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THiS AKGHJS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10. 1895. 5 SPOT GASH DEPARTMENT STORE. Young & McCombs 1725 Second Avenue. WE ARE UNPACKING DAILY. THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS WORTH OF FALL Which demands the attention of the trading public, if you consider well the value of a dollar. Having purchased direct for import has put us on the ground lloor as to price and quality. DRL-SS GOODS. Wc show you a line of Dress Goods, Silks and Trim mings unsurpassed in this vicinity. Wc want to show you our line, and if we can't save you money don't buy of us. Every piece of goods guaranteed as to quality, color or price. A beautiful line of Black Dress Silks. CLOAK DEPARTMENT. We show in our Cloak Department over 300 styles of Cloaks, Jackets and Capes, having closed out the entire sample line of an eastern manufacturer, which consists of every known style of Cloaks or Capes made. We will close out the entire line at wholesale prices. We have sold a number of garments all ready, and if you like to save at least $5 on a $20 garment, come to us. Any person wishing to re serve a garment can do so by paying a small deposit on same. ' Fur Capes, 30 inches long, 6 inch collar, 90 inch sweep, $6.95 Astraken Capes, 30-in. long, 6-in. collar, 1 co in, sweep, $995 Ladies' Cloaks, $2.75 up No old garment carried over. - - All the latest. Young & Mc Combs 1725 Second Avenue, - - ROCK ISLAND THE PLACE TO BUY VVall Paper Room Mouldings, Pictures, Picture Frames and Window Shades is at the Adams Wall Paper Company, 310, 312 and 314 Twentieth street. vsv iy Is, Call and save yourself some money. It will pay you to buy even if you have to store them till next season. Also examine our line of house furnishings the finest in the city. Allen, Mvers & Company iS2i Second Ave. Opposite the Harper House & 0008 Flattening Out PRICES ON Sl'CII TII1NG3 AS GAS and GASOLINE STOVES and REFRIGERATORS. Only a few left, but THEY MUST GO before the season ends. KENNEDY VS. KNOX. Alderman and Mayor Have Another Dissertation. SIXTH WAEDEK CARRIES HIS POEf T. The Kiecatlre ItcvomM Contused Over u Motion sod 8abtitte and Pat the Wrong One, Causing m TCrancle-AU Over tUe Saloon (Jaettlon -Other U-tins You're out of order, AM. Ken nedy." i am not." Hut I say you are." I know hotter." Kap! Hap!! Uap!!! 'I say you're out of order! Sit down!" I will not!'' I say you will!" I wiil leave it to any honorable man here that I attached a substi tute to tuy motion, and I demand a hijuare deal." And the mayor wiped -his brow and heaved a :ku of defeat. Aid. Gall eaid Kennedy was right and the presiding jrenlleman s tempera ture dropied about 40 decrees. He explained h!s intention to do the tiju;'.re thing;, nut had acted accord ing to his belief wheu he put. the original motion. 1'robablv a more amusing exhilii turn was never enacted in tno munic ipal chamber. Hadn't it lieen that lliey were too busv with their mouths, face-making would have iin doiibtedlv In-en thrown in. l?nt thev wen: both goad and mad and it looked for a few minutes a if a ring would have to be marked oiT. After the confusion had subsided the mayor s:m;r "You Can't 11 a v in Our Yard Any More." in an undertone. All Over the Siilotin OueHlioii. The exhibition followed another round with the Sunday saloon iues tion. following the reading of the M. K. church union resolution by Wil liam Jackson. Aid. Kennedy sul milled an ordinance repealing the former action of the council in eliminating the Sunday closing clause. licfore he delivered the final svllablc, Aid. Johnson was on his pins and moved to tablo it for consideration. Aid. Kenned v substituted the motion bv moving its adoption by an aye and nay vote and received a second from Aid. Gall. The mayor evidently didn't pay any heed to Kennedy and put Aid. Johnson's motion. The Sixth warder interrupted the execu tive and reminded him of Ins mis. take. Kennedy's answer was that he was out of order. Kennedy's physi ognomy turned chalky while and his usual cucumber coolness became somewhat disturbed, and the dia logue as riven above followed. The mavor's eves could have been knocked olT with a club and the Slowing perspiration evinced h's inner rage. At one time Kennedy pushed forward his desk and but for the mayor edged into his wny of thinking he would probably have went after him. The mayor was assured by Aid. Gall that Aid". Kennedy's deniaud was just. ami the mayor shifted Ins gum and put the substitute motion, which was lost: Ayes Kennedy, Gall, Nelson, Foss I. Nays Surman, Zeis. Johnson, Schreiner, Sehroeder. Dauber, Tiu dall. Schneider, Tender 'J. The original motion was then put and was carried by the same vote of 0 to 4. S'hncliler'j Sirl. 