THE HICKORY DEMOCRAT Published Every Thursday bv 9 W. E. HOLBROOK, EDITOR AND PROI Entered at the Post Office at Hickory as second class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Year Cash In Advance $ i o Six Months, " 5' Three Mouths " " 2 Advertising Rates, Transient 2o cents an inch Prefered Position 15 " " Yearly Contracts 10 " " Special Fates given to long term ad vertising. THURSDAY, NOV. 12, 1908, The election is past, let u turn our faces to the future This country and especially th south has a bright future befor it. As brave men let us face th situation and taking fresh cour age battle for the right and ii. the end right will triumph. Few towns are more favorabl\ located than Hickory. Midwaj between Salisbury and the Blu- Ridge mountains, situated G the east of the mountains where the first rays of the morning sur kisses the hills and lights up tfr valleys, this town is highly fav ored and destined to become a great health resort to which th> afflicted will flock as doves to their windows. The defeat of sheriff Boyd can not be construed as meaning he was not an efficient officer. The county has never had an} more faithful conscientious offi cer. He enforced the law with out regard to fear, or favor. Mr Mr, Leonard, sheriff-elect is a most excellent gentleman and will make a good and faithful officer, yet we cannot help but feel that it is a pity that the county should be deprived of the services of an officer who has been so faithful and who had just served one term. But such is the game of politices. Why are Prohibition votes not counted in Hickory? This ques tion has been asked us and we are not in a position to answer. It is a known fact that several prohibition votes were cast in Hickory and these by some of our most intelligent citizens. These persons vote their consci entious convictions and are en titled to have their votes counted We submit this question to the election board. Chairman Eller Praises Editors The Democrat is in receipt of the following letter from State Chairman Eller, which explains itself: Mr. W. E. Holbrook, Editor, The Democrat Hickory N. C. My dear Sir: The editors of the Democratic newspapers have, as always, again contributed more to the success of the Party than any or all other factors concerned. I am impressed with the fact that you have displayed during the campaign just ended even greater interest and weilded a wider and more potent influence than ever before. As Chairman of the Executive Committee, I would be remiss in my duty to close this campaign without a grateful acknowledg ment. Knowing, as I do, the many! dangers that beset us, I am able j to say that the Party may well; feel proud of the general result in the State. We have polled our vote, and have said emphati cally that North Carolina is and shall remain Democratic. Again thanking you pers mally and assuring you of my high es teem, I am, Sincerely yours, . A. H.-ELLER, Chm. Can't look well, eat well or feel well with impure blood feeding your body. Keep the blood pure with Burdock Blood Bitters. Eat simply, take exer cise, keep clean and you will have long life. Subscribe for the Demoerat. Three Districts Lost. The loss of three Democratic members of Congress in North Carolina is a matter of deep re This is true as a party natter but also true as to the 3plendid men who suffered de feat. The retirement of Hon, V. T. Crawford from Congress ; in the Tenth district by the nar row margin of 245 is a matter cor general regret, both because it retires an able and expari 3nced Congressman who at Vashington reflects credit upon lis State, and because it dis places him to make room for a nan wholly unfit for the posi tion. It is well known that this is one of the districts into which the Republicans sent a bag of noney. In Buncombe county ilone over seven thousand dollars vas spent in the campaign and its quiet use was the chief cause of the Republican victory in the ! Tenth district. The Eighth dis- J trict ha 3 generally been Republi can in presidential years and , this year it was one of the dis tricts into which Republican ; noney was poured by the Na -1 tiunal Committee, Mr. Hackett nade a gallant fight but the odds were too great for him to win | against the big Republican voce ' reinforced by boodle. The de j feat of Mr. Brooks in the Fifth I district by the meagre majority jof 364 votes is a calamity. He is | an able man and would have won ■ honor in Congress. His oppon ! ant inherited plenty of money aid made no public campaign in j the district. The Republicans j with their usual Pecksniffian hypocrisy, while posing as fa voring temperance, made some thing out of the piohibition elec tion and Democratic dissensions in several important counties. 