Newspaper Page Text
; September i, 1909. THE
ed , at Churebville, Va.; not Warm
Springs. , .
Rev. Geo.. H. Cornelson, Jr., D.D.,
changes his address to First Presbyterian
Church, New Orleans, La.
Rev. A. J. Ponton change^ his address
to Chatham, Va., R. F. D. No. 3; no
change in his field of labor.
Rev. H. B. Searight, of Washington,
N. C., will leave on August 16, for his
vn rn t inn u'hirh ho will onnnH of
treat and Waynesville, N. C.
Rev. Dr. and Mrs. L. B. Turnbull, of
Lexington, Va., are enjoying an outing in
Northern New York and Canada.
Rev. G. G. Sydnor, D. D., of Rome, Ga.,
is visiting relatives in South Boston and
Halifax, Va.,
Rev. S. S. Oliver changes his address
from Pitt8boro, N. C., to King's Mountain,
N. C.
Rev. J. O. Needham, of Shepherdsville,
Ky., has received a call from the church
nt Ada, Okla.
Rev. H. S. Springall, pastor of the
First Church, Corpus* Christi, Tex., will
spend his vacation in New York and
Winona Lake, Ind.
Rev. W. A. Daniel, of Huntersville, N.
C., has decided to accept the call from
the church at Jasper, Ala.
Rev. T. S. Ctyce, D.D., president of
Austin College, Sherman, Tex., passed
through New Orleans on his way homewards
from Montreat, where he spoke
last week, and preached ou Sunday fix the
First Church, which he has served so
acceptably several weeks this summer.
Rev. James Samuel Amsey Hunter, for
twenty-two years a missionary of the Associate
Reformed Church to Mexico, died
last week at the home of his daughter in
Gastonia, N. C., at the age of sixty-two
years.
D?.. A n Li I -J 1?- ? -1^
ncv. n. n. nuiuciuy, unci u. picuauui
summer at Marietta, returns to 233
Luckie St., Atlanta, Ga. During his absence
the ladies of his church repaired
and repapered the manse.
Rev. Dr. Thornton Whaling, former pastor
of the Lexington Presbyterian Church,
now of Dallas, Texas, reached Lexington
Saturday and is the guest of Mr. Matthew
W. Paxton. Dr. Whaling preached most
acceptably to his old congregation Sunday
morning and afternoon.
Press Dispatches announce the death
at Lenoir, N. C., of Mr. Thos. Reese English,
son of Rev. Dr. English, of Union
Seminary. Hosts of friends will read this
notice with sorrow; and breathe a prayer
to the God of all grace for the comfort of
the bereaved.
M. Vandervelde, the Socialist leader, of
Brussels, announces that he will go to the
Congo to defend the American missionaries,
the Rev. William M. Morrison, D.D.,
and Rev. William Henry Sheppard, D.D.,
who are under indictment there for criminally
libeling the Kassai Rubber Co., a
Congo Free State corporation.
The Rev. Dr. Howard Agnew Johnston,
oi uoioraao springs, nas many irienas in
the South, who will be grieved to hear
of his affliction by the death of his wife,
which occurred on August 15, in Cincinnati.
PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOUT
TIME AND PLACE.
Presbyterial Meetings.
Synod of Alabama.
East Alabama, Geneva, Oct. 19, 8 p. m.
Mobile, Scotland Ch., Tunnel Springs,
Sept.-19, 7:30 p. m.
Tuscaloosa, Hadden Ch., Sumter Co.,
Oct. 12, 1:30 p. m.
Synod of Arkansas.
Arkansas, Conway, Sept. 28, 7:30 p. m.
Ouichita, Mt. Holly Ch., Union Co.,
Sept. 23, 7:30 p. m.
Pine Bluff, Marvell, Oct. 15, 7:30 p. m.
Washburn, Charleston, Sept. 22, 8 p. m.
Synod of Florida.
Florida, St. Andrews Bay, Oct. 26,
7:30 p. m.
Synod of Georgia.
Atlanta, Rock Spring Ch? Fulton Co.,
Sept. 28, 7:30 p. m.
Cherokee, First Ch., Dalton, Sept. 28,
7:30 p. m.
Macon, East Macon Church, Macon,
Oct. 19, 7:30 p. m.
Synod of Kentucky.
Ebenezer, Millersburg, Sept. 28, 7:30
p. m.
Louisville, Bloomfleld, Sept. 28, 7:30
p. m.
Muhlenburg First Ch., Central City,
Sept. 28, 7:30 p. m.
Transylvania, Pisgah, Sept. 28, 7:00
p. m.
West Lexington, Horeb Ch., Fayette
Co., Sept. 28, 7:30 p. m.
Synod of Louisiana.
Louisiana, LaFayette, Oct. 26, 7:30 p.
New Orleans, First Ch., New Orleans,
Oct. 19, 7:30 p. m.
