|l? Powder W Jfj) AbsotatelyPw® wL am The only Bahina Powdermade h&, from Rgyal Qrapgream ctf Tartar 0 IS YOUR MONEY IDLE? $ 8 Q 1 1 V Idle money is like seed that is not sj N planted—it will not yield a har- Q V vest. K A Deposit your funds with us—your Q JJ money will then work steadily, 8 A -- takes no holidays, and will be O V absolutely safe. X 8 i « WE PAY 4 PER CENT INTEREST Q 9 8 8 S fi Hickory Banking & Trust Co. S fLaooooooooooooooooooooooJ Ifor"sale| A Handsome Hotel I just renovated, good as new, formerly Jf known as the Depot Cafe, now the Wil- lis Hotel, in center of city, now rented, ff bringing a handsome dividend on pur- N chase price. Same equipped with all modern conveniences Reason for sale, seeking other investment. Time of sale ff limited. If interested write J. W. Camp bell, No. 1, North Davidson St., Char- ff lotte, N, C.' Price reasonable and terms N made to suit purchaser. n J. W. CAMPBELL, Owner. | "SUPERIOR" 1 orce-Feed, Disc Drills. I "The Kind That Will Sow Ap pier Oats." —-—III—-—Z——Z—Z—ZZ!—^3—Z—I^ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ # All feed changes are on the outside so they are easy to get to. THE BEST ONE MADE. Shuford Hardware Company. vest. Go Home Colonel. (continued from first page) these same negro delegates when you needed them to run your particular machine. Certainly, the Southern people "knowthat never since the days of Reconstruction was there a Republican president who antago nized their sentiment in this regard so flagrantly as you. You doggedly retained the negro Crum as collector of the port at Charleston over the pro tests and appeals of the white citizenship of that community. In utter disregard of not only the feelings of the South, but also the decencies of your office, you dined Booker Washington at the White House, receiving him on the most -intimate terms oi social as well as political equality. You closed the postoffice at Indianola, Miss, and told the " people there that if they would not accept your negro postmaster, they should be deprived of the mail service. And only a few months ago did you not stand before i gathering of national note and, with your arms around two negrc politicians from the North,- pro claim them "the equal of even white man within the sound oi your voice.*' Go home. Colonel! Go homt and apologize as best you can tc the colored brethren whom you consider your "equals" in the North; but as for the South, what you haVe done speaks sc - loudly that we cannot hear what you say. Republican policies have nevei been popular in this section but if it came to a choice v betweer . yours and Mr. Taft's we should infinitely prefer the latter; for he has shown himself at leasl sincere and has proved himseli an honorable partisan in appoint ing federal officeholders he has been most considerate of oui people's interest, while you Colonel, were seemingly bent up on Africanizing the South Atlantic coast. The truth is that on all essen tial matters of government youi policies and the South's con victions. your purposes and th South's interests are radically opposed. You stand for £ perpetuatioi of the high protective tariff. We believe with Woodrov Wilson that there should betarif revision, "steadily and unhesitat ingly downward." You are urging, as you havi ever done, a centralization o federal power at the sacrifice o State rights. We believe in preserving th integrity of the States in orde that this republic may endur and its people be free. You stand for a goverment b; - rulers in place of laws and yoi consider yourself the "indispens able man." The South believes in constitu tional government and its Demo cratic blood rebels at the idea o the dictatorship you would es tablish. We might condone, thougl never accept, your reactionary views on the tariff, as due p your intimacy with the trusts an( your dependence on Special In terests for campaign contribu dons. We might palliate you] greed for federal power and you: treason to the third-term prece dent as the out-breaks of a fiery ambition but the South canno overlook the Pecksniffian hypro cisy with which you are now seeking to cozen its votes. We judge you by , what yoi have done rather than by whai you profess. Your promises, as your recorc proves, are but weathercock* that shift with every wind of ex jDediency. Just as you clamor for th( negro's suppression when you art South and