1 Those and lavish and quiet use of i money were responsible for the result in the Fifth. Mr. Brooks; and his friends were confident of victory and had no thought of the unexpected big Republican vote polled. ' ~ J The majorities in the Tenth and Fifth are so small as to make it certain that the men will be "one termers" and these districts will be certainly, redeemed two years he ice. The Republican vote in the Eighth is large and it is a close district, but without the help that a presi-. dential election in that district gives to a Republican candidate is will probably be carried again by a Democrat. This is the dis trict in which Mr. Lin ney and Mr. Blackburn have both been elected and re-elected by the Re publicans. Leavitt vs. Leavitt. Now that the election is over i and there is no chance that the airing of her domestic unhappi ness might have a harmful effect i upon the political future of. her I father, Mrs. Ruth Rryan Leavitt is preparing to bring suit for ab solute divorce from her artist husband, William Homer Leavitt. Tnis information was giver out last week by an intimate friend of Mrs. Leavitt. This friend says the suit will be filed in Denver, where the Leavitts had a home—purchased for them by William Jennings Bryan— and where they last lived to gether. Leavitt is now in Europe, con tinuing his art studies. The two children, Ruth Leavitt, 5 years old, and William Bryan Leavitt, 3 years old, are with their mother Officially, they still live in Den ver, but they spend much of their time in Lincoln, and the children had the time of their lives at Fairview during the cam paign. Little Bryan Leavitt is the complete master of his grand father, leading here and there, like a pet lamb, the man who was strong enough to compel the Democratic party to nominate him three times for the presiden cy of the United States. No opposition is expected from the artist. His wife told friends in Denver that he was "simply impossible" and that she "could not endure him, anothor day." When the action is begun the , charges will be non support, mental cruelty and incompatibi lity of temperament. Mrs. , Leavitt will ask for the custody of the children.—Charlotte Ob server. "My child was burned terribly about . the face, neck and chest. I applied Dr Thomas' Electric Oil. The pain ceased and the child sank into a rest ful sleep."—Mrs. Nancy M. Hanson, Hamburg, N. Y. Marion Butler Arrested. Sampson county had a sensa tion on Tuesday of last week, in the arrest of its Republican demi god ex-Senator Marion Butler. As he was on his way from his North Carolina home at Elliott to the voting precinct at Turkey the arrest was made by Constable Hammond upon a State warrant iworn out before a magistrate in Greensboro by Republican State Chairman Spencer B. Adams, charging criminal libel. An ap pearance bond of $2,000 was re quired, which was promptly given by Senator Butler, with his brother, George E. Butler, as security. This proceeding is but another | feature of the Adams-Butler libel j suit out of Butler's charge that Adams grafted extensively while a Judge of land claims in Indian territory. After giving bond Butler proceeded to the polls and voted. A STEADY DRAIN. Sick Kidneys Weakens the Whole Body—Makes You 111 Languid and Depressed. Sick kidneys weaken the body through the continual drainage of life-giving albumen from the blood into the urine, and the sub stitution of poisonous uric that goes broadcast through the sys tem, sowing the seeds of disease. Loss of albumen causes weakness, languor, depression. Uric pois oning causes rheumatic pain, nervousness, nausea, cricks in the back, gravel and kidney stones. The proper treatment is a kidney treatment, and the best remedy is Doan's Kidney Pills. Great Hickory cures prove it. Mrs. C. E. Doster, living at 906, Ninth St., Hickory, N. C., says: "I am glad to give my name as an en dorser of Doan's Kidney Pills as I know from personal experience that they are a most reliable remedy, and one that will relieve kidney trouble if taken ac cording to directions. I suffered for some time with pains across the lower part of my back and at times so nerv ous and dizzy that I felt unsteady for on my feet. I procured Doan's Kid ney Pills at Menzies Drug Co. and they proved so satisfactory in every way that j I willingly give them my endorsement, and would not be without them in the house." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's —and take no other. Notice of Sale of Land Under Mortgage. Py virtue of the powers con tained in a certain mortgage deed executed by O. W. Osborne to M. A. Rowe on July 20th, 1907, and due January 20th. 1908 to secure the balance of the purchase money due on the lands hereinafter described and de fault having been made in the payment of the same, which mortguge deed in recorded in the office of the Ragister of Deeds for Catawba county in book 79 at page 438, the undersigned mortgagee will sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder in front of the Postoffice in Hickory* N. C., on December 12th, 1908 at 1 o'clock p. m. the following lot or parcel of land lying in Hickory Township, Ca tawba county, N. C., and bound ed as follows: Beginning at a stake on the South side of Main street in West Hickory-Long View and runs S. 33-4 E. 180 feet to a stake; then N. 86.1-4 E. 50 feet to a stake; then N. 3 3-4 W. 180 feet to a stakaon margin of Main street; then S, 86 1-4 W. 50. feet to the beginning, being lot No. 61 ac cording to the plat made of said lands by Barb, surveyor for Campbell & Buchanan of the M. A. Rowe lands. This Nov. 9, 1908. M. A. ROWE, Mortgagee. M. H. YOUNT, Atty. Notice of Sale of Real Estate. By virtue of an order of the Superoir Court of Catawba coun ty, made in a Special proceeding therein pending, entitled G. P, Campbell, Jennie E. Campbell and S, D. Campbell against A. L. Pope, Nora Pope, Walter Rowe, J. R. Bumgarner and M. A. Bumgarner, the undersigned commissioner will sell at public auction to the Highest bidder for cash, in front of the Postoffice in the City of Hickory, Catawba county, N. C., on Saturday De cember 12th, 1908; at 