Newspaper Page Text
* HART COUNTY OFFERS MANY OPPORTUNITIES TO THE HOMESEEKER
8 PAGES
IN VHS
ISSUE
VOL 49
HARTWELL ON TRUNK LINE NO. 2
OF NEW STATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM
0
r Proposals will be considered by the
legislature which assembles next
week for the construction of a great
highway system to pass through 116
counties of the state.
The plan is to have 12 trunk lines >
numbering from 1 to 12. They are
to be zoned under one bill. The
order of construction is to be with
the Governor, Comptroller General
and Attorney General who will be ,
governed by the value of each'high
-way and the population to be served.
* Trunk line No. 2 begins at Hart
well, the entrance to the state from
South Carolina, and passes through
Royston, Danielsville, Athens, Wat
kinsville, Madison, Eatonton, Gray,
Macon, Echeconnee, Perry, Hender
[ son, Vienna, Cordele, Ashburn, Syca
i more, Tifton, Adel and Valdosta, to
the Florida line. ,
The methods and plans in detail
including maps, were given in detail
in last Sunday’s Atlanta paper*. The
1 fclan contemplates taking up the
i highways in the order of their im
j portance. The first line from Sav
, annah through Atlanta to Chatta
nooga, and the second through Hart
well, Athens, Macon, Cordele, Tifton
to Valdosta, etc.
o
| FIRST BLOOM ’25
Lw Mr. Z. P. Barron, of this city,
P brought in the first cotton bloom of
j the 1925 season early Tuesday morn-
I ing ‘
Mr. Barron is manager and one of
I the proprietors of McClure’s, Inc.,
1 and in addition to his store duties
I has been trying his hand at cotton
I this year.
| He has a good sized field near the
1 home out Howell street.
Two More Come In
| On Tuesday afternoon a bloom
I »as found by Leonard Mann on Mr.
fl Grover Heaton’s place at Eureka.
Mr. M. T. Milford, of Sardis, re
fl ported a bloom early Wednesday.
DEATH OF TWINS
■
Ji Many friends deeply sympathize
fl with Mr. and Mrs. Julian Wakefield,
fl of Sardis, in the death of their twin
I baby boys, Julian and Julius, born
fl Monday, June 15, 1925.
I interment was in the Sardis
■ cemetery on Tuesday.
fl o
I Baptist Church
fl Daily Vacation Bible School Has
Very Fine Opening.
g The Daily Vacation Bible School
I at the Hartwell Baptist church open
-IJ* 1 Monday morning with a very fine
fl attendance for the first day. The
fl enrollment on Tuesday morning had
fl reached one hundred and forty, which
fl was forty more than we had expected
Ito have in the school. We have no
fl doubt but that the final enrollment
fl shall reach about two hundred be-
I fore the end of the school.
The children seem to be thrilled
fl with the daily programs which we
I have. They enter into the.work in
fl very fine spirit. Their conduct is
fl of such a nature as to make us feel
I very happy each day to know chat
fl our children are of such a high type,
fl The attendance of these children is
fl not based on compulsion. The at-
I tractive feature is the fine program
fl which has been arranged for their
fl pleasure and profit. The children
■I had much rather come to the school
fl than to stay* at home. It is hard
fl to keep a child at home once he has
I Mt on to the school.
fl The faculty is showing a very fine
fl spirit, also. Many of those who are
fl helping in the school are doing so |
fl at a very great personal sacrifice,
fl But the work is quite as attractive
fl to the workers as to the pupils. Mrs.
fl W. B. Suddeth, who is the Principal |
fl of the school, has arranged the work |
fl in a very attractive way and has j
| shown that she has a great aptitude j
| for such work. We are glad that'
I - 4 and Mr. Suddeth will be teachers
I in our public school in Hartwell next |
I year, and so, their family will be ■'
I numbered among qs in a short time, i
I We cordially invite the parents and
I friends of the school to attend at
fl any time during the daily sessions. ,
fl We believe that the Daily Vacation
fl Bible School will now become one of
fl the regular summer attractions for I
fl the boys and girls of our town,
fl Therefore, we hope that the parents
fl will come and see for themselves the
fl I&ue of this work.
fl We welcome all boys and girls
fl from 4 to 14 years of age, Inclusive.
I W. A. DUNCAN, Pastor,
fl —o .
