The Clayton tribune. (Clayton, Rabun County, Ga.) 18??-current, August 17, 1899, Image 1

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7, •; THE CLAYTON TRIBUNE. DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF RABUN COUNTY SAND NORTH EAST GEORGIA. VOL II. CLAYTON. RABUN CO.. GA./THURSDAY. AUGUST 17. 1890. NO. 30. Arrested for the Si Smith Murder, j “Five Minutes To Surrender.” The latest development in thi Si! Kcowee Courier :— Smith ihucder case was the arrest Greenville, August 5—J. D. M. of Taylor Hamilton of Maycsville. i Dillard, who has been a leading by Detective Looney Monday after- J contractor and builder in Green- noon. Sheriff Monday went to j ville. was arrested tonight by Sher- Mayesvillc with Looney to identi- iff Gilreath, charged with assault fy Hamilton, but this he did not do. . Hamilton is said to have con fessed that he was the man who acted the part of the ■•prisoner” on 4 the night of the murder, and also .implicated others. Looney telegraphed Cheif of ' • Police Smith , giving the names of the parties implicate^!, whereupon Charles H. Tanner and Tom L- Bryson wete immediately nrrcsied and lodged in jail here. Hamilton was carried to Atlanta jail from Muyesville. . • > There are thousands of rumors of this and that, but weonl^ print the facts, IVncUthat too, after they Imp- r P® n - Col..Howard Thompson has been engaged to defend Tanner and Bry son. Mr.Thompson brought hit; clients Tanner and Brvson ,before Ordina ry Rudolph this morning on a writ of habeas corpus to sectjro tiieir ^Jisfliargc from the custody ot the * sheriff. Detective Loonay and the •pfotjccuTor, Mr. Hitl,-ot Huber* X MffiJJtVtoyniY'^^J^iVabsetif fnHjtwtie , fqity, therefore could "not show , cause why the prisoners should be with attempt to kill. The assault was committed some time ago and a war rant was issued, but Dillard left town and returned last night. Late tonight Sheriff Gilreath learned of his presence and went to his house to maKo the arrest. It is said Dillard defied the officer and got into the cupola on the tep of the house, armed with a revolver. The sheriff gave him five minutes to.surrendcr. He decided to como down and was taken to jail. He will give bail tomorrow. The as sault was made on a young man with^i knife. lie was severely cut in several places, but is now out and about. , .... . ^ . Wlint! your own liusbund. held. Mr. iliotnpsou did not do- , ,. . , , I den WROTE TO HER HUSBAND- The young wife of a busy man is no longer suffering neglect from hdr well-intentioned but preoccu pied husband. Here is i he story of how it came about. ‘T want you to.address this letter for me,” said she to her best friend, then on a visit to the house. “ Very well—whom to?” < ‘ To Robert Angmeyff number and sireet.” i nil ml immediate action under these conditions, so the filial hearing was postponed until tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock.—Gaines ville Eagle. WHAT MAKES SUCCESS “Wo arc forever going to begin work in earnest tomorrow,*’ si id Mr. Stuybolt, “unit we are never satisfied with Jthe job we’ve got, and we peiform the labor involved in it in only a half hearted man ner, but we tire going to work in dead earnest when we get a job to suit us. “The fact is that tomorrow,when we get to it will bo to us us today is now; we shun’t feel any more like work. And that other job, when we como in actual contact with it and see it close nt hand, wont suit us any better than tlio one we’ve got now docs. “The truth is that we arc dwad- lers and shy of work and trying to get along just as-easy as we can. We hate to pitch in and go at things. “The time for us to work is now, not tomorrow, and the job for U3 to collar is the one we’ve got. Round that up in 6tyle , do the work completely and thorough ly. and you’ll be astonished to find how You’ll bring it out und what changes there are in it. And ev erybody that knows about your worn or is in any way concerned 1 u r ® or affected by it, as it done well or |looks hk® 11 bride onco more, III, will be delighed to see it well done—everybody likes to see a job, whatever it ia, well cfone—and pleased with the deer, and there’s moitey in it every time. ‘•It isn’t the job that makes suc cess-, it’s the man', and don’t yon forget,—New York Sun. •ar? What under the 6un do you mean by writing to him. and lie at home every day in the week?” ‘‘I’m not going to argue the mat ter. and the lotior is prepared. You direct the envelope, so that lie will read the letter from curiosity, if nothing else. I have no object ion to explaining to you ir confidence. Robert never seems to have any spare time to talk