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October 7, 1898 The Mount Vernon Hawkeye-Record | |
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October 7, 1898 |
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VERNON HAWK-EYE.
MOSESu Mons
THE UP-TOdIATE
WINNERS-ax,
Wish to announce that
they are pleasantly located in
their :C New Millinery Parlors
over "The Hub" Clothing Store
£V3-‘I’7mW33337-‘1’3W3? ova?"
ocal Department y.
'
'/./-’.I./ .1.’./.’./. ./-/./.I I-l-tf',"
‘ \«z«<{:é<=<<€<émeet ewe;
——l\lrs. II. S. l‘linmert of Sibley, Iowa
is visiting her sister Mrs. Decker, this
week.
williss Lulu Boyd returned Monday,
having spent several months with
~~5(laptain Kepler was a business
v1s1tor at Lowden ’l‘uesday.
~',l‘hos. A rmstrong left Monday after-
noon enroute home to Kansas.
—Geo. Goodyear Esq., returned from
where hey will be pleased to
gree old friends :6 and make
many new ones. All the lat;
est conceits in Up/tozDate Milz
linery to please the eye. :6
:6 THE LOWI PRICES will
more than repay you for the
efforts put forth in ascending
the stairs.
Fall Opening
Sept. 30 and “Oct. lst
All Ladies
Cordiallg InVited toCall
JAM/ES RILEY, Prop.
Net)! ran/«V
PLEASANT HILL
LIME KILN
DEALER 11' All!) MANUFACTURER 0!
LIME.
HAIR, E}
CEMENT
KEPT CONSTANTLY 0N HAND, ALL
ORDERS PROMPTLY DELIVERED
JAMES RILEv,'m-,,y,ggnon. .
Drop a Card in the Post Office.
SUCCESSOR 70 ISAAC SINCLAIR
REPAIR SHOP
Wagons. Buggies and Farm Machin/
cry Repaired Promptly. Screen
Doors. Windows and Cabinet
, Work.
Yo ur Patronage
S OIiCiT‘d 0
Prices Reasonable.
Shop on South Side. Nelli
Isaac Sinclair's Residence,
BARBERSHOP
L- W. REID
PROPRIETOR’;
First Clue work (lamented.
Slamming on Monday.
Ladies
A NEW PATENT
BED SPRING
THE BEST THING OUT
Manufactured and
Sold by
W. H. RAYNER
Mt. Vernon, Ia.
Every bed guaranteed to give
satisfaction or money refunded. I
also make a specialty of repairing
all kinds of furniture at reasonable
prices. Drop me a postal card and
I will call promptly and get your
furniture and return the same when
repaired.
DID YOU
Know that we are mak-
ing Remarkably Low
Prices on Wall Paper?
Unless you
lake a Look
at our stock and get
our prices
You Will great-
ly regret it.
These Goods Must Go.
Select your pattern.
Price ranging from
2 1-2 to ZOcts per roll.
....AT THE...
City Pharmacy
Dr. T. J. Baird,Propr.
Wednesday morning for Sioux Rapids
Philharmonic Concert company.
relatives in Ohio.
—Bernice Banuhart of Moquaketa,
is spending this Week visiting With her
friend, Miss Keedick.
——Mrs. Blowers and Mrs. Evans of
Waterloo, were here Thursd iy to visit
their sons at the college.
——A. J. Power has been to Omaha
and Logan this week but is expected
home tonight or tomorrow.
-—Geo. J. Gardner Jr., of the Electric
Light 00., goes to Chicago tonight upon
a. business trip of a few days.
——Mrs. J. T. Snouffer of What Cheer,
was the guest of her sister Mrs. ll. 1),
Buttertield, Tuesday and Wednesday.
—Governor Shaw has been given a
date for a campaign meeting at Mt.
Vernon the afternoon of November 3rd.
—George Barge left for Omaha Tues-
day night expecting to also visit his
sister, Miss Ethel Burge, at Charter
Oak.
——Geo. Waln, who has been at Cedar
Rapids this week as a member of the
Conrad band, was seen on our streets
today.
—-Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Harrington are
up from De Witt for a visit at the
home of their daughter, Mrs. J. 1’.
ltebstock.
——This is the windup of Cedar Rapids
Carnival week which is reported quite
a success and well attended despite
weather not of the pleasantest.
—Dr. Wheat has returned from an
extended summer trip, and a stay of a
month or more at Ellsworth, Iowa,
where he practiced his profession.
~—Mr. Mather of Springdale, secretary
of the School Board, and family visited
the college today returning from Marion
where they had been attending Confer-
ence.
—Miss Dougherty was called home
Thursday by the death of grandfather,
an old and highly respected citizen of
J anesville, who has been seriously
sick some time past.