SARDIS CHURCH
I Rev. L. T. Weldon will preach at
fl Sardis Baptist church Sunday morn
fl ng at 11 o’clock.
fl cordially invited,
fl o
fl SARDIS WINS FROM LAVONIA
I TOWN TEAM
I The Sardis baseball club had a
I ’egular slug feast and defeated the
Lavonia town team nine 24-6. Tur
, held the locals to a few scattered
hits. He was master of the situation
during most of the game.
A third pitcher was used by La
mia but to no avail.
Sardis meets Centerville next Sat-
at Centerville.
THE HARTWELL SUN.
Vets Will Gather In
Royston July 4th
Every Veteran of the Confederacy
in the counties of Franklin, Hart and
Madison will be invited to Royston
1 on the Fourth of July and will be
j presented with a Stone Mountain
: Memorial Coin from the business
i men. They are also planning a pro
i gram that will draw a large crowd
from the three counties. They have
• already secured Col. George M. Na
-1 pier, Attorney General of Georgia, to
i be the principal, speaker for the oc
! casion. Several other features of
I entertainment will be given on that
' day among which will be a free base
ball game in the afternoon. Every
Veteran wil be furnished with a din
ner.
No doubt a large crowd will be
present in Royston on the Fourth to
hear Col. Napier and pay tribute to
the valor of the men who wore the
grey during the war between the
states. There are about 125 or 130
I Veterans left in the three counties
I and it is expected that the majority
I of them will be present on the oc-
I casion, states the Royston Record.
GEORGIA LEADS
FARM PROGRESS
Atlanta, June 16.—Great increases
during the last several years in the
value of Georgia farm products and
manufactures and a noteworthy in
crease in population Were pointed
out today in a report by the Geor
gia Real Estate Association, which
declares Georgia now is leading all
I southern states in many lines of
| development.
I According to figures released by
the United States Agricultural De
| partment Georgia showed a larger
i[increase in farms products in 1924
1 than any state in the union,, the
gain being 46 per cent over the
I previous year. During the same year
i the manufactured products of the
[ state showed a valuation of $604,-
450,000, which was an increase of
58.5 per cent over 1921, the last
year for which comparative figures
were available.' These figures are
made public by the census bureau
in Washington.
According to official figures, the
gasoline tax and income tax in
Georgia ranks second, the repprt
continues.
In population increase during the
five years since 1920 this state is
surpassed among southern states
only by North Carolina, the present
figures being 3,058,260, as compar
ed to 2,910,598 in 1920. This was an
increase of 147,662. Increase in
other southern states during the
same period are as follows:
Alabama, 108,207; Florida 111,-
218; Mississippi, no increase; North
Carolina, 181,718; South Carolina,
86,690, and Tennessee, 78,846, ac
cording to the statistics furnished
by the census bureau.
“These figures serve as a fine il
lustration of what the state is do
ing,” says the report. “A study of
the situation will show any citizen
that Georgia is progressing in a very
substantial way and very rapidly, at
this time. There never has been
a time when our people have been as
willing and as ready to develop
and promote the agricultural and in
dustrial expansion of Georgih as at
present.
Officials of the Georgia Real Es
tate Association expressed them
| selves as particularly pleased over
[ the increase in agricultural values
[ and activities, as it is believed that
I betterment of agriculture will have
i a profound effect on all lines of
i business in Georgia.
- o
MT. OLIVET DOWNS CENTER
VILLE 14 TO 2
On Saturday afternoon, June 13,
| on the Mt. Olivet diamond, the hard I
hitting Mt. Olivet team banged out
a total of sixteen hits and 14 runs
to win from the Centerville nine in
the opening game of the League sea
son.
The famous pitching of Bailey and
the hitting of the entire team featur
ed the game for Mt. Olivet.
Adams and D. Brown played .best 1
for Centerville.
Score By Inning*.
Centerville 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 — 2
Mt. Olivet 005 2 3 4 x—l 4 ;
Score RHE
Mt. Olivet 14 16 2
Centerville 2 5 5
Batteries for Centerville, D. Brown
and Adams; for Mt. Olivet, W. Bailey
and Morris; umpires, J. Brown and
T. Brown.
o
MEETING OF KIWANIANS
Visitors at the weekly session of [
the local Kiwanis Club last Friday
were Mr. S. N. Martin, of Chicago. I
Ill.; Mr. Hayden M. Pearman, of
Carrollton, and Mr. Joe Martin, of
the University of Georgia.
Short and interesting talks were
made by the guests.
Reports of various committees fea
tured the session.
