Established 1899 v x Beal ZH3s*ba/bo X O Now is the time to buy, if it is city, suburban ox coun- ft X tiy property that you waut, we wil! help you buy itr~- /C Drop in our office and we will show you a list of property Nr that we have for sale, and you will surely find something aC V to suit you. V * * 0 loans 8 /C If you have money of your own or lunds held m trust, X Sc we are in position to lend it on first mortgage improved V real estate, and guarantee the interest and principal when V O due. Let your money woik for you. 0 Fire Insurance _ O V We represent none but sound, solid and successful fixe Jv V insurance companies. Let us wiite youx fixe in'suxafcqe, Sr O Ivife Insurance Do you xealize that at a very small cost you can make X your estate worth $5,000 more than its present value? V © A policy in the Southern Life & Trust Co. is just as much O a part of your estate as your home. See us about taking O rS out a policy. All insurance premiums loaned here. C 5 0 Hickory Insurance & Realty Go., y X J. A. LENTZ, W. A. HALL, M. H. GROVES, X Sr President. Vice-President. Sec. Treas. Sc V H. E. McCOMB, Ass't Mgr. Real Estate Dept. | The Hickory Banking & Trust' Co f 1 _ We are fully covered by Burg lar and Fire Insurance : : : Take no risk by keeping your money in your home or on your person, but deposit same with § us. - _ §- 2 He Pay Interest on Time Certificates " I a and saving accounts, and will appreciate yout | business, great or small. You can get your money any time you want it, if left with us. Iry g 6 us. " 1 I g w7x7 um, - JULIUS E. ABERNETHY, g | Cashier. President. § © ® 1 The Value of a Dollar | m % © w Ay Is what you get when you trade at © our store. » © ® / j | IN FIRST-CLASS GOODS | @ We sell Clothing 25 per cent, cheap ® er than you can get it elsewhere. | SHOES! SHOES!! | © The Best line in the city. Come to see us for bargains. | .. | I Setzer & Russell 1 % HICKORY, N. C. $ © V' ' ® ®S®®@SS®BS® "TREE To Subscribersi^^NT | For a ltmited time we will give absolutely freeA of charge to each new or renewing subscriber -■year's subscription to Th South rn Agriculturist, !' Nashville, Tenn. - ' For forty years this paper has been the guide of thousands of Southern farmers. If you are not a subscriber to our paper, or if your sub scription has expired, order NOW and get a this valuahle present free. We reserve the 5 right to withdraw this offer at any time, so | HURRY UP. 1 The Hickory Democrat ]| H * ' I If you want a job of printing done that All PPiIII f! (P wiU ve you entire satisfaction, just give 111 I 1 y 1 The Democrat Printery your order and you VU 11 lining, will be thoroughly satisfied. THE HICKORY DEMOCRAT HICKORY, N.C., THURSDAY. MAY 7,1908. SHOILD A GtRL PROPOSE. Fewer Matrimonial Mistakes if She Did. / "When a young man or woman is 21 or 22 years old it is his o** her duty to get married," declar ed Rev. CL F. Thomas before his congregation at St. Ann Catholic church, "The young man is then about 6 years out of school, ger. orally speaking and if he has formed good habits let him mar ry. If he has formed bad habits he should never marry. Dr. Thomas gave some practi cal advice to the young people present.- Amon» other things, he emphatically declared himself in favor of letting the girl pro pose as well as the man, for this he said, would prevent many un happy marriages The girl is usually very care ful in selecting a husband, band, and she is not liable to make a mistake. With a man this is often the case. Let the young man save money, for i do not think much of the future wife who lets her ycung admirer spend all his money in 'fiowers and candy. When the young woman sees him inclined thus she should en courage him to do otherwise. DP not be afraid of public opinion. It is the worst kind of folly to get married without a cent in one's pocket. I have known young men who even had to borrow the dollar to get the license. Young man. when you propose be able to say: "I can support you; I've got nerve and at least a little capital to start witn." Be able to start out independent and do not rely on father and mother. Steady yourselves and get your bearings, and, above all habits. Keep away from tie saloons and gambling and remember that you are making yourselves- First of all be sure that you can support a wife a.id then get a girl worth marrying. When you ha?e saved something and have formed good habits get married right away. Don't wait till you get another girl; you have looked around enough and are supposed to be serious. _ A married man makes the bet ter citizen, because marriage steadies a man. You can see it the day after he is married. The reason is he's got more steam in his boiler, A bachelor is mostly selfish,' Marrying makes a man unselfish, because the need of supporting a wife and family makes him industrious and econ omical. To the girls I would say that when you begin to keep company get a man that is a man and not a baby. A man with some dignity and character, whose intentions are not always tending toward the crease in trousers and the parting of his hair in the middle and fancy neckties. The world is full of such today. Get a man who has work and don't make him spend all his money in buying you flowers and candy. I sound this warning to voung men: There are many girls who care for their men friends only to use them as a convenience. Don't marry a man to reform him —it is too big a risk. The secret of it all girls is to put yourselves in the place of the young man's mother as the lady whom he intends to marry, be cause she is his ideal. You must not be wallflowers and butterflies for if you look at such they blow away. You