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It Costs Nothing To examine our Henderson and La Princesse Corsets Comfort Style And Value \ ' 7 HENDERSON Fashion Form Corsets I A Corset For Every Figure - ^ To The Gentlemen of Hot Springs : Our Gents’ Furnishing Department is now fully equipped, and we extend a cordial invitation to all to come and see what we have to offer. New Spring Styles in the famous ‘‘House of Kuppenheimer1’ and “Rochester Special” Clothing. Beautiful patterns in Cluett, Monarch, Wilson Bros, and other standard shirts. All the latest styles in Arrow Collars. Underwear for the man that cares. We guarantee satisfaction. Our Gentlemen’s store will be conducted on the same high standard as our Dry Goods Store. Boys ask the ladies about us-~they know values when they see them WOODCOCK & LAW50N DRY GOODS COMPANY UUDEHSTS OUTFITTERS ♦ SPECIAL EMBROIDERY SALE MONDAY—17-Inch Flouncing and Corset Cover Embroidery 10c per yard 5 Big Line of Odd Dressers S We are overstocked on Odd Dressers, and in order to re- JJ duce our stock, we will place our entire siock of ■ Dressers on Sale at Aetuil Market Prices, absolutely nothing held in reserve. B Are You In Need £ Of a good Ice Box? When we say GOOD, we mean 5 _ * ** the BEST—that Ice Box we carry in stock, which ■ ■ are now on display in our store. Come in and look them over ® A beautiful 31-piece DINNER SET with every $25.00 W CASH PURCHASE, B I Tthh.BLfuie0Pric«,h Grand Rapids Furniture Co. Yo"c£3B'i* ■ ■ 220-222 Ouachita Avenue. For the Best Line of Furniture We are Headquarters Watch Our Windows Telephone 1079 **#•••**»«•««««**«» •***#»#***#♦**♦ ft Mountain Valley Mineral Springs Water ! “KING OF MINERAL WATERS ” J WAS AWARDED FIRST PREMIUM AT THE ARKANSAS STATE FAIR 19C9, 1910, 1911, ft It Is Radio-Active. It Is Deliciously Palatable , ' •» UNSURPASSED FOR GENERAL TABLE USE. * BEST DIURETIC KNOWN in Treatment of KIDNEY AND BLADDER TROUBLES, t One-IIalf Gallon Delivered to Your Room Daily for $1.25 Per Week. ft RATES—AT HOTEL, MOUNTAIN VALLEY $12.50 PER WEEK AND UP J Office and Drinking Pavilion « First Floor Southern Club Building, Opp. Arlington Hotel. Our friends are invited to make our Pavilion their Headquarters during their stay in the Springs. HOTEL PHONE—133 • CITY OFFICE PHONE—405 ^ COMMISSIONER'S SALE. Notice Is hereby given that In pttisn ncc of the authority ami directions con sult'd in the decretal order of ihe chon ery court of Garland county, made ami titered on the 19th day of February, A. >. 1912, in a certain cause (No. 49,<i> lien pending therein between l nioii rust Company, Agents, Sam W. Key urn and K. G. Thompson, complainants, ml M. U Wells and Bessie Wells. d< - euduntB, the undersigned, as comniis ioner of said court, will offer for sale t public vendue to the highest bidder, t tho northwest front door or entrance f the comity courthouse, in which aaui ourt is held, In tho county of Garland, vlthln the hours proscribed by law for udiclal sales, on Wednesday, the Kith ay of April, A. D. 1912, the following escribed real estate, to-wit; All of the southeast (SE 1-4) quarter f section thirty, township two 12' 'uulh, range nineteen (19) west, except hat jiart thereof described as follows: login at a point on tho cast side o. 'edar Glades road, four hundred and fit - y feet southerly from the point where he stream known as Bee Branch runs 'V«r ssld road; run thence easterly at ight angles with said road nine hundreo vet; thence northerly parallel to suit! oad four hundred and fifty feet; thence vesterly parallel with first line nine hun Ired feet to west side of Cedar Glades load; thenco southerly along east side „f *,1,1 ,-oail four hundred and fifty feel to the point of beginning. \iso lot Number five of block nlnetj uvo of the City of Hot Springs, and al so, parte of lots seventeen ami nineteen in block ninety-two of said city of not Springs, as per deed of J. G. Housdaio, Trustee, to Bessie Wells, made May 9.. 1901*, ah shown In Record Book 34, page f. of the records of deeds and mort gages of Garland County, Arkansas, to which reference is made for a more par ticular description, which mote particu lar description Is as follows: Baits or lots seventeen (17) and nineteen (19) In 1 hiouk ninety-two (99) ns mapped and platud by the (J. S. Hot Springs com 1 missloners, more particularly descrtoed as follows: .. .. I Butrin on uuauaw avenue at the noitn I easterly corner of lot eighteen (18), block ninotv-two (99); ami run thence soum casterly "along the line of lots eighteen land nineteen in said block ninety-two ' ,o a point on the line of Ha.el street and said lot nineteen (19) one hundred , and fifty feet from Qua paw avenue tor the place of beginning; thence south 1 westerly parallel with tiie