The Clayton tribune. (Clayton, Rabun County, Ga.) 18??-current, July 03, 1924, Image 1

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4 ‘THERE IS NO PAPER LIKE THE HOME PAPER TO HOME PEOPLE. VOLUME XXIX t CLAYTON, RABUN COUNTY GEORGIA. THURSDAY JULY 3 1924. NUMBER 26 STOCK LAW LOSES 0U1 LIGHT VOTE CAST ALL OVER COUNTY. Wednesday's election for “Fence” or “No Fence” result ed In a defeat of the no fence law and the status of the cow nnd hog remains the same in so far as the election is concerned. A very light vote was cast all over the county. Probably the Valley District is the only one that voted a majority in favor of No Fence. It is reported here this morning that the Valley District is contemplating an election for that district, in which they propose to vote the No Fence law. It was thought that Clayton District would have voted a large majority in favor of stock law but only 135 votes were cast in iavor afid 177 against. Although the returns are not all in it is estimated that when completed that the issue will have lost by about two hundred. AGED VETERAN DIES Mr. M, F. Giles, aged eighty six years, a veteran of the six ties died at his home, near here, { last Monday.‘June 30th and was buried at Taylor’s Chapel, on Tuesday following. The funeral was conducted by R6v. '97 L? • Hunnicutt. Mr. Giles was a member tf the Baptist church and a Con federate Veteran having served in the company commanded by Capt. Sam Becks He leaves beside his wife, three sons and four daughters, to whom the friends of the de ceased tender their sympathy in their bereavement BAPTIST CHURCH NEWS. The services at the Baptist church last Sunday at 11 a. m. consisting of a number of five minute talks by leading laymen was greatly enjoyed by all pres ent. And a motion to continue the services through next Sun day at 10:45 a. m. was voted. Of those who will make short talks in interest of a new church building are viz, Hon. R. E. A. Ilamby, Col. T. L. Bynum and L. P. Cross. Every member and friend of of the Clayton Baptist church should hear these distinguished laymen discuss these great ques tion that confront the Baptist host of this community. We wish to announce that next week will be round-up week for the seventy five millon campaign. An effort will be made by the committee to see every member of the church next week and give them an opportunity to pay up their pledges. Williams and family, arrived at their nnacle Or . will spend months of Julv and August, dr. W illlams is a prominent bus- ness man of Winder but enjoys e in Rabun coun jht hun welcome CONFEDERATE VETERANS MEET AND ARRANGE FOR PICNIC - After some discussion the sec ond Saturday in August was cho sen, as the date of annual re- un, Committees were named on arrangements and after the pay ment of dues the meeting ad journed to accept the hospitality extended to them, by that prince of entertainers, Mr. Joe Tow. of the City Cafe, and where they were served a most sumptous meal which was greatly enjoyed by the “Old Boy8”who wore the Cray. A rising vote of thanks was tendered to Mr. Tow for his kindness and was appreciated more than we can express and we trust that it is as “Bread cast upon the waters to return many days hence." Adjutant METHODIST CHURCH NEWS The third Quarterly Confer ence for the Clayton Charge will be held at Wesley Chapel, on Saturday, July 5th. Our Presiding Elder has noti fied us this week, that it will be impossible for him to be present on Sunday as planned. Services for Sunday will be announced on Saturday. The District Conference meets at Whiter, Ga., on Wohdefi'day, July 9th. at 2 00 p.m. The meet ing will continue through Thurs day. Each church is expected to to have a delegate. R. P. Ethridge, P. C.