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THE HUTTIG NEWS. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF SOUTHEASTERN ARKANSAS AND UNION COUNTY. VOL. I, NO. 1. HUTTIG, ARKANSAS, SATURDAY, MAY, 4, 1907. PRICE. $1 PER YEAR EIGHTY-EIGHTH ANNIVERSARY. Huttig Odd Fellows Celebrated the Occasion Last Friday Myht in Proper Style. The members of Huttig Lodge No. 348. 1. O. O. F. held a public installation of officers and celebra tion of the 88th anniversary of the foundingof theorder at thelodgehall on Friday evening which was large ly attended and highly appreciated. The following officers we install ed for the next six months: N. G.—T. H. Carter. V. G.—C. N. Caldwell. Secy.—J. Brigenax. Treas.— R. P. Inzer. Chpalin—J.J. Walker. The following program was car ried out after which all present en joyed an ice cream supper: Opening Ode. .Mr. and Mrs. Cargill Prayer*. Rev. Briereton Solo. Mrs. Graham Installation of Officers. Song .Flora Gargill Address on Order.E. A Wooley Instrumental Music . .Mr. and Mrs. Gargill Song .Flora Cargill Instrumental Music Jewell Wells and Ethel Cargill Benediction - - Rev. Briereton The Huttig lodge was instituted on June 10th 1905 with 72 char ter members and now has 96 mem bers with new ones joining every meeting night which is every Tues day ■ e v^niTigr- n-irs hits auoirr $350 i‘n their treasury outside of fiixtures and regalia and was the banner lodge of the state last year in the amount of money given to ward the support of the Orphan's Home which certainly speaks well for the members and town consid ering the short time the local lodge has been organized and that Huttig is only a town of 2,000inhabitants. F. G. Wooley, W. H. Wheler and Berry Woods are the past grands of the local lodge and are still resi dents of Huttig. Free sample of “Preventics" and a booklet on Goidswill be glad ly mailed you. on request by Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis., simply to prove merit. Preventics are Lit tle Gold Cure tablets. No quinine, n" laxative, nothing harmful what ever. Preventics prevent colds as the name implies—when taken early or at the "sneeze stage” For a seated cold or LaGrippe break it up safely and quickly with Preven tics. Sold by Fe smthai Drug Go. Koadmaster Plummer Resigns. Roadmaster J. M. Plummer, who has had charge of the El Dor ado & Bastrop, the Farmerville Southern and the Little Fock & Monroe railroads since their com pletion has’ tendered his resignation but same had not been accepted up to the first of the week’. His many friends up and down the line are in hopes that it will not be and that Mr. P'ummer will remain in charge. ____ For Sale In Felsenthal. Lot 31. block 14; lot 9,block 18; lot: 16, block 82.> Will take $175. for all. Address P. G. Gunst, Yazoo City, Miss. E. S, Bales Dies at Camdin. The friends of E. S. Eales, who for the past two years has been living at Huttfg and Strong were shocked to learn of his death,which occurred at Camden on Sunday, April 21st. Mr. Bales was only sick five days and his death was wholly unexpected. In March of this year Mr. Bales was married tc Miss Nannie McGill of Strong who has our deepest sympathy in hei bereavement. He was a member in good standing of Huttig Lodge No. 348, I. O. O. F. Dairy Helper Wanted. A woman who understands dairy work can secure steady employ ment at good wages by addressing Wm. Morris, Huttig, Ark. Will Co Vbroad. H. B. Davis and wife left Wed nesday for St. Louis, Mo., and af ter a short stay there will go to Boston, Mass., from which port they sail on the White Star Line Steamer Canopic on the 18th for a three months trip abroad. They will stop two days at Gibraltar and also at Tangiers before arriving at Naples. Before returning they will visit France, Germany, Switz erland, Holland, Belguim, and En gland. Mr. Davis has been chief ac countant in the offices cf the Un ion Saw Mill Co., for the past two years and their many friends will wish them a safe and pleasant voyage. _ Angora Goats Lost. Two angora goats strayed from relsenthal about three weeks ago. Will.give reward for their ... »!■, - ' ■ ■■■ « .Ulii'i TTLU turn or information where to find them. J. A. Knox. Were Accommodating. A woman in a ne’ghboring town going from home for the day, lock ed everything up well and for the grocers benefit wrote on a card:“A'l out. don't leave anything.” This she left on the front door. On her return home she found the house ransacked and all her choicest pos sessions gone. To the card on the door was added: “Thanks; we haven’t left much.” Advertised Letter List. The following letters remain un claimed in the Huttig postoffice for the week ending April 28. 