EXTRACT FROM ADDRESS OF MRS. WOODBURY.
Our eyes and our ears have been greeted during the last few days by those initial letters, "A. M. A.," and we have perhaps got a new meaning which was hinted at yesterday morning, "A Master Artist," because the American Missionary Association takes the black clay and transforms it into the immortal soul. But I like best of all the meaning given to the letters by a little boy who had just begun to study Latin. With that air of ownership which we are so apt to see in the boys and girls who have just begun the study of a new language, he came to his mother and said, "Here it is: A. M. A.—AMA., Love thou them." I like better than all the meaning given inadvertently by that little boy, because it seems to me that the American Missionary Association, working as it does among the poor and oppressed classes, striving to weld into one common brotherhood the black, the white, the red and the yellow, is the best exponent we have here in our own country of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, and of that self-sacrificing love which brought Christ into the world to die for the rich and the poor, the high and the low, the black and the white alike. So it is entitled to write on all its literature and emblazon on its shield those cabalistic letters, "A M A"—"Love thou them."
I will not try to add to facts or multiply incidents. Here we have before us this great problem: ten millions of our people, one-sixth of our whole body politic, sunk in the depths of superstition, ignorance and sin. We may shut our eyes to this problem; we may ignore it; we may say it has been exaggerated; we may even say it does not exist. You and I in our quiet homes may not hear the mutterings or the moanings of these ten million souls in bondage; but their cry goes up to Him who in mankind's first morning uttered those two burning questions which have ever since determined the standard of the Christ spirit in humanity: "Where art thou?" "Where is thy brother?"
We are to make of these ten million people God-fearing, intelligent citizens. We are to leaven this mass of humanity with the leaven of the school and of the church, and, so doing, make of these two million whites, these stanch, stalwart Anglo-Saxon men, and of these eight million loyal, affectionate, docile negroes, all American-born citizens—we are to make of them a bulwark which shall resist the oncoming tide of socialism, anarchism and of atheism, which is trying to overwhelm our American institutions, rob us of our public-school system, profane our Sabbath and snatch the scepter from our fathers' God.
And how is this to be done? How is this problem to be solved? By just such work as this of the American Missionary Association, which has abundant facilities, plenty of energy, wisdom and experience, and even the consecration necessary for the great work before it—everything but the money. And where is the money coming from? The money is coming from the churches. How do we know? Because the American Missionary Association was born in the churches, is the child of the churches, was sent forth from the churches with the benediction and prayers and blessings of the churches to carry out the policy adopted by the churches. The Church will not forsake its own.
And this is our work. It is not the abolition of races, but the recognition of brotherhood. This is the work which Christ has given us to do; and if we would solve this negro problem, and all the thousand and one problems which are ever vexing the life of our free Republic, we must solve them by the principles of the Golden Rule and the democracy of the Lord's Prayer. It is not sufficient for us to stand with Thomas and say in rapt admiration, "My Lord and my God." Side by side with our black brother and with our white brother, with our yellow brother and with our red brother, we are to kneel and say, not "My Lord and my God," but "Our Father," and the spirit of common prayer to a common Father whom we have not seen will bind our hearts in closer brotherhood to those whom we have seen, and we will rise from our knees to carry out the principles of the Golden Rule.
WOMAN'S STATE ORGANIZATIONS
- MAINE.
- Woman's Aid to A. M. A.
- State Committee—Mrs. Ida Vose Woodbury, Woodfords;
Mrs. A. T. Burbank, Yarmouth;
Mrs. Helen Quimby, Bangor. - NEW HAMPSHIRE.
- Female Cent. Institution and Home Miss. Union.
- President—Mrs. Cyrus Sargeant, Plymouth.
- Secretary—Mrs. John T. Perry, Exeter.
- Treasurer—Miss Annie A. McFarland, Concord.
- VERMONT.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. J. H. Babbitt, W. Brattleboro.
- Secretary—Mrs. M. K. Paine, Windsor.
- Treasurer—Mrs. Wm. P. Fairbanks, St. Johnsbury.
- MASS and R. I.
- [A]Woman's Home Missionary Association.