Mrs. L. N. Adams presided at the
piano.
HARTWELL, HART COUNTY, GA., FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1925
POULTRY SALE
HERE JUNE 26TH
If you have hens, roosters, fryers
jor other members of the feathery
I tribe that can be disposed of bring
: them to Hartwell on Friday, June
26th, —this will be the last co-opera
tive sale for the season, according
to" County Agent Bingham, unless it
is evident that the supply of chick
ens will demand another sale later.
Shipped Biggest Car.
Hartwell has been the scene of
some big car-lot chicken sales dur
ing the past year or so, one event
all Hart county people point to with
pride being that last year when we
shipped the largest and most valu
able carload of chickens to market
that ever left the State of Georgia.
Bring your chickens here Friday
morning of next week, June 26th, —
let’s put a bunch of them in this car.
And then why not get ready now
to go in the chicken business right
so that Hart county can ship during
1926 a carload every two weeks.
That would bring thousands of
dollars into our county annually.
Tell your friends about the sale in I
Hartwell Friday, June 26th.
o
NEXT SUNDAY IS
“FATHER’S DAY”
Sunday, June 21st, is “Father’s
Day.” Homage due to the man who
has been the main support of the
boys and girls from the time they
were born until they reached the age
of maturity will be paid to him dur
ing the day. The observance of the
day is not observed as yet in a man
ner approaching the observance of
Mother’s Day but many people wil]
stop to ponder during the day of the
goodness of their dads.
No joking—father does like to be
appreciated. He was a little jealous
when Mother had a halo placed upon
her head, but he never said a word—
just kept plodding away. He always
knew that anything ever said about
or done for Mother would not pay the
debt humanity owes to Mother, but
right down deep in his heart, Father
always believed that he deserved a
little recognition for the part he plays
in keeping the world turning on its
axis.
This year it falls on Sunday, June
21st. Last year was the first time
Father ever received widespread rec
ognition with a “day” and he liked it
so well that he believes he will reTish
one every year.
As a rule, Father doesn’t care to
have anyone “make a fuss over him.*
He is content to go on doing his bit
by rearing his family and helping
wherever he can in community bet
terment.
But he’ll have to admit that he’s
a little blase if he doesn’t warm up
to the idea of being the center of
attraction one day in the year.
Bring on the socks, the handker
chiefs, neckties and cigars.
o
Wljen John Milton died he left
three thousand dollars to his wife,
who, by the way, was his third wife. ■
When she died, at her request, a
tombstone was erected over her grave
which bore the inscription: “Eliza
beth, the third and best wife of John
Milton, the poet.”
o
Only one hundred of the four hun
dred twenty-five miles of railroad
which would carry the products of
the great northwestern grain-fields of
Canada to salt water at Hudson Bay
remains to be finished. However,
due to the fact that it will cost ap
proximately $22,500,000 to complete
the railway, erect terminals and
dredge the channel, it is doubtful if
the work will be finished.
STAR THEATRE
Thursday and Friday.
“Lilly of the Dust.” From wall-|
flower to wildflower, from the heights ’
to the depths, from the sweet flower |
of a great love to the bitter rem- [
j nants —Pola Negri runs the whole
range of life in this sensation-filled
drama.
Saturday.
“The Spoilers,” Rex Beach’s world
renowned novel of the conquest ofi
golden Alaska, has been brought to
the screen in a great thrilling motion
picture romance. The cast includes
, Milton Sills, Anna Q. Nilsson, Bar
i bara Bedford, Robert Edeson, Noah
! Beery, Louise Fazenda, Rockliffe Fel
lowes, Wallace MacDonald, Mitchell
j Lewis, Ford Sterling, Sam de Grasse.
Monday.
“The Air Mail.” Here’s the big
gest and swiftest thrill-picture ever
made! A smashing romance-melo
drama of the daring pilots of the mail
planes. By Byron Morgan, author
of the Wally Reid auto-racing stories.
Tuetday and Wednesday.
“Daughters of the Night,” featur
ing an all star cast. Secret perils,
: temptations—love and life of the
telephone girl.
Coming Thursday and Friday.
June 25 and 26.
“Feet of Clay.” It is typically
DeMille, and you know what that ’
means—luxury, gorgeousness, linked
with a logical, dramatic, pictorial '
story. A picture with a “smash” ■
i climax, the like of which has never ■
been seen before. i 1
General Assembly
Will Convene Next
Wednesday
The General Assembly*of Georgia
convenes at the State Capitol in At
lanta next W'ednesday, June 24th.
to be in session for the allotted
period of sixty days.
