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Raleigh Christian Advocate from Raleigh, North Carolina • Page 7

Location:
Raleigh, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

RALEIGH CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1892. cR MARRIAGES. tervards she joinei the M. E. Church, ways, until crippled by this disease, MISCELLANEOUS.

NEW DOUBLE COLUMN ADVERTISEMENTS. HEAD- MANUFACTURED ONLY BY JLS. I. OUITSON O. JOHNSON'S ITCH OINTMENT Will cure itch in 24 to 25 3.

and 50c. a box by mail without extra charge. ANDRE South, of which she was a consistent member the remainder of her life. She was a true wife, an affectionate mother and esteemed most by those who knew her best. As she was nearing "the valley of the shadow of death" her assurance of heaven seemed to grow brighter, and she requested the reading of the 23d Psalm.

Thus composed amid suffering, and awaiting her heavenly Father's will, she bade adieu to loved ones here to "dwell in the house of the Lord forever." A devoted husband, four little children, a father and mother, five sisters and four brothers, besides a large circle of acquaintances, mourn their loss; yet "not as others which have no hope." "When we asunder part, It gives us inward pain; But we shall still be joined in hearty And hope to meet again." S. B. TURRENTINE. JOYNER. Mrs.

Mary A. Joyner, nee Mary A. Sugg, was born March 30, 1843, aud died Friday night, Jarch 18, 1892, aged 48 years, 11 months and 18 days. She professed religion at twelve years of age under the ministry of Rev. Paul J.

Carraway on Snow Hill circuit, Greene county, N. and joined the M. E. Church, South, where she ever remained a consistent Christian till death. She was a devoted wife, a kind and loving mother.

She leaves a kind husband, six children and a host of friends to mourn her loss. She realized that her heart was affected and her desire was to pass away quietly some night after retiring, which she did on the night of her death. At about 11 o'clock the soul left the body, leaving upon the face a pleasant smile, indicating that all was well. Our loss is her eternal gain, for she lived and died a consistent Christian. We extend our heartfelt sympathies to the bereaved family and pray God's blessings upon them, and may they all live so as to meet mama in heaven, where she is waiting and watching at the beautiful gate to welcome them home.

R. F. Taylor. Resolutions of Respect. Resolutions of respect by the missionary society of Mountain Island M.

E. Church, South: W7iiereas, it has pleased Almighty God in his wise providence to take from earth to heaven little Douglas Kelley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W.

Kelley, be it therefore Jiesolved 1. That we bow in humble submission to his divine will whodoeth all things well, knowing that he has said, "suffer the little ones to come unto me." 2. That our deepest sympathies are hereby tendeTed to the bereaved parents, and that we pray the God of all comfort to abide with them in this their s)re bereavement. 3. That a copy of these resolutions be sent to the family, a copy be entered upon our records and a copy sent to the Raleigh Christian Advocate for publication.

Mina Howard, Ida Craig, Beile Brinkxey. They poulticed her feet and poulticed her head, And blistered her back till 'twas smart ing and red, Tried tonic3, elixirs, pain killers and salves, (Though grandma declared it was noth ing but The poor woman thought she must cer tainly die, Till "Pa vorite Prescription" she hap pened to try. No wonder its praises so loudly they speak; She srrew better at once, and was well in a week. The torturing pains and distressing nervousness wmcn accompany, at times, certain of female weak ness. vield like magic to Dr.

Pierce Favorite Prescription. It is purely vfieretable. nerfeetlv harmless, and adapted to the delicate organization of woman. It allays and subdues the nervous symptoms and relieves the pain accompanying functional and organic troubles. Guarantee printed on bottle- wrapper, and faithfully carried out for many years.

St. Annas Asylum, New Orleans, Sep. 5, '91. Mr. Chas.

