PART TWO ESTABLISHED 1899 FIRST BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF HICKORY, N. C. INCORPORATED Total Assets July 1, 1912 $280,487.48 AUT Tmooo c oT TAL Total Shares in Force 7,000, Representing a Matured Value of $700,000.00 Has a Record of Over 22 Years without the Loss of a Single Penny You can join any time by paying back to the beginning of the series. New series open at the beginning of each quarter—January, April, July, October A Few Reasons Why We Consider Building and Loan Stock the Best Investment and the Most Practical Way to Bay, Build or Improve a Home Our stock pays 6 per cent interest, compounded semi-annually, payable at maturity, free G( all taxes. It starts at nothing and repays you SIOO.OO in cash for each share of stock at the maturity of the series. It becomes responsible for your SMALL savings and makes LARGE ones of them. It will loan you money when you want it and wiil help you build a home, should you desire it. It refunds every penny of your paid-in dues if you should with draw before the maturity of the series. It is the only way that you can place your small savings in a regu lar systematic way and realize 6 per cent ccmpotnded semi annually, FREE OF ALL TAXES. y • Call on or write to the Secretary and he will be glad to give you any information concerning the working of the Association G. H. GEITNER, President HICKORY TANNERY'S BUSINESS PROSPERING Mr. Chas. H. Geitner a Nation Wide Authority on Leather. MANY TONS OF BARK ON HAND. Mr. Geitner's Ancestors for Genera tions Have Been in the Tan ning Business—The Pro cess of Making Horse Collars Most In teresting. Written for the Democrat by Dr. R. W. Brown. Were v:e as a civilized people forced to Rive up some of our comforts, amongst the last to be yielded, would be those things fabricated from leather, one of the accessories. There are only three absolute life necessities, air, food and water. All else are only means to promote our com fort and e >se. Skins or hides have been used for convenience or protection since the time which is probably pre historic. Aborigin t) war shields and arm or was made from hides and skins. Moccasins worn by the North American Indian were the first application of leather for foot wear on this continent. Daring Biblical times skin« were removed entire, the legs and apertures tied, using the neck opening for filling and discharg ing fluid. These were called leather bottles. "Put not new wine in old bottles," etc. The early equipages, especilly those of state, used broad bands oi leather; attached to the axels, ir lieu of springs. The early parch ment was made out of the skii of a sheep or goat. In ancien times thongs were used to se cure sandals. The origin of tanning is obscun but probably some skins wer thrown into a pool of water wher bark had soaked for some time and when the skins were re moved, they were found to b cnangt-d both in color and tex tare, Experimentation eventu THE HICKORY DEMOCRAT J.' A. Lentz aliy brought tanning to an art, and r.o where in the United i States is the art of tanning car I ried on so scientifically and so successfully as in the Hickory Tannery, owned and manipulated 1 under direct supervision of Mr. Chas. H. Geitner. Mr. Geitner's great-great-grandfather, great grandfather, grandfather and • his father were all tanners. The cumulative experiences of his ' ancestors, added to his own, has made Mi. Geitner a national authority on the subject of tan ning. Many times he has been asked for information, by other i tanners of this country, whp were unable to solve many intri cacies incident to leather manu ?acture. ! Whether the tanning process , is mechanical or chemical or both j we do not know, but tannic acid fis absolutely necessary. Tanic acid is a very powerful styptic. It coagulates the blood and must j also have the same effect on 1 animal tissues, as all hides and s skins have a certain amount of a residual blood. Mangrove bark I nas tne largest per cent of tanic, 25 per cent, and oak bark 11 per ' cent, A iquid extract is made 3 from the bark containing 25 per B cent tannin, 7 per cent solids and 68 per cent water. A cord of r oark makes one barrel of liquid extract. After the hides are p properly cleaned, they are put A in vats. For light leather and k lace leather 6 or 7 days in the vats is sufficient, but for harness 'A and shoe leather four or five _ months in the liquid extract is e necessary to pro lupe the best e and most durable leather. When these heavy hides are ready for n use they contain enough tannin, , or tanic acid, to increase their n weight nearly twice as much as before tanning. I Oak and Hemlock barks are "" used, but the oak bark gives the . p best results and is used exclusive- Z ly by the Hickory Tannery, which Z uses 500 tons of bark a year, e $1500.00 worth of tan bark oi p ' 1500 tons is kept on hand con >e stantly. This tannery turns oul 600 sides each week, employing u 30 expert workmen during tru SPECIAL* "TRADE WEEK" EDITION ,r '*fh -** >4 ' "■'- * ,' : --S'' ,'^ : ; '.