This will be the first session of
the Legislature under the new bi
ennial system.
Under the new law it will carry on
for sixty days, instead of fifty, as
has been the case in previous years.
But with adjournment sine die on the
night of August 23 there will be no
other regular session of the State’s
legislative body until the third Wed
nesday in June, 1927.
Incidentally, there seems to be a
strong probability that the legislature
will actually adjourn at midnight of
the 60th day this year instead of put
ting the hands of the clock back and
staying in session until 3 or 4
o’clock of the following day, as in the
I past. For the last day under the
I new 60-day regime is a Saturday
i and there undoubtedly will be a
I strong sentiment against staying in
| session on Sunday under any pretext.
Helpful Law* Urged.|
Many new members have expressed
i varying views as to what they hope
'to accomplish this year. Taken all
in all these views are constructive,
rather than destructive, and hopes
are high that laws of genuine value
to the welfare of the entire state will
be written on the books before the
session ends.
There is another strong tendency
which appears good. That is the in
clination on the part of many to de
vote the time not to the passage of
new laws, but to the perfecting of
those already on the books.
One of the principal subjects, as
usual, will be the tax proposition.
Income tax, sales tax, and other
forms of taxes will be discussed pro
and con.
Hart county’s Legislator, Col. B. B.
Zellars, will take his chair in the
House for the first time next Wed
nesday. He succeeds Hon. W. B.
McMullan.
Senator J. N. B. Thompson, of
Madison county, succeeds Hon. T. S.
Mason, of Hart, from the 30th Sen
atorial District.
o
—OUR—
WEEKLY SMILE
(C.J.T.—Phila.,Pa.)
K-. , *
The article quoted from a Georgia
paper which appeared in The Sun on
June sth stated the truth when it
stated that the mail order houses go
after business stronger during the
months of June, July and August
than at any other time of the year.
Gimbel’s, like all other concerns
which do a mail order business, is
sues a special summer catalogue on
June the first and continues circular
izing the trade during these months.
The response is very great for, right
now, the mail order department is so
•busy they can hardly handle the bus
iness. Any merchant who thinks
that he can be wide awake for nine
months of the year and sleep during
the three remaining months, is think
ing wrong. The proper thing to do
is to APPROPRIATE A CERTAIN
AMOUNT FOR ADVERTISING
EACH YEAR and advertise DURING
THE DULL MONTHS as well as the
busy seasons. Mail order houses
never sleep. National advertisers
never sleep. No real, live merchant I
should ever allow his business to fall I
asleep. Advertising has made all of
these concerns whose annual appro- I
priations for advertising are listed
below:
Victor Talking Mach. Co. $3,000,000 [
Ford Motor Co. 2,650,000 '
Chevrolet Motor Co. 2,200,000 I
Postum Cereal Co. 2,000,000'
American Tobacco Co. 1,900,000
[Proctor and Gamble 1,900,000
I Dodge Bros. 1,800,000 [
Liggett and Meyers 1,700,000
i Colgate and Co. 1,600,000 [
I Congoleum Co. 1,600,000 [
Campbell Soup Co. 1,500,000 |
Calumet Baking Pow. Co. 1,400,000
Pepsodent Tooth Paste Co. 1,400,000
[ Willys-Overland Co. 1,400,000
W’m. Wrigley, Jr., Co. 1,250,000
H. J. Heinz and Co. 1,200,000
The Palmolive Co. 1,000,000
Buick Motor Co. 1,000,000
'•Eastman Kodak Co. 800,000
Hart, Schaffner and Marx 800,000
Cream of Wheat Co. 500,000
The heat spell which lasted ten !
days in the East and which killed
hundreds of people finally was brok- I
en last week. The official thermo
meter registered only 100 and a
fraction but many of the household
thermometers registered 120 and,
not being able to go any higher,
stopped working. One man stated
that during the hot spell he had a
dream —dreampt that he went to
hell. Said that he made the trip in i
a large dirigible and went through 1
miles hnd miles of space until fi
nally he came to a land of beautiful i
flowers. Flowers were everywhere,!
he stated, and when the dirigible i
stopped at hell station, he got out
and had a talk with the station mar
ten “Why, is this hell?” he asked
the station master. “Yes,” he an
swered. “Well, it certainly is dis- I
ferent from the hell I have always i
heard and read about—why,-the hell
I always heard about was a pit, burn
ing with fire and brimstone where |
HOTEL COMPANY
HAS GOOD YEAR
The annual meeting of the stock
holders of The Hartwell Hotel Co., j
last Monday resulted in the re-elec- j
tion of the old board of directors, .
composed of Messrs. A. N. Alford, !