A Conrad Dear Sir: A feeling of gratitude for my own recovery and a hope that others may benefit by my experience leads me to give you a history of my case of rheumatism and of the efforts made to cure or relieve me. I have suffered from rheumatism for nearly twenty years, which grew worse, un til suffering and poverty drove me to the charity hospital, where I re wi din p1 under treatment three lilUAUV months. I was then discharged, tttUVi fhp asnrance that I could never walk again without crutches as I was then doing, my rheumatism having grown worse while I was the Dints of my right leg swelled up to more than double their natural size. I was then offered a home in this institution, which I accepted last April. I am now Gl years of age, had al- led an active life, supporting myself comfortably, and became very unhappy living on charity.

Hearing this, several ladies who were acquainted with me and what I had done during the war, wrote requesting the officers to treat me with the Electropoise, and I have now had eleven treatments of two hours a day, three times a week. After the third treatment all pains disappeared, I threw away my crutches and am now able to walk entirely without assistance. I feel sure that in a very short time I shall be able to leave the asylum and make my own living. In addition to this my general health has been much improved and is as good as could be expected of any one my age. Very respectfully, Mrs.

Mary E. Wilbert. The facts stated by Mrs. Wilbert in the preceding communication in so far as they relate to her residence in this city (St. Annas asylum) her condition when she came here, for she could not walk without her crutch, and now she goes up and down stairs without assistance, in duces me to give my testimony to the fact of her having derived great benefit from her treatment with the lectropoise.

Her eyesight has also been wonderfully improved, for she could do nothing without glasses, and now she can thread a very fine needle without ihem. Respectfully, M. E. Ogden, Matron of St. Annas Asylum.

For all information regarding the lectropoise, write to Atlantic Elec tropoise Washington, D. The Life Insurance Co. of Va. The annual statement of the Life In surance Company of Virginia will be ound in this issue. This company has had fine success.

Its surplus is very arge. Its premium income has grown in five years, from 1887 to 1892, from $395,447.67. Its gross in come in 1891 was $416,407.07. It loans arge amounts in North Carolina, making it practically a home company. Col.

F. H. Cameron of this city, is the superintendent of the company for this State, and we cheerfully commend him and his company to the liberal patron age of our readers. See the fine show ing it makes in the statement else where in this issue. Teachers Wanted.

Methodist. Address Southern Teach- ers' Bureau, Winchester, Tenn. Send stamp. April 6, tf. For Malaria, Liver Trou ble, or Indigestion, use BROWN'S IRON BITTERS To Ladies.

Nothing makes a lady so happy and beautiful as to be healthy. Every lady who reads the Advo cate can be made happy and healthy. Send 2c. stamp to Mrs. Jos.

W. Ashby, Mount Airy, N. tor tree sample and information. Six months treatment lor 5.00 sept 12 tf bought a yj Piano ffir fa ii a (S paid only S375. For the very same Piano.

Neither one was worth a nickel over $300. Insure Yourself against paying' exhor-bitant prirr by buying direct from I1LUDDEN BATES, Savannah, Ga. Who have but One Prire and that the Jowesf. knoncn. You can't pay them more than Instruments are actually worth.

They are not built that way. I Write for latest SPECIAL OFFERS. sept 28, '885 DR. BLOSSER'S CATARRH CURE, the most pleasant and effective remedy yet discovered for the prompt relief and cure of CATARRH, COLDS, etc. Inhaled by smoking.

No tobacco- Sample free by mail. Dr.J. W. Blosser SAMPLEFREE nov 25-1 y. 198 Broadway, New York City, AND ALTON, GA.

The finest quality of Bells ot Churches, cnimes.Bcnools.etc. uny warrauteu. write for Catalogue ana Jr-rices. BUCKEYE BELL FOUNDRY, Tie YAH DUZEN TIFT Cincinnati, 0, july 1st 52t UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL BThp, SDrins Term begins Jan. 5th, 1892 and ends on the first Thursday in The Summer Session begins July 15th, and ends on the last Monday in 1892.

For particulars address, Hon. John manning, Chapel Hill, N. C. nov 25 7mo. AGHEBS Register NOW and secure po sitions in the Colleges, Seminaries and Schools of the South and Southwest.