——The 8th Division of the Ladies
Exchange will have for sale on Satur-
day; bread, rolls, chickens, cookies, can
fruits and several kinds of cakes.
Mus. Conan.
—Miss Leonora Fancher ’92, has re-
cently been appointed director of
physicial training at the Lewis Insti-
tute in Chicago, having, resigned her
his western trip last Saturday.
~Chas. Warren of Mechanicsville.
was a business Visitor Monday.
~C. E. Esgert was a Monday passen-
ger for Omaha and the exposition.
—D. E. Long has rented and moved
into the residence occupied recently by
Miss lioover.
—~The Y. M. C. A. baths in Consort
vatory Hall are expected to be fully iii-
stalled by Saturday.
—Len Keedick was home from
Maquoketa for a two or three days’
visit the first of the week.
—E. L. Boles, Esq. of Waterloo, was
an over Sunday guest at the home of
his sister, Mrs. Nellie Carson.
—The Progress Club will meet with
Mrs. Stowe, Oct. 10th. at 7:30. ,
SEC.
—Mrs. D. II. McDonald of Chicago,
made a short visit here early in the
week at the home of her sister, Mrs. J.
C. Keedick.
——Miss Mary Ovington is here for 9.
visit with friends and former school-
mates, 3 guest at the home of her aunt,
Mrs. E. 'l‘. Cough.
——Sidney Heald was a college visitor
Monday, having made arrangements
for work with the l’armallee Library
Association for a time.
———O. L. Chaffee left here Tuesday noon
to travel in southern and central Iowa,
having accepted a position with the
Iowa Remedy 00., of Atlantic.
——John Berryhill, one of the master
mechanics of the Milwaukee road with
headquarters at Freeport, Ill., was the
guest of friends in this city Sunday.
—The Ingleside Club will meet at
the borne of Mrs. A. K. Knox, Monday
evening, Oct. 10, at. 7 p. m.
‘EC.
~——Frank Johnson of Colfax Ia, has
rented the W. C. Johnston farm. Jno.
Petty will work Clarence Leigh’s farm,
phile Dali Strothers takes the Hoover
arm.
wNeighbor! is that alley cleaned up
in good shape for winter and how
does the street look in front of our
residence? “A word to the w" e is
sufficient.” ~
~—Mrs. Howe, who has been visiting
at the home of her sister Mrs. Decker,
was a passenger enroute to her home at
Canon City, 0010., on the “Colorado
Special” Sunday afternoon.
~Ja‘p Bloom has accepted a clerkship
with W. G. Power. “Jap” tits his new
position nicely and has always proven
an affable and accommodating salesmen
and popular with the trading public.
~Mr. and Mrs. Gray, whose home is
in Connecticut and who make annual
trips out this we , were guests last
week of Mr. and rs. M. L. Ink. The
two gentlemen are old time friends.
mahdrew Laylander of Nashville,
Ohio, is visiting his relatives M. L.
Ink and family. Mr. Laylan or is a
cousin of Mrs. Ink and one of the pro-
minent citizens of the Buckeye state.
—Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Ink, who have
been quite busy entertaining friends at
their pleasant home just north of town,
did a ittle visiting themselves Tuesday
and favored Mechanicsvllle friends
with a call.
—Jesse H. Hale of Halo Bros, left
conference at Marion this week are:
President Kin ,Dr. Stuntz, Dr. Lusk,
Rev. Bailey, ev. Kynett Professors
Harlan and Freer and r. A. W.
Berryman. ~
-—The Cineograph Concert company
will pla a return date at the Lisbon
Opera
Prices 30, 20 and 10 cents. This com
Pan , ,
We] salted audience a few weeks
~The party com
Wolfe and Mitotic, ,
Jap Bloom, that
drive to Omahaand
Saturday. They
as delighted with
varied experiences
joyed one of the mo ,_
tlon trips of a life r
Ina ’
--Ernest Raynor performed quite
difl‘icultpiece of work in painting the
tank on the waterworks tower, In the
undertaking of which be displayed un-
usual genius and mechanical ability
for one so young and inex orienced.
He rigged up his own scaffo ding and
performed the details of a hazardous
work in a most satisfactory and prac-
tical manner.
’-—Rdv. Dr. Kynett spent Sunday and
Monday, with his relatives in town,
having come from Montezuma where
the Iovta Conference was held and
leaving Tuesday to attend the session
of the Upper Iowa Conference of
which he is a member, at Marion. He
delivered an able. address at the Chapel
Sunday in which he discussed evolu-
tion from a Bible standpoint.
—Horace Lozicr reached home last
Saturday, his trying experiences with
the engn‘neering corps in the Santiago
campaign leaving him so emaciated
as scarcely to be recognized by intimate
friends. Mr. Lozier informs his friends
that he was not taken with fever but.
gradually failed in strength untill he
was com elled to retire from service
and attributes the trouble to poor and
insufficient food more than to climatic
or uncomfortable conditions incident
to active army campaigns.