J. H. Skelton. Dr. W. I. Hailey, Dr.
B. C. Teasley, E. E. Satterfield, J.
A. W. Brown, A. S. Skelton, D. C.
Alford, J. E. Cobb, J. R. Leard, R.
P. Clinkscales, J. T. Brewer, 11. H.
Wilcox, C./ E. Matheson ami F. T.
Kidd.
Mr. A. N. Alford was re-elected
President of the company, as were
the other officials: Hon. J. H. Skel
ton, Vice-President; E. E. Satter
field. Secretary, and H. I. Alford,
Treasurer.
The report of President Alford to
the stockholders showed the affairs
of the company in splendid shape,
and a report of the committee in
charge of the upkeep of the proper
ty showed that recent improvements
had not only beautified the place but
put the building in excellent shape
from top to bottom.
Receipts by the company as rental
for the year ending this month show
ed a gain over the previous year.
As a result of the financial report
and outlook for the future, hotel
ttork took an upward trend this week
and within the next two years it is
expected that every debt will be
wiped out and the stock bringing a
premium.
SELL COINS HERE
, The committees sold several hun
dred Stone Mountain Memorial coins
last Saturday and there is still a
steady demand for the 50 cent pieces
that were issued by the United
States government as a fitting tri
bute to the valor of the Confederate
soldier.
Every Southerner should have one
I and particularly every Georgian, for
it is in our own state that Stone
Mountain is located.
Hons. J. H. Skelton and R. C.
1 Thornton head the campaign in
Hartwell and Hart county, and they
are ably assisted by strong commit
tees from all the various organiza-
I tions.
n
Banks May Reopen Soon
I Stockholders and depositors of the
Georgia National Bank and the
: American State Bank in Athens have
j been called to attend a meeting in
I Woodruff Hall on the University
campus next Monday, June 22nd, at
11 o’clock.
The banks will very likely re-open
within a short time. They have de
positors and stockholders all over
northeast Georgia, it is said.
-O ■■ ■ ■■
Bowersville Business Change
An important business change in
Bowersville recently was the pur
' chase by Mr. W. B. Sanders and
his son, Mr. Ray Sanders, of the
business formerly operated by J. A.
| Johnson.
Mr. Johnson will remain in Bow
i erijville, and devote most of his time
to his farming interests.
The new firm is known as W. B. i
Sanders & Son, handling a full line
of groceries, and also operating a ,
modern soda fount, etc.
o
Hartwell needs street paving and 1
sewer extension. Let’s get them.
there was weeping and wailing and
gnashing of teeth." “Right, you
■ were, but things are different now
since Bob Ingersol came here. The
1 first day he came here he took charge
[ and he and some other men dug
[ canals and irrigated this land and
turned things bottom side up. They
I put in waterworks, ice cooling sys
tems and they have truly ma<|e a
' wonderful place out of it. The de
vil you see sitting over there in that
chair is nothing more than a figure
[ head any more. Ingersol is boss
| around here now.”
Atlantic City is doing a rushing
i business these days. A large per
cent of the population of Philadel
phia moves to this great‘playground
for June, July and August. Excur- I
sions over all the railroads are in
operation daily now. The round trip
fare from Philadelphia is $1.50. I
is needless to say that the week-end
crowds are immense. It is 62 miles
from Philadelphia to Atlantic City
; and the scheduled time for these ex
j cursion trains to make it is 55 min-
I utes.
A Philadelphia preacher said that [
he believed that any man who at
tended church during the extreme
, hot spell would receive special bless
ing.
Philadelphia now has buses run
i ning in all directions- the kind that
are used on sth Avenue, Now York |
I City. It is a real pleasure to get up
1 on top of one of these buses and go i
for a ride.
All Philadelphia stores close on
i Saturdays during July and August. '
Monday is the best business day up
here. The folks read the advertise
ments in the Sunday newspapers and
go to town Monday morning hunting
bargains. Gimbel’s and five other
Philadelphia department stores fill [
the Sunday newspapers with from
- three to five pages each of advertis- '
I ing.
