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'j2 ; r. - * t r.j th
fBelmontColiege^
n For Young Women I
n Nashville. Tenn. II
11 Compos <do( 12 Schools. Diplomas con- fl
11 (erred by these Schools. Courses leading II
to degrees B.A. and M.A. Prepares (or II
II nil ChlUase ?nil nsl?-e-4M?
II Art, Expression, Physical Culture, Mod- II
II em Languages, Domestic Science In 111
II hands of Masters. Director or School of II
II Music, Edouard Hesselberg, eminent In
| pianist and composer. Located in match- II
II less, magnolia-shaded hilltop park. In lit
If city limits. Country environment. Out- II
If door sports and study. City advantages II
ff liberally patronized. 17 states represent- 11
If ed last year, to per cent Northern girls. \l
U Early registration necessary. Only llm- U
M Ited number of new students can be 1
f received each year. Catalogues on re- 1
quest. Address Box U.
ft IKA LANDU1TH. D.U., LLI>., President J
^Mto^llUOh
Henry N. Gastrock
3120-3122 "Magazine St.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
RELIABLE SHOES FOR THE FAMILY.
Agents, M. A. Packard & Co.'s
$3.50 and $4.00 SHOES FOR MEN.
Phone Up-town 2200 W.
Bring Us
Your Savings
MSB CET? 3
1-2 Per Cent Per Annum
on Deposits $1,00'and upwards
Whitney-Central Trust
& Savings Bank
616-618 Common St.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
F. Johnson 6 Son Company
LIMITED.
UNDERTAKERS AND FURNISHERS
OF FINE FUNERAL
FURNITURE.
i?
300 Magazine Street, corner Julia,
and Washington and Prytania Streets.
Both 'Phones 697.
NEW 0RLEAN8, LA.
. ; \ ;
E PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOU'
Marriages
Belvin-Guntner.?At Bristol, Va., June
19, 1909, by Rev. C. C.' Carson, D. D.,
Mr. William O. Belvin and Miss Serapbine
Guntner.
Dornin-Tait.?At the home of Mr. Robert
Tait, father of the bride, Norfolk,
Va., June 16, 1909, by Rev. E. B. McCluer,
Mr. George Armstrong Dornin, of Amherst,
Va., and Miss Florence L. Tait.
r<3U.D?nikl? A * * I. ~ I
wU/ VIMWIV* ni mc U'JIiie UL LL1U
bride's father, near Centerville, Miss.,
June 16, 1909, Dy Rev. D. O. Byers, Dr.
Harmon E. Day, of Gloster, MIsb., and
Miss Etta Pemble.
Fleming-Price.:?In the Presbyterian
Church, Georgetown, Texas, June 16,
1909, by Rev. M. C. Hutton, D. D., Mr.
Morris Fleming, of Talpa, Texas, and
Miss Early Walton Price, of Georgetown.
Hall-Persinger.?At the residence of
the bride's parents, near Low Moor, Va.,
June 23, 1909, by Rev. L. H. Paul, Mr.
John Emmett Hall and Miss Leona M.
Persinger.
Haney-Campbell.? In the First Presbyterian
Church, Hattiesburg, Miss.,
June 22, 1909, by Rev. E. J. Currle, Mr.
J. J. Haney and Miss Bertie Campbell.
Johnsor.-Kevan.?At Petersburg, Va.,
June 17, 1909, by Rev. J. S. Foster, D.D.,
Mr. W. J. Johnson and Miss Epes Collier
Kevan.
Long-McKinney.?At the home of the
bride's mother, Clifton Forge, Va., Jupe
23, 1909, by Rev. L. H. Paiil, Mr. Clarence
L. Long and Miss Emma F. McKlnney.
Parrish-Fortner.?At Bartow, Fla.,
June 19, 1909, by Rev. E. J. Young, Mr.
James Parrish and Miss Lennie Fortner,
both of Wildwood, Fla.
Smith-Niblack.?At the residence of
fche bride's father, Mr. T. A. Niblack,
Tyler, Tex., May 26, 1909, by Rev. J. E.