^;.{J';;:-- '. ■ I^^2^'''•HHsfe't^6Bsfi66,•-• 1 V i -". igStJfcr.'gtf »J. • "■*: ... . ■ n J. D. ELLIOTT, Vice-President S. E. Killian J. A. Martin A. A. Shuford, Jr. BAGBY BLACKWELDER, Attorneys busy season, making leather es pecially for harness, saddles and horse collars. Leather for cotton mills gets special treatment. This plant covers 4 acres, and has 7 separate buildings for fire protection. The main building is 110 f#»et square, 3 floors. The main warehouse 70 by 35 feet, 2 floors. A dynamo on the premises creates all electricity used. All the liquid bark extract is made by this concern. The bark shed h Ids 1500 tons Of oak bark and is kept filled. Hickory is well represented in I the tanning business, and main tains ifs superiority as long as Mr. Chas. H. Geitner owns and controls the Hickory Tannery. It would well repay any one to visit this manufactory owned by Chas. H. Geitner and P. A. Set zer. While the building is not very large it is far from being small. Every thing is very con venient and the best machinery is used. At one end the leather is cut similar to a tailor cutting cloth for a coat. When the peices are sewed together they ' have the shape of an elongated 1 cupid's bow but very much ' thicker. After sewing by ma -1 chine and the proper reinforce ment by hand, an employee I shoves a steel tube into one end, - and almost before you can say t Jack Robinson a machine stuffs I the collars full of properly pre s pared rye straw, then a trip 3 hammer gives the proper con- J tour to the padding. Another s chap puts the stuffed "cupids t bow" into a machine which gives i it the shape of a horse collar r with all the wrinkles ironed » out. r By this time it looks like a s horse collar. Other rapid work men put on.the finishing touches, 5 color, buckles, straps, etc. Then e the collar is ready for the shops - and Mr. Horse, h £fThe leather goeslinto the build ing at one end ae moist leather r and goes out the other end per i- fectly dry, a perfect horse col t lar. u . All the machines are run by • electricity, and the pressure of a HICKORY, N. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1912 foot starts or stops a machine. While this concern is owned by Mr. Geitner and Mr. Sstzer, the latter has supervision over the plant and the details of the busi ness. The Hickory Horse Collar Manufactory is well worth visit ing. Dr. Johnson Rings Clear on Hell. Charity and Children. According to the Raleigh Christian Advocate, a Bible stu dent association has decided that there is no hell and calls on min isters and newspapers to start a crusade against the doctrine. These fceaidless bovs, whose brains are as scant as their beard, are not the only wiseacres who pitched the Bible overboard. All down through the ages these smart alecs have risen from time to time to tell the world the straight thing about eternal pun ishment; but the hammers wore themselves out and the anvil re mained. The safe and wise sen sible thing is to take the Bible as it stands and not try to read in to its pages a meaning that suits the depraved natures that resent the infliction of the punishment their sins deserve. The doctrine of hell has helped to restrain the unruly and keep the world from sinking into its own corruption. At at. Timothy's The St. Timothy Home and Foreign Missionary Society will meet at the church Sunday at 3 p. m. There will 'be a special program-rendered which will be > interesting. The public is in ' vited. I F. K. ROOF, Pastor. P. L. MILLER, Pres. i Reformed Church. • Regular services next Sunday 1 at the usual hours. At the morri- J ing service Rev. I. N. Perghtel. D. D., of Pa., will preach. r The United states g*ves an - nually $80,000.00 to support the - national gnard of this state. $25,000.00 of this amount is for / rifle practice. The U. S. owns \ the rifle range. DIRECTORS: C. H. Geitner THE BLOWING ROCK COUNTRY POPULAR. Hickory is the Gateway to this Beautiful Sky Land Section. FAMOUS ROCK OF BLOWING. Faithful work of Dr. Savage who is about to Leave after Ten years i of Service—Hickory People at the Blowing Rock Hotel. (By Old Hurrygrapli) Green Park Hotel, Green Park, N. C., Aug. 5. —Hickory is the gateway to the most beautiful section of North Carolina. The Blowing Rock country, 4,300 feet skyward, up through the clouds, is the Switzerland of America in beauty and picturesque grandeur. It is the El Dorado of nature's health stores; the elysium of de lightful breezes; invigorating air, so exhilarating that a charm ing and talented lady guest of the Green Park hotel says she feels as if she were "breathing