Newspaper Page Text
32 TH]
rilDEC r\IARRHOEA,
bUllLd l/YSENTERy,
CHOLERA INFANTUM,
anb all
affegtionsofthe bowels.
Oxford, La., July 7,1888.
viemlemcn.?We have used your Hrrxiie's Cop
*ial in our family foi some time past, and an
perfectly ratisfied with itr effects. Would nol
willinefv do ?
?? ? respectfully,
J. n. Robinson
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
FRICE, SOr. ar.d SI OO.
**?*ppared hv ! L. LYONS & CQ
Henry N. Gastrock
3120-3122 Magazine St.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
RELIABLE SHOES FOR THE FAMILY.
Agent, M. A. Packard & Co.'s
$3.50 AND $4.00 SHOES FOR MEN.
Phone Up-town 2200 W.
A. B. Griswohf 6 Co., Ltd
Jewelers and Silversmiths
Our Stock rvf Tomol"
.tv.. j., onverware, Diamonds
and Precious Stones, Watches
Novelties In Gold and Silver, Is the larg
est and handsomest we have ever shown
Everything New, Fresh, Attractive.
Write for our Book of Suggestions.
A. B. GRISWOLD A. CO., Ltd.
Established 1817.
728 Canal Street, NEW ORLEANS.
F. Johnson 6 Son Company
LIMITED.
UNDERTAKERS AND BURNISHERS
OF FINE FUNERAL .
FURNITURE.
800 Magaxlne Street, corner Julia,
ard Washington and Prytanla Streets.
Both 'Phones 697.
NBUI ABI B ? ? ? -
ww vnkKAnOf LA<
0. J. Macnmrda, Jr. B. R. Qngoiy.
M acmurdo& Gregory
SINIRAL INSURANCE.
Ofltca Na. ?14 Htnntn Building.
PtaM lteli 4411. Naw Orlaa&a, La.
Fire, Lit*, Accident, Liability, BoH?r,
Plato Slua. Indemnity, Burglary. Tarnada.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
y
E PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOUT
Marriages
Graham-Ulue.?In me Presbyterian
church, Aberdeen, N. C., April 14, 1909,
by Rev. j. D. A. Brown, Mr. John W.
Graham and Miss Kate S. Blue, daughter
of Mr. John Blue.
mayo-Duncan.?At the pastor's residence.
Atlanta, Ga? May 8. 1909, by Rev.
J. D. Keith, Mr. Benjamin H. Mayo and
Miss Annie Cleo Duncan.
McDonald-Currie.?At the residence of
Mr. A. McN. Currie, Jackson Springs,
N. C.. May 5. 1909, by Rev. J. D. A.
Brown, Mr. Moses C. McDonald and Miss
Lillie A. Currie.
Morgan Browning.?On May 9, 1909,
at Ingleside manse, by Rev. R. D. Stimson,
Mr. R. B. Morgan aud Miss Lula
Browning.
Moore-Davis.?At the residence of the
I bride's mother, Mrs. Lou Davis, Acker'
man, Miss., May 5, 1909, by Rev. R. W.
I Mecklin. Mr. William bnelton Moore and
j Miss Rose Davis, both of Choctow
i county, Miss.
, Pawling-Schamber.?In New Orleans,
I La., .May 19, 1909, by Rev. Dr. George
Summey, Mr. Herbert Francis Pawling,
of Kansas City, Mo., and Miss Clara
Mary Srhamber, of Buffffalo, N. Y.
Deaths
Erand.?At 15 Kennedy street, Atlanta,
Ga., May (J. 19109, Miss Annie Brand,
aged twenty-one years. Interment at
Sylvester.
Sell.?>->n May 3, 1909, Miss Mildred,
this lovely young Christian fell asleep
in Jesus. She was tne only daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Bell, ot West, Miss.
She was born March 1, 1893; was a member
of the Presbyterian church and "in
all things adorned the doctrine of God
her Saviour." H.
Pierson.?At Orange Memorial Hospital
on Sabbath morning, Maren 7, 1909,
of acute congestion of the lungs, Leila
Paul, widow of Edward D. Pierson, of
*
v/imigc, i\ew jersey, and youngest daughter
of the late Edwin and Frances Wills
James, formerly of Petersburg, Virginia.