- President—Mrs. C. L. Goodell, 9 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass.
- Secretary—Mrs. Louise A. Kellogg, 32 Congregational House, Boston.
- Treasurer—Miss Annie C. Bridgman, 32 Congregational House, Boston.
- CONNECTICUT.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Miss Ellen R. Camp, 9 Camp St., New Britain.
- Secretary—Mrs. C. T. Millard, 36 Lewis St., Hartford.
- Treasurer—Mrs. W. W. Jacobs, 19 Spring St., Hartford.
- NEW YORK.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. Wm. Kincaid, 483 Green Ave., Brooklyn.
- Secretary—Mrs. Wm. Spalding, 511 Orange St., Syracuse.
- Treasurer—Mrs. J. J. Pearsall, 230 Macon St., Brooklyn.
- NEW JERSEY.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union of the N. J. Association.
- President—Mrs. A. H. Bradford, Montclair.
- Secretary—Mrs. R. J. Hegeman, 32 Forest Street, Montclair.
- Treasurer—Mrs. J. H. Dennison, 150 Belleville Ave., Newark.
- PENNSYLVANIA.
- Woman's Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. J. W. Thomas, Lansford.
- Secretary—Mrs. C. F. Yennie, Ridgway.
- Treasurer—Mrs. T. W. Jones, 511 Woodland Terrace, Philadelphia.
- OHIO.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. Sydney Strong, Lane Seminary Grounds, Cincinnati.
- Secretary—Mrs. J. W. Moore, 836 Hough Ave., Cleveland.
- Treasurer—Mrs. G. B. Brown, 2116 Warren St., Toledo.
- INDIANA.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. W. A. Bell, 223 Broadway, Indianapolis.
- Treasurer—Mrs. A. H. Ball, Anderson.
- ILLINOIS.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. Isaac Claflin, Lombard.
- Secretary—Mrs. C. H. Taintor, 151 Washington St., Chicago.
- Treasurer—Mrs. L. A. Field, Wilmette.
- MISSOURI.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. Henry Hopkins, 916 Holmes Street, Kansas City.
- Secretary—Mrs. E. C. Ellis, 2456 Tracy Ave., Kansas City.
- Treasurer—Mrs. K. L. Mills, 1526 Wabash Ave., Kansas City.
- IOWA.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. T. O. Douglass, Grinnell.
- Secretary—Mrs. H. H. Robbins, Grinnell.
- Treasurer—Miss Belle L. Bentley, 300 Court Ave., Des Moines.
- MICHIGAN.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. J. M. Powell, 76 Jefferson Ave., Grand Rapids.
- Secretary—Mrs. C. C. Denison, 132 N. College Ave., Grand Rapids.
- Treasurer—Mrs. E. F. Grabill, Greenville.
- WISCONSIN.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. E. G. Updike, Madison.
- Secretary—Mrs. A. O. Wright, Madison.
- Treasurer—Mrs. C. M. Blackman, Whitewater.
- MINNESOTA.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Miss Katherine W. Nichols, 230 East Ninth Street, St. Paul.
- Secretary—Mrs. A. P. Lyon, 17 Florence Court, S. E., Minneapolis.
- Treasurer—Mrs. M. W. Skinner, Northfield.
- NORTH DAKOTA.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. W. P. Cleveland, Caledonia.
- Secretary—Mrs. Silas Daggett, Harwood.
- Treasurer—Mrs. J. M. Fisher, Fargo.
- SOUTH DAKOTA.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. A. H. Robbins, Bowdle.
- Secretary—Mrs. W. H. Thrall, Huron.
- Treasurer—Mrs. F. H. Wilcox, Huron.
- BLACK HILLS, SOUTH DAKOTA.
- Woman's Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. J. B. Gossage, Rapid City.
- Secretary—Mrs. H. H. Gilchrist, Hot Springs.
- Treasurer—Miss Grace Lyman, Hot Springs.
- NEBRASKA.
- Woman's Home Missionary Union.
- President—Mrs. D. B. Perry, Crete.
- Secretary—Mrs. H. Bross, 2904 Second Street, Lincoln.
- Treasurer—Mrs. James W. Dawes, Crete.