Auto Tag License
Fund $2,621,051
In Five Months
; Total collections of $2,621,051.1 1
from the automobile tag department
of the office of Secretary of State S.
[ Guyt McLendon, up to June 1, for
the year 1925, were announced Sut
' urday in Atlanta.
This total is approximately the
same as the entire amount collected
for 1924.
The collections by months for 1925
are as follows:
January, $228,433.89; February,
$969,351.65; March, $1,093,451.08;
April, $210,584.79; May, $119,229.-
70. Total, $2,621,051.11. I
- • - ■■ o “ ■
Aged Colored People Die
Hack Moss, col., age about 60, died
at the home in Cokesbury commu
nity Sunday, June 14th, 1925.
Betsy Jones, col., wife of Dan
Jones, also of Cokesbury section,
died Sunday. She was about 65
years old.
Both were among Hart county’s
best known colored citizens.
• o
PLAY AT RUHAMAH SCHOOL
NEAR ALFORDS BRIDGE
The play, "An Old Fashioned
Mother," will be given ut Ruhumah
school Saturday evening, June 20, at
i 8 o’clock. This play has been suc-
I cessfully given by the Roberts
j school and it is by request that they
bring it to Ruhamah.
A small admission will be charged.
The proceeds to go for the church
and school.
Come ami bring all your friends.
Mrs. M. D. Smith
Mrs. Moses I). Smith, age 69, died
at the home in Holly Springs section.
Hart county, Sunday, June 14, 1925,
and was buried the day following in
the cemetery at Holly Springs.
The deceased had been in ill
health for the past year, but only a
week ago became seriously ill.
She was born in Elbert county, be
ing Miss Martha Moss, daughter of ,
the late Asa and Nancy Moss. In
1873 she married Mr. Moses 1).
Smith, who survives her.
When 16 years of age she joined
the Baptist church, being u member
at Holly Springs, where she was
loved by all, and did much good dur
ing her long and useful life.
Mrs. Smith is survived by her hus
band; three sons, Messrs. T. 1., G. G. r
and G. R. Smith, and two daughters,
Mrs. T. M. Myers and Mrs. Ida Col
vard, all of Hart county.
One sister, Mrs. Doe (Crittenden, of
Royston, and two brothers, Mr.
Moses Moss, of Hurt county, and Mr.
Martin Moss, of Florida, ulso sur
vive.
She will be greatly missed in the
home, the church and community.
The bereaved husband, children,
brothers and sisters have the sym
pathy of all in their loss.
Brock & Weatherly, of Royston,
were in charge of the funeral ar
rangements.
Ministers in charge of the funeral
wen- Revs. A. W. Bussey, T. J. Ruck
er, E. R. Goss and Rev. Smith.
o
Methodist Church
The nastor will preach at the usual
hour Sunday morning and evening.
Everybody cordially invited.
Following services a Church Con
ference will be held, delegates being
elected to th«* District Conference at
Toccoa July 2-3. Delegates from
the Quarterly Conference have pre
viously been named.
Sunday school begins at 10 o’clock.
Come. There’s a class and a hearty
welcome for all.
At the Epworth League Conference
at Oxford last week the Leagues of
the Elberton District were awarded
the Efficiency Cup for the best rec
ord during the past year in the whole
North Georgia Mr.
John 11. Baker, of Hartwell, is at.
the head of the work in the District.
At the Oxford meeting the repre
sentatives from the Hartwell League
I won second place for the best pro
gram on “Stunt Night.”
MT. HEBRON CHURCH
Rev. Guy Atkinson will preach at
Mt. Hebron next Sunday morning at
II o’clock.
Everybody cordially invited.
o
BIRTHDAY DINNER
The birthday dinner given in honor
of Mrs. B. F. Partain on Sunday,
June 14, 1925, was enjoyed very
much. Those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Partain and children, Mr. Eu
lers, Denver, Ruby and Miss San
ders, Mr. John Partairf, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Partaine, Haskel, Melvin,
Clyde, B. C., Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Madden, Sarah, Helen, Mrs. Mary
Rowe and Gene Rowe, Mrs. Alice
Koke and children, Janie, Joe and
Henry, Leon Crow, Malcome Crow,
Taiford Dunn, Benton and B. C.
Feltman, Anton Kotal.
All went away wishing Mrs. Par
tain many more happy birthdays.
ONE PRESENT.
BPAGES
IN THIS
ISSUE
NO. 46