~Bennett Chapple, editor of the La
Port City Press. has been appointed
Western agent for the National Mag-
azine with headquarters at Chicago.
Though continuing his work in both
positions he has entered the College
and will be here as heretofore to con-
tinue his studies with a view to final
graduation. His brother is very suc-
cessful as Business Manager of the Na‘
tional Magazine which now surpasses
Munseys and Godeys in circulation,
having only the Cosmopolitan and
McClures ahead in the association of
$100 magazines.
——Dr. A. J. Kynett made an in-
teresting Speech to the students at
chapel Monday in which he compli-
mented the Cornell students on their
opportunity for personal association
with the Professors as com ared with
the work under tutors an assistant
professors which is so common at Yale,
Harvard and Princeton. He also high-
ly praised the growing American uni-
versitv at Washington D. 0., in the un-
excellcd opportunities offered for post-
graduate study and impressed all with
the importance of the scripture lesson
“That; no in liveth or dieth to himself
but whether II 'ng or dying we are the
Lord's."
—Hon. 0. A. Pollock ’78, judge of the
district court. and wife Martha Clin.
ton Pollock ’79. visited their college
friends Thursday, having come 700
miles from Fargo. N. D., to attend a
reunion at De Witt of the former
students of his deceased father, who
was principal of one of the first private
academies in the state away back in
the early history of the country, also
being the first principal of Epworth
Seminary. He was much pleased by
meeting about 75 of his father’s former
pupils and the improvements at Mt.
Vernon. He made an inspiring ad—
dress to the students in Chapel, follow-
ed by Mrs. Pollock, counseling them to
make long and thorough preparation
for their future work in life. The
Judge has made a fine record as a
lawyer and statesman in whom Cornell
takes great pride.
3*,
to take charge of the painting on a
new home 0 Banker Farmer of- that
place, mention of which has previously
been made in these columns.
—Rev. W. M. Lesser, pastor of the
Methodist church at London, visited
the college Tuesday on his way to con-
ference and conducted chapel exercises.
He has been quite successful in his
pastorate among the Germans.
~P. O. Hahn is building an addition
to his tenant house, situated just south
of his home, to be used as anpperating
room for photography work. The
premises have been leased for 3 years
to Mr. Mee, at present located in
Mechanicsyille,
—As most people familiar with the
circumstances recognized at the time,
the Hawk-Eye unintentionally in re-
ferring to Ernest Keedick, last week,
should have had it Leo Keedick, thus
getting the names of two excellent
young men mixed.
“The growing business and increas-
ing regular trade at Long’s has necessi-
tated more help, which demand has
been supplied by a new delivery boy in
the person of J. R. Wheat,while Harry,
Gilliland now devotes his entire time
to duties in the store.
~Mrs. E. N . Faucher returned to her
Chicago home Tuesday morning to
visit with Mrs. L. D. Wishard, daugh-
ter and sister, Winifred, who have re-
cently arrived from Crage Moor. Ulster
county N .Y., where they have spent
the summer among the Catskill Mts.
-—A.G. Rigby,Cornell’s mostsucceséful
pecialist in life insurance, has arranged
to give the Geological department a ma -
uiticent relief map four by eight ft. 11
size of the United States, which will be
a most welcome addition to the increas-
ingly valuable collection already made
by its honored founder, Professor N or-
ton.
~Rev. Kenneth Money visited his
Cornellian friends this week, having
spent the summer in Minnesota and
has quite recovered his health much to
the joy of all who knew him. The
special treatment In Asheville N. C.,
and the recuperative rest this spring
among his relatives in Nebraska, have
been very successful factors in his
providential restoration to usefulness.
—The Philharmonic Concert com-
pany was greeted by a good sized audi-
ence at the Auditorium Wednesday
evening and gave a most acceptable
entertainment, consisting of choice
music and reading. Both the individual
and ensemble work of the ladies being
of the highest order they were receive
with due and hearty appreciation by
the discriminating audience character~
istic of the city, where many of the
best entertainments of this character
are heard, The beginning of the sec-
ond part by posing exhibitions enabled
the inauguration of a change of cos-
tumes, which was as pleasing a feature
as it was a novelty in formal programs.
The advance advertising given out by
the ladies of the M. E. church, under
whose auspices the company appeared,
was of a character to arouse high an‘
ticipations but it is a safe assertion
that no one was at all disappointed in
the realizations presented by the
position with the North Side Y. W. C.
A, .
~Among those from here attending
cuss, Monday evening Oct. 10. _
gave a line 'cntei'tainmentgtofa
P '
it):
GRAND DISPLAY
OF
LATEST STYLES
AT
LOWEST PRICES
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
RANDALL KEPLER
THE LEADING MILLINERS.
