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fHE GrAJNESViLiUE NEWS, £ WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 17, 1902
'Uncle Nat” Writes From The
the road. That part of the coun
try is »8'.poor as some parts ol
Georgia,
We arrived in Springfield a
9 o’clock the next night and onl
had time to change cars, and the
we moved on to Chelsea. India
Territory. We arrived there a
2 o’clock in the morning, and n
one to meet us. The hotels an
boarding houses all shut up an*
the ground was covered with sno
aud ice, but we were not left a‘
the same. There was a good lad
there expecting her daughter o
that train from school, and sb
took us to her house and treate
us all right. When the boys cam
m next day about 11 o’clock, i
was a fine day overhead but a Jit
tie rough under foot. We onl;
had to go four miles out' to th
farm and there we found plenty
The potatoes as fine a9 I ever saw
in Georgia and plenty of big fa
hogs, two hundred and fifty t-
three hundred and fifty pounds
each. The boys have fifty' od<
head of hogs in stock and some o
them are fine.
They have brood sows that wil
weigh two hundred and fifty each
a year old ; five months old pigs
weighing seventy-five to one bun
dred pounds. They bave^gatherer
nine hundred bushels of corn, and
thev have two thousand more to
get iD. There is lots of corn and
cotton yet to be gathered. It has
been raining off and on for 6ix
weeks and they can’t get in the
fields for the mud. Our crowd all
stood the trip well and we are hale
and hearty. Mr. Harmen Martin
got a jobfor this week a dollar a
day, and next week he will work
at the oil mill at $150per d#.
That will do very well. George
Barfefct and: myself will help--the
boys gather their crops. I helped
George gather a lead of corn yes
terdav and we got a western wag
on bed full off of three rows four
A Golden Rule
of Agriculture:
Be good to your land and your crop
CTill be good. Plenty of
The best
at one-half price
Chelsea, Indian Territory,
Dec. 9th, 1902.
Dear friend and friends;
According to
promise I will let you hear from
myself and family. We left
Gainesville on Dec. 2nd as you all
know,of course we had to stop in*
Atlanta, and then on to Nash
ville and Memphis, arriving there
1.80 the following morning. We
only had to stay there one hour,
and then we pulled out for Spring-
field, Mo. where we ran into a
snow storm,but notyery cold, and
through Arkansas we found plenty
of cotton and corn not yet gather
ed, and so it was in southeast Mis
souri.
Right here I will have to get off
the line a while. George Barrett,
most of you know him, the young
man who lives with me, was rid
ing with a drummer aod saw a
larsrfi flock of sheep. The man
It takes five of the ordinary quarts ” to make a gallon, but a Haynf.r att/it,
full quart, an honest quart of 3B ounces, four to the gallon. Now, you uavvm?lrt ET ha
least $1.25, a bottle for whiskey that cannot possibly be any better thanwa at
good, or $6.25 a gallon. If you buy HAYNER WHISKEY you save at least rs ^ 51 as
gallon. We sell two gallons for about the same as you pay for one gallon nr wS!?.? 11 ever?
whiskey. Just think that over and remember that HAYNER WHISKEY aS,
our distillery to you, carries a UNITED STATES REGISTERED DISTILLFP’c?!' flD! a
ANTEE of PURITY and AGE and saves you the dealers* enormous profl^rv,:^
it’s so good and so cheap. That’s why we have over a quarter of a million
tomers. That's why YOU should try it Your money back if you’re not satisfE* CCi
in the.fertilizer spells quality ,
and quantity in the* har-
-vest. Write us and
we will ■ send you,
jfree, by next mail,
our money winning
books. If,
GERMAN KALI WORKS, J§j
93 Nassau Street, S|^
New York. * Oil
Direct from our distillery to Yoy
Saves DMltrs’Profits! Prvwnt* Adultaraiionl 0 *^
PURE SEVEN-YEAR-OLD RYE
FULL $0^0 EXPRES
QUARTS O PREPAI
Tarragona, Dec. 11—The Span
ish steamer Catalina from New
fOrleans to Genoa, while entering
the,port here today, struck a pier
ADd had her bows very badly dam
aged.
The battleship Texas and the
cruiser Topeka got under way and
left the navy yard at Norfolk
tor Culebra Wednesday after-
£1-0011.
Here you will find all that’s freshest and best in the
fancy grocery line. We keep replenishing our stock and
therefore, can fill your orders any time.
Have you tried our Coffees and Teas ?
We handle the celebrated Chase & Sanborn’s Teas
and Coffees—the best in the world.
TWENTY-FIRST SEASON
A Happy Combination.
During the World’s Fair I bought a
bottle of Cheney’s Expectorant at the
suggestion of a druggist, for
j§| Try them. In fact, we have ALL THAT’S GOODf
§| to eat, and we sell it AT THE RIHHT PRICES,
Can’t we do some business with yon ? Telephone us |
ft your orders, and same will .have prompt attention.
_ a severe
cold Contra cted while on a lake steamer.
Nothing has ever acted more pleas
antly or effectually and I am never
without a bottle. P. L. MORGAN.
Don’t buy anything in
STOVES, CROCKERY, GLASS
WARE, plain or decorated lamps
until you have seen our stock
Also our Heating stoves, Grates, Fire sets
iFire dogSj Shovels and Tongs, Coal Hods Ta
ble .cutlery. Etc.
country’s progress are roads and
schools. And they are inseparable,
where one is really good the other will
not long remain bad, and where one is
neglected the other is not found much
m advance.—Southern School and
Home.
This year must be marked with a
black stone on the calendar of cham
pagne lovers for 1902 will he one of the
very worst champagne years on re
cord.
Agricultural Tiger Disc plows
IMPLEMENTS Chattanooga Hillside Disc Plots,
J&oiiev Lcaosd On Farms,
We make loans on improved farms,
m Hall, and the surrounding, counties,
on teu years time, with the privilege of
making payments on the principal sum
at any time. For further information
apply to
R. P. Latlner,
Room 4. State Bank Building, Gaines
ville, Ga.
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