line of Qua ! paw avenue across lots nineteen and sev enteen In said block ninety-two, to a point on the dividing line between lots ‘sixteen and seventeen, one hundred and (fifty feet from Quapaw avenue, thence southeasterly along the line between said bntrr 1 i i - ...... ii —— said block 92; thence northeasterly t.. Hazel street at the common corner of lots one and nineteen In said block nine ty-two; thence along tlie line of lot nine teen on Hazel street to a point one hun dred and fifty feet Worn ijuapaw ave nue, the place of beginning, said lots and parts of lots being situated in the City of Hot Springs, in Garland County Arkansas. Terms of sale On a credit of three months, the purchaser being required to execute a bond as required by law and the order and decree of said court In said cause, *wlth approved security, bear ing interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from date of s8lc until paid, and a lion being rolained on the prem ises sold to secure the payment of the purchase money. Given under my hand this 13th day of March, A. D. 1912. . H. A. WHITTINGTON. Commissioner in Chancery. STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING, i Notice is hereby given that the annti I at stockholder;# meeting of the HOT ! SPRINGS GOIJF AND COPNTRY CLl’1.1 I ASSOCIATION will be held at the Huml 1 nes-. Men's league on Monday, April 8. 1912, at K o'clock p m., for the election 1 if directors to serve for the ensuing year | and for the transaction of such other busts*** as may lawfilllv come before prfm. TOM .1 PETTIT. If" lino H<',.retur> —nm ■■———ii - --i For Constable To the Voters of Hot Springs town ship: I am a candidate for constable of Ilot Springs township, before the democratic primary, March 27, 1912. 1 stand for a firm and impartial en enforcemeot of the criminal laws of the state, and pledge myself to a faithful discharge of the duties of the office, if elected. I have been a resident of Hot Springs for the last J5 years and am well acquainted with the situation and conditions. I ear nestly solicit your votes and infiu-1 once. TOM HOLLOWAY. Heat Cold Room*3 Quickly iMMia Use Perfection Smokeless Oil Heateis They produce intense heat wlthou moke or smell. I Ask Your Dealer or Phone 224 Waters Pierce Oil Co. LITTLt LEFT OF CAMPAIGN WORK ALL WHO HAVE FOLLOWED RACE CLOSELY IN DISTRICT CER TAIN OF WOOD’S DEFEAT. Three Candidate^ Opposing Wood and Witt Will All Help to Split Up the Garland County Vote. There is little of work to be done in the famous first Eighteenth Judi cial district campaign for prosecuting attorney. Yesterday the five candidates clos ed their campaign in the south part [ of tills county, with a speaking at An tioch. 'illie crowd was small for two » reasons, one of which was that it was Saturday and many farmers come to town on that day, and the other was that the fame of the aviation meet had reached that se tion, and many came to see the fliers. Montgomery county has been can vassed. Monday the candidates will swing into the east portion of the county, speaking at Inton; and Tuesday they will close the country campaign wit'll a speaking at Ixnisdale. Then there will be a lull in the fight until Monday, March 25, Just two nights before the election, when the five candidates will speak at the Au ditorium theater, in this city. That will lie the last sneaking. Much interest centers in that clos ing speech making, for it will be the only opportunity the people of tlhis city will have to hear the candidates. There was a disposition to get tile I Bijou rink, but that plan meets oppo- I sition beiause it would not contain the crowds, and because also It Is a bad hall for speaking, and all present could not hear. With the situation fairly summed up at this time, .1. B. Wood has no chance for election. The cumpaign In Montgomery county was followed by the county candidates for various of fices in that county, and whether friendly or oliherwise to Mr. Witt, they regard him as very strong, and say he will get from 55 to 80 per cent of all the vote in his home county. The campaign in this county has al so been followed by the candidates for county offices here, and they talk to the voters really more than the candidates for prosecuting attorney do. These candidates concede that Wood is a back number, that his speecSi lias been lneffective( that flaunting a vicious fiast before a peo ple as familiar with conditions as Wood himself, has done him no good, and thby see that he is out of the run ning. Yesterday’s speaking at Antioch was little different from the other debates in the county. J. B. Wood opened yesterday, and spoke for about an hour. He spoke in loud voice, ar raigned the city administration, talk ed of gamblers running everybody and everything