70‘
.&
‘71
X'K'«tat'fltrfl'«'«tMWfi'arduddl‘dh‘»‘»‘»'¢°"D"“"«"°("K'MH«'+
The Time to Begin
Buying your Fall and Winter
ls right now. The season has begun; the cold weather is
fast coming on. o e The Fall Styles are all in, await-
ing the arrival of the army of tall shoppers that always
put in an appearance at our doors, eager to purchase
W‘HOES
In Linn County. Come early and take your pick of Box
(slalf, Vlci Kid, Winter Tans etc. o o a South side Main
treet.
Horton & Kyle
«.«quxngup.do.».p.».».p.p..p.p.».».p.».»
...Foot
...Fitters
+~a~u~a~m~¢<mm~um~
70‘
«'4'
'K'«mt«'«Ndfld'q'andnlr‘»‘Mfl‘MW'WD'Nr'h‘W'W'W
,\ '\-\-\ -\-\-\ -\°\-\-\
’43333393333.
4'
. The advent of x“
it
“ The Fall Sca
(l5
(.5
Finds us well prepared with a
nificent stock of CLOTHING WE
FURNISHING GOODS for I'len i3?”
. . :6 :6 Among the H
good things in the piles of over i L
on our tables is i
The
(65
(ll . ~
(It i 1
it Gaymck
Overcoat
(ll
(ll
(ll
THE BEST GARMENT IN
WORLD FOR THE MONEY. in,
. . all wool Kersey, Black, Blu'ma
Brown -- absolutely fast colo 538'
triple warp Italian body linin'm"
I firm
AIL:
ntm
(IS
silk sleeve linings, all double-s.”
' ‘ under the arm. "as wide
(65
«"K'«Wt«MNM'«'«'«"«"«”»'MN"WW'»‘°W°»'»“X"W'N"»“P"X‘
Leave your orders
for coal to be tie-
vered this nonth
$7.75 pe ton.
Jt
so
3 DRY GOODS
:\ Full Lines of Fall Dry Goods Arriving
Come in and See Them
We Will be Pleased to Show You the Goods. Beauti-
ful Wrappers in Prints and Flanneletto, Cheaper
than Making. Carpets, Rugs, Portiers and
Lace Curtains.
GRerRIES
SWEET PICKLES AND BAKED BEANS.
MASON FRUIT JARS, EXTRA CAPS
AND RUBBERS.
Books, Etaitionery and Artists’
Material. Town and Country
School Books.
.#
w
h—
b...
our Aim
patronage.
we hope to merit and receive
I niANT TO_—-—-——
‘ G-U-B-A
Customer of mine when in need of any-
thing ‘bln the line of fine jewelery or
jewelery repairing.
R. a snavsusous}
t" /l\
ALL DEPARTMENTS FULL OF NICE FRESH GOODS.
HEINZ'S PURE APPLE CIDER VINEGAR,
Is to furnish a first class Book Store, and
W- G. POIDER-
ings extending back under 13-
arms -- seams are welt stitch ‘
Has fine silk velvet collar. P0
are all extra stayed. For quail
o - fabric, tailoring and trimmings ‘ 1°
X (.5 sidered, this is the ;
best overcoat in l I 01
.. the world for E
o 0 he
I on
tin,
1 GI
of
(05 Pl Pt F”
(.5 facts Hrc. Stubborn “C
(It ' a a a
We wish to impress upon your mind t 1?
stock is large and our prices
the lowest. . 3i.
,IBI
(so; ROOD & YOUN
22eeeeeeecé§
GROCERIESa:
WITH RBLIABIJS oooos. LOW PRICES AND mom
was. we AFFORD YOU TRADING
vasnoss or ms 825?.
THE CHOICES’I‘ GOOD.
ON THE MARKET AND THEY ARE ALWAYS :l
AT PRICES THAT KEEP THEM t'
AND WHICH ASSURBS YOU THE FRESHE ‘i
To SELECT FROM. ’
'bvoM-ao-«uoto
A GOODPLACE FOR ms FARM
A coon PLACE FOR THE CITIZEN TO I.
W'MO‘NO-«o-«I
WWW
mm
ot.1h¢o.o l
Almighfy Doll:
Is the Dollar you spend with us 3?
we give you the greatest value
your money.
Qualit ' is of first Importane
Quality joined with Low Prices is the Buyes’ i,
we keep Quality, we sell it at Low Prices.
See Our Splendid Stock.
Full of Good Quality and For Sale at Prices that .
Dollar Mighty. It Requires No Head to See ,'
Bargains in Our Stock of
your
Staple and Fancy Dr Good 7'
Dress Goods, Notions, eto- '
H-
BUTTERICK PATTERNS
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