Newspaper Page Text
30 TF
CHILDREN'S ILLS.
Ask your druggist for a bottle of "Baby
Ease." (Cost 25c.) Give to the child
as directed on bottle. "Baby Ease" is
advised for diarrhoea, convulsions, colic,
constipation, sour stomach. "Baby Ease"
makes teething easv. Dromntes ehoorfni.
ness and produces natural sleep. "Baby
Ease" makes a mild laxative for school
children. It is a pleasant, harmless and
effective substitute for calomel or castor
oil. Next time you need a remedy
for children's ills, try "Baby Ease." Formula
printed on the bottle. Circular
free. Baby Ease Company, Atlanta, Ga.
W. T. Hardle Wm. F. Hardie
Robt. T. Hardle Eben Hardie
Wm. T. Hardie & Co.
COTTON FACT0R8 AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
933 Gravier Street, cor. nrvoHw,
NEW ORLEANS, LA.'
J I ^
; | R. L. Christian Sr Co. \:
j ; 808 E. Main 8treet,
J! RICHMOND, - VIRGINIA,;;
I! FANCY GROCERIES jj
; | Agents <or
!| HUYLER'S CANDIES;!
Mail or Bring Us
1/ r?
Your havings
We pay Interest on
Deposits of $1.00
and upwards.
Whitney-Central Trust
& Savings Ranlr
616-618 Common St.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
F. Johnson 6 Son Company
LIMITED.
UNDERTAKERS AND FURNISHERS
OF FINE FUNERAL.
FURNITURE.
Washincton Ave. and Prvtania ? -
Livery Department: Phone Jackson, 697.
Undertaking Dept.: Phone Jackson, 21.
NEW ORLEAN8, LA.
r r
[E PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SO
Marriages
Bridges-Gingles.?At the manse of the
Presbyterian Church, Mt Pleasant, Tex.,
August 15, 1909, by Rev. J. O. Vnmor
Mr. T. J. Bridges and Miss Pearl Gingles,
both of Bridges' Chapel.
Cook-Gallant.?In Ariel, Miss., July 28,
1909, by Rev. W. F. Creson, Mr. J. B.
Cook and Miss Mary Gallant, daughter
of Mr. L. M. Gallant, of Ariel, Miss.
Cummings-Maupin.?At the home of the
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Maupin,
Prairie Grove, Arkansas, August 18,
1909, by Rev. J. E. Wylie, Mr. H. D. Cummings
and Miss Mary Rebacca Maupin.
Martin-Draper.?On Thursday, August
19, at the manse in Winfleld, W. Virginia,
by the Rev. Jno. K. Hitner, Mr.
Earl Russell Martin and Miss Virgie
Dene Draper, both of Hurricane, Putman
county, West Virginia.
Lewis-McKmeely.?At Bogalusa, by
Rev. Edmond La Vergne, on August 20,
1909, Mr. Chas. B. Lewis to Miss Nettie
McKmeely, of Bogalusa.
Morris-Brian.?In Alexandria, La., August
14, 1909, by Rev. B. L. Price, Mr.
Frank B. Morris, of Louisville, Ky., and
Miss Clemmie Brian, daughter of Dr. F.
N. Brian, of Alexandria.
Moses-Tipton.?In Knoxvtlle, Tenn., at
the bride's home, August 19, 1909, by
Rev. James Park, D.D., Mr. Edward Pearson
Moses and Mrs. Lucie Alexander
Tipton.
' ~ : '
Deaths
Faubion.?At her residence in Leander,
Texas, August 2, 1909, Mrs. Marinda
Black Faubion, widow of William Faubion.
She united with the church at fifteen
years of age, and for over fifty years
lived a consecrated Christian life in the
Presbyterian Church. She was the devoted
mother of ten children. M. C. H.
Hood.?Died, at her home at Green
Hfll, Texas, August 7, 1909, at the age of
fifty-four years, Mrs. Anna D. Hood. She
was laid to re3t at Green Hill Church, of
which she was for many years a most devoted
member, and of which her father
was the founder.
Gildersleeve.?At Abingdon, Virginia,
on Saturday, July 24, 1909, at three
o'clock, p. m., after a short illness,
Mrs. Mary Gibson Gildersleeve, wife of
Benjamin Gildersleeve, Sr., in the seventieth
year of her age.
Knutti.?July 31, 1909, at Morganton,
West Virginia, after a short illness of
typhoid fever, In the thirty-eighth year of
his age. Prof. John G. Knutti, A.M., a native
of Switzerland, principal of Shepherd
College State Normal School, and a
UTH. September i, 1909.
member of the Shepherdstown Presbyterian
Church. He leaves a wife and two
children. His "sun is gone down while it
is yet day."
Mrs. Georgia Ann Ransom died August
22, 1909, at Newnan, Ga. Verily, a
mother in Israel has been called up
hogher. She was a faithful and devout
follower of Jesus, having united with the
Presbyterian Church at Newnan in 1850.
MRS. SARAH F. ROBERTS.
Sarah Frances White, daughter of Robert
Luther and Jean Stephenson Frierson,
wife of Benjamin Franklin Roberts,
mother of Leon F. Roberts, of Pawhuska,
Oklahoma; B. F.. Jr.. of Arcadia T-rmia
iana; Horace, of Sharpsburg, Kentucky;
Ewing, of Nashville; Chas., Jennie and
Grace, of Franklin, Tennessee; born August
23, 1847, died August 2, 1909, aged
62 years less 21 days.
President McKinley, having taken the
oath, turned about first of all to kiss his
mother. This act, a tribute to a mother's
love, vibrated a common cord, and the
hearts of all the people responded. Her
love had been from the cradle "a pillar
of fire by night and a .cloud by day"?an
efficient tonic, a safe stimulant. Her
complacent smile, her joyous tears on this
proud day of her son's inaugural, were
they not symbolic of a prouder day in a
brighter world? This smile, these tears,
do they not paint "the bow of promise"
that spans life's young pathway? Do
they not interweave an arch bright with
heaven's colors against earth's clouds big
with the thunderbolts of opposition, discouragements
and temDtations? The
mother's love can not die. It lives here,
It lives there, it is immortal. Her example,
her precepts and her prayers are
character builders. Noble sons and virtuous
daughters are the fruits of her patient
and persistent toil. When toil is
ended and tears are wiped away and
mother a sweet memory, then the influence
of her devoted life is magnetized by
God's Spirit and becomes one of the
"drawings of the father."
Absence so sad,'so crushing, is not essentially
loss. "Eye hath not seen, ear
hath not heard, nor hath it entered the
heart of man to conceive what the Lord
hath in store for those that love Him."
What gain to her? Love so potent in the
home here will surely receive augmented
power there. Heaven is so near we reach
there in the twinkling of an eye, so accessible
only the upward glance; so benignant,
ask what you will. These are
the facilities. Hence, what limit can be
placed on the Allwise and All Powerful?
They in heaven certainly do the will of
the Father. It's my Father's will that all
shall come unto Him. All honor to the
mother's love. Noble characters are the
best . monuments of a mother's love
her children- can rear. Men digging In
* A
vug i units ui mi ancient city uneartnea a
stone. Chiseled on It were these words:
"To the memory of a good woman." And
in the world amongst strangers let your
lives speak these words, no more, no less.
W. W. 8. .