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»0PQUUIVI1U GEORGIA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER .3,1918.
BRING US YOUR
We have completely overhauled our gins
and everything is in first class shape. /
We are better Prepared
than ever to give you
good and prompt service
Will buy your seed and sell you meal and
hulls.
v We appreciate the patronage of all our for
mer customers and invite your continued busi
ness. If you have not been our customer in
the past, give us a trial and let us show you the
advantages we have to offer.
We are ready for business now.
CONNALLY & KIRKLEY GIN CO
^ ♦ The
Scrap Book
SEEK LIGHT ON CZAR’S FAJTE
Recent Discovery Made Near Eka
terinburg Has Revived PMoibiii-
ties of Authentic Disooveriss.
The osar’s fate is the subject of
a Judicial iuqtiiry. Evidence was Riv
en that the Jewels of the imperial fam
ily had been brought to Ekaterinburg
and concealed about the person of the
ex-grand duchesses and their suite.
Only July 17, 1018, some peasants
came across a campfire abandoned
by Red Guards some eighteen versts
from Ekaterinburg. The peasants,
searching among the ashes, discovered
■fc croft* or emerams, four bones from
a woman's corsets, buckle* from a
man's suspenders, slippers, buttons,
and some Imitation pearls. A num
ber of other significant objects were*
discovered—a woman’s haudbag,
scraps of material and lace smelling
of paraffin, splinters of emerald amt
pearl, and finally a stone set in plati
num In an extremely dirty condition
which proved to be a diamond worlh
100,000 rubles. An expert, called in
to value It. declared flint the stone
must have belonged to a necklace of
great value. A human finger, false
teeth, aud splinters of bombs were
removed from the shaft of an aban
doned mine near by. The finger was
that of a woman. Nenr the edge of
the shaft other traces and splinters
of bombs were found. The Inquiry is
being continued by the government
of Omsk, and It Is hoped to bring to
light the burial place of the ex-impo-
rtn! # ~*** n ~
AUTOMATICALLY PUT OUT FIRE
Extinguisher* PI«oe<t Around Thrntk-
Ing Machine Will Prevent Much
Oeetructian ef Property.
On wheat erplode? It aot ooly eah,
hut , doe*. Wheat explosion* ham
caused loss of life and destruction of
property. The difficulty Is that rlouda
of dust are thrown out hy the ■*-
chines that thrash the wheat grata
from the straw. The One dust partt*
lies mingle with the air, oftea term
Ing a mixture that Is as saslly I gulled
n* gasoline vapor.
The United States department Of
agriculture Investigated this problem.
Its experts now recommend automatic
dre-exllngulshers for the threshers.
— and from there we went to Japan 1
A Veteran of the Civil War Writes
I had an occasion to take a trip in my Chevrolet with my wife and
granddaughters and I made the trip of 351 miles as shown by my
speedometer in the elapsed time of eleven hours and forty-nine min-
utis from-Cincinnati to Chicago. I averaged 25 1-10 miles per gal
lon for the trip and drove the car the entire trip myself.
The
Chevrolet
“Four-Ninety’ 1 Touring Car is comfortable
to ride in, and easy to drive. It has weight
enough to keep to the road at all times. It has
proper spring suspension. The seats are well
upholstered, deep and roomy. And it is an
easy car to handle in close traffic.
Also see the F. B., the best car on the market today for the money
We also handle all kinds of supplies and accessories.'
1 W. JAMES &
Talk about adventures !
Men in the Navy come
home with the kind of
experiences that mo>st
chaps read of only in the
books.
Here’s your chancel
Uncle Sam has, as you know,
a big Navy and gives red-
blooded young fellows tike you
aa opportunity to step aboard
and “shove off”.
What will you get out of it?
Just this:
A chance to rub elbowe with
foreign folks in strange parts of
the world.
The chance for good honest
work on shipboard—the kind of
work that teaches you something
real; the kind of work that puts
beef on your shoulders and hasr
on your chest.
You will get 30 care-tree vaca
tion days a year, not couatm.*
shore leave in home or foretgoj
ports.
You ’will have the kind of com
radeship in travel that sailor*
know.
You will have regular pay;
over and above your meals, lodg
ing and your first uniform outfit
—good stuff all of it.
You can join for two year*.
When you get through you’ll be
physicully and mentally 1 tuned
up” for the rest of your life..
You’ll be ready through and
through for SUCCESS.
There’3 a Recruiting Staaooi
right near you. If you don’t:
know where it is, your Post
master will be glad ta tell yut-u
To any Father and Mother
fn the Nary your boy’ j food, health, work and play, and
onoeol welfare are looked after by reaoonaibte erperta.
Shove ofif f -Join the
U.S.Navy-
Firo Will Molt One of tho Fuses Th«(
Are Distributed About tho Thrashing
Mschins, and This Will Start thh
Flre-ljKtlnguisIwr WarWn^
'The extinguisher consist* of a tsuk of
water containing sods, Ifl. 1
Ue of sulphuric ield 1* placed. In cash.
at fTre, ilffS of ffie, Fuses (UstrlbullT
ahoiil flie mnciiino’will be niefied. Thh
medmujwj hrealjj the acid-kettle, and
thj ensuing chemical action gives ott
cerium dioxide through uoxxles.—Pop
ular Science Monthly.
What Djd You Think It Waef
One© Lb or© w©r© two men and a
woman who decided to go flatting.
They took a boat and rowed quite A
distune© out to sen. and as the flail
were not biting very well, the woman
was trull Ing her hand In the water.
Suddenly she pulled her hntid into t:l«e
bout uxid cried: “Oh, l have lost in#
diamond ring!”
The water wns too deep for anyone
to dive and get the ring, wo although
the owner felt very bad about It, noth
ing could be done. Just before the#
started toward the shore, one of tiaa
men booked an exceedingly big flak.
That night they had uonie of that
fish for dinner. All of a sudden tho
woman who had lost the diamond ring
hit on something bard, and what do
you think it was? It wah a fishbone*
Rich Man Lived Simply.
A fifteen .dollar desk wna the center
from which John R. Maiming, ship
owner and broker, Now York, mads
hia fortune now estimated at nine mil
lion dollars. The furniture of lb la
millionaire's office consist* only of tho
cheap desk, a hat tree aud four chairs.
The same modesty In furnishings was
displayed hy the millionaire in the lib
ling up of his home on Riverside drive*
Tho largest items ar© the grand plana*
which is valued at $2R0, and a tnahofp
auy bed. appraised at $7l>. Two oth*r
beds are listed at $20 and a brass lied
at $8. A year before JUs death tan
ning waq the.-eeritral figure in a JwreACii
of promise action brought against him
by Mias Honors O'Brien. She wa* Si
and ha was 84 years old at the time.
CIGARETTE
rjET 'a package today. No-
tice the flavor—the whole
some taste of Kentucky Burley
tobacco.
Why do so many “regular
men” buy Lucky Strike
cigarettes? They buy them
for the special flavor of die.
toasted Burley tobacco.
There's the bjg. reason—-it's
toasted, and real Burley. Make
Lucky Strike your cigarette.
Guaranteed bjr