Established 1899 Here's The Point. One point well driven home is worth a dozen half-hearted state ments. We are EXCLUSIVELY in the SHOE business. Naturally with only ONE line of gcods to look after we can give that line un divided attention and with THIR TY years experience can secure the very best goods for our trade. The longer we are in business the more we learn about shoes. When you buy shoes of us you get the benefit of our knowledge and experience. Every pair of shoes entering our stock MUST be durable, comfort able and stylish. Special attention is called to our stock of "Queen Quality" goods for ladies. These have stood the test and there are no others in their class. Our Fall and Winter stock is in, and we invite an inspection. Link's Shoe Store. * ' —— O I have just returded from the markets, where I have personal- O ft ly selected the finest line of Ladies Ready to Wear goods ever ft fS offered in the country. I have neither spared time or money in X assembling for our ladies the newest and best in Suits, Coats, X JC Skirrs and Waists and every other article used or worn by Ladies, V Wait lor the announcement of our first great Opening of Ready V/ O to Wear goods. Just arrived the finest line of Ladies Princess O ft Suits, Silk and Mesaline waist, silk and Heatherbloom petticoats ft Q ever displayed in Hickory. Respectfully, rS X McCoy iVloretz. X FWTTQ]BES| Have you a good watch? If 1 not, you need one, and I am in p a position to serve you in the best possible manner. Itf | MY STOCK IS LARGE, | and all the reliable makes and grades are always on hand at |j the lowest prices; 7to 24 jewel B movements, plain nickel to sol id gold cases. | QEO. E. BISANAR, f jj| Jewele and Optician Watch Inspector Southern Ry. || FHE HICKORY DEMOCRAT HICKORY, N. C..THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1909. BIG GOLD MINING. Operations on a Large Scale in Burke County. (Special Correspondence.) Brindletown, N. C., Aug. 25, 1909. —Brindletown people are very much pleased at the way matters are shaping themselves in mining ways and look forward to a period of prosperity. Messrs. Allen and Little have sub leased a large section of the Mills prop erty located on Pilot mountain to a company of Pittsburg people who have formed the Pilot Moun tain Mining Co., and are already installing the necessary machine ry. When their plant is com pleted they will have a 180 H. P. battery of boilers, a 140 H. P. engine, hydraulic lifts and a centrifugal pump. Thev will take water from Muddy Creek and use hydraulic power for getting out the gold, ar>d the pump they will use is powerful enough to put a stream of water up over the top of Pilot moun tain. The hydraulic lift will be used for putting the tailings into reservoirs or hollows.on the Mills property, and thus" Seep them out of Muddy Creek. They will employ forty hands and work night and day in three shifts of eight hours each. Allen and Little will soon be gin work on the Denton mine, and will put in a boiler and pump for operating the hydraulic stream and centrifugal pump for pumping tailings into suitable places in order to keep them out of Muddy Creek. W. H. Allen personally is be ginning mining just back of Walker's store. He will bring water through 1,000 feet of pip ing under a head of 65 feet for hydraulic mining, and use the 65 H. P. boiler, 60 H. P. en gine and 60 H. P. pump that he has used heretofore for min ing purposes for pumping tail ings into reservoirs and keeping them out of the streams. From now on all the mining companies operating in Brindle town will keeping the tailing out of the streams as they have found by experience that bv sending tailings down a stream they block themselves and are unable to mine as deep as they want to. They will also, as far as possible, by means of brush dams and other ways filter the water so that when it escapes into the streams it will be muddy colored only. The land owners along Silver Creek, becoming alarmed at the rise of a foot in the bottom of Silver Creek and laying this all to the mining car ried on in Brindletown, and not tiking into account the effects of the rains for the past two years, and having been beaten in their efforts to have the Legislature delare the running tailings into streams a misdemeanor, have now taken the macter into courts, and through T. Y. Biggerstaff, of McDowell county, have alleg ed damages and procured a tem porary injunction which will soon be served on the defendants. They have made Allen and Lit tle, both individually and as part ners, defendants and have join ed with them as many others as they could find, including some of the Pittsburg people who are not on Silver Creek at all. Law suits are expensive any way you put it, and whether the farmers win or lose, they will have a heavy bill to pay, and they might better use that money in clearing some of the logs and sunken scows out of the creek,and so in creasing its current. But if they want the fun of a law suit they can have it, as this is a free country. Messrs. Allen and Lit tle are not losing any sleep over the matter, although