Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / Sept. 16, 1915, edition 1 / Page 5
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CALOMEL IS MERCURY! IT SICKENS! ACTS ON LIVER LIKE DYNAMITE "Dodson's Liver Tone" Starts Your Lher Better Than Calomel and Doesn't Salivate or Make You Sick. Listen to me! Take no more sick rninjr. salivating calomel when bilious or constipated. Don't lose a day's work! Calomel is mercury or quicksilver •which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it. comes into contact jth sour bile crashes into it, breaking ii up. 1 his is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you are slug „ish and '"all knocked out," if your liver is torpid and bowels constipated or vou have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour just take a spoonful of harmless Dod son's Liver Tone on my guarantee. - \ ■HI ■ !■' II E Hickory Manufacturing Co. 1 HICKORY, N. C. MANUFACTURERS OF I SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, | I Mantels, Moulding, Lumber, Etc. FINE HARDWOOD WORK A SPECIALTY | SEND US YOUR PLANS FOR ESTIMATES Write for Catalogue and Prices J PHONE No. 16. J I SouthenrPublic Utilities Com'y. | I ANNOUNCEMENT The following prices f. o. b. Detroit, effective August 2, 19 5: Ford Runabout $390.00 Ford Touring Car 440.00 Ford Town Car 640.00 No speedometer included in this year's equipment, otherwise cars ful- 9 gj ly equipped. There can be no assurance giv£n against an advance in these prices at |J I any time. We guarantee, however, that there will be no reduction in g 9 these prices piior to Aug. 1, 1916. » S PROFIT SHARING WITH RETAIL BUYERS On August 1, 191 4 t we made the announcement that if we could make a 9 and sell at retail 300,000 Ford cars between August 1, 1914 and August 1, flr K 1915 we would share profits with the retail purchasers totbe extent of from 31 H S4O to S6O on each car. We have sold over 300,000 Ford cars in the time S m specified, and profit-sharing checks of SSO each will be distributed as rap- M |j idly as possible after August 15, 1915. Retail purchasers who have not yet H | mailed us their profit-sharing coupons, properly endorsed, should do so g H without delay. ' R Our plan to profit-share with retail purchasers of Ford cars during 1914- g U 15 has been most successful. We thoroughly believe in it, but, reali.?-, S ing the uncertainty of conditions generally makes it advisable to defer any w announcement of future profit-sharing until a later date. H We are, however, confident of our inability to reduce costs for several is months, and therefore can offer no profit-sharing for cars delivered during B August, September and October, 1915. # • n Ford Motor Co., Detroit, Mich. a Hickory Garage Co. - Hickory, N. C.;i PHONE 225 I | .■'•; ~ votan Coffee SANITARY C AJN i rSK&ii " UNDER THE LID A THIV COVERING I ' 0F T,N ' STRENGTH AND AROMA RETAINED. I | SOLD BY US EXCLUSIVELY ] NEWTON & HAMRICK Electric Light and Power Franchise For Sale! The City of Hickory, North Carolina, on the 12th day of October, 1915, at 10 o'clock, A. M., will award to the bidder offering to pay to the cify during the; mo." of the franchise the highest percentage of the gross annual receipts, an electric lirht and power franchise, granting the nght to use the streets of the city for■ tic purpose of operating electric light, power; fuel and heat plants for a period of Thirty years. . . , , . ~, ' All bids must be accompanied by a certified check for one hundred dollars. Sealed bids will be received, but m>y bidder present at the opening of the sealed bids will have the right to raise;the: highest sealed or oral bid. The successful bidder, within tliirty days after the awarding of the franchise, must file a bond running to the .city* to be approved by the City Council, in the penal sum of Five Thousand .Dollars, conditioned that such bidder shall well and truly observe and faithfully perform each and every term and condition of the franchise. „ , All bids will be received at the office of the City Manager, who upon request \\ ill furnish any additional information desired. ' The city reserves the right to refuse any and all bids. S. C. Corn well, - City Manager, - Hickory, N. C. aug 17-20-23-27-30-sep-3-71». •- - - - - Here's my 'guarantee—Go -to any drug store and get a 50 cent bottle ofjDod son's Liver Tone. Take a spoonful to l ' night and if it doesn't straighten you right up and make you feel line and vigorous by morning I want you to go back to the store and get your money. Dodson's Liver Tone is destroying" tile sale of calomel because it is real liver medicine; entirely vegetable, 'therefore it can not salivate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod son's Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean your bowels, o£ that sour bile and constipated waste which is clogging your svstem and mak ing you feel miserable. T guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone will keep your entire family feeling fine for months. Give it to your children. It is harmless; doesn't gripe-and they like it* pleasant taste'. Make the South the Beautiful Land it Ought to be. No people can be what they ought to unless they live amid beautiful sur roundings, and there is no excuse for any farmer in the South not having a pretty farm and home. The Almighty will certainly make any farm beautiful wherever the farmer does his part wherever gullies, stumps and sprouts are eliminated and fields kept large, whole and symmetrical instead of be ing ragged aid spotted with neglected hedgerows and neartsickening patches of turned-out land. Nor is there any excuse, no matter how poor the owner may be, for having one single ugly home anywhere in all our Sunny South. Where we can't have'paint we can have whitewash, and whf*re we can't spend money on handsome buildirgs, we can at least have the glory of beautiful trees, shrubs, vines, fbwers and grassy lawns that the Almighty puts within reach of everybody in cur favored section. A Southern home without flowers ought to be a disgrace to the owner. Even a cabin whitewashed and made beauti ful with blossoming morning-glories maybe a greater delight to the eye than a showy mansion built without taste. And just here there comes to us a letter from one of our readers, Mrs. W, I. Zichry, of Bsxley, Ga., so hap pily expressed and so suggestive of 3ur opportunities for adding to the word's beauiy, that we cannot refrain from giving it emphasis on this pige. She writes: "I am living at an old homestead that has belonged to several genera tions cf the same family. It has now passed into the hands of strangers; the members of the old family are dis persed and gone far away. But this place is a memorial to them, and especially to the first lady who. came here as a bride and lived here as wife and mother through a long and useful life. Her impress is still upon every thing, her spirit lives anew in the re- Current blooming of her rose garden. I, a stranger, feel a kinship with her as I breathe their dewy fragrance Elarfy m,the spring myriads of daffodils, jonquils and narc's us came up in great haste. Some bore trumpets and were the trumpeters of the good tidings of spring, the eternal yellows of all the sunsets within the hearts of them, their fragrance and freshness almost divine. At Eister.time the white flags unfurled in all their purity, an emblem of the sweet spirit of her whose pure thought aDd innate love of the beauti ful gaye them, a perpetual gift of loveliness, to those that came after her. Today there is a flaming ol crimson lilies and amaryllis against the ftreeti shrubbery. Nor can we who are the inheritors of this loveliness forget that the sweetness of one wo man made it all possible. Though stVLis. mingled with the dust, the work of her hands lives on in the beauteous life of the lilies; she is immortalized in the blooming cf her flowers.'' Who of us should not covet a like immortality, and who of us should not strive to make home and farm a little fairer, a little more beautiful, not onlj for our own families, but fcr those whe are to come after us? --Let's make the South the beauti' ful land it ought to be! —The Progres sive Farmer. A TWICE-TOLD TALE, One ot Interest to Our Readers. |t • 4 Good News bears repeating, and when it is confirmed after a long lapse of time, even if we hesitated to be lieve it at first heariijg, we feel secure in accepting its truth now. This fol lowing experience of a Hickory man is confirmed after thre# years. H. W. Jones, revenue officer, 620 Eighth Ave., Hickory, says: "I was bothered by weak kidneys for some time. I finally got a supply of Doan's Kidney Pills at Lutz's Drug Store, and began taking them. They helped me more than any other medi cine I ever tried. I was surprised and delighted with the results, They regulated the action of my system. One of my children also took Doan's Kidney Pills, with success." (State ment given February 18th, 1911.) 