for his equality wher you are North, so on every othei issue, you are the lightning change mountebank of the time By turns, you wear the lion's and the ass's skin. In one breath you clamor for industrial justice - and in the next you propose t( legalize monopoly. You denounce the "houses' one moment and the next take them to your bo3om. - You preach pure politics while your own hands are dripping with campaign fat from the In terests. In truth, you stand at Arm ageddon and you battle for the trusts. Go home, Colonel! The South is hospitable but it isn't so gullible as you seem tc think. It isn't yet ready to sell its Democratic birthright for your mess of political vagaries. Its people are marching in loyal phalanx behind a leader who has sprung from their own soil, marching with clear eyes and true hearts to certain victory. Don't delude yourself by think ing they will desert such a cause and such an opportunity for the tin horns and stale ballyhoos of your charlatan show. What do you think of the may oralty race? A late fall is promised us; and yet we were under the impression that officially fall had already ar rived, Catawba College Notes. JNewton, Oct. 9. —Mrs. Vena Little Goode has been engaged by the college assistant music teacher for this year, Saturday and Sunday Trof. J. F. Bucliheit attended the "Church Work ers' Convention" at St. Luke's church near Granite Quarry. While there lie delivered an address entitled "Educa tion, the Handmaiden of the Church". Last Wednesday Miss Fillingim organ ized the choral class of twenty five members. Wednesday afternoon Mr. M. J. Stlor, now of the Morrison Hotel in Chicago, formerly a student at Catawba, was a visitor on the campus. Among the new students enrolled this last week have been Messrs. Debrille and Paul Allred from Granite Falls and Mr. John C. Peeler from Conover. The executive committee of the board of trustees met Monday afternoon and elected Mr. J. B. Leonard, formerly professor of Latin fa the college, to suc ceed Mr. M. J. Rowe, who has resigned. Rev. W. W. Kowe addressed the Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. last Sunday afternoon, his subject being "The Tabernacle of the Jews". In this same connection it might be said that there are this year in the college eleven ministerial students. Mr* John C. Peeler is now supplying the pulpit of the Reformed church at Conover. WOMEN SHOULD BE PROTECTED Against So Many Surgical Op* erations. How Mrs. Bethune. and Mrs. Moore Escaped. Sikeston, Mo. —"For seven years I suf fered everything- I was in bed for four or five days at a time every month, and so weak I could hardly • HL walk. I cramped and U* had backache and headache, and was so nervous and weak that I dreaded to see anyone or have any one move in the room, doctors gave me WlwmMIM medicine to ease mc at those times, anu said that I ought tc have an operation. I would not. listen to that, and when a friend of my husband told him about Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound and what it had done for his wife, I was willing to tr-ke it: Now I look the picture of health and feel like it, too. I can do my own housework, hoe my garden, and milk a cow. I can entertain company and enjoy then. I can visit when I choose, and walk as far as any ordinary woman, any day in the month. I wish I could talk to every suffering woman and girl."—Mrs. DEKA BETIIUNE, Sikeston, "Mo. Murrayville, 111.—"I have taken Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for a very bad case of female trouble and it made me a well woman. My health was all broken down, the doctors eaid I must have an operation, and I was ready to go to the hospital, but dreaded it EO that I began taking your Compound. I got along so well that I gave up the doctors and was saved from the opera tion."—Mrs. CHARLES MOORE, JR. R Ho. 3, Murrayville, lIL The World in Baltimore. On Oct. 26, a foreign missior exhibit will be opened in Balti more, to run thirty two days This exhibit will present even foreign country where foreigr mission work is being done. TlJ customs of the people will be i! lustrated, their pleasures, con ditions of social life, the pro gress of the gospel among them etc. Over 5000 people will be engaged in the different repre sentations. A number of dramas will be presented, setting for the certain events. It will be worth a great deal to any one.andespecially a church worker to see this exhibit. It will cost SIOO,OOO. An admis sion fee will be charged for the purpose of defraying the ex penses in part though much has alreadv been raised by populai subscription. Saves Leg of Boy "It seemed that my 14 year old boi would have to lose his.leg, on accoun of an ugly ulcer, caused by a bac bruise," wrote D. F. Howard, Aquone N. C. "All remedies and doctor: treatment failed till we tried Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and cured him with one box." Cures burns, boils, skin erup tions, piles. 