Vacancies are occurring every day. Registration fee $2.00. Send stamp for AMFRTOAN KFltKAP OP EDUCATION, MISS CARTER, Proprietor, Cole Bldz, NASHVILLK, TENN feb 10 26t Stool Alloy Church suul School T.U. mrSmH for t'atulogue. C.

S. BKI.li Hillsboro. O. may 25 2G eow i jgin IIIOL fi Ayer's Pills Are compounded with the view to general usefulness and adaptability. They are composed of the purest vegetable aperients.

Their delicate sugar-coating, which readily dissolves in the stomach, preserves their full medicinal value and makes them easy to take, either by old or young. For constipation, dyspepsia, biliousness, sick headache, and the common derangements of the Stomach, Liver, and Bowels; also, to check colds and levers, Ayer's Pills Are the Best Unlike other cathartics, the effect of Ayer's Pills is to strengthen the excretory organs and restore to them their regular and natural action. Doctors everywhere prescribe them. In spite of immense compe tition, they have always maintained their popularity as a family medicine, being in greater demand now than ever before. They are put up both in vials and boxes, and whether for home use or travel, Ayer Pills are preferable to any other.

Have you ever tried them yer's Pills Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer Lowell, Mass. Hold by all Druggists.

Every Dose Effective ONE OF SHE MOST PLEASANT SUMMER RESORTS In the State is Piedmont Springs, Sotkes County, N. C. New and comfortable Hotel. Beauti ful mountain scenery. Delightful climate.

Mineral water unsurpassed by any in the State. Moderate rates. Splendid band ot music. Jb or health or pleasure seekers it has no equal. Jfor descriptive circulars and further information, address, liEO.

it. QlTINCY, Winston, N. Lessee and Proprietor. may 18 tf Do Xou Want a Teacher Teachers' Exchange Box 378, Richmond, Va. Supplies colleges, schools and fami lies with teachers without charge.

Secures situations tor teachers at moderate cost. Correspondence solict ed. Wm. F. Fox, Manager, (Supt.

Richmond Public Schools.) may 18 tf MEDICAL DEPARTMENT OF THE University of North Carolina. Third session will begin Sept. 1st, 1892. Instruction Chemistry, Phy sics, Anatomy, Histology, Physiology, and Materia Medica. Dissecting compulsory.

Practical microscopic work in the Biological Laboratory. For information address, Dr tt. H. WHITEHEAD, Chapel Hill, N. C.

may 18 12t TO MAGISTRATES. C0UNTYA0FFICERS. Upon receipt of name and post office, we wTill man to any Magistrate or rioimtv Officer in North Carolina a copy of Revised Fee Bill and List of Blanks to be used. JSI WARDS BKOUGIITOX, I'ubli Hers, J. W.MeGEE, Jr.

Druggist, 101 Fayetteville Raleigh, N. C. Keep a full line of Pure and Fresh Drugs, Toilet Articles ana uaraen Coals Ppftsp.rmtions tilled DrOUlDtlV and accurately day or night. Mr. Wm.

impson nas cnarge or tnis aepartnieuu Call and see us or order what you want by mail jan 29-ly. Wire Railing Ornamental WIREWORKS. No. 311 North Howard Street, BALTIMORE, MD. Manufacture Wire Eailine for Cemeter ies, Balconies, Sieves, Fenders, Cages, Sand and Coal Screens.

Woven Wire, etc. Also Iron Bedsteads, Chairs, bettees, arl 1-lv. GOLDEN MEMORIES BOOK OF THE OF IN SONG, AND BOOKS STORY. CoVd Plates, 50 full-page 2W Illustrationsl MASTERPIECE of LITERATURE and ART1 fiitllery of Pictorial Art, Llhrwry of Snored LHer Titiire, a I'e Chrlwt from Cradle to Crowit. sold at a price within the rea-h of AN AGENT WANTED IN EVERY TOWNSHIP.

