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The Joy of the, Kitchen
Everyone is demanding better, more
wholesome bread. Here is the Flour ~
that gives you all this and REAL FLA
VOR. It makes you want more. Bread
' wade with FLavw-FLcuria irioiSt.'Flii-i-
very, so good.
FLA VO is a nature-flavored flour. It contains
the entire food values of-tbe wheat berry. It in’
creamy white, the purest flour thatoto be made.
The essential aromatic oils of the wheat wherein
lie the flavor, are not milled out of it
Every sack of flavo floor* certified
Ask for this nature-flavored flour and
you will eat bread with the highestfood
value.
FLAVO FLOUR $1.25 FOR 24 LBS.
ORDER A SACK TODAY
FOR
artha Washington Shoes for
r omen, Chas. Morris Clothes
>r Men and Boys. Dresses
and Sweaters for Girls,
boos, Hats, Caps, Overshoes
and Raincoats, etc.
COME-LOOK-BUY
We have opened the Kinmar
stand with a stock of groceries
and confections, alf and see us.
UOl
Jiiji McLeod will also be here to
repair your shoos.
A, R. Green & Co,
'SSsssa
*7z£rzrzz,;*,ti$ uijjml**. ft M jm hi -i mi 1 .
visitor
The Clayton'Tribune
L t
*4*
Editor.
: Aa«istant Editor.
James J. iMynolds,
■Ktir-r -
J, A. Reynold*, Proprietor.
ItSPTEiUblished In The Year 1896
StJBSORIPTION ’ PRICE
One Yew— "i 1 1 - 60
Succetaors to Canup & 7 hompton
County.
Rabun
Official Organ
Published Every Thursday Morning.
Entered as second class matter, at the
postoffice at Clayton, Ga.. under
the Act of Mareh 3 1879,
Our attention islcalled to the
•tfrtement of the National Board
ofFirelUnderwriters.^stimathip
that*more than 26,000,000 people
of this country^are improperly
housed, or nearly a fourth of
them which means that 5 t OOO,OOC
new fhomea.* springing up ovei
night, would not give us more
than what we^need at this time.
And yet on every working day of
the year, 889 dwellings are
destroyed by firfe in this country,
With a financial daily loss ot
In the last fi\
i,000. In the las it five yean
dwellings worth $30,000,000 have
biBSn burned to destruction.
Good Patent Flour [2$1.15
Pure Leaf Lard 16c
Sugar 8c
No. 6. Roasted Coffee 15c
FattacklMeat • 16c
Rib Meat 17c
Nice Percale 12 l-2c
Good Sheeting 10c
GoodiDress Ginghams'], r 15c
Mens’ hatsl^ ? $2.00
Ladies dress shoes $2.50
Mens’ dress shoes $3:50
Overalls . $1.00
We "shore” have the
shoes at the right prices.
Come and see us.
E. M. Canup & Son
Mt. City, Ga.
ft* *rrfrrr-rrr,rrrrj-srj-rj-frisi-fTi-i-rrtrf 1
mm
*X Good Drug Store’
Flashlights
Fishing outfits
Stationery
Varnishes
Sterno heaters
Toilet articles
Paints & Oils
Putman dyes
Edgerton’s Salt Brick
Floor mops Razors and blades
Kodaks and Supplies.
Goif Suppliat, ; SchoaLCooks and School Supplies
Agency at Store for Gainesville Steam Laundry.
Magazines-Cigarettes-Cigars
• V*‘ r --,. , \
To Please You—Pleases Us.
Sub scribe to day.
A few hourslafter Caruso died
the civillzedjworld knew ofj 1
and was in mourning. A hundred
years agoJNapoleon’.died, on]Ma>
5/4821, and it was exactly sixty
dava before the ’world received
the newa. Though! the_JKJng]ish
Get In Line-:-Advertise
bsssi
expecting his death at any
moment arid had made every
preparation to have word trans
mitted from St, Helena to Eng
Mild With all possible dispatch,
it wife not until Julv 4, that] the
news reached London, : having
been brought there by the, jail
ing vessel Heron, .In accordance
with the Spirit of the times, V,the
message was flot given opt,, on
tfee arrival of the vessel, but wae
first conveyed to the co’onial
office, an act which required
approximately two hours itself.
July 4,1621, fell on Wednesday,
on Friday, July 6, the , news
reached Paris. Messengers were
dispatched from Paris to Germany
where the newspapers>>mmcnt-
ed on the death of "General
Bonaparte” for the first time cn
July 12, eixtv-elghtKdays efter
the event had taken place., Anc
this not&e wasJn a paper publish-
at Mayence, then virtually a
French town.
The VoaaiSche'Zeitung, found
ed in 1704!and then, as now, thf
leadintlGermanldaily, contained
no notice of J Napoleon's^ death
until July 14, and then it merely
copied the London Times. Private
individuals living in the provinces
regardless of their station ir
life, received the news later. It
was not conveyed to Gothe/then
living a Weimar, untflthe very
last of July, He received it in a
letter bearing a black seal.
Any good man that wants a
job and a home for family should
read J. L. Deal’s ad in this
issue, r .
H McMillian'and Col. Frank
lin, of Clarkesville were here on
profession^ businem first of the
trsek.
We are publishing in this issue
the names of the boys (ten in
number) in Rabun County that
gaVS their all in the World Wax-.
u ■ . >*. .mgswr v.w,
i of the castes in Delphi,
has decreed that any
\asmtm
Col. Bynum was a
Beaumont, Sunday,.
Mrs. Roy Mize visited in Cor
nelia latter part of last week.
Dexter James, of Mountain
Rest, S. O. was in ' Glayton
yesterday on business.
The fox hunters are on the
alert again. Catch ’um boys if.
you’ve lest any. We’ve caught
ours.
Mrs. Irene Dotson, of Mountain
City, attended the meeting of
the Eastern Star here Monday
night.
The City Tax Assessors say
that they will double all tax
payers who fail to make returns
under oath.
“With Apologies to
Ring Lardner”
Boys! A gentleman told us the
other day (confidentially) that he
had been a patronizer of corn
flicker” for ten years or moie
and further stated:
“There’s no use in arguing,
it does more harm than good.
Besides the pain it brings in the
morning after the night before,
it also pains your friends to see
you in an intoxicated condition.”
There i3 much truth to be
gotten Ironi this statement. You
do not go unobserved when you
hive taken a little too much,
your actions are noticed by your
friends, real friends, and they
s&y: ‘‘Perhaps he would not
believe'it if I were to tell him,
that with every drink h r takes,
he is a step closer to a drunkards
grave.” A drink, a dram drinker,
a DRUNKARD. If there is
any devil in you it comes out
when you have taken a little too
much. And some possess more
than others—devils. The writer
has taken a snort or two of
"D.utches, Cognac and Vin
Rouge” combined, and a little
Champagne on the side
and have felt the pain and thirst
that comes the morning after.
This one was "flogged” in a
hostile country and observed by
hdstile people—on the Rhine
inhere there is drinking all the
^ timp. Back to the beginning:
When a man has ftrnneled it for
ten years and can’t speak a good
ij wprd for it—Don’t you think it
-f U time to stop and think?
, Mrs. Fannie Weatherly, of
Mountain City was here Monday
night and attended a meeting of'
the Eastern Star.
The home of Chas. A. Rogers
in West Clayton caught on fire
early Monday morning and was
quickly extinguished with little
damage done.
We have been informed by
reliable parties that there is a
big bear on Rock mountain in
the eastern part of the county.
Let’s get him.
mpi
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