25c- at C. M. Shuford, Mtser & Lutz and Grimes Administrator's Notice Having qualified as Executor of R E. Deal, deceased, of Catawba County North Carolina, this is to notify all per sons having claims against the estate o said deceased, to exhibit them to th€ undersigned on or before the 11th da> of Sept., 1913, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will pleas? make immediate payment. This 11th day of Sept. 1912. 9-12 6t LEROY E. DEAL, Exr. Modern Substitute. Mrs. Justin de Bunch—Has your baby learned to talk yet? Mrs. All De Mustahd—No, and his nurse is so stupid that I'm afraid he never -will, But you must Jet me show you new tricks I have taught Fido since you were here last. Play 2ead, Fido.— Milwaukee News. "Generally debilitated for vears Had sick headache, lacked ambition, was worn out and all run down. Bur dock Blood Bitters made me a well woman/'— Mrs. Chas. Frekory, Moos up. Conn. ' x Notice of Sale of Property; Unde Execution. North Carolina, Hickory Township Catawba County. City of Hickory In the matter of the Street improve ment Taxes or Assessments of W. S. Ramseur. | Under and by virtue of an execution j directed to the undersigned, Tax Collec tor, in and for the city of Hickory, which said execution was issued by W L. Clinard, Clerk of the Board of Alder men in and for said City of Hickory, said execution being issu&l under and in accordance with the terms and provi sions of Chapter 242 of the Private Laws of North Carolina, Session 1907, same being issued for the collection of the street improvement taxes or assess ments due by said W. S. Ramseur, for. certain streets improvements, made by the City of Hickory, at and in front of the property hereinaftei described, said improvement taxes or assessments being in the sum of $109.27 1-2; which said W. S. Ramseur failed and retused, and stil fails and refuses to pay,—And wherea by said Chapter 242 of the Private Laws of North Carelina, Session 1907, said amount of street improvement taxes or assessments is made-- and constituted a lien on property of the said W. S. Ram seur; which is located on Ninth Avenue, this being one of the streets improved by the Board of Alderman of the City of Hickory, under the authority con tained in said Chapter 242 of the Private Laws of North Carolina, session 1907. NOW THEREFORE, as required and commanded to do, and pursuant to said execution, I will on Monday the 4th day of November, 1912, at twelve o'clock noon, at the door of the City Hall, in said City of Hickory, sell, at publi c outcry, for cash, to the last and highest bidder in order to satisfy said execution, all the right, title and interest which the said \V. S. Ramseur has in the follow ing described real estate, namely a ene half (1-2) undivided interest in and to the following described property, which was levied upon by me on the 25th day oi September, 1912, the same being bounded as follows, namely,— BEGINNING at a stone c6rner, 40 feet South of the Southeast corner of Lot No. 17, runs South 50 feet to a sU ke, thence West 132 feet to the Lyerly 1 ne; thence North 50 feet to a stake in the margin of Ninth Avenue; thence East 132 feet to the beginning,—Known as part of Lot No. 52 as shown by plat of the City of Hickory. This the 25th day of September, 1912. A. A. Whitener P. P. Jones. Attorney. Tax Collector of the 9-26-4t City of Hickory. Notice of Sale of Property Under Execution. Noith Carolina, Hickory Township, Catawba County. City of Hickory. In the matter of the Street Improve ment Taxes, or assessments of Miss 1 Oilie Hoyle. Under and by virtue of an execution directed to the Undersigned, Tax Col lector, and in and for the City of Hick ory, which said execution was issued by W. L. Clinard, Cleik of the Board of Aldermen, in and foi the said City of Hickory, said execution being issued un der and in