Established 1899 YOUR BANK ACCOUNT Is Important It would be foolish for you to entrust your funds and the in °fpyoUrbusinesf to a Banking concern about,wh>se Record, Resources and Methods you did not know. Don't you think so? This Bank is under Government supervision, and not onlv invites your account, but invites you to inform yourself as to its methods, and facilities, its resources, its management, its officers, its record. „ / Come in at any time and letus talk the matter over; 4 per cent, interest paid on tone deposits and savings accounts. Money loaned to cuitomsrs. You can not afford to be with out a Bank account. FIRST NATIONAL BANK HIOKOKY. N. O. CAPITAL, $200,060.00 Surplus and Profits, $25,000.00 A. A. SHUFORD, Pfes. • K. C. MENZIES, Cashier J. D. ELLIOTT, Vice-Pres „ J. L. CILLEY, Ass't. Cashier I Special Prices § j| ON HEAVY-WEIGHT " W ® Suits and Overcoats /IS iti For 30 Days s» A Our stock is not large, however, we don't js! JL believe in carrying over goods, preferring JK & to sacrifice the price while the goods Pre JK A yet very desirable, thus giving us room for JK § Spring Goods, and giving you the new JK merchandise at low prices. JK to DON'T FORGET OUR LINE OF "WALKOVER" SHOES I aj in heavy Winter weight are the very best 5K w to be had, $4.00 the *>air. Tg 2? A complete line of "Hawes" and "Stetson" Y WS Hats and Furnishings. - W fa $ j Moretz-Whitener Clothing Co. Jj fIS The Quality Shop. W 1 The Value of a Dollar I ® © & —— —■— j|, Is what you get when you trade at 8 our store. - ~~ © | ========================== % | IN FIRST* CLASS GOODS | 8? tfy We sell Clothing 25 per cent, cheap l er than you can get it elsewhere. 1 | SHOES! . SHOES!! 1 ® The Best line in the city. Come to © P see us for bargains. I Setzer & Russell f to . # ® • HICKORY, N. C. S # iiW We have aH-kinds of Books except School Books, and CA^ %f3 keep a full line of jfS SCHOOL SUPPLIES \fy y|k Pen and Pencil Tablets, Composition Books, Examina- - j tion Tablets, Pencils, Pens and Ink. \fjf A & MAGAZINES. '|3 Whether you want a single copy or an annual subscrip- W JjlW tion, you will find us ready and prompt to get you what %?•* you want. W Zy VAN DYKE BOOK & ART SHOP A. L. MOSER, and L. R. MOSER, Proprietors. C. i£. Shuford and E. B. Menzies. m T\ J Is the best advertising medium in Cataw 1A lflmAOPn I county' as it is read in very near every Ml 111 1111 111 Hi ll State in the Union, and in every home in 1111/ 1/uiirvv uii county. The subscription price is only SI.OO per year. THE HICKORY DEMOCRAT. HICKORY., N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13,1908. The True and the Untrue. He was a dog But he stayed at home And guarded the family night and day. He was a dog That didn't roam. He lay on the porch and chased the stray — The tramp, the bur glar, the hen v away: For the dog's true hea£ for that household beat At morning and evening in cold and heat. He was a dog He was a man. And didn't stay To cherish his wife and bis children fair. He was a man. - And every day His heart grew callous, its love beats rare He thought of himself at the close of day And cigar in his fingers, hurried avay To the club, the lodge, the store, the show, But he had a right to go, you know, He was a man. —Rev. Francis E. Townsley. To the People of North Caro lina. We and others of the Anti- Saloon League, called the tem perance forces together to meet in convention in the City of Ral eigh, on Jan 21st. The great convention that assembled un animously asked the present Legislature to give the State a statutory law against the manu facture and sale of liquor at the present session but a majority of the members of the Legisla ture, after considering the mat ter, decided to submit the ques tion to a vote of the people. The "Long-Dowd'' bill is now a law. It is a composite bill prepared by the best thought of temper ance men in the State. It is not as stringent as some of as would like it to be, but it is an exten sion of the Watts and Ward bill to the whole State. On Tues day, May 26th, the issue will be presented to the people of North Carolina, are you "For or against the manufacture and sale of in toxicating liquors?" The praise for this issue being submitted to the people of North Carolina is due to the" great heart of the masses of its citizenship demand ing this reform, the ministers of the Gospel of peace and good will towards men, those Senators and Representatives who voted for the bill, most of the press of the State, the Educators of the State. The bill leaves intact the higher local prohibitory laws now in force in the several counties. We have patiently borne for years the galling yoke of thej saloon, distillery and drink evil with all their attending curses and woes. The time has come when this enemy to the human family must be destroyed. No family, high or low, rich or poor has not felt the awful curse of the drink habit. It is the can ker worm that has eaten into the heart of the body politic; it has made the sweet water of life bitter; the tears that have been shed by an army of mourners speaK to our heads as well as our hearts. "In the sweetest bud, The eating canker dwells." No