6ver three years later, Mr. Jones | added: "I use Doin's Kidney Pills i whenever I have backache or kidney I complaint and always relief. I confirm my former endorsement." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't sim ply ask for akidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills —the same that Mr. Jones had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo. N, Y. ; j % ;.To fpHow foolish precedents, ancf J wlhfe: both our eyes, is easier than to think.—Cowper. tffren Cla sores, wiier sememes Kcs'i enh The worst cases, no matter of how long standing, are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relieve! , Heals at the «amc Um;. 85c« 60c. PARKER, N. C., MAN GETS QUICK RELIEF W. R. Davenport Better After First Dose of Remedy. W. R. Davenport of Parker, N. C., long buffered from a peculiar malady of tlie stomach, he sought treatment with but little relief. At times it seemed that he would have to give up hope: He took Mavr's Wonderful Remedy and found immediate benefit. He wrote: "For years I have suffered from a disease * hlch puzzled doctors. Thtey termed It, cata r rli of tlie stomach.say l»g the only hope would be a change of climate, and that in all probability I would never get well. Then I heard of your remedy. One bottle gave me instant relief. It made feel likeanew nun. Your full course of treatments has al>out cured me. Sev eral of mv friends* have also been cus ed." Mayr's Wmlerful Rimady glve pennanent res ilts for stomach, liver and intestinal ailments. Eit as much and whatever you ltke. No more disj tress after eating, pressure of gas in the stomach and around the heart. Get ohe bottle of your druggist now and try it on an absolute guarantee— if not satisfactory money will be re turned." Popular Excursion to Atlanta, Ga., Wednesday, September 22,1915, via Southern Rail way—Special Train From Charlotte. Special train consisting of standard Pullman sleeping cars and fust class day coaches will leave Charlotte at 11 p. m., Wednesday, SeDteraber 22nd, arriving Atlanta 7:35 a. m,, Thursday, September 23rd. Passengers from all point* north and Wist of Charlotte will use regular trains into Charlotte Wednesday, Sept. 22, aid special train from Charlotte. Following low Round Trip Fares will apply from stations named: Hickory $5.00 Newton $4.90 Returning tickets will be good on all regular trains except train 38, leaving Atlanta up to and including Saturday, September 25. Great opportunity to visit the Gate City at small cost and see the many attractions for which Atlanta is noted: many Parks, Theatres, Base Ball, Fed eral Frison, Fort McPherson, etc. Pullman reservations must be made in advance. For reservations or other information s;e any agent Southern Railway, or write R. H Deßutts, D. P, A., Char lotte, N. C. CALIFORNIA Expositions San Francisco and San Diego, California Southernßailway Premier Carrier f the Suth Very Low Round-Trip Rates. Dates of sale March 1, to Novem ber 30, 1915. Final return limit three months from date of sale, except that those tickets will not be good to re turn later than December 31, 1915. Low Round Trip fares from princi pal points as follows:! Charlotte $84.15 Salisbury 84.15 High Point 84.15 Greensboro 84.15 Mount Airy 84.25 North Wilkesboro 87.85 Statesville 84.15 Hickory 83,25 Morganton 82.20 Winston Salem 84,15 Shelby 82.60 Fares from other points on same basis. Fares to Seattle or via Portland and Seattle at wigher rate, hhese tickets will permit of diverse rotting and will allow stop-overs on both going and re turn trip within limit of ticket. Southern Railway offers choice of several routes of historic interest from which to select; going one way and re turning another. Through connections and good service via Memphis, St. Louis, Chicago or New Orleans. Through cars daily via New Orleans and Sunset Route. Special car par ties now