* NOTICE OF MASS MEETING A mass meeting of the citizens of Rabun county are called to meet in the court house, at Clay ton, Saturday July 5th. at 1;30 p.m., for the purpose of discuss ing the advisability of making an effort to locate the proposed national park in Rabun County. In view of the fact that the National Government is contem plating establishing a National park somewhere in the Blueridge Mountains, and that there is s probability of its being establish ed in this section, it behoves us to get together and decide wheth er or not we want to make the effort to locate it with us. Already an Association has been organized and is function ing, for that purpose, and it is proposed to photograph this sec tion as a means of informing the Park Commission as to the ad vantage offered here. So let’s get together and discuss the pros ond cons of the issue. The Boards of Trade of Cor nelia and Clarkesvilie will be here*and are prepared to give out some information on the sub ject. Clayton Chamber of Commerce, NOTICE OF BOX SUPPER. There will be a Box Supper at Wolf Fork School House next Saturday night; July 5th, at 8 o'clock. Everybody is cordially invited. All we ask is good be havior. Mr. B.C. Heyward, o£ Clarkes- viilewasa business visitor here DEMOCRATS DEAD LOCKED IN CONVENTION VIcADOO HOLDING HIS OWN Sweltering in the hot summer heat of New York, the Demo cratic Convention is unable to nominate a candidate for presi dent. ' With a goodly number of dark horses being groomed and none of the leading candidates losing enough to make any perceptible difference no one is able to see even the slightest ray of what the final results may be. THE CLAYTON BARBER SHOP The Clayton Barber shop, of which Mr. Roy Mize is proprie tor,, has added several new fa cilities to their new shop, lately, which will add greatly to the ef ficiency of the shop. Awong the new addditions are electric fan, an electric hair dry er and electric clippers together with a large assortment of ton ics and is now ready to serve the most fastidious customers. \ AGE IS NO BARRIER When the family brood is rear ed and has left the home nest, pa and raa no longer settles into the quietude of their declining years, but betak§ ,themselves un to the nearest college Where they substitute for the. slate, pencil and blue-back speller of their youth the slide rule, test tube and a copy of Shelley, Keats or Browning. They delve into thei rwork with far more ardor than the sixteen and seventeen year olds whom they sit beside in class, profess ors say, A gray haired mother of 60 years, surrounded by class mates who insofar as age is con cerned might be her grandchild ren, is learning what of Euclid she failed to get long ago. Another, in registering, re marked that she and her daugh ter were taking turn about in furthering their education. The mother keeps the home during the school year while her daugh ter goes to college. During the summer she goes to school while her mother remains at home. A 72 ‘ year old mother of ten children, all of them married, came to college last year. She had returned, she said, to fulfill a cherished ambition to learn to write. The new-fangled sub jects often hold the aging stu dents more rapt than the classics. Enrolled in the Mercer Univer sity summer school are two stu dents over sixty years old, three others over fifty and ten othere over forty. Six of these are wo men, five of whom^are mothers of families. NOTICE TO WORLD WAR VETERANS World War veterans, who wish to make application for the com pensation recently granted them will be able to get the informa tion necessary, at the ost Office from Post Master, r . R. Cannon. He WEEKLY ARRIVALS OF VISITORS FURNISHED BY THE HOTELS , - WELCOME TO RABUN COUNTY Each week the Tribune will publish a list of the visitors at the varios hotels, provided the hotel managers will furnish the list not later than Tuesday evening, of each week. MT. LAUREL INN - Mr. P. O. Turner, of Atlanta. Miss Grace Freeman " Mr. R. C. Cassells Miss Margaret Fagan t , Mr.Hinton J. Hopkins. ,, Mrs. Hinton J, Hopkins (l Miss Camilla Holland Miss Claire McDonough *, Miss Maudic Harris ,, Mr, W. It. Gormon “ Mr. J. H. Fears “ Mr: W. R. Walsh ,* Mr. H. G. Bass Mrs. H. G. Bass BYNUM HOUSE- Mrs. Ralph Edmondson, of Atlanta. ' Mrs. Lloyd Clark Muster Lloyd Clark, Jr., ,, Mrs. John A. Copeland and three children ,f Mrs. R. J. Harris *’ Miss