things over with me. When he comes down in the morning lie is in a rush and a 6tew to reach the office. lie bolts his breakfast, kisses me good-by on the run, and is none till evening. At dinner he is in a ntrvous haste to get away ‘to meet some business engagement,’ runs hurriedly through Iii6 paper, and is gone a- gain. ‘’When he reaches home I uin in bed, or we’re both so sleepy that we couldn’t talk intelligently if we wanted to. You, perhups, won’t understand, for your Knowledge of married life is a theory. But there nro some things about which he and I must consult. I have to manage the affairs of this house und I want his advice. I at. least would like to him manifest a little interest, and I rather think his ap proval would do me lots of good.” The letter was sent. The hus band laughed hilariously. Then a sobor second thought took posses sion of him. He and his little wife full partners now, and she Doubt is no more a sign ot intjsl- 1 actuality than u drifting vessel is of good navigation. Rev. J. M. Yingling, pastor of the Bedford Street Methodist church at Cumberland, Md. says: “It affords me much pleasure to recommend Chamberlain’s Colic, Choleru and Diarrhoea Remedy. I have used it and know others who have done so. I have never known it to fail. It is a sure cure wheu taken in time.’ Hamby. Persimmon- Weather is pleasant ind showers frequent. Katydids al^e ■'niaKing the forest ring. i - Corn crops are excellent in this community. The pleasant show ers we have been hfving have made corn to shoot so fast that it is almost impossible fo a squirrell to climb a stalk-. A si oot is like ly to sprihg forth and f ush him off before he gets very liigji. One old farmer said that his coin had shot and that that hadn’t washdown in the ernbgruss snapping like forty. We are glad to see V, V, Justus among us again. j , Mr, Nonnon and Miss Tula, Lil lie and Lena have been visiting in this community during ? the past week. •' ' J i About twentv-eight qjf Persim mon’s inhabitants went tp the con vention at Burton Saturday and Sunday. They all report a fine timo. , J J.C. YorK brought back a fine melon with him from tjfe oonveti- tion. Go again, J. C. * L. T. Teems is gone tdfllighlands N.C, Take u walk througMticemetery alone and you -will- jKjiu the last resting place-of the mtaHylio blcvtf it Tvns loaded. A little further down the slope is the crunk who tried to show how close he could pass in front of a moving train. In strolling about- you see the mod est monument of the hired girl who started to start toe fire [with kero sene and n grass-covered Knoll that covers tlie boy who put a corn cob under u mule’s tail, The lull shaft over the man who blew out the gas casts a shadow across the boy who tiicd to jump on the moving train. Side by side the ethereal creature who always had her corset laced to the last hole, and the intel ligent idiot who rode a bicycle nine miles in ten minutes, sleep on un disturbed. At repose is the doctor who look a doso of his own medi cine. There with the top of a shoe box driven over his head is the rich old man who married a young wife. Away over there reposes the boy who fished on Sunday and the woman who kept strychnine with powders in the cupboard. The man wilt stood in front of a mowing machine to oil the cycle is now and rests beside the careless brakeman who ted himself into a seventytou engine, and over in the corner of the fence in the potter’s field may be seen the bleaching bones of the man who tried to whip the editor.—Knoxyille Tribune. A woman preacher nt Joplin, Mo., says an exchange, stopped in the middle of a sermon, and pick ing up a bible said she wa» going to throw it at a man who was not good to his wife . As she swung j her arm forward every married man in the church but one ducxed under the seat: the one who didn’t duck being a deaf mute. An old farmer says : “My bdys, when from sixteen to twenty,knew more than I did; at twentyfive they knew as much ; at thirty they were willing to hear what I bad to say ; at thirty-five they asked niY advice; and I think, when they get to bo forty, they will acknowl edge that the old man does know something.’’ I am the mother of eight child ren and have had a great deal of experience with medicines Last summer my little daughter had the disentery in its worst form. We thought she would die, I tried everything I could think of. but nothing seemed to do her any good. I saw by an advertisement in our paper that Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was highly recommended and sent and got a bottle at once. It proved to be one of the very best niedi cinefi we ever had in the house. It saved my little daughter’s life. I am anxious for every mother to know what an excellent medicine it is. Had I known it at first it would have saved me a great deal of anxiety and my Jittlc daughter much suffering. Yours truly, Mrs. Geo. F. Burdick Liberty, R. I. For sale by J. L. feky-v , -. . ,• - An $ah? osflee'SffVflWVecent- ly asked his pastor home to dinner with him. The invitation was ac cepted and when the preacher no ticed tho scant fare upon the table, lie asked a blessing as follows* ••Lord, make us thankful for what we are about to receive, and then strengthen us to journey home after •we have received it.” “I’st liabbin a heap oh trouble wid sleepless dqsc nights,” remark ed an old darkey one day. “Hi, yi, I reckons I knows all ’bout dat,” said another African near by. “Yo’ knows noffin—dat’s wat yo’ knows.” replied the old man. “Surtin, I do know sunthin,” chuckled the other; “I knows well miff dat you cant sleep of nights— an’’sides, I knows dats yo’ neigh- bo’s enn’t nuttier ef dey’s got any chickens. ”—Ex, A newly married editor gets off the following : “What is the differ ence between honeycomb, a honey moon and a pretty girl? A honey comb is a small cell, a honeymoon is a big soli, and a pretty girl is a damsel,’’ The soothing und healing prop erties of Chamberlain’s Aough Rem edy, its pleasant taste and promp arid peraauet cures, have made it a great favorite with the people For sale byj. L.^ every where; For sale by J.L. Hamby. ,- During the civil war. as well as in our late war with Spain, diar rhoea was one of the most trouble some diseases the armv had to con tend with, In many instances it became chronic and the old sold iers still suffers from it. Mr Day id Taylor of Wind Rtdgc, Greene, Co., Pa. is one of these. He uses Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and says ho never found unything that would give him such quick relief. For sale by J. L. Hamby. Harry—Papa, what's a critic? Harry’s Papa—A critic, my boy, is a man who gets paid for telling other people bow they ought tp do thingsAhat be could not possibly do himself. RAM’S HORN BLASTS- The fervor of human love needs but a slight breeze of evil gossip to fan it into the fires of hate. < A fqol may prefer man’s age of reason to God’s eternity of wis dom. Christians should watch always, for they are always watched. A heart full of love means r, mouthfull of blessings. The saints should be too closely united in Christ to admit of any root of bitterness springing up be tween them. Piety never reigns in an untidy and disordered house. Sell not your spiritual birthright for the world’s mess of pottage. Democracy is never safe unless it be the expression of theocrasy. He who would learn to work for men must learn to wait on God. Christ did notsaY that the world would be lighted by preachers, but by practicers. • ’ Our profession of- love,to God is t proven by ihe practice of the love Of Cod only. It is a poor sort of-virtue that consists in abstaining' from sins that are not cared for. ' If souls could be seen, jnimy a church might give an exhibition of living skeletons. The salo/)n light is a false bea con that ertn only bo extingished by Christian yote». You must get on the inside of a man beforfe you can talk to him a- bout- inside things. Even the devil was convinced when ho saw that Job served God for love and not- for a living. Prayer is not merely getting God to do something for us, but ir is putting ourselves where God can do something with us. Many who profess to follow Christ arc willing that their broth ers should lose life rather than that they should sacrifice liberty. Hungry Higgins—Here is an ad. in the payer that says “save vour old rags. Modesty in a woman is like color on her cliocK—decidedly becoming, if not put on, W hat bolds all the snuff in the world? No one nose. Alleged Signs of Luck- Dream of eggs, sign ot money. Dream of snakes, sign of ene mies. If you sing before brennfast you will cry before supper. Dreaming of muddY or rushing water brings trouble. Finding a horseshoe or a four- leaved clover brings trouble. If you cut Your nails or sneeze on Saturday you do it “for eyil.** She who takes the last stick at a quilting will be the first to mar- r y- \ If you spill the salt some one will be mad with you, unless you put some of it in the fire. Stdb your right toe, you are go ing where you are wanted—your left, where you are not wanted. If the first Sunday in the month is unpleasant there will be but one pleasant Sunday during the month. If your right ear burns some one 1b praising you—if your left, your friends are raking you oyer the coals.