Red River, Banks Chapel, Bossier parish,
Sept. 28, 7:30 p. m.
Synod of Mississippi.
Central Mississippi, Greenville, Oct.
26, 7:30 p. m.
East Mississippi, Unity Ch., Aug. 24,
2 p. m.
Meridian, Bay Springs, Oct. 26, 7:30
p. m.
Synod of Missouri.
LaFayette, Sweet Springs, Sept. 14,
7:30 p. m.
Missouri, Ind., Grove Ch., Aug. 31, 7:30
p. m.
Pftlmvrfl Alovnnilrln 5ont 98 7-9A ~
Potosi, Fruit land, Sept. 28, 7:30 p. m.
St. Louis First Ch. Festus, Sept. 28,
10 a. m.
Upper Missouri Bethel Church, Sept.
16, 8 p. m.
Synod of North Carolina.
Albemarle, Nutbush Ch., Sept. 28, 8
p. m.
Asheville, Franklin, Sept. 21, 8 p. m.
Concord, Banner Elk, Sept. 14, 7:30 p.
m.
Fayetteville, Rockingham, Sept. 29, 11
a. m.
King's Mountain, Union Ch., Sept. 28,
8 p. m.
/-? ^ "
lue^mcuuuiG, iaw v/reen, oepi. 0, a p.
m.
Orange, Cross Roads Ch., Sept. 21, 3
p. m.
Wilmington, Clinton, Oct. 6, 2:30 p. m.
Synod of Oklahoma.
Durant, First Ch., Hugo, Sept. 22, 8
p. m.
4- *
H.. 21
Mangum, Altus, Sept. 7, 8 p. rn.
Synod of South Carolina.
Eethel, Bethesda Cfi.; Sept. 8/ 11 a. m.
Harmony, Beulah Ch., Oct. 5, 7:30 p.'m.
Enoree, Wellford, Sept. 14,-8 p. m.
Pee Dee, Effingham, Sept. 24, 11 a. m.
South Carolina, WilHamston, Sept. 14.
8 p. m. ? '
s Synod of -Tennessee.
Columbia, Belfast Union Ch., Sept. 27,
7:30 p. m.
HOlston, Rogersville, Sept. 1, 7:30 p.
m.
Knoxville, St. Elmo, Sept. 15, 7:30
p. m. '
Memphis, Oakland, Sept. 21, 7:30 p. m.
Nashville, Shelbyville, Sept. 21, 7:30
p. m.
Western District, Denmark, Sept. 28,
7:30 p. m. . j
Synod of Texas.
Brownwood, Bangs, Sept. 23, 8 p. "in.
Central Texas, Clifton, Sept. 16, 8 p. m.
Dallas, Amarillo, Oct. 12, 8 p. m.
Eastern Texas, Livingston, Sept. 14,
8 p. m.
El Paso, Barstow, Sept. 15, 8 p. -m.
Forth Worth, Gordon, Sept. 23, 8 p. fn.
Paris, Honey Grove, Sept. 24, 8 p. m.
Western Texas, Goliad, Oct 13, 8 p. m.
Synod of Virginia.
Abingdon, Glade Spring, Sept. 22, 7:30
p. m.
Chesapeake, Bealeton, Aug. 31, 8 p. m.
East Hanover, Mattoax, Oct. 5, 3 p. m.
Lexington, Beverly, W. Va., Oct. 12,
9:30 a. m.
Maryland, Hancock, Sept. 21, 8 p. m.
Montgomery, Princeton, W. Va., Sept.
14, 8 p. m.
Winchester, Romney, W. Va., Sept. 21,
8 p. m.
Woct ~
..v.i, twuuici, vmesvine, sept. 21,
7:30 p. m.
West Virginia .......
Greenbrier, Organ Cave, Aug. 31, 8
p. ra.
FROM THE BENCH
A Judge Commends Pure Food.
A judge of a Colorado court said:
"Nearly one year ago I began the use of
Grape-Nuts as a food. Constant confinement
Indoors and the monotonous grind
of office duties had so weakened and impaired
my mental powers that 1 felt the
imperative need of somethirg which
neither doctors nor food specialists
seemed able to supply.
"A week's use of Orsne-Niito
each day convinced me that some unusual
and marvelous virtue was contained
therein. My mental vigor returned
with astonishing rapidity; brain weariness
(from which 1 had constantly suffered)
quicky disappeared, clearness of
thought and intellectual health and
activity which I had never previously
known were to me the plain results of a
few months use of this food.
"Unhesitatingly I commend GrapeNuts
as the most remarkable food preparation
which science has ever produced
so far as my knowledge and experience
extends."
The judge is right. Grape-Nuts food
is a certain and remarkable brain builder
and can be reH?H nmn. "tiiom'. -
reason." " ?
Ever read thfc above letter? A new one
appears from time to time. They are
genuine, true, and full of human interest.