Gertrude Josey *• Miss Carrie Lazarnes ’* Miss Ethel Josey " Mrs. Chavannes and son and daughter Miss Margaret B. Batlle “ Miss E. Marion Battle •* Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Barnd, bride and groom, of Opelika, Ala. Mr. H. C. Hughes, Atlanta Mrs. H, C. Hughes, ” Mrs. L. F. Driver nud son. Thoinasyille v Mr. and Mrs. Joe Esty'and baby.' AU lanta., Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Hull and children, Westminster, S. C. DERRICK HOUSE- . Mis. Nina Burney, Rome, Ga. Miss Mrttie Ivey, AJanta, Ga. Miss Elizabeth Pearson, Wadley, Ala. Mr. Glenn Hopkins, Atlanta. Mr. A. J. Johnson, Macon. Mrs. J. C. McKay, Rome, Ga. RA.RUN LODGE— M. M. Willis, of Wilson, N. C. Miss Jewell Echols, Decaur, Ga. Miss Amanda Snead, ” Mr. F. M. Rooney, Atlanta. Mrs. F, M. Rooney, ” Mr. H. H. Hervie, College Park, Ga. Mrs. H. H. Hervie, ' ” Mr. A, M. Hollingsworth, Atlanta. Mr, and Mrs. W, M. Thomas and son, Homer, Ga. Dr. L. W. Hodges, Winder, Ga. Mrs, L. W. Hodges, Mr, G. E. Wilhelms, Atlanta. Mrs. G. E. Wilhelms, ” ; Mr. W. G. Dobbs, “ .. Mr. A. M. Ellsworth, " * Mr. O. A.-Dobbs, " DIXIE CAMP FOR GIRLS— ATLANTA Miss Christine Wright Helen Miller Elsie Mullins Mary Candler Maude Hardwick Mary Trammel Edna Body Betty Hadley Kathrayne Pierce Elizabeth Body Elizabeth Dodd Dorothy Winn Eugenia Candler Mary Dodd Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Newsom Willis Sutton Jr. Mrs. A. T. Miller Mabla E. Oook, Montgomery, A*a, Florence Willis, Greensboro, Ala. Eliza Shirley, Tallulah Falls, Ga. Nell Hodges, Birmingham, Ah. Myra Slaughter, Bowie, Texo: VALDOSTA Mrs. O. B. Foster Ferrel Dalton Lonita Foster Houston, Texas Mrs, Alston Clapp Mary McKenzie Retta Hazlip Mocon’ Ga. Anna Brown Small. Itia Brown Lena Lamar West Point, Ga. Ceorgia Atkinson Charlotte Ferguson Mary Francis Lnnier Lucy Lanier Marie Lanier Marie Cumbee Gabriella Freeman Sarah Garvin, Warm Springs,’*Ga Leland Barbee, Knoxville, Tenn- Florrie Jo. Everett, Fort Valley, Ga. Evelyn Duke, ” Mary Lanie, Langdale, Ala. Kathleen Allen, Deland, Fla. Louise Vaughn, Clinton, Ky. Melba Johnson, Galveston, Texas Gervais. Prentiss, Indianapolis, Ind, EVER BREEZE— Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Law, of Tampa, Fla,, have come for the summer to thoijr'cgttage. Ever Breeze, on Shady Sideband have with them, Mr. E. Taylor Cowan, of St. Peters burg, Ffa, Mrs. E. Taylor Cowan, ” Miss Helen Cowan, •* Miss Ruth and Master Earl Cowan, four year old twins of- the Cowans’ Mirik Helen Barnes, of Macon. THfi EARL HOUSE- IVfrs. tf• B. Bush; of Atlanta. Master Orvid Bush’ “ Mrs. Sam Hembry, Hartwell, Ga, Mr. Guy Atkinson, ” Mr. R. T. McGahee, Atlanta. Mrs R, T. McGahee, “ Mr. Ross Hunter, “ Mr. L. S. Funk, “ Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence. “ Mrs. Pearl Webster, “ Mrs. T. A. McDonald ’ “ Mrs. I. J, Price, Daytona, Fla. Miss Josephine Price, “ Mr. Edwin Langston, Monroe, Ga, Mr. Louis Johnson, Decatur, Ga. Miss Love, Alabama KIMSEY HOUSE- Miss Sophia Mattison, of Miami, Fla, Mrs, - Blanche Frost, ” Sargent Ryans, of Athens, Ga. Mr. T. B. Boggus, of Atlanta. BLUE RIDGE HOTEL- Miss Hilda Davidson, Pittsburg, Penn Mr. McElhnnnon, ' “ Mr- E. H. Forrester, Buford, Ga. Mr. J. T, Rogers, Clearmont, Ga. Mrs. J. T. Rogers, ,, Miss Eugenia Rogers “ Miss Louise T Rogers, ■ “ Mrs. W. T. Darsey, •• Mr. Frank Manley, Dnlton, Ga. Mr. W. J, Manley, “ Mrs. W. J. Monley, ^ *• * Miss Manley, Mrs. H. R. Cannon, Atlanta Master H. R. Cannon, Jr., ” THE GREEN HOUSE—• Edd Athon, Milledgeville, Ga. Mrs. Sue Crowder, Atlanta. Mrs. J. E. Taylor, Macon. Ga. Miss Ruth Taylor, “ Mr. W. D. Lee, Birmingham, Ala, Mr. Luther Roberts, Gainesville. Mrs. Luther Robers, •< Mr. Ed Quillian, “ Mrs. Ed Quillian, •• Mrs. A. S. Render, Atlanta. Mr: C. M. Ray, Norwood, Ga. Mas, C. Ray •• '< Miss Delia Ray “ . “ _ , Miss Dorothy Brown West Union S.C Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Brown “ •; Miss Lethia Segraves Atlanta Miss Mae McConnell “ Mr. F. S. Hall " ' Mrs. F. S, Hall “ Mr. Courtney Hail “ Mr. Stephens Hall Miss Betty Hall Miss