The Jackson Herald February 18, 1898
Mrs. Lula Niblack
______
There is no death, the stars go down,
To rise upon some fairer shore,
And bright in Heaven's jewell
crown,
They
rise to shine forever more.
The breath has left the body of Mrs. Lula Niblack, and her body is now reposing in the cold earth of Virgil cemetery, but she is not dead. her memory is still alive in the good and noble work she did while on earth.
She pitied and comforted the sick and afflicted; she was a zealous worker in the Sunday school, teaching the young minds the way to go; she was a devoted member of the church, and took delight in helping souls from the darkness of sin to the marvelous light and liberty of the Master.
Mrs. Lula
Niblack was thirty-two years old at the time of her death, Dec. 10, 1897.
She was reared in Jackson county, near Maysville; her maiden name was Miss Lula
Loggins. she leaves a husband and four children---three boys and one
girl. She had been a member of the Baptist church for fifteen years.
She died of consumption. She was a smooth-tempered woman, and never became
angry. She is at home in Heaven.
A FRIEND.
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