they prefer peace to law suits ; especially in view of the expense they are going to from now on to keep the Can You Pronounce ? There lived a man in Mexico, Who all his life did battle To rightly spell such easy words As Nahautlacatl. He wrote the names of all the towns— It took of ink a bottle, But could not spell Tenochtillan, Nor plain Tlacaecotl. He went to spelling school each day, And, though a man of mettle. He could not conquer Topiltzin, Nor Huitzilopoehctl. He dwalt some time in Yucatan, And there, at Tzompantilli, He learned to spell one little word; 'Twas Ziuhonolpilli The joy of spelling just one word Did all his mind unsettle; But, spelling still, he failed at last On Popocatepetl. tailings out of the streams. Regarding the dredging and muddying of Silver Creeks, Messrs- Allen and Little have secured options on the necessary land foj from seven to nine miles along each creek, and are now waiting for the New York peo ple to take up the option they have on this proposition. Their option has not long to run, and it will not effect the matter inju riously if they fail to complete the matter as the Pittsburg peo ple will take up the matter and carry it through if the New York crowd fall down and allow their option to lapse. It would be a good thing for land owners on those two streams if this deal is put through as they will not only receive a very good price for their lands, but will also have the privilege of furnishing at least 12,000 cords of wood a year to run the dredges by, in addition to other stores. All in all those mining matters stand to put a good many dollars into the pockets of Burke county men in the next few years. Optimist. Drunkenness. No good reason can be given to regret that we have no lawful inducement to drunkenness now in our part of the land. A doctor whose business it was recently studied conditions among the children of the city of New York. He declared that the greatest sufferers because of drunkenness are the children of drinking parents. Of these there are very many. Women as well men drink, which increase the evil. Seventy-one per cent of the children of drinking parents are afflicted with functional, organic disorders, which are inherited from their parents. This means that children of besotted parents usually suffer degeneracy and mental deficiency, with damage in body, mind and estate. Here, as in New York, we are morally, physically and indus trially lower than we might be because of strong drink, and also because o± tobacco, opium, co caine and other drugs. In actual results the abuses of these things are worse than war and pesti lence. Prohibition of them all is a right, for it is the right of a people, of a state, to prohibit for self preservation. There is no right to personal liberty when a person, by abuse of that liber ty, harms another person or so ciety. If the rotting potato be separated from the rest the loss will be less. Let each one of us who suffers from an appetite for one of these destructive things remember what is better, "If thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out." People who feel sure of their ability usually make the least display of it. The more money a woman has the more red hair she can have without people calling it by that name. COTTON IN THIS STATE. How the Output of the Pro duce Could be Doubled. There are 14 counties in North Carolina tfiat raise over 15,000 bales of cotton, eight that raise 10,000 to 15,000 bales, 15 that raise 5,000 to 10,000 bales, and 31 that raise less than 5,000 bales. The biggest cotton raising coun ties are Cleveland, Mecklenburg, Union, Anson, Scotland, Robe son, Wake, Johnston, Wayne. Wilson, Nash, Halifax, Edge combe and Pitt. Robeson is the champion producer, as it raised last year 51,445 bales, against 34,638 for Johnston, the second largest producer. Mecklenburg is third, with 32,415. Area compar ed, however, the little county of Scotland beats the State. On the map it looks like a mere township, _ yet last year it raised 25,995 bales. Gaston, the great est cotton mill county in the State, lying between Cleveland and Mecklenburg, two over-15,- 000-bale counties, raised only 12,829 bales. Catawba is an un der-10,000-bale county, but the farmers there pay more atten tion to wheat and sweet potatoes than they do to cotton. That the cotton area of North Carolina is not nearly developed is evidenced by the fact that less than 5,000 bales are rais,ed in Bladen, Col umbus and Pender, three of the finest cotton counties in the State and each capable of producing from 30,000 to 40,000 bales. Richmond, Cumberland and Sampson could easily be brought into the 35,000-bale class, while Rowan, Cabarrus and Stanley could be brought up to 20,000 or 25,000. The State in 1908 pro duced 683,628, counting round as half-bales against 749,712 bales in 1904. This State could easily grow over a million bales should the necessity for it arise. —Char lotte Chronicle. Your Teacher Can Teach Agriculture. "One of the greatest obstacles to agricultural teaching in our country schools is the diffidence of the teacher, who