race is exempt;_ especially is it injurious to the negro, to whom the white race owes a duty. The people of the State, in the generations gone by, have resisted to the last ditch tyranny and oppression, cruelly and wrong. The power is with them, and they are once more called upon to do battle in a righteous cause. Be not deceived with false arguments. The business man and corporation no longer wants one who drh s in his employment. The Mill and Manufacturing towns of the State have refused to license the traffic fraught with such evil to the moral prosperity of the com munity. How wonderfully they have prospered by so doing! This issue appeals to men of all parties; to men of all creeds; it is above party, above creed, above nationalities; it is a matter of conscience. With malice to ward none, and with an eye single to the pubiic good, we call upon all to Join with us in the contest. If any have made, wittingly or unwittingly entan gling alliances, hurtful to them selves, or the good of the human family, we appeal to them to sever their connection with the "body of this death," re-assert their freedom and manhood and enter test. We especially appeal to those who have been against us in the past to forget all differences for the public good and enter this contest. It i 3 a contest against the saloon, distillery and drink evil, and not against the man; an issue of msrit and morals, and not of msn and politics. Friends of Temperance, org? r ize, work, watch and v pray. If this is done victory is ours. JNO. A. OATES. Chm- Ex. Com, HE RIOT CLARKSON Pres. of State Con. R. L. DAVIS. State Organizer. HeTnought He Stopped the Paper. It is said an acquaintance met Horace Greely one day, and said: Mr. Greely, I've stopped your paper." "Have you?" said the editor, "Well that's too bad," and he went his way. The next morning Mr. Greely met his subscriber again, and said: "I thought you had stop ped the Tribune?" "Sol did." ' 'Then there must be some mis take," said Mr. Greeley, for I just come from the office and the presses were running, the clerks were as busy as ever, the com positors were hard at work, the same as yesterday and the day before." - "Oho!" ejaculated the sub scriber, "I didn't mean that I had stopped the paper; I stopped only my copy of it, because I didn't like your editorials." "Pshaw!" reported Mr. Greeley, "It wasn't worth taking up my time to tell me such a trifle as that. My dear sir, if you expect to control the utterance of the 4 'Tribune' by the purchase of one copy a day or if you think to find any newspaper or magazine j worth reading that will never express convictions at right an gles with your own, you are doomed to disappointment." THE JUMPIN.G OFF PLACE. "consumption had"me in its grasp; and I had almost reached the jumping off place when I was advised to try Dr. King's New Discovery; and I want to say right now, it saved my life. Im provement began with the first-bottle, and after taking one dozen bottles I was a well and happy man again," says George Moore, of Grimesland, N. C. As a remedy for coughs and colds pnd, healer of week, sore lungs and for preventing pneumonia New-Discovery is supreme. 50c, and SI.OO at C. M. Shuford E. H, Meazies, vV. S. Martin druggists. Trial bottle free. * The Dentist—Now, Johnnie, Brace up. It'll be all over in a minute. Boy—Yes, but just think of that minute. —Puck. NO CASE ON RECORD. There is no case on record of a cough or cold resulting in pneumonia or consumption after Eoley's Honey and Tar has been taken. It stops the cough and breaks up the cold quickly. Refuse any but the genuine Foley's Honey and Tar in a yellow package. W. S. Martin-& Co. Wheji and Why We Should • Advertise. We know some merchants who think it is n)t worth while to advertise during the first months of the year because they don't expect much trade until later. Wonder what those same mer chants would think of a farmer who should decide that it was useless to plant anything in the spring because he does not ex pect to reap until fall? Apropos of this matter of ad vertising, about which some people entertain erroneous ideas we call attention to the follow ing, which is reproduced from The Winston-Salem Journal "With the approach of the new year, business men and mer chants are planning their cam paign for business during 1908. The progressive merchant man ufacturer, banker and business man in any line will include in his plans a liberal appropriation for advertising, always one of the most 4mportant features of anylegitmate business. It has been truly said that ' 'Advertising is the life of trade/' and all wide awake business men keep that fact in mind; and the Castomir is next too, for men and women of this day and time have realiz-! Ed that they get the best, fresh-' est goods from the manufactur- j ers and merchants who adver-j tifiO, Men in all lines of business! are studying advertising. The Raleigh Evening Times contain ed the following, concerning a recent article on bank advertis ing which applies wiih equal truth to other lines of business, as follows: "An article by Mr. J. G. Brown of this city, in the Bank Advertiser has caused a