champagne"; refreshing ice cold water from mountain springs. The famous blowing rock is one of the wonders of nature. It is on the top of a precipitous mountain, near the Green Park hotelr some 300 feet or more in height, and overlooks a vast gulf of mountain tops, valleys, dales and coves; with breezes blowing in from the great and grand ex panse sufficient to blow back to the rock any ordinary light thing thrown over the rock precipice. The small ciearings, mountain farms and home, nest ling here and there as far as the eye can reach, look like a patch work quilt spread in a rugged manner upon the heaving bosom of nature. Before the delighted and awe-inspired beholder, in the distance, stands the majestic Grandfather mountain, towering skyward, silent and sublime; with chain after chain of moun tains that link themselves 'in colorings from a dark green Something New in the Way of Lump Investment If you have money that is not netting you (free from all taxes)five per cent, per annum, it will be well for you to investigate our new class of stock known as . - Dividend-Bearing Advance Payment Stock which nets you five per cent, per annum,payable quar terly, and is sold for SBO.OO per share. G. R. WOOTTEN, Secretary and Treasurer W. B. Menzies shading into an invisible blue that melts into the azure of the sky, and looks to the imaginative tye. like a cerulean pathway beyond the clouds. At every turn in this delightful country there are natural pictures of beauty that causes the sense of admiration to revel in the glories of a "hand Divine," that has placed here such a wealth of mountain scenery, and surrounds it with such rarefied air, and pure crystal water. It is indeed an enchanting land. It must be seen to be appreciated. THE MOUNTAIN ROADS. The roads in the mountains are now in the best condition they have been, possibly this season. Some of them have been worked lately and are better than ever. Automobiles from Lenoir are making three trips a day easily; and it is no mon sight to see from five to eight surries in a line coming up the mountain, with from four to five passengers each —people coming to enjoy the delights of this beautiful and healthgiving country. A DELIGHTFUL AFFAIR. "The Fountain," the home of Cant. W. D. Jones, in the "Hap py Valley," nine miles from Le noir, is one of the old co lonial, happy homes, so full of crenerous hospitality and rich his toric lore, was the scene of a charming social affair last Tues day. The gracious hostess was Miss Lily Jones, and the occasion was a birthday dinner, compli mentary to her mother, Mrs. W. D. Jones, and her cousin, Miss McCampbell, of Birmingham, Ala., who is on a visit to "The Fountain." The birthdays of the two ladies fell on tb* same day. The event was cd brated in a delightful manner. A num ber of guests from Lenoir and Hickory enjoyed the hospitality of this delightful home. GOOD PREACHING. The people of Blowing Rock are enjoying a season of good preaching every Sunday. For Democrat and Press Consolidated 1905 several Sundays Rev. James I. Vance, of Nashville, Tenn., who has a cottage here, has been de lighting large congregations in the Presbyterian church, from the rich store house of his able and brilliant mind. His brother, Rev. Jos. A. Vance, of Detroit, Mich., is also here, and has tak en part in some of the services. Both are North Carolinians who have made great reputations for ability in the service of their Master. The Episcopalians have a de vout and faithful worker in Rev. W. H. Savage, rector of The Church of the Holy Spirit, the church of such peaceful restful ness on the mountain aide. Rev. H. R. Maliinckrodt, of Charlotte, preached there an able sermon last Sunday to an appreciative congregation. Mr Savage filled an appointment at Boone. Mr. Savage has been in Blowing Rock ten years and he tells your correspondent that he contem plates going to Roanoke Island, probably this fall, to work among the life-saving stations, a field he formerly filled and where he longs to work again. He has one of the finest collections of Indian arrow heads and other Indian curios I have ever seen; together with fine specimens oi' minerals—most of them picked up in this Blowing Rock country. He took a special prize at the Jarre >town exposition for having one of the best there. HICKORYITES AT BLOWING ROCK HOTEL. J. L. Biddle, Dr. Biddix. Wil liam Council!, Eck Abernethy. Miss. Ruth Abernethy, Miss Alice 4bernethy, Mrs. J. A. Lentz, Miss Frances Lentz. Chicken Smothers in Heart of Melon. Kinston Special in News & Observer. A half-grown chicken pecked its way into the heart of a water melon in a Jones county barn yard this week and smothered to death. M. L. Jones, a well known farmer, declares that the chicken had gone so deeply into the melon that only its feet were sticking out. PAGES 7 TO