because she has not herself been taught ag riculture, thinks that she cannot teach it to others. She can teach agriculture successfully, as I have seen demonstrated in many in stances; and I believe that I have frequently led them to do so in my teachers' institute and sum mer school work, by calling their attention to the fact that to teach some agriculture, they need not know all agriculture, and that if they can teach to their pupils a few facts or principles,that they do not already know, that it mat ters not if the pupil knows a few kinks and turns about handling a plow or a mule that the teacher does not know. "I wonder, as a matter of fact, if our teachers who have consci entiously and thinkingly studied a good text-book, do not know as large a per cent of the knowable, teachable, agriculture as that same teacher knows of the know able, teachable history which she thinks herself amply able to teach?"— Dr. F. L. Stevens, in Raleigh (N. C.) Progressive Farmer. Snake Found in an Apple. We have heard it stated that it is not an uncommon thing to find snakes taking refuge in a cabbage head. Stories are related of persons who upon cutting them found a small green snake coiled up within. Oar townsman, Mr. T. H. Pegram furnishes the facts for a new chapter to the volume of snake stories. The other day there was picked up an apple on his premises, in which there was a small round hole as if made by a worm. Upon cutting the ap ple there was a green snake about 8-inches long, cozily coiled within the apple. The snake is of an exceedingly poisonous va riety and the fact that the rep tile is seeking a home in the ap ple makes it necessary that care be exercised in handling apples. —Mcoresville Enterprise. Democrat and Press, Consolidated 1905 t HOW HONEY GROWS 1 & W I ============= # l|l There are over seventeen million people in the y|| ' § United States making their money grow by de positing in the BANKS. w y)ji §sl.oo a year for fifty years is only $50.00, but W compounded it is $290.00. $50.00 a year for fifty Sjj /|\ years, is only §2500.00 but at interest it is sl4,- to W 500.00. W T f fNS This shows what systematic saving will do, anv w /IS kji ac one can save money, and when you plant savings 2K /j\ i n OUR bank you will harvest dollars in future to W life. Plant the seed now to have the big tree later, w «s ======== % $ " $ Hickory Banking & Trust Co., $ ii\ The Farmers Friend. to jREMARK:ABLE| Clubbing Offer f ! \ The Democrat makes the following offer by ? i which papers, each among the best in its class, i can be 6btained at unusually low rates. r r The Democrat i year The Democrat I year 4 A The Saturday Chronicle i year The Saturday Chronicle i year i \ Farm News i year Womaus Home Journal i year \ \ All Three One Year $2.00 All Three One Year $2.00 ? The Democrat 4 I year T f The Saturday Evening Chronicle i year # ! Household Journal i yAr A All Three One Year $2.00 J I THE SATURDAY EVENING CHRONICLE. f A Big Saturday Afternoon Paper For Sunday Reading, A r The Saturday Evening Chronicle carries a full report of local, state, J f and foreign news, which is supplied by an experienced force of local 0 Sand state news gatherers, and by two leading telegraph and cable news A services, The Hearst and The United Press. It has feature pages em- J bracing the best that is going in art and literature. It also contains a \ f colored comic supplement for the children, and is a distinctively de- r r sirable paper for those who want a once-a-week paper. The regular 4 i subscription price is $1.50 per year, and it sells at Sc the single copy, i i THE FARM NEWS. 4 f This is a very popular farm journal published by The Simmons Pub- f f lishing Company of Springfield Ohio. f # THE WOMANS HOME JOURNAL. A Filled monthly with best serial stories, most helpful department — a f fashions, fancy work, beauty and health, mother and child, flowers and f f poultry, cosy nook for girls, cookery, etc. f S HOUSEHOLD JOURNAL AND FLORAL LIFE. ) A magazine devoted to the home and flowers. i ®06060000006600000QOS060» § Claremont College f | Hickory, N. C. | K Fall term opens September 7, 1909. A new heating system well A instajled. Every room furnished with new furniture. The school A A offers the following courses: Classical, English, Musical, Art, Ex- A pression, Preparatory. The music course unsurpassed by any in §» the State.- Send for new catalogue. A JOSEPH L. MUR 9 »oogooooooooooooooooooo^ b LENOIR COLLEGE § V Hickory, IN. G. V X Drop a Gard for a Catalogue at Once. X JK A. B. Courses. Music (piano, violin, voice, theory), Expression, J|K ■J Art, and Preparatory Departments. Our Graduates admitted to post graduate courses in N. C. University. New Dormitory for Men. Eiglity-foot wing being added to Girls' Building. Steam heat, elec- JK ■J trie lights, baths, &c. Board and lodging at cost! Tuition in College, $40.00 a year. Hickory Business College in connection with L. C. JK Bookkeeping course, |2o; Shorthand course, S2O. Our students get Jiff CJ and hold positions! R. L,. FRITZ, Pres. Q %0609000600QGOQ008600QQOS Try an Ad. in The Democrat.