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TH
YELLOW SULPHUR SPRINGS, VA.
New Management.
Excellent Cuisine and Chapel Service.
Booklet on Application.
Open June 1,
W. D. PAXTON, Prop.
W. T. Hardle Win. F. Hurdle
Robt. T. Hardle Eben Hardie
Wm. T. Hardie & Co.
COTTON FACTORS AND
.COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
933 Gravier Street, cor. Dryades,
NEW ORLEANS. LA.
twmwwwwiwwmwwy.wi
iH. L. Christian & Co. ] i
808 E. Main Street,
RICHMOND, - VIRGINIA.];
I: FANCY GROCERIES j|
Agent* <or j \
I: HUYLER'S CANDIES jj
Henry N. Gastrock
3120-3122 Magazine 3t.
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
? AND GLT =
3 I-2 Per Cent Per Annum
on Deposits $1.00 land upwards
Whitney-Central Trust
& Savings Bank
616-618 Common St.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
F. Johnson & Son Company
LIMITED.
UNDERTAKERS AND FURNISHERS
OF FINE FUNERAL
FURNITURE.
Washington Ave. and Prytania St.
Livery Department: Phone Jackson, 697.
Undertaking Dept.: Phone Jackson, 21.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
[E PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOUT
Marriages
Chatterton-Kessler.?In the Oak Cliff
Presbyterian Church, Dallas, Texas, June
30, 1909, by Rev. Wm. Fred Galbraith,
Mr. Rollin M. Chatterton, of Lexington,
Ohio, and Miss Helen M. Kessler, of Dal
las, Texas.
Davis-Cotten.?At the residence of the
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Cotten,
Corinth, Miss., June 23, 1909, by
Rev. J. W. Allen, of Booneville, Mr. W.
H. Davis, of Booneville, and Miss Luclle
Cotten.
Cunningham-Hipp.?In the Thornwell
Memorial Church, Clinton, S. C., June 30,
1909, by Rev. W. P. Jacobs, D. D., Dr. G.
W. Cunningham, of Middlebury College,
Vermont, and Miss Mattie Hipp.
Dickson-Rutledge.?At Summit, Miss.,
July 10, 1909, by Rev. A. F. Laird, Mr.
Robert L. Dickson, of Memphis, and Miss
Venlta Irene Rutledge.
Deaths
De Wanneick.?Mrs. Mabel de Wanneick,
wife of Dr. O. J. de Wanneick,
died at her home in Dallas, Texas, July
1, 1909, in her twenty-seventh year, and
was buried at the home of her father in
Sheldon, 111. She was a member of the
Oak Cliff Presbyterian Church. A devoted
wife, a faithful friend, a beautiful
Christian woman, has entered upon her
eternal rest, where she continues the
beautiful life begun here.
Jameson.?Near Chalybeate, Miss.,
June 25, 1909, Miss Fannie Meeks Jaimeson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Minter
Jaimeson. For many years she had lived
a consistent member of the Chalybeate
! Presbyterian Church. A beautiful and
strong Christian character has been removed
from the walks of life to a
heavenly reward.
Was* a* ~ 1
ww ? ?*? nv uci uuiiic in nuisuuru,
Texas, June 12, 1909, Mrs. Guy C. West
< (nee Miss Mary Petheram, of Dallas,
Texas), died and was buried June 13,
the service being conducted by Rev. W.
Fred "Galbraith, of the Oak Cliff Presbyj
terian Church, in Dallas, of which she
; was a loyal member for a number of
! years,' and who also officiated at her marriage
a few months ago. The soul and
sum of perfect wifehood, a devoted *
Christian, a true gentlewoman, she met
death as she lived?serenely and with
the hallowed spirit of a handmaiden of
God.
MRS. MARY ALLEN KEMPER.
Mary Allen Kemper was born January
9, 1866, at "Valley Spring," near New
| Hope, Augusta county, Virginia. She
was the daughter of William Bell'Crawford
and Virginia Brown Holbrook, the
latter being a native of Buckingham
county, Virginia. She was baptized in
infancy at Mt. Horeb Presbyterian
'H. July 21, 1909.
Church and united with the church on
the contession of her faith in her sixteenth
year. On December 17, 1885, she
married Charles E. Kemper, a lawyer,
of Staunton, who removed to Washington,
D. C., in 1893, where they have since
resided.
Mrs. Kemper for several years attended
the Central Presbyterian Church
in Washington, of which Dr. Pitzer was
pastor, but finally connected herself"
with the Gunton Temple Memorial
Church, of which Rev. Dr. J. Lee Allison
is pastor.
She died May 23, 1909, after a long
and desperate illness, with the peace of
God upon her face and the blessed hope
of a glorious immortality.
Mrs. Kemper loved the house of God
and was a most active and efficient member
of the Woman's Missionary Society.
In Mrs. Kemper was illustrated the glory
and Influence of true womanhood. She
was endowed with the attributes of tenderness
and modesty, crowned with the
d xdem of wisdom, clothed with the
spotless robe of purity and adorned with
the rare jewels of patience, perseverance,
faith, hope and love. Such characters
can not die; they are immortal. She
leaves a husband, two sons and a large
circle of relatives and friends, who
mourn her departure. "Blessed are the
dead who die in the Lord."
Pastor.
In Memory of
MRS. MARY ELIZABETH CARTLEDGE
CHATHAM.
The subject of this sketch was born in
Madison county, Georgia, June 6, 1860,
of Christian parents, being the only
daughter of Rev. John L. and Eliza
McCurdy Cartledge. The father survives
her, but her mother preceded her to a
better home.
Mrs. Chatham was married in 1890 to
Mr. Wm. C. Chatham. To thfs union
four children were born, two girls and
two boys, all comparatively small, who
are left to strueele without a mnther's
love, care and guidance, and the smallest,
who doesn't know the true worth of
a loving mother, and who can never
realize that she has left them for all
time; but to some of them she had instilled
into their hearts that force of
character which has already molded their
lives for better, and the lessons she has
taught them will be lived out in the
future.
Mrs. Chatham had been a member of
the Presbyterian Church since quite
young, and as such she had always lived
a devout Christian life and had exemplified
it in many ways.
As a wife she was a true and devoted
helpmeet. As a mother she was all that
love and'alTecTion, care and self-sacrifice *
could be to her children, teaching them
from earliest infancy their duty to God,
to his cause and to his Church.
Mrs. Chatham, after an illness of three
months, during which time all that could
be done for her was done, fell asleep in
Jesus, July 5, 1909. During her long