should imitate your mothers virturs and you will in variably succeed. It is a pity | that women don't do the propos ing lor there would be fewer mistakes. —Ex, OASTORZA. B**™ th * Kind Yon Haw Always Bought Subscribe for the Qemocrat; only $l.OO a year. _ Gone to Seed. "It is vtallenough to support a wise law but there is no need of going to extremes." These sage reflections are brought about by the fiery and if we must say it, unreasonable zeal which the Mercury displays for the cause of State prohibition. after week that journal with a reckless disregard of the danger of injuring its standing with the Republican party, has appeared loaded down to the water's edge with editorials urg ing the voters to support prohibi tion. The thing seems almost to have become a mania, an obses sion with the Mercury. ~ In the editorial, news and local departments# you are sure to stumble over some bold declara tion like the following: , It is true that the Mercury is opposed to the Democratic party anJ. all of its works. It is also true that a Demo cratic Legislature passed the prohibition law and that the Re publican party hopes to make votes by taking no stand on the question. But for years tne Mercury has fyeld itself out as a prohibition journal. Jt has lec tured preachers, teachers and others whose business it is to build up public morals and has criticized them supporting whis key men. It has criticized the politicians,—Democratic politi cians, we mean —for dodging this issue, When the Watts and the Ward laws were under discussion we opposed them because we said there was no prohibitiion in them, We said if you'll give us State prohibition that would be like something. The Mercury would be for that Now with this record behind us does any body think that we would keep silent when state prohibition is an issue? Let Party advantage go. What is it compared to God's eternal What is it compared to rescuing the hap piness of little children and help less women? Why don't Mr. Click "slow up' just a little bit. Mr. Click is too pronounced for prohibition—We don't think. Nature has provided the stomach with certain natural fluids known as the digestive juices, and it is through these juices that the food we eat is acted upon in such a way as to produce the rich, red blood that flows through the veins of our body and thereby makes us strong, healthy and robust, and it is the weakening of these digestive juices that destroys health. It is our own fault if we destroy our own health, and yet it is so easy for anyone to put the stomach out of order. When you need to take something take it promptly, but take samethiug you know is reliable —something like Kodol For Dyspepsia and Indigestion. Kodol is pleasant take, it is reliable and is guaranteed to give relief. It is sold by W. S. Mar tin and C. M Shuford. "Prohibition does not prohib it" is the song of the man trave lling ovfer North Carolina as the k paid agents of the distillers and whiskey do you suppose the mak ers and sellers of whiskey would put up millions of dollars to fight prohibition? Letter to N.W. Propst Hickory, N. C. Dear Sir:- Two cans of paint look alike; two paints look alike, whea open ed; two jobs look alike, so long as they 're new —unless one is scant. They are far from alike 5 one is paint and the other is tTash. The gallon price is not far from alike,, They don't cost alike, One % takes_lo gallons to paint a house: the other takes 20. The cost of one job is sso* thp other sloo—it may be $90 —the job that coast least is the good one: wears twice as long as the other. There are two ways of telling good paint: by the name; by the number of gallons it takes for a job—least gallons best paint. By (he name Deyoe; by least gallons.- - Yours truly, 53 F. W. DEVOE & CO. y, S.-F. B. Ingold sells ourjaiut. The Harrow, Its Use and Its Abuse. At this season of the year there is no implement on the farm of more importance than some good form of harrow, such as may be found in most of the markets. As fast as land is broken it should be harrowed the same day. This is to pulverize the clods, make a fine seed bed and con serve the moisture. Do not wait two or three days until several t#ne of moisture have been lost on each acre. Moisture is of utmost importance to a growing crop. We always have a dry spell some time during the summer, so we must arrange to have i good supply of moisture stored in the soil to carry the crop right on through the drought. If the soil is so dry and hard when breaking that it breaks up in clods, then a roller should precede the harrow. This either crushes the clods or presses them into the loose soil so that when rain comes they absorb sufficient moisture from the loose soil to become dissolved. A clod can hold but little moisture and is not worth much more to a plant than is a stone. In the use of the harrow many farmers make the-mistake of trying to break land with them by placing on chuncks, stones or by riding on them. They were not intended for breaking land, but for surface cultivation. Even the disc harrow is not suitable for breaking land. Another very important use of the harrow, including the weeder and similar forms of cultivators, is in the first cultivation cf young plants. No future cultivation is of quite the importance of the first Even before the planting begins run the harrow over the field. If a hard rain comes be fore the seed comes up. the har row should |>ass over again. This should be repeated every week or ten days, according to seasons, until the plants are too large. The ordinary harrow will cover five to six acres per day easily, The two-horse forms ten or more, while the Weeder will