MRS. JULIA OGDEN PAYNE.
In Memoriam.
God in his wisdom took from her
earthly home to her home eternal in
the heavens Mrs. Julia Ogden Payne,
April 7, after an illness of a few hours.
The Ladies Aid Society of Westminster
church, Lynchburg, desire to express this
sense of the loss they so keenly feel. Mrs.
Payne united with the church in early
life,, her faith and trust in her blessed
Saviour always firm and unshaken.
She was twice the president of this
society, and gave freely of her time,
talents and means for tta
.?? uv* UUVCUlClll.
She had a fine mind, well stored and cultivated,
and amid all the changes of
life bore herself nobly and won through
admiration and affection all who knew
her.
She was a true friend and a devoted
mother, and her children may rise up
and call her blessed.
Qreen be the turf above thee.
Mrs. Lizzie S. Mosby.
Mrs. Lily H. Thornhill.
Mrs. John Hickson.
'H. May 26, 1909.
JOSEPH ALLEN McCLUNG.
Died on February 12, 1909, at his noniu
West Virginia, in the sixty-ninth year ot
his age, Joseph Allen McClung, a native of
Blue Sulphur Springs, Greenbrier county.
West Virginia, and a member of Staurt's
cavalry throughout the entire war between
the states.
He was a devoted husband, a loving
father, a staunch friend, an upright man
in juti ms intercourses with his fellow
men and a brave Confederate soldier. He
leaves a wife, who was Miss Callie Doyle,
and four sons,?Albert, William, Joseph
and Samuel?all grown, besides many relatives
and friends to mourn his loss.
Rest in peace, brave Southern soldier,
Ended is your mission here.
May you And abundant entrance
To those heavenly mansions dear.
MISS MARGARET McCASKILL.
Miss Margaret C., daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenith and Nancy McCaskill, was
born in Kershaw county, S. C'., December
20, 1838, and died at her home at C.assatt,
in the same county, March 17, 1900.
At the age of sixteen she gave her
heart and life to her Saviour and joined
Pine Tree church. She was a consistent
member and an earnest and zealous
worker in her church and Master's vinevwr.rl
nn? 51 Af>ll?%-> 1
? ? iiuicu to ner reward.
Her remaius were buried in the Scotch .
cemetery on Lynch's creek. Kershaw
county.
She leaves three sisters and seven nephews
and nieces besides a host of relatives
and friends to mourn her departure.
The battles of life are. over.
The crown of victory won,
Servant of God we can say 110 more,
Thou Thy work hast well done.
?Friend.
MRS. EMILY THOMAS.
In Shelby, at the home of her son. RevJames
Thomas, April 28, 1909, Mrs. Em- I
ily Thomas most peacefully, after an illness
of a few days, died. The remains
were taken to her old home In New Bern,
N. C., and she was buried by the side of
her husband, who was Judge Oharles R.
Thnnrno a+ " *
.vi. uuC uime secretary or State,
Judge of the Superior Court and member
of Congress four years
Her oldest son, Hon. Charles R. Thomas,
is in Congress now. Of her five Sons
three of them were at her bedside when
the end came, and all of them?three of
them being ministers of the Presbyterian
church?were at her burial.
She was a woman of rare qualities of
mind and heart, and she has left an impress
of the true and the beautiful which I
can never be obliterated.
CAPT. BENJAMIN CUNNINGHAM |j
YANCEY.
The subject of this sketch was born in I
Greenville, S. C., July 30, 1836, but was |
i curea in Montgomery, Ala. He was
graduated from the University of Alabama,
August 16, 1856, with the degree
of Bachelor of Arts, and later received
the degree of Bachelor of Law from the
Cumberland University, of Lebanon,
Tennessee, and was admitted to the bar
in Montgomery, Ala., the same year.
Tie served throughout the war as caytain
of artillery in the Confederate army.
At the close of the war, he removed to
Brazil, where he resided fourteen years,
and in 1873, at Santa Barbara, married