For sometime he had been confined to his bed, the illness beginning many days ago by an attack of heart failure or something bordering on it. Yesterday morning about 10 o'clock death relieved him of all the suffering incident to life.
He was a soldier in the Confederate war, though very young. After the war he married Miss Annie E. Mandell, of this county, a lady from one of the oldest and best families. Since that event he has been a citizen of Waynesboro continuously. They have one living child, John D. Munnerlyn, Jr., who attained his majority a few years past.
His appearance in our midst where day after day and year after year he has been met by his friends and acquaintanceswill be missed for a long, long time. His familiar and always cheerful face will be lost to the office of THE TRUE CITIZEN where it so often was welcomed by us in the past.
In the Methodist church as a member he was a constant attendant and ever in his place, and his voice heard in its richness and fullness of years, cannot be supplied there any more.
It is in no perfunctory way that we extend sympathy to those who need it most in their bereavement. Peace to his remains. His remains will be interred in the Waynesboro cemetery. His funeral will take place at 3 o'clock p.m. from his residence.
The True Citizen newspaper, March 23, 1895
-obit provided by DianaB
For sometime he had been confined to his bed, the illness beginning many days ago by an attack of heart failure or something bordering on it. Yesterday morning about 10 o'clock death relieved him of all the suffering incident to life.
He was a soldier in the Confederate war, though very young. After the war he married Miss Annie E. Mandell, of this county, a lady from one of the oldest and best families. Since that event he has been a citizen of Waynesboro continuously. They have one living child, John D. Munnerlyn, Jr., who attained his majority a few years past.
His appearance in our midst where day after day and year after year he has been met by his friends and acquaintanceswill be missed for a long, long time. His familiar and always cheerful face will be lost to the office of THE TRUE CITIZEN where it so often was welcomed by us in the past.
In the Methodist church as a member he was a constant attendant and ever in his place, and his voice heard in its richness and fullness of years, cannot be supplied there any more.
It is in no perfunctory way that we extend sympathy to those who need it most in their bereavement. Peace to his remains. His remains will be interred in the Waynesboro cemetery. His funeral will take place at 3 o'clock p.m. from his residence.
The True Citizen newspaper, March 23, 1895
-obit provided by DianaB
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