against him, lauded himself and /his brothers who are holding public Toffleee throughout the state, and closed with a most ter rific arraignment of George P Whit tington, hatred for whom he Hurls out in vehement fashion. Hon. Gip Witt followed Wood, and lie made one of his best speeches of the campaign. He spoke to tlie peo ple of Antioc h as a stranger coming before ttiiem asking for a sipiare deal, and a fair measurement of himself and tils claims, as against those of opponents, with a cordial invitation to the people then to select the man who most appealed to them as the right one to support. He talked of his entrance In the race, of the endorse ment he had at home, refuted in un disputed fashion Wood's charge that 'be was a candidate of the gamblers, and there is no doubt Hut that he made votes In Antioch township. George P. Whittington was the third speaker, and he opened by stat ing that at the outset of the cam paign Wood had donated but a small portion of his time to his (Whitting ton's) candidacy but that, later Wood bad realized that the record Ihe had exposed must be answered or Wood would suffer under the refusal, and not. being able to answer with argu ment, had resorted to the flat state ment that it was all falsehood. Whit tington insisted that such an an swer would not suffice( and pointing direct to .1. B. Wood declared that Wood knew that he was defeated in this race, and that never again would Ihe people of this district be both ered with Wood as a candidate for anything after he was swamped this time. Judge M. S. Cobb followed, and he made a masterly appeal to the peo ple to select him as the true repre sentative of good government of all those in the face. He declared him self free from any alliances that would tend to a return to old condi tions, but on the other hand declared for a safe and sane administration of public affairs that would help the whole of the district. Judge Thurston P. Farmer closed wUUi a stirring appeal to the voters of Antioch to weigh well his public record, to think about the responsi bilities of the office, and to bestow their suffrage where they knew that the public trust would be appreciated and that appreciation shown in a careful and painstaking administra tion of an office the duties of which the statutes defined. He spoke for a more liberal government in the city of Hot Springs, that would help tlhe national resort grow and take Us place among the foremost of the world. -J 97 PER CENT PERFECT. An Unusual Record for a Pile Rem edy. When Dr. J. S, Leonhacdt, of Lin coln, N'el)., located the cause of piles uid louud a successful inward rent sdy for piles, he had It put on sale inder a strict guaranty of satisfae ion. In lo years only :i per cent of HKM-ItOID users have asked for ;heir money hack, and it speaks well for this scientific modern remedy. l!et a guaranteed $1 package from K. G. Morris Drug Co., Hot Springs, Ark., or any druggist, or write to Dr. Leonhardt Co., Station B, Buffalo, N. Y\, for HKM-KOID booklet. Mrs. IT. F'. Megginson and son have returned home afler a visit to friends iu Georgia. j AN OPEN LETTER. With profound Joy, on my own be half, as well as that of my congre gation, 1 desire to thank all of you who have in any way assisted In the erection of our handsome new chftrdh edifice. The citizens of Hot Springs have received inc with open arms, with words moat cordial. The sense of obligation rests upon me. May I prove worthy of the sacred trust and cor dial friendship into which I have been inducted. With the Psalmist, J can say: “My lines have fallen in pleas ant places." If at any time I can serve you, and our delightful city, command me. Yours for the whole gospel, PJ-JRCY 0. CROSS, Pastor Christian CBiurch. Fred Pennel has returned from a brief business visit to Little Rock. SPECIAL MEETING, M. W. A. A special meeting of Hot Springs camp No. 13343, Modern Woodmen of America, will be held Monday even ing, March 18, at Camp Hall. The reg ular deputy for this district will ad dress the meeting, his subject will be one of particular interest to every member. All Neighbors are urged to attend. J. J. HICKMAN, Clerk. Miss Elba Moorman of Marshall, Texas. vrtho had been spending the season with Mrs. A. T. Henderson, has returned to her home. EASTERN STAR. A regular meeting of the O. E. S. No. 69, will be held in the Masonic Temple at 7:30 p.m. All members are requested to be present and vis iting members are cordially invited. M AUD SPIVEY, W. M. Agues Demby, secretary. OCEAN TRIP HOT SPRINGS, ARKANSAS TO NEW YORK $53.17 Via Memphis and New Orleans 5 DAYS AT SEA Including Meals and Berth Via Memphis and Savannah Ga. 3 DAYS AT SEA $34.27 For Full Information Call on W. W. ANDERSON, C. P. A. Phone 141 Rock Island Lines