HOT EAT( 130 Fifth Avenue, Sew York- feb 11-tf free In the Methodist church at Leaks-ville, Wednesday, May 25, 1892, at 8 p. iss Nannie S. King, daughter of Y. KinS of Leaksville, N. to lit.

A. II. Ould, of Lynchburg, llev. H. F.

Wiley officiating, assisted by Rev. D. C. Field. At Mr.

Clark Johnson's, the father of the bride, May 12, 1892, Mr. Allen Fuller and Miss Eula Johnson, all of Randolph county, Rev. 11. S. Ab-eruethy officiating.

By Rev. P. J. Carraway, at Siloam church May 18, Mr. L.

B. Williams, of Yadkin county, N. and Miss Lula M. Cornelius, of Surry county, N. C.

At the residence of the bride's father, j. W. Ridge, May 11, 1892, Mr. Charles fc Wilson to Miss Mary S. Ridge, both of Randolph county, N.

C. At the home of the bride's fat'aer, Mr. J. S. Council, May 25, 1S92, by Rev.

F. D.Swindell, D. Mr. Harry Hines and Miss Katie Council. In the M.

E. Church, South, at Stumpy Point, N. on May 15, 1892, Mr. A. C.

Gray to Miss Caldonia Payne, Rev. K. R. Pugh officiating. In the M.

E. Church, South, at Stumpy Pointy N. on May 15, 1892, Mr. R. T.

Wise to Miss Rebecca Gray, Rev. K. R. Pugh officiating. OBITUARIES.

IS We will insert an obituary of eighty ords free of charge. For the excess of 80 words we charge one cent per word. Count the words in excess of eighty and send the coney with obituary. Observe this kule L3A.sk. Do not put in any original poetry.

MEE KINS. After a brief illness, Bro. V. O. Meekins died April 19, 1S92, at Kennekeet, aged 34 years and 9 months.

We tender our sympathies to the bereaved family. J. A. Rouse. KEARiNS.

Mrs. Diza Kearns, a native and resident of Randolph county, X. daughter of JFood and Mary Arnold, wife of Ivy Kearns, was born September 7, 1312, converted under the ministry of Rev. Benjamin Kidd 1S23, married December 15, 1831, and died January 22, 1892. Unto this happy couple were born one son, eight daughters, twenty-four and nineteen great-grandchildren.

The husband, son and four daughters survive, with other kindred, to mourn an irreparable loss. Sister Kearns joined the Methodist Episcopal church in her sixteenth year at the time of her conversion, and remained a consistent member until her death. She was not afraid to die, and bad expressed a desire "to be taken before her husband," apparently from a dread of widowhood. Her desire was realized, inasmuch as the husband (three years her senior) survives his companion of four-score years. Dr.

John R. Brooks preached her funeral January 23, 1892, at Salem church, at the time and place of her burial. In the silent city of the dead she now sweetly sleeps, with "No cares to break the long repose." ''We shall sleep, but not forever, In the lone and silent grave; Blessed be the Lord that taketh, Blessed be the Lord that gave." S. Aeernetiiy. HANCOCK.

Miss Frances Hancock died at Hillsboro, N. May 2, 1892. She was a devoted member of the M. E. Church, South, and was 73 years old at her death.

Though spending thirty of these years in total blindness, yet she was always cheerful and happy. The funeral services were conducted by the writer, after which we placed her body in the Hillsboro cemetery, but her spirit is gone to a place where the inhabitants are never sick or blind. "Asleep in Jesus', blessed sleep! From which none ever wake to weep." J. M. Lowdeii.

JENKINS. George W.Jenkins, aged o5 years, departed this life April 11, 1892. Bro. Jenkins was a farmer of honest toil, and a man of deep conscienti dus-ness. He would revolve in his mind our pastoral talks and the sermons that he heard from one month to the other, and used to say that some of his happiest experiences cam a to him while between the plow handles.