being arranged, affording op portunity to make trip without change and with select company on outgoing trip; returning at leisure via any route you may choose, stopping off at your own pleasure, thereby avoiding all the discomforts of going and returning with large tour parties, being compell ed to follow the crowd. In going in dividually or with special pullman car parties you spend your own money, stop where you please and go and come to suit your own convenience and save money paid tourist agents for escorting you around. For further information apply to Southern Railway Agents, or R. H. Deßutts, > Division Passenger Agent, Charlotte. N. C. f. r 11 - ~ I I. Biliousness and Constipation. It is certainly surprising, that any woman will endure the miserable feel in es caused by biliousness and consti pation, when relief is so easily had and at so little expense. Mrs. Chas. Peck, Gates, N. Y., writes: "About a year a go I used two bottles of Chambetlain's Tablets and they cured me of bilious ness and constipation." For sale by Menzies Drug Co. & Lute's Drug Co. Proceedings County Commissioners. It was ordered thit $15.00 be paid for the burial expenses of Mrs. Mary A. Killian, who was a Confederate pensioner at the time of her death. Ordered that an election be held for Conover Public School, District No. 10, for special tax for graded school, proposed 30c property tax and 90c on the poll. Said election to be hell Oct. 11th H. D. Sease appoint ed Registrar, T. L. Hunsucker and Albert Smith pollholders. Orderid that Malinda Hafer of Claremoct, be continued on outside pauper list, she being 84 years old, and nearly helpless. Allowances of $2.00 per month. Ordered that the Jailor be required to see that each person be bathed once each week, and that the bedding be sunned once each week, also that each cell and toilet be cleaned every day. Ordered that the petition for road leading from Oren Cline's, near New ton passing over -the lands of Perry Cline, Nels Hunsucker and Mark Cline, J. J. Cline, Wm. Dellinger. David Maylor, Freeman Huffman, David Drum and others, connecting with Hickory road near Noah Deal's store, was accepted. None of the above landowners were damaged, and no damatre assessed. Ordered that, for new road near Orin Cline's passing over lands of Perry Cline, Nels Hunsucker, Jason Cline, Mayk Cline, Will Dellinger, David Drum, David Kavlor, Treller HuSman and others to Hickory road, near Noah Deals Store, that J. K. Smith, Elam Icenhour D. E. Cline and Robeat Drum be appointed as over seer, with right to summon all men liable for road duty, within a distance of 2 1-2 miles, (Hickory Township excepted) for the purpose cutting out road and putting it in a good passable condition for travel* Ordered that the assessors of road damage, be pzid as followj; John K. Smith, $1 00, W. L. Yount, SI.OO Lee Rockett, SI.OO. Ordered that $50.00 be appropriated to Catawba County Fair to be held at Hickory, as heretofore. Ordered that J. C. Campbell, of Maiden, oe continued as outside pau per, with allowance of $1.50 per month, being a cripple. The automobile fund $1,100.40 re ceived from the State, be equally ap propriated between the right town ship of the county, amounting to $137.55 to each township. The proposition of the Federal Government to appropriate $20.00 to the dairy cattle judging contest was accepted thus making $40.00 as prizes for the boys of Catawba County. —Catawba County News. to the Public. **l feel that I owe the manufacturers Chamberlain'g Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy a word of grati tude," writes Mrs. T. N. Witherall, aowanda, N. Y, ''When I began tak ing this medicine I was in great pain ind felt terribly sick, due to an attack of summer complaint. After taking a dose of it I had not long to wait for re lief for it benefited me almost imme diately." For sale by Grimes drug Co. & lutz's Drug Co. Was Allowed to Serve Sentence For His Wife. Alamance Gleaner. At the court here last week a fine example of fidelty was set. A colored man named Morris Graves, whose wife had been sentenced to jail for six months upon a conviction for selling liquor, asked leave of the court to serve his wife's sentence. Judge Allen was touched by the offer. H« allowed the husband to plead guilty