1 o'clock, p. m., the following tracts or parcels of land for partition among the heirs at law of P. J Rowe, deceased, to wit: First tract: Beginning at a stone in the mill road in Amon Sigmon lina at the northern terminous of a street and run ning S. 87 E 9 £ poles to a stake by a cherry tree near the corner of James Rink's field, then with his line N. 3iE. 74 £ poles to a stone, Mrs. Holler' corner; then N. 88 W. 32 poles to a stone, B. P, Bass S. W. corner; then with his line N. 20 W. 46 1-2 poles to White oak stump; then N, 36 1-2 p. to a stone and red oak by a pine and red oak pointers said Bass' corner; then with another of Bass' lines N. 48 W. 53 pole to a red oak stump,ethen N. 13 W. 13 9-10 poles to a stone in Turner's line by sourwood and white oak pointers, then with Turner's line S. 78 W. 17 1-5 poles crossing Horse ford creek to a Post oak, then same course with Turner's line 52 1-2 poles to a pine by P, O. and Persimmon pointers, on east side of Horse Ford creek road, then with said road S. 101-2 E29 poles crossing said road to a stone by a chjrry, dogwood and oak pointers; then S 16 3-5 E 46 3-5 poles to a red oak on the west side of the road, R. Whitener's N. W. corner, then with his line N. 67 1 2 E. 39 1-3 poles to a stone pile on the fpoO6OGOQOOOQO»S&@O@&SQQ«Se^ § Seven Jewel Elgin Watch | Reduced to $4-35 | | Our Special Bargain List of | b Watches for the Holidays | 8 =—————= 8 8 16 si ze, 20 year case, 7 jewel, Elgin or 1 1 CT A Waltham movement 11 §l2 size, 20 year case, 7 jewel, Elgin or X Waltham movement U 0 6 size, 20 vear case, 7 jewel Elgin or Q 75? 55 Waltham movement s•J %j A Q o . O O 18 size, 20 year case, 7 jewel Elgin or 1 A OC ® Q Waltham movement q 8 8 x 16 sizk, ntckel case, New England V v movement, $1.65 . K 6 size, nickel case, New England q k movement, 5i.95. , X 8 | 0 This is the best watch bargain we & have had in stock. 0 A 7 Jewel, Rockford Movement, /J> ***7 r"* ft double sunk dial, extra fint fin- / *"S M Bish throughout at the extreme- (J/ J• / H ly low price of | We will not be undersold. | j K Get other prices and then k ! K come to our store. | § We'll beat 'em. h . 8 | The Morrison Bros. Co., | K (INCORPORATED) V ? b Christmas Gift Distributers § J L Hickory, N. C. b s South side of the Shuford mill road, then N. 87 E. 25 2-3 poles to a post oak and stone where plumb bush stood; then S- 28 2-5 E. paralel with said Shufox-d mill road 60 4-5 poles to a stone orr the West side of said road by white oak pointers; then S. 65 W. 6 2-3 poles to a stone; the S 16 1-2 E. 14 1-2 poles to * stone; then N. 63 E. 7 poles to a white oak on west side of said road; then S. 18 11 E. 47 7-10 poles to a Post oak stump; then S. 42 1 2 E. 25 1125 Doles to the beginning. Containing 63 7-32 acres. Second tract: Beginning at a a P. 0. oak on S. side of Shuford mill road and runs W, 341-4 p, to rock on old line; thenN, 12 vV, 56 P, to red oak; then S, 44 1-2 E. 12 P, to Maple on branch; then S. 341-2 E, 39 poles to the Post oak; then S. 52 1-2 E. 25 poles to the beginning. Coniain -7 acre's, 1 Rod and 26 poles The above lots will be sold in separate pieces and as above des cribed. This November 9 1908. M. H. YOUNT and E. B. CLINE. Commissioners Dr. Price, the famous food expert, has produced a product called D? PRICE'S WHEAT FLAKE CELERY FOOD which is considered to represent the highest food production. Its healthful qualities are unsur passed. * For sale by all Grocers Electric Lights Are a Source of Unfailing De light. They are cheaper than any other lights, and are so restful and pleasant to the eyes. They are ready to be used at any time when the current is on, and may be turned off at any time when they are, not desired. NO groping for the oilcan and spil ling the oil on the floor or table and lamp, and wiping the chimney and blacking your hands. Everybody uses electric lights who can, and everybody can who will. The price is in reach of every one. They have now finished extending their elec tric wires all over Hickory, along every important street, and are rea dy and desirous to wire every house along its line and install electric lights. See our Superintendent, Mr. D. L. Wray and get him to wire your residence and stable. THORNTON LIGHT & POWER CO. i Ladies' Tailored Suits , 7— — { The most complete line of Ladies' Suits I and Skirts ever displa} r ed in the county, and while our Suits are tailored faultless ly, we are making special prices on them _ which is almost as cheap if not quite as I you can buy the material and have them made at home, while it is impossible to I have a suit tailored at home to compare ; with our Tailored Suits. \ ■ I Ladies' Coats and Skirts : A very complete line of the newest things, beauti -1 fully tailored, from $2.50 to $25 00 i Full Line of Satteen, Heatherbloom and Silk | Petticoats from SI.OO up I ie k est of t^em ur I OIIUvJi uiluLOi work and school shoes sim ply leave them guessing. All guaranteed full vamp and solid. It will pay you to see our line of shoes [ before vou buy. - - 1 | McCoy Moretz An Attractive Parlor it makes when furnished with one of our superb parlor suits. There is nothing tawdry about our fine satin damask leather upholstered furniture; it is rich and effective, besides being solidly and reliably made, and the colors and patterns of the upholstery fabrics are in the latest styles. in furniture. ■ "* • i - The Hatcher Furniture Co, HICKORY, N. C.