Often times would he quit his plow long enough to get down upon his knees in the fresh-plowed ground and pour out his soul to his God, and as often would he rise triumphantly victorious over his shortcomings, which grieved him no little. Bro. Jenkins never had any children, but leaves a wife and an adopted daughter to grieve after him. May Heaven, that healeth all earthly sorrows, some sweet day. bv its glorious magnetic power, reunite them all.

G. G. IIARLEY. HELL. Mrs.

Helen L. Bell, nee New ton, was born in Chapel Hill, N. De cember 0, 1861, and died in Winston, N. c-. April 5, 1S92 She was happily u'iited in marriage to Edward W.

Bell August 25, 1885. Under the ministry of Rev. J. Heitman, at Chapel Hill, she was led to a caret' id study of the Holy Scriptures, which resulted in her happy conversion 't Iioiup. durinsr her erirlhood.

Soon af- ow i find at any place between Richmond, uuu wi" w. $10.00, $15.00 and urios ami ciauiea GRANDIMAY REDUCTION SALE IN FURNITURE. On May first I inaugurate the grandest and most astonishing reduction sale in all kinds of furniture. This reduction sale does not simply include a styles to be used as baits," but everything in my store goes at ii.J Tt i 11 v-X ot.ifo tViof mxr nfop.lr WS never SO large LiitJ price. win uc vvciiiui uic ucic or complete as it is to day.

You will not aim quanta, su laige a dluub. "uui rift mo i. x. 7v 4- foil orvvno trt SAP. TYfi Of Write Elt) iurniLure, j.

lanus or urgans yuu suuum for catalogues and prices. Astonishing! Astonishing I RRnunoM STTTTN a solid oak Redroom suit consisting of large ioak Bed, Dresser with Glass combination, washstand, 4 oak chairs, oak rocker, i oa center table ana toweij rack, an ror oniy imaaiwa pieces. $18 50 and $20.00. Many other styles in oak, cherry and walnut running thus, $25.00, 32.50, $37.50 and up to 2ou IPAIKILOK SUITS. There is no department in my store more complete that my ftock of Parlor Suits.

You should see those in crushed piusn, wooi piusu, tapestry, silk bracatelle, silk damask, ana wncon rug. Cuu10 v. styles at such low prices as is astonishing UMiasBig Mooni -Rxtmision tables at S4.S0. $6.50. $9.00 and up as high as $35.00.

Sideboards in artistic styles ranging at $9.00, $12 50, $15.00, $25 00 up tp eacn. fining room (Ws at $3.50, 4 50, $7.50 and up to $25.00, sets that costs you else- where twice as mucn money. SINGLE AND BED LOUNUUS. Singles $12.00 and $25.00. Beds at slightly advanced prices.

A completelcatalogue Lounges furnished on application. BABY CARRIAGES, CRIBS AND CRADLES. Here vou can get anything you want for the comfort and amusement of the little ones. Carriages at $0.75, $7.50, of various styles and prices. FOLDING BEDS AND LADIES wiutijnw jj-oivd.

The finest and most celebrated Folding Beds always in stock. I can save you money if you want a folding bedjbuy from no one until you see my catalogue. OFFICE AND LIBRARY FURNITURE. Professional and business man of all classes will find in my. JMffirU mentof office furniture, just what they want.

I am away down on roll desks Write me for catalogues. GIRL'S AND BOY'S BICYLES. I am selling the celebrated Gendron Safety Bicyle. Do not buy until you get my prices. PIANOS AND ORGANS.

I sell the leading makes of Pianos and Organs Every one guaranteed. Delivered at your depot with music and instruction books, and with tes- trial. Every instrument must come up as represented or money ref unded.I guarantee to save you money. vnnviv writp me for Catalogues E. M.

ANDitiiWs, rite me ror ataiugu Furniture.Piano and Organ Dealer, 16 and 18 West Trade Street, Charlotte, N. C. mar 1 tf i Cy (tj.

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About Raleigh Christian Advocate Archive

Pages Available:
9,097
Years Available:
1856-1899