1907: Gents. Webeater. John Fike. Walton (2) Ganes, Eliah Gaster, Harvey Himsann, Elah Lambert, Frank Smith, Lee Toyel, Dalas Darrington Rev.W P Ladies. Bates Mrs. Emma Smith, Mrs. M. G. Jones, Mrs. Davis Payne. Miss Mary Washington, Mrs. Laura When calling for above letters please say advertised. J. U. Brown, P. M. Notice. Notice is hereby given that the law firm of Moore & Green has been dissolved, as to all future legal bus iness by mutual consent. This March 29th 1907. J. B. Moore. J. H. Green. Let me send you free, just to prove merit, a trial size box of Dr. Shoop’s Gatarrh Remedy. It is a snow white creamy, healing anti septic balm.. Containing such heal ing ingredients as Oil Eucaliptus, Thymol, Menthjol, etc, it gives in stant and lasting relie’f to catarrh of the nose and throat. Make the free test and see for yourself what this preparation can and will ec complish. • Address Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Large jars 50 cents. Sold by Felsenthal Drug Co. Buttermilk as a Medicine. Even when it is sourest, if it is still in good condition, buttermilk is a valuable medicinal agent. A re freshing acid, it is always nourish ing without being insipid. The lactic acid which it contains attacks and dissolves every kind of earthy deposit in the blood vessels: keeps the veins and arteries supple and free from matter which might otherwise clog them, and destroys the irritating calcareous deposits that may gather around the joints, as well as any poisonous waste in the muscles. It is not only bene ficial to the digestion, but also for tuberculosis and all other pulmon ary complaints. It is also a harm less substitute for intoxicants. Drinking buttermilk freely—two quarts a day would not be too much is said to preserve the com plexion of youth, and as gouty diffi culties generally arise from slug gish excretion it is a blessing to all who suffer from such complaints. Buttermilk not only tones up the RAILROAD TIME TABLE LOUISIANA & PINE BLUFF. feaves Arrives 12:20 p.m Huttig 4:50 p.m. Connects at Dollar Junction with El Dorado & Bastrop Ry. LITTLE ROCK & MONROE RY. Leave Arrive 4:43 p. m. ... Felsenthal 12:20 p. m. 4:50 p. in Huttig 12:10 p.m. J 9:35 a. m.Monroe _ y 7:35 p. m. --- ■■■■ ’"r‘" Leaves Arrives *12:35 p. m Felsenthal 10:00 a .m. FARMERVILLE & SOUTHERN RY. North South 4:25 p. m. Felsenthal 12:35 p. m. 4:20p.m. Huttig 12:40 p.m. 4:13 p. m. L. R. &M. Con 1:00 p. m. 4:00 p. m. . Cecil ...1:30 p. m. 3:00 p. m. Marion.. 1:50 p. m. 2:30 p. m.Farmerville 2:15 p.m. ^Arrives Monday. Wednesday and Friday. Leaves Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. LODGE DIRECTORY. ROWLAND LODGE No. 594 F. & A. M.meets every second and fourth Satur day evenings at 7:30 o'clock. Visiting Masons always welcome. W R. Mauser, W. M. W. H. Wreler. Sec. HUTTIG LODGE No. 348 I. O. O. F. meets every Tuesday evening.'/- Visiting brethern cordially invited to attend. T. R. Carter, N. G. J. Brigenax. Sec. SWEET BAY CAMP No. 411 W 0. W. meets every first and third Saturday eve nings. Visitors made welcome. S. Farmer, C. C. E. L. Adams, Clerk. Rheumatism I have found a tried and tested cure for Rheu matism ! Not a remedy that will straighten the distorted limbs of chronic cripples, nor turn bony growths back to flesh again. That is impossible. But I can now surely kill the pains and pangs of this deplorable disease. In Germany—with a Chemist in the City of Darmstadt—I found the last ingredient with which Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy was made a perfected, dependable prescription. Without that last ingredient, I successfully treated many, many cases of Rheumatism; but now, at last, it uni formly cures all curable cases of tins heretofore much dreaded disease. Those sand-like granular wastes, found in Rheumatic Blood, seen, to dissolve and pass away under the action of this remedy as freely as docs sugar' when added to pure water. And then. When dissolved, these poisonous wastes freely pass from the system, and the cause of Rheumatism Is gone forever. There is now no real need—no actual excuse to suffer longer with out help. We sell, and in confidence recommend Dr. Shoop’s Rheumatic Remedy i FELSENTHAL DRUG CO. stomach, but furnishes material from »'hich healthy blood may be easily made. It is also easy of as similation. and in cases where sweet milk would prove objection able from a medicinal point of view it may safely be given with every assurance of beneficial effect. For creaky, aching, or swollen joints it should be taken frequently, and care should be observed to procure it freshly churned. Do it now. Subscribe for The News $1 per year. The Farmer’s Creed. More than sixty years ago Henry Ward Beecher, the great pulpit or ator, gave voice to the following farmer's creed, which possesses lasting qualities: “We believe in small farms and thorough cultivation. “ We believe that soil loves to eat as well as its owner, and ought, therefore, to be liberally fed. “We believe in large crops which leaves the land better than they found it making the farm and the