good deal of comment by the press of the State, because of the sound ness of the idea set forth. Mr. Brown is himself a newspaper advertiser and knows whereof he speaks. Attention is directed to the concluding paragraphs oi Mr. Brown's letter: "You hear people say so and so is a good advertiser," now why Is it? It is because they cannot pick up their paper with out seeing 'so and so's' adver tisement. He has always some thing to say, and they have be come interested in his advertise ments—interested enough to talk about him and his adver tisements. Be like him; look upon your advertisement as an investment; plan it carefully, judiciously and thoroughly, and then regard the business you get from it .as surplus. No in vestment in the world pays like good advertising. Continually cultivating the crop in the grow ing season makes a bountiful harvest possible. Cultivate good advertising and get a har vest of deposits. You reach in telligent people through the n3ws papers, because of the masses. People who do not read them are those who do not place their deposits in the bank. "The banker depends for his patronage upon the people who are thinkers; therefore, an in telligent advertisement will set intelligent people to thinking. A medium which enters the home and is looked forward to each day or week, is the medium in which to convey your arguments to the people. Let the hand bill the advertising scheme, or the newspapers? Judge others by yourself—you read the adver tisements in the papers you pat- KEEPING OPEN HOUSE. Everybody is welcome when we feel good: and we feel that way only when our digestive organs are working properly. Dr. King's New Life Pilb regulate the action of stomach, live and bowels so perfectly one can't heir feeling good when he uses these pills 25c at C. M. Shuford E. B. Menzie W. S. Martin drug stores. Democrat and Press, Consolidated 1905. ronize the merchants who adver tise, so let your light shirt through the columns of the newspapers—it pays. "Not *nly should banker everywhere weigh cafefull; what Mr. Brown says but all business men who have anj articles in which to interest the people, should do so." News of Edith. Snowing this morning it look* like winter has been cold enougl foi; us all, this month. Farmer need not fear the 801 l Weav hurting the crop this vear, he if set back. Its the 801 l Weav that hurts the farmer most, i has damaged the pi-ice of las years crop and is- now looking to get the next. Farmers have little dn3 to wards this years crop. We raise lots of cotton in Mountai Creek but so far have not heard of any one that will mike cotton the leading croo this year. The Lyies Creek correspond ent got smartly into it. I speit he lacked the discipline in rais ing laid down by J. S. K., ir last weeks Democrat. That j letter was Law and Gospel an without its application in tht home and scholia, we need expect anything only by chance. I am glad the legislature ha done its do, again and aajourneu I have yet to hear any country people complain of the prict they formerly had to pay to travel on the railroads." Nor have I beard anyone praise the reduction. 1 suppose they ai not the common people, but I ck. hear of the lateness of the de li very of mail since the railroad; reduced their trains the rural people don't get their mail from one to two days as early as they did under the star route system. That amounts to something in the battle with business. Think of the farmer three days behind the markets. Well prohibition is the issue before the people now and from what I hear I think the country people will take less stock ,in it than anything that has ever been agitated among the people unless it is good roads. This year will be one of the hottest political campaigns the country has .had *for years, *its going to be hot from township to President too many factions in all parties that kick if they don't think they are controlling. They are like these children raised without the discipline of the rod if they obtain it will be by chanee. Well it does seem that those who have tried and failed ana whose principles have not been adopted by the masses ought to stand aside and let others try their hand and there is not a few of those common people who have become satisfied that a large amount of those elected to office are more interested in politics and how to get back| again than they are for the good I of the country. It continues snowing, with success to the Democrat I'll close GREEN HORNE... DeWitfs Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve is best for cuts, bruises and scratches. It is especially good for piles. Sold by C. M. Shuford, W. S. Martin & Co. We cheerfully confess to be just old-fashioned enough to like to sit in front ef a fireplace. CASTOR IA for Infants and Children. Tb« KM Ym Haw Always Bought '• \ * The, more a man knows the less he's inclined to boost Coddling the Stomach. - Do not pamper the children with ho* house methods there is a common-sense method. If the children or the man or woman show a tendency to be "off their feed," if they begin to lose flesh, their stomach should be toned up with a harm* !ess tonic which will increase the secre tions of the digestive tract A tonic made jf native medicinal- roots which will in vigorate the stomach into greater activ* ! ty and increase the secretion of the !