accordance with the terms and provisions of Chapter 242 of the Private Laws of North Carolina, Session 1907, same being issued for the co-lec tion of the Street Improvement taxes or assessments, due by said Miss Oilie Iloyle, for certain street improvements, made by the said City of Hickory, at and in front of the property hereinafter des cribed, said improvement tr.xes or assessments being in the sum of £119.53 1-3, which said Miss Oilie Hoyle failed and refused, and still fails and refuses to pay, and whereas by said Chapter 242 of the Private Lawc of North Carolina, Session 1907, said amount of street improvement taxes or assessments is made and constituted a lien on the property of said Miss Oilie Hoyle, which is located on Ninth Av enue, this being one of the streets Im proved by the Board of Aldermen of the City of Hickory, under the autho ity contained in said Chapter 242 of the I Private Laws of North Carolina, Session 1907. NOW THEREFORE, as requested ' and commanded to do, and pursuant to said execution, I will on Monday .he fourth day of November, 1912, at twelve o'clock noon, at the door of the City Hall in said City of Hickory, sell at pub lic outcry, for cash to the last and high est bidder, in order to satisfy, said exe cution, all the right, title and interest which the said Miss Ollie Hoyle has in the following described real estate namely a two-third (2-3) undivided in terest in and to the above described prop (,erty, which was levied upon by me on the 25th day of September 1912, the same being bound as follows, namely,— BEGINNING at H. S. Suttlemyre's (now J. W. Shuford's) corner on Niuth Avenue, runs thence 100 feet, more or less to J. L. Latta's corner; thence w,th said Latta's line, 183 feet, more or less to corner on D. E. Moose's (now M. E. Henkel's) line; thence with Moose's (now Henkle's) line, 100 feet, moie or less, to Suttlemyre's (now Shuford's) line; thence with said line, 183- feet, more or less, to the beginning. This the 25th day of September, 1912. P. P. JONES, tax collector of the city of Hickory. A. A. WHITENER, , 9-26-4t. City Attoney A Latter Day Shaker I have sold most all the chill tonics , made, but can truthfully say that there are none that give the satisfaction that your Dr. King's Improved Chill Tonic gives. It always cures before one bot tle is taken. Please send me three dozen at once. J. C. HARNER, - Covington, N, C. Sold by all medicine dealers, j Nyal's Laxacold acts directly n the mucous membranes relieves irritation and inflammation, opens the pores of the skin and acts as a tonic laxative. In most cases it cures in twenty- four hours, v 25 cents for THITRY-FIVE tabiels. ——aa——tawa»Z3—!———————ma— M^ ——.— MOSER & LUTZ, Druggists. "ON THE CORNER." Learn Telegraphy and earn SSO to $l5O per month. Thousands of operators needed. Most fascinating an d educa tional work. Positions assured all graduates. Write immediately for catalogue. Spartanburg School of Telegraphy, Maii*Street, Spartanburg, "S. C. Canvassers Wanted To handle the New Fibre Broom, the best house broom ever put on a carpet. Write for particulars. Bartlett Brush Works, ELMIRA, N. Y. Save money by buying diamonds now. Diamonds are cjntinually advancing, and you can buy from my selection of beautiful stones and save money. Come and see these fine stones and other nice goods in all lines. GEO. E. BIS ANA R JEWELER and OPTOMETRIST. Watch Inspector for Southern and C. & N-W. Railways. %UJh? cold» wsmSmtt how | Don't forget the repairs on your buildings. Now is the time to look S Some of them will need new i oo"'ng. New locks, hinges, bolts-bet ■ ter be sure that everything is cold-and blizzard-proof. Come in and talk it over with us. I ABERNETHY HARDWARE COMPANY. j Job Printing' That's Different—Phone 37 Subscriptions Payable in Advance The attention of our sub scribers is again directed to our cash-in-advance plan which is now in effect. All subscribers are asked to keep their subscriptions paid up well in advance. Our field representative Mr, S. J. Lawrence, will call on a great number of sub scribers and will be pleased to get your renewal. He will also be in potition to offer a splendid club com bination. Read the oifer on the last page. RYE BREAD City Bakery 'PONE 235. Conceit. A conceited woman is not one who thinks that she is better-looking than any other—they all do that—but on« who says so. —London Tatler.