in a made-up case, sent him to the roads for three months, and let the wife go. It is a rare thing to see such fidelity; rather one sees shirking and conniving to escape, regardless of whom the hardship falls upon. Such examples are rare. Morris Graves is a credit to his race. A Wonderful Antiseptic. Germs and infection aggravate ail ments and retard healin?. Stop that in fection at once. Kill the germs and get rid ol the poisons, for this purpose a single application of Sloan's Liniment not only stops the pain but kills the germs. This neutralizes infection and gives nature assistance by overcoming congestion and gives a chance for the free and normal flow of blood. Sloan's Liniment is an emergency doctor and should be constantly kept on hand. 25., 50c. The SI.OO size contains six times as much as the 25c. Martial Law at Port Au Prince. Port au Prince, Haiti, Sept. 4. —Rear Admiral Caperton, in command of American expedi tionary forces, today proclaimed martial law at Port au Prince and other districts, occupied by American troops, - 1 w "Success is a Matter of Concentration and Perseverance 99 Haphazard and lax methods in any pursuit have but one ending, that of disaster. Your business will expand only as you concentrate your energy and apply perseverance. The great artery in business is finance. When this is based on the best banking method suc cess obtains. Your commercial account in this bank increases your business prestige and encourages business perseverance. The First National Bank welcomes the new depositor, and lends every encouragement consistent with good business. Small as well as large accounts solicited, and most careful attention given to all. Four per cent interest paid on savings ac counts, compounded quarterly. Fir& National Bank, Hickory, N. C. Capital and Surplus $290,000.00 PROFESSIONAL CARDS R. P. DAK IIN CONTRACTOR and BUILDER Fine Residence and Difficult Re modeling a Specialty. HICKORY --- N.G. HICKS & HICKS DEMISTS Office'.in Masonic Building ARTIFICIAL TEETH A SPECIALTY ZIMMERMAN &'MOOSE I ARCHITECTS I OFFICE: 2nd Floor Southern Express Bldg I High-Grade Training. Broad Experience. I Efficient Service. Dr. 1. A. Wood, DENTIST Office over Moser & Lutz Drug Store. Hickory. N. C. Dr. Charles L. Hunsucker PHYSICIAN Office Over Shuford's Drug Store Calls Answered Promptly at all Hours. Phones: Residence 92; office 26. Office Hours: 3:30 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. iu. DR. W. B. RAMSAY, Dentist. Office Over Shuford Drug Store F. S. Steele, M. D. Office Over Menzies' Drug Store PHONES Residence 221-L. o. Office 370 R. W. WOLF'S VETERINARY HOSPITAL Corner 9th Ave., 9th St. THAT NEAT HAIR-CUT YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING-FOR IS AT Dietz's Barber Shop TRY US NONE BETTER DR. PAUL W. TROUTMAN Sucessor to Dr. J."C. Biddix DENTIST Office over Singing Sewing Machine Office. HICKORY. N. C. I Q. "J. Tfcrmati | I ARCHITECT I Stevenson Bids .HICKORY, N. C.| tmtn iiif-f D. F. CLINE'S Palace Barber Shop and Pressing Club —Phone 96 ALL FIRST CLASS WORKMEN HOT AND COLD BATHS We Are Prepared to Do Your Tonsorial Woik and Make Your Clothes Look New. Club Membership Tickets 4 Suits SI.OO. All Work Guaranteed. D. F. CLINE, - PROPRIETOR Clines' Barber Shop 9TH AVENUE NEAR POST OFFICE^ Modern, Sanitary, Convenient HOT and COLD BATHS EITHER SHOWER OR TUB Polite Barbers, Splendid Service Courteous Treatment. Can't look well, or eat well, or fee well with impure blood. Keep the blood pure with Burdock Blood Bitters. Eai simply, rake exercise, keep clean, and good health is pretty sore to follow, SI.OO a bottle. NORTH CAROLINA ) CATAWBA COUNTY / Notice of Sale of Valuable Real Estate. Under and by virtue of the power of mortgage vested in me, the under signed mortgagee, wherein Q. E. Lai I, late of the county of Catawba, executed, together with his note for the sum of $225.00, said note and mortgage being N dated 28th of April, 1914, due and paya* x ble twelve months after date, which was given for the purchase price of the prem ises herein described, and default having been made in the payment of the said * note and mortgage, or the interest on the same; Therefore, the undersigned mortgagee, un der and by virtue of the powers of sale contained in the mortgage, and