>iiosphates from the food —» remedy which will do this is one which has ttood the test of public approval for uearly forty years, and contains no alco hol or narcotics. We refer to Dr. Pierce's CJolden Medical Discovery. It can be riven to the smallest child with perfect freedom. Jf the blood is Impure, if pim ples, boils, headaches occur, if the atom «h is weak —first eradicate the poisdtis irom the blood. AH IMITATION OF NATURE'S METHOD, •f restoring waste of tissue and impover shment of the blood and nervous force is •sed when you take an alterative extract •f native roots, made without the use of !cohol, like Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical discovery. . This vegetable medicine •oaxes the digestive functions and helps a the assimilation of food, or rather takes .'rom the food Ju3t the nutriment the blood requires. Along with its use one should take jxercise in the outdoor air, get all one .an of God's sunlight and air; practice i deep breathing exercise every day. This "Medical Discovery " gives no false stimulation, because it does not contain alctfbol or a narcotic. It helps digestion and the assimilation of such elements in the food as are' required for the blood. Unlike a cod liver oil, against which the already sensitive stomach will declare ipen rebellion, this tonic has a pacifying iction upon the' sensitive stomach and jives to the blood the food elements the tissues require. It maintains one's nutri tion by enabling him to eat, retain, digest and assimilate nutritious food. It over comes gastric irritability and symp'-; a»s of indigestion, and, in this way,' fever, night-sweats, headaches, etc., are done away with. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery purifies the blood and entirely eradicates the poisons that breed and feed disease. It thus cures scrofula, eczema, erysipelas, boils, pimples, and other eruptions that mar and scar the skin. Pure blood Is essentiarto good health. The weak, run down, debilitated condition which so many people experience is commonly the effect of Impure blood. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery not only cleanses the blood of impurities, but it increases the activity of the blood-making glands, and it enriches. the body with an abundant ■ supply of pure, rich blood. A consideration of first importance in deciding what medicine to take for the cure of blood or stomach disorders is as to its hacmlessness. Dr. Pierce is frank and open with the public for he tells just what is contained In Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery —its ingredients are Golden Seal root, Queen's root, Stone root, Black Cherry bark, Bloodroot3landrakeand pure triple refined glycerine. Concerning Golden Seal the highest medical authorities agree with Prof. John M. Scudder who says, "It stimulates the digestive processes, and increases the assimilation of food. By «hese means the blood is enriched, this blood feeds the muscular system. I mention the muscular system because 1 believe it first feels the increased power imparted by the stimulation of increased nutrition. The consequent improvement on the nervous and glandular systems are natural results. "In relation to Its general effects on the system, there is no medicine in use about which there is avch general unanimity of opinion. It is t miver»aUy regarded as the tonitf useful in all debilitated states." Concerning -Bloodroot The American Dispensatory say*. "Stimulates digestive organs. Increases action of heart and arteries—stimulant and tonic. Very val uable as a eough remedy— acts as a sed ative—further valuable as an alterative." Read all about vourself, your system, Mie physiology of life, anatomy, hygiene, simple home cures, ete., in The Common Sense Medical Adviser, a book of 1008 pages. For cloth-bound copy send 31 cents In one-cent stamps, or for paper jovered 21 stamps. Address Dr. £▼. Pierce, Buffalo, N. T. Speaking of glad surprises, did you ever find a quarter in the pocket of a pair of discarded trousers? 3 A NIGHT ALARM. Worse than an alarm of fire at night is the metallic caugh of crup bringing dread to the household. Careful mothers keep Foley's Honey and Tar in the house and give it at the first sjgn of danger. Foley's Honey and Tar has saved many little lives and it is the only safe preparation for children as it contains no harmful drugs. W. S. Martin & Co. People attending court at New ton often suffer serious incon venience on account of not being able target reliable reports about the trains at night. Train No. 82 will frequently be reported on time. The hacks will take the passengers from the hotels to the depot and then as apt as not it will turn out that the train is an hour late. This is very incon venient to the travelling public and ought to be remedied. There is no fun in waiting an hour or so in a cold depot when the pas sengers might as well be at the hotel. We hope steps will be taken to remedy this trouble.