Statue of Miss Frances E Willard Erected in Statuary Hall of the Capitol Buildi

Cover Statue of Miss Frances E Willard Erected in Statuary Hall of the Capitol Buildi
Statue of Miss Frances E Willard Erected in Statuary Hall of the Capitol Buildi
3rd Session 1904 1905 United States Congress 58th
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Her labors, her successes, and her achievements have been eloquently portrayed here to-day by those who have preceded me. It is enough for me to note that no man or woman of her time wrought better or accom- plished more for the protection and upbuilding of her sex and the cause of temperance. The endearments of home and the quiet of her fireside were sacrificed in the interest of the unfor- tunate among both men and women.
30 Acceptance of Statue of Her great soul carried her activities beyond
... State and na- tional lines and led her to help the unfortunate in all countries and all climes. The noble Roman matron Cornelia, when called upon by a wealthy lady of Campania to exhibit to her her jewels, called her two young sons to her side and said, "These are my jewels. " Miss Willard, who rejected the offers of husband and home that she might the better serve the cause to which she had dedicated her life, on a like request for the exhibition of her jewels could have pointed to the thousands of unfortunate men and women who had been res- cued by her from lives of crime, drunkenness, and immorality to that of pure womanhood and honorable manhood.

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