. Mary Clarke Nind and her work : her childhood, girlhood, married life, religious experience and activity, together with the story of her labors in behalf of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church. can mothers. I seeher now in her plain black dress, so artistic in its touch of white inthe chemisette; her beautiful white hair as a crown of glory to heranimated face; her strong personality and unwavering faith as shesat in my office one winter morning to discuss some phase of theMasters work. Those were the days she would touch my shoulderwith her hand and call


. Mary Clarke Nind and her work : her childhood, girlhood, married life, religious experience and activity, together with the story of her labors in behalf of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church. can mothers. I seeher now in her plain black dress, so artistic in its touch of white inthe chemisette; her beautiful white hair as a crown of glory to heranimated face; her strong personality and unwavering faith as shesat in my office one winter morning to discuss some phase of theMasters work. Those were the days she would touch my shoulderwith her hand and call me daughter, little knowing how she com-forted my mother-sick heart, hungry for one more caress of amothers hand, a sorrow too great for any one to know but mySavior. May He comfort your heart likewise. I see her standingone Sunday morning in the pulpit preaching, as if inspired, from Individual Tributes 205 Josiah 14:7. How she dwelt upon how the Lord sends out to spyout His work, His land, and *I brought Him word again as it was inmy heart. How much she made of the thought that the Lordswork suffers from our hearts, our lack of faith. How much brighterheaven must be at her entrance, and what a privilege it was to knowher!. MARY C. NIND AND LYDIA P. NIND Taken September, 1902. in front of tte W^esleyan Home, Newton, Mass. CHAPTER XXXIII TRTOUTES BY ORGANIZATIONS There were many formal tributes by organizations with whichmother had been connected or with which she had labored, some ofwhich have been preserved. These are given here: Adopted at the tvjenty-ninth anniial meeting of the Northwestern Branch ofthe Womans Foreign Missionary Society for the year 1904-5. MRS. MARY C. NIND—TRANSLATED SEPTEMBER 2, 1905. Hidden by the pillar of fire at night one of the Israel of God has passedinto the promised Canaan. For more than the three score years and ten has lived a high life of hope, love and holiness, to vphich death wasnothing but the breaking away of the last cloud a


Size: 1420px × 1760px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectmissions, bookyear190