McLean, Mr. Percy O. Smith and Miss
Elizabeth Niblack.
Spencer-Mason.? In the Psesbyterian
Church, Port Gibson, Miss., June 23,
1909, by Rev. M. E. Melvin, Mr. Meredith
J. Spencer and Miss Lillie Hoopes
Mason.
Warner-Kennedy.?In the Brotherhood
room of the Central Presbyterian Church
of Atlanta, Ga., June 14, 1909, by Dr.
Dunbar H. Ogde'n, Mr. Louis S. Warner
and Miss'Annie S. Kennedy.
White-Morris.?At the residence of
Mr. Oscar McFarlans, Tyler, Texas,
June 17, 1909, by Rev. J. E. McLean, Mr.
Dabney White and Mrs. Burk Yarbrough
Morris.
Wickenhoeffer-Johneon.?At the residence
of Capt. Sid Johnson, Tyler, Tex.,
June 15, 1909, by Rev. J. E. McLean,
Mr. Arthur George Wickenhoeffer and
Miss Wilhelmina Easby Johnson.
Married ,at Bridgewater, . December
16, 1788, Captain Thomas Baxter, of
Quincy, aged 66, to Miss Whitman, of
the former place, aged 57, after a long
and tedious courtship of 48 years, which
they both sustained with uncommon fortitude.
rH. July 7, 1909.
Deaths
Carter.?At her home in Washington,
D. C., on Wednesday, June 23, 1909, Miss
Mary Carter, daughter of the late Edwin
Carter, for many years a ruling
elder in the Presbyterian Church of
Fredericksburg, Va. Interment at Fredericksburg,
Friday, June 25.
Covington.?At Atlanta, Ga., Wednesday,
June 16, 1909, Mrs. Belle Smith
Covington, wife of M. L. Covington. Her
remains were takeji to Carrollton, Ga.,
for interment.
Glenn.?Thomas S. Glenn died at the
home of his niece, Mrs. B. G. Smith, Liberty,
S. C., on June 16, 1909, at 10:30
p. m., after an illness of several weeks.
He was sixty-one years of age. He was
torn and reared at Slabtown, Anderson
county, South Carolina, being the third
son of F. M. and Mary Templeton Glenn.
He was never married. He connected
himself with the Church early in life
and served successively as deacon and
elder. He had been in 111 health for
many years. He was kind, gentle, affectionate
and charitable, successful in
business, gifted in public prayer, a patient
sufferer. The funeral occurred on
June 18 at Slabtown Church, and the
body was interred in the church graveyard.
MRS. SARAH J. LOWE.
My sister, Mrs. Sarah J. Lowe,
was born in Jefferson county,
Georgia, August 23, 1840, and
departed this life in Swainsboro, Ga.,
May 6, 1909. She joined the Presbyterian
Church in girlhood and remained
a member of the same until death, except
for a little while when there was
.w v/ftiutvu ui iici tuuicc iicai iier sue
affiliated with the Methodists. She
loved her Church, her church paper and
her Bible. Free from all deception, she
lived a life that was like an open book.
She was of Scotch-Irish extraction,
her grandparents on the maternal .side
coming from Ireland in the latter part
of the eighteenth century, our mother
being born in this country in the year
1804. Her husband and three children
preceded her. Six children and one
brother are left to? mourn her going
away, but we hope to meet her again
"where there'll be no more parting."
Her sorrowing brother,
J. L. Scruggs.
THE WORD ETIQUETTE.
The very high sounding word etiquette
had a very humble origin, for etiquette
meant simply a label. It received its
present signification from the fact that
a Scotch gardener who laid out the
grounds at Versailles for Louis XIV. was
mtifih onnnwA/1 ?ll-i- ?
muvm MiKivjrou at liic tuui L1CI a IVUIM1JK
mrer bis newly made paths, and at length
had labels placed to indicate where they
might pass. At first these labels were not
attended to, but a hint from high quarters
that in future the walks of the courtiers
must be within the "etiquettes" or labels
was promptly attended to. *