cultivate fifteen acres per day with a single man and horse. The teeth (spikes) of the im plements pass in among the young plants and destroy weeds and grass that would have to be gotten out later by expensive hand hoeing. Thus they are both efficient and economical. The time to use the harrow in such cultivation is just as soon after a rain as the land is dry enough for the horse to walk on it easily. Do not wait until a green carpet appears on the sur face and the soil has Ibe come dry. It will root up some of the grass but will simply cultivate the remainder so that it will grow all the faster, The good farmernever sees any grass in his farm if he can prevent it. The best time to destroy weeds and grass is while the seeds are germinating in the soih and be fore they make their appearance above the surface. A day's work at the proper time is worth several day's work later. Many crops may be grown to maturity without any cultivation except that given by a good har row or cultivator. As a rule the double, triple or even the quad ruple forms are more economical because one man can manipulate the extra force of horse power instead of having a man for each horse. Then there are the sulky ar rangements which make the la bor a great deal easier for the farmer. G. R. HUDSON. Special Agent, Demonstration Farm Work. Subscribe for rhe Democrat. Democratand Press, Consolidated 1905. NOTH CA ROLINA CLASSIS Of the Reformed Church In Session in Concord. The North Carolina Classis of the Reformed Church held its annual session in Concord, the first session. having been held last Tuesday night. • The body is meeting in Trinity Church, and will remain in session all week. Tuesday night Rev. D, E. Bowers, of High Point, the retir ing President, preached the opening sermon, after which the Classical communion was held. The following officers were elec ted: President—Rev. C. E. Wehler, D. D. - Vice President—George Mc- Corkle. Corresponding Secretary—Rev Shu ford Peeler. Reading Clerk—Rev. Milton Whitener. Wednesday was largely taken up b> the reports of the various pastors which showed the gener al work of the church to be in excellent condition. The report of the trustees of Claremont Col lege at Hickory was read by Dr. J. L. Murphy. Ringing resolutions endorsing state prohibition were unanim ously passed. There is a large attendance, and the sessions are most inter esting. On Wednesday night there was an educational meeting, which was addressed by Dr. Snyder, President of Catawba College, and Rev. W: W. Rowe. Thursday was devoted to the general business of the Classis. Thursday night a strong address on prohibition was delivered by Rey. W. H. McNairy. Dr. W. B. Duttera also delivered an in teresting illustrated lecture on I Missions of the Reformed.' church. Her hand this man could not get, His health was not as it should be, He had not used the "best as yet," Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Menzies Drug Co. Rowan Will Cive 300 Majority for Prohibition. Rev. W. vV. Rcwe, of Rockwell who attended the meeting of the North Carolina Classis is enthu siastic about the situation in Rowan in regard to the prohibi tion election. He says the coun ty will give a majority for pro hibition of about 300. All the reports received here from Row an indicate that the county will go dry by a good majority.— Concord Times. wj Where biscuit, S] cake, hot-breads, cruets |^f S or puddings are required j£j i| 'Royal is indispensable.' Ifjt \ftoX9lr\ jfj Baking Powder|| |vl Absolutely Pure jdjj w| Not only for rich or fine food |V| * or for special times or service. 14' Royal is equally valuable in the SB |j| preparation of plain, substantial, - Kl |P I - every-day foods, for all occa- IS [X sions. ~lt makes the food more S£l 135 ta&y, nutritious and wholesome. Pert Paragraphs. Even a rich girl may make a poor wife. After saying you intend to do a thing do it. Ever notice hew much truth. there isn't in a compliment? How harsh it sounds to hear a i man criticise your pet hobby. But few dancing masters are to be found in the hop districts. No. Alonzo, a pile of filthy lu cre is not necessarily a heap cf dirt. The man who sees no good in others is no good. There is always some man a round who is willing to second any kind of a motion. Money makes the mare go—or come or stay, according to the way it talks to the jockey. Don't worry about your looks. "You look all right to your friends and the rest of the world don't care how you look. Anyway, the self made man. hag. no one to blame but himself. Life is too short for a man to do all the things his wife wants him to do. What this world needs is an additional supply of men and women who talk less and say more. COLDS TAAT HANG ON. Colds that hang on in the spring de plete the system, exhaust the nerves, and open the way for serious illness. Take Foley's Honey and lt quickly stops the cough and expels the cold. It is safe and certian in results. W, S. Martin & Co. ANNUAL RE-UNION. Confederate Veterans, Birm ingham Ala., June 9th and 11th 1908. Southern Railway announces following round trip rates for the above occasion. $ 8.95 Durham - •--- , 11.95 Gastonia 8.55 Greensboro 10.85 Hickory 9.20 Raleigh 12.05 Goldsboro 13.45 Approxinately low from other points. Date of sale June 6th, 7th and Bth; good returning leave Birm ingham midnight June 20th. For further information apply to any agent Southern Railway. R. L. VERNON. Traveling Passenger Agent. Insist upon DeWitt's Witch Hazel salve. There are substitutes, but there is only one original. It is healing, soothing and cooliDg and is especially good for piles. Sbld by C. M. Shuford. & W. S. Martin.