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2 PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOU
Marriages
I !!! ^ : !
Davis-Houston.?In the manse, Covington,
La., December 9, 1909, by Rev. J.
M. Williams, Mr. Daniel W. Davis and
Miss Edith Arthur Houston.
Olney-Canfield.?At Franklin, Tenn.,
December 10, 1909, by Rev. W. J. McMillan,
Mr. H. L. Olney and Miss Eva
Duncan Canfleld, of Nashville.
Hatchett-Hamlen. ? At tho ?v>o?o?.
Franklin, Tenn., November 6, 1909, by
Rev. W. J. McMillan, Mr. James M.
Hatchett and Miss Callie Mae Hamlen,
of Athens, Ala.
Buford-Gary.?At the Mays Hotel,
Franklin, Tenn., October 1, 1909, by Rev.
\V. J. McMillan, Mr. Buford Gary and
Miss Louise Andrews, of Nashville.
Killen-Morgan.?At the home of the
bride's mother. College street, Americus,
ua., by Rev. J. A. Thomas, of Thomasville,
Ga., Mr. James T. Killen, of Valdosta,
Ga., and Miss Marie Edgeworth
Morgan.
Bradbury-Smith.?In Banks County,
Ga., December 9, 1909, by the Rev. W. L.
Barber, Mr. M. W. Bradbury and Miss
Willie E. Smith.
Foote-Cockerham.?In the Hotel Grunewald
parlors," New Orleans, December
9, 1909, by Rev. John N. Blackburn, of
Houma, La., Mr. John M. Foote, Superintendent
of Public Schools of Terrebonne
Paris, and Miss Viva Cockerham, of Coushatta.
La.
Rr>h?rc~- C I-? ** * - -
....waunusi m.?ai iue residence
of the bride's parents, in Bogalusa, La.,
on Wednesday, December 8, 1909, by Rev.
Edmond LaVergne, Mr. Herman G. Roberson
and Miss Gladys Lucille Saunders.
Graham-Corley.?On Monday, December
6, 1909, at 138 West Fair street, At- .
lanta, Ga., by Rev. John D. Keith, Miss
Helen Corley, of Lexington, S. C., and
Mr. Joel William Graham, of Atlanta.
| Deaths j
Mcintosh.?Died in Norfolk, Va., on the
twenty-sixth of November, 1909, Mrs. Isabella
Donaldson Mcintosh, widow of
Commander Charles Fleming Mcintosh,
C. S. N., and daughter of the late James
Donaldson Thorbeen and Anna Moore
Howison, his wife, in the eighty-third
year of her age.
Kinnard.?At Franklin, Tenn., December
5, 1909, in her fifteenth year, Miss
Cynthia Graham Kinnard, youngest
daughter of Mrs. C. H. Kinnard, fell
asleep in Jesus. The Master has transplanted
a beautiful and fragrant flower.
MR. AUGUSTUS LONGSTREET HULL.
There fell asleep in the city of Athens,
?jia.. November 11 Mr inmatna T
street Hull, In the sixty-third year of his
age, for years a ruling elder in the Presbyterian
Church of his city, Mr. Hull's
life was a singularly beautiful one, characterized
by simple dignity, the refinement
of a broad and true culture, a wise
TH. December 22, igog.
and sane judgment, and above all a deep,
genuine piety. His passing away is a
distinct loss to his state and city which
so long have had his unselfish services
in public offices of many kinds, pre-eminently
in the University of Georgia,
which he loved so well and served so
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veterans will miss his presence and hisenthusiastic
allegiance to the glorious
traditions of the South. But most of all
will the Church to which he gave his devoted
service bewail her loss in the passing
of one so wise in her councils, so
true to her standards and so unswerving
in his loyalty to them. For years he had
borne heroically a physical trouble that
showed him a moral hero, patient, brave,
uncomplaining. His going was a sweet
release, an entrance into fuller life. The
testimony of his last hours was a glorious
attestation of his victory over
death wrought out by his Master, whose
he was and whom he served. His last
wish was that the Holy Spirit might
come down upon all around him, and
seal his going Home as an example to
those who followed him. And so death
had lost its sting. It became a triumph.
How glorious it is that the Church can
number with her saints in glory everlasting
such as he who thus witnessed
so triumphant a confession and who even
now beholds the King in His beauty and
is like Him. M. L. M.
MISS ANGIE C. WING.
The Master whom she followed so lovingly
and so faithfully has called our
beloved president, Miss Angle C. Wing,
to be with Him; therefore be it
Resolved, That we thank God for the
help and inspiration, from a life of such
rare attainment in spirituality, and such
habitual giving of all to His service.
Second. That we strive more earnestly
to do the work to which her life was
so largely devoted, the sending of the
gospel to the people yet without it.
Third. That these resolutions be published
in The Missionary, The Christian
Observer and The Presbyterian of the
South, and that a copy be placed upon
the reenrHa of ami*
Mrs. E. P. Morgan,
Chairman.
Mrs. Herbert Brown,
Mrs. E. B. Witherspoon,
Mrs. E. Blatchford,
Miss Florence Wade,
Mrs. J. T. Killen,
Mrs. J. A. Craig,
Executive Committee of Woman's Foreign
Missionary Union of Macon Presbytery.
MRS. MARTHA ATTILIA FRIPP.
Resolutions adopted by the Ladies' Aid
and Missionary Societies of the Presbyteriap
Church, Richberg, S. C.t on the
death of Mrs. Martha Attilia Fripp:
Whereas, God, in His infinite wisdom,
has seen fit to remove from her sphere
of usefulness our friend and co-worker;
luereiure oe 11
Resolved 1. That we deeply mourn the
loss of one who was always faithful to
every trust.