through
the soul he knelt with us in our ago
nies.
“He was the Gamiel at whose feet
we learned the noblest lessons of life.”
for he sympathized at once with what
was weakest and what was strongest
in our natures. He showed us how
to love truth and be charitable, taught
us that the rustle of silken skirts .or
flash of diamond counts for naught in
comparison with a noble spirit and a
heart of gold. He made us wiser,
more self-acquainted; he taught us the
love of God and love of our neighbor;
that it is not necesary to be great to
be happy; is not necessary to be rich
to be just and generous. If an arch
angel should come down from heaven
we cannot conceive that he would
clothe God’s message of love in moru
comforting or uplifting language.
“The first visit Gamiel ever made
to the earth that is recorded, was when
he was sent down from the presence
of God to tell Daniel that he was
greatly beloved. A man greatly be
loved,” and “O, man greatly beloved,”
is written in our memories over the
closed page of our association with
Rev. W. S. McCarty Through all the
years he lived among us he ever sided
with the weak, the poor, the wronged,
and lovingly gave alms, carrying on a
war of goodness, a war of kindness,
and his loyal heart and his pure hands
were ever ready to serve us. He de
voted all of himself, his beautiful life,
his splendid intellect, his deep learn
ing, to his people; was ever and always
tireless in his ministrations; “locking
in marriage vows the hands of some
crossing others on breasts of peace,
softly pressing down to rest the lids of
loving eyes grown sightless.”
And so he journeyed on from day
to day, “in every storm of life an oak
and rock, in every sunshine, vine and
flower.” “He added so greatly to the
sum of our human joy that were every
one to whom he did a loving service
to bring a blossom here, he would
sleep beneath a wilderness of flowers.
He ever pointed us to the Higher
Way, bidding us hope, bidding us
serve. He daily strove to lift us up
into loving, useful service and so
raising the standard of our lives, gave
us noble purposes and lofty aims, call
ing into life the best in all our wo
manhood.
Through his influence there sprung
into life a strong, active Woman’s
Auxiliary in his church, one striving
to help forward every cause of Home
and Foreign Missions. One side of
this granite shaft will stand
through years to come a loving tri
bute to his memory from this Wo
man’s Society, a society now bearing
the name “The W. S. McCarty Auxili
ary of the Madison Baptist Church.”
It is in the name of these devoted ones
that I speak today. The echo of his
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voice is yet audible in our hearts and
we shall guard the sacred heritage
forever and forever more.
In erecting this memorial we can
not hallow this spot to hold his mem
ory, for the beautiful life he lived
here has consecrated his memory far
above our power. It is rather for us,
the living to be here dedicated to the
great task before us, that from the lov
ed dead we take increased loyalty to
that cause for which he gave his
heart’s fullest measure of devotion,
may God make us worthy.
Before It Is Too Late.
It you nave a tender message
Or a loving word to say,
Do not wait till you forget it,
But whisper it today.
The tender word unspoken,
The letter never sent,
The long forgotten messages,
The wealth of love unspent;
For these some hearts are breaking,
For these some loved ones wait;
So show them that you care for them
Before it is too late.
—D. H. Sweet.
Is Cancer Hereditary?
Dr. Bye, the eminent specialist on
the treatment of Cancer, states that
after devoting many years to the
study and treatment of this disease,
he is convinced beyond a reasonable
doubt that Cancer is hereditary, hav
ing treated as many as four members
of the same family afflicted with the
disease. He has published a book
describing Cancer in its various forms
and stages, which will be of vast in
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friends afflicted. This book is sens
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Broadway, Kansas City, Mo.
13