farmer both glad at once. "We believe frn going to the bot tom of things, and therefore, in deep plowing and enough of it. All the better with a sub-soil plow. "We believe that every farm should own a good farmer. We believe that the best fertilizer for any soil is a spirit of industry, enterprise and intelligence. With mif tl Oil® If."lUP’ff I1 ‘llm. o - -- in. ofur-gyps-mir uunra and green manure, marl and guano will be of little use. "We believe in a good fence, good barns, good farmhouses, good stock, good orchards and enough children to gather the fruit. "We believe in a clean kitchen, a neat wife in it, a spinning wheel, a clean conscience. “We firmly disbelieve :n farmers that will not improve; in farms that grow poorer every year; in starving cattle, in farmer’s boys turning into clerks and merchants; in farmers ashamed of their vocation, or who drink whiskey until honest people are ashamed of them.”—Gotton Journal. Notice. The Union Saw Mill Gompany will pav &50.00 as a reward to any one. not in its employ, who will fur nish information from which any person shall be convicted of depre dating or trespassing upon the tim ber of said Gompany. This let, day of February, 1906. Union Saw Mill Go. By F. W. Scott, Sec'v and Treas. Let me mail you free, to prove merit, samples of my Dr. Shoop's Restorative, and my book on either Dyspepsia, The Heart or the Kid j neys. Address me, D- Shoop. I Racine. Wis., Troubles of the , Heart, Stemach or Kidneys, are merely symptoms of a deeper ail ment, Don t make the common i error of treating symptoms only. Symptom treatment is treating the result of your ailment and not the cause. Weak stomach nerves— the inside nerves—means a weak stomach always. And the heart and kidneys as well have their in s de or controlling nerves. Weak en these nerves and you inevitably have weak vital organs. Here is ■ where Dr. Shoop’s Restorative has made its fame. No other remedy eyer claims to treat the inside nerves. Also bloating, biliousness : bad breath or complexion, use Dr. Shoop's Restorative. Write for my free book new Dr. Shoop’s Re storative sold by Felsenthal Drug Co, MONROE BISINESS MEN SpenJTwo Hours Here Thursday Afternoon - Out After Trade. The third annual excursion of the Monroe business men given under the auspices of the Progress ive League and in charge of that prince of jolly good fellows, Col. E. W. Anderson, arrived here at 12 o'clock Thursday noon on schedule time and left for Strong and El Dorado via Felsenthal at 2 o'clock. The special train consisted of a baggage car two coaches and a dining car and was in charge of Conductor C. K. Thomas of the Iron Mountain. The party was composed of sixty representatives of the leading bus iness firms of Monroe who were out after business and each dis tributing advertising matter. If a man visited their train and carried away what was given him in the way of souvenirs he would have looked like an Xmas shopper. During their stay here the editor heard many words of praise for our school and church buildings, also the public library and comfortable homes. A large number of the party were shown through the plant of the Union Saw Mill Go. and marveled at its completeness. The train left Monroeat? o'clock Thursday morning and the night iii.QP f IT I TT^ »•« <-» «■» — J •-1~ — h vtu jymn -T Lhr toRustonover the Arkansas South ern and to Monroe over the V. S. & P. Ry. Lath Mill Men Wanted. Twenty men for lath mill work wanted at once at Union Saw Mill Company's mills. Feeders, grad ers, bolters and tiers. Don't wait to write but come at once. Em ployment guaranteed. L. G. Gibson Lath Contractor. Diamonds in a Turkey. A. E. Culbreath of the Culbreath Logging Co., who has just returned from a trip to Gurdon is authority for a story we have failed to see in print regarding Pike County dia monds. Ed says the sheriff of that county on last Christmas found two genuine first water diamonds ; in the craw of his Xmas turkey and that nearly all the available land in that neighborhood has been optioned the purchase price of some named as high as $40,000 for 40 acre tracts. The people who hold the options will not even allow a person upon theground and rumor has it that over 100 fine diamonds have been found since the first discovery some six months ago when specimens sent to Tiffney of New York were pronounced genuine. Does Away With Special Stamp. Postoffice department officals are looking forward with interest to the patting into effect of the law permitting the transmission of letters and packages for special de livery where the necessasy 10 i cents postage is attached in addi tion to the ordinary' postage. The law will become effective July 1 ; next, and is intended to do away with the necessity for the usual special delivery stamp. It is be-' lieved at the department that a considerable increase of business 1 will result. 4