in com pliance with the terms therein stipula ted, said mortgage being duly in the office of the Register of Deeds frr Catawba County, N. C., in Book 110, * Page 5'15, the said mortagee will on Sat urday, Sept. 25,11915, at 2o'clock, P. M., in front of the Post Office in the City of Hickory, N. C., sell to the highest bid der for cash, the following described real estate, to wit:—Two certain tracts or parcels of land, situated in Hickory Township, North Carolina: First tract. Beginning at a stake in the Island Ford road, corner of lot No. 1, and running North 21 1-2 West 147 feet to a stake;thencc South 61 3-4 West 71 1-2 feet to a stake; thence South 21 1-2 East 138 3-5 feet to a stake in the Island Ford Road; thence North 67 1-2 East 75 feet to the beginning, being lot Na.3 of the land surveyed for H. H. Millej, Second tract. Joining the abo\e, be ginning at a stake on Shell Street, cot? ner of lot No. 2, and running South 37 West 75 feet to a stake; thence South 64 East 110 1-4 feet to a stake; thenceJNorth 61 3-4 East 75 1-2 feet to a stake; thence North 59 1-2 West 139 9-10 feet to the beginning, being lot No. 4 of the land surveyed for H. H. Miller. The above land is located in the town of Highland and is very desirable proper ty- This the 23rd day of August, 1915. H. H. MILLER, Mortgagee. D. L. Russell, Atty. aug-24-31-sep-7-14-21. NOTICE Sale of Valuable Real Estate Whereas M. M. Flangan, late of Ca tawba county and State of North Caroli na, named the undersigned as the exe cutor of her last will and testament; and whereas the undersigned has duly quali fied as such executor under said will and testament; and whereas the undersigned is authorized, empowered and directed by said will to sell certain real estate: Now, therefore, the undersigned will, at 12 o'clock, noon, on the Ist day of October, 1915, sell at public auction, for cash the following described real estate: One-hilf interest in that certain lot in the City of Hickory, Catawba County, North Carolina, located north of the Southern Railway, and known as the M. M. Flanagan and A. R. Flanagan home place, which lot begins at a stake lOtf feet from the beginning corner of lot No. 48, Robinson plat, and runs north 200 feet to a stake; thence west 100 feet to a stake; thence south 200 feet to a stake; thence east 100 feet to the begin ning. The same being the lot conveyed to M. M. Flanagan and A. R. Flanagan by M. L. Flanagan by deed of date De cember 7,1902. All that certain lot beginning at a stake, the north-west {corner of the Flanagan lot, and runs thence, east with the line of said lot 100 feet to a stake; thence north 100 feet to a stake in the south margiu of the street formerly called Martin Street; thence with southern mar gin of Martin Street west 100 feet to a stake; thence south 100 feet to a stake, the point of the beginning. The same being that certain lot conveyed to Mary M. Flanagan by Bettie R. Holden and others by deed of date August 6, 1891. The personal property, including house-hold and and kitchen furniture, of the late M. M. Flanagan will be sold at the same time. The place of sale will be on the side walk in front of the First National Bank of Hickoiy. This the 31st day of August, 1915. J. L. CILLEY, Executor. sep-3-10-17-24 — 9 — Coach Excursion to Washing ton D. C.. Tuesday, Sept, 21. Southern Railway will operate a low fare per capita excursion from Salisbury, Greensboro, Reidsville and intermediate points to Washington, D. C., Tuesday, September 21st, arriving Washington Wednesday morning, 22nd. Returning these tickets will be honored on any regular train handling day coaches up to and including train 29 leaving Washing on at 4:30 p. m., Friday, September 24th. Round Trip Fare From Hickory $5.50 Under this arrangement passengers can, if desired, have three whole days and two nights in Washington, allowing ample time to make side trips to Balti more, Philadelphia and other points. This is the last excursion of the sea' son to Washington. THE SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH For further information see nearest agent or write R. H. Deßutts, D. P. A.# Charlotte, N. C. *
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 16, 1915, edition 1
5
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