'Vc have been ridiculed by church people and called all sorts of names. Now what we want to know is whether wc are anarehists or rebels.''' Thus broke in Aid. Schnei der, who demanded that Kennedy's ordinance lay over for consideration, and if it was found that the alleged serious mistake had been made, why it would be dilTercnt. Aid. Foss called up the saloon stalls anil believed the council was responsible for the immorality car ried on in them, and should have them abolished. He presented a resolution ordering the drafting of an ordinance for the suppression of and removal of saloon stalls, and it was carried. other Matter. Various other matters of moment came up, as detailed in the official record. Aid. Schreiner had a plan for a system of storm drains looking to providing for the carrying off the city's superfluous water in times of overflow; one for a westerly course through the city entailing a eost of JS'J.UUl), and one along Twenty-fourth street directly north to the river be ing estimated at f 10,0'JO. The prop ositions were referred to the sewer ami linance committees to report. Tho ordinance permitting the Dav enport & Kock Island Hallway com pany to dispose of its rights to tho Tri-City Railway company was pre sented and adopted by unanimous vote, thus making possible with the municipal sanction the plan of reor ganization the present company con templates. The city reserves all the rights it the premises maintained under the former ordinances, and the company agrees to continue the present service in all respects. Lanchtrr Lcurts a Charm To beauty when it discloses a pretty set of teeth. Whiteness, when na ture has supplied this element of loveliness, may be retained through life by using the fragrant Sozodont. Uard Coal Market. Hard coal is cheaper now than it has been for many years, and this is the best time to lay in your winter's supply. Call on K- G. Frazcr fur rock bottom cash prices. Telephone 1133 KICKING TO THE END. the Remonstrance Acalutt the M. IV. A. Olttce Kemmal Pawce All ttcaaoiu The Fulton Journal, which is con ducting a general warfare against tho Modern Woodman of America, in seeking to retain there the head of- tiee ajainst its will, and thus imper iling its valuable record every day they are kept in unsafe buildings, says in an extended dissertation in its last issue: - If tho men who undertook to move the head oflicc of the Modern Woodmen of America from Fulton to Itock Island in lH'.M at Springfield. and again in 1892 at Omaha, and again at Madison in 181)5, had put f.irth one-fourth ol the energy in trying to have an ollice building erected at Fulton, there would have been a building long ago anil n;i onr eouid have bceu justly accused of laboring more for the interests of K'K-k Island than for the interests of the Modern Woodmen of America. Our Noble Order.' After the abor tive action at the meeting of the head cauip in Omaha in 1SH2 an in junction was obtained preventing the removal of the head camp from Ful ton. This injunction was in force at the tune of the meeting of the head camp at Madison, is still in force and will remain so till dissolved by the court. Knowing this anil knowing that such cases are liable to be in court for several years, if the pres ent head ollice is ill such an iin-wito. insecure building, it trenis as if the head i!li -ers who are Irving to ol tain a safe building, simply striving for the interests of the order, instead of the interests of Kock Island, would have been content to have the suitable building erected at Fulton. Then the injunction would have done no harm and the vau:ii:e ree. ords would be just as secure in a :ife builili.ig in Fulton as in the same kind t a building at Kock Is- land." Should Now Act llonoralilv. It seems diiiicult for the Fulton representative to comprehend the folly of its further protest against the wiil of the order. No one has blamed the Fulton people for mak ing every houorable effort to retain the Woodman ottiec there. lSut it has readied that stage now where further remonstrance and further effort to thwart the purposo of the great order cannot be called honor able or manly. At the last meeting of the head camp Fulton entered into competition with other rival cities f ir the head oflicc. It stood not on its rights, technical, sentimental, real or imaginary, but stood up with the other cities upon a fair test of merit. Like IVoria and Decatur, it was defeated. Hock Island was on the fare square issue and by every rule of honor and fair deal ing selected. Fulton should have abided by tho conse quences. To seek now to agaiu ile Icat the order's decree would be as unworthy as it would be idle. The head oflices arc coming to Koelf Is land and ail talk about what the or der might have loue with reference to building at Fulton had it been disposed, is but visionary and is ir relevant entirely. The Journal's effort to console itself with the thought that it is a matter of indifference to the 140,000 members of the fraternity where the oflicc is situated is not borue out by the facts. Tuc subject about which the chief interest centered in the re cent head camp meeting was the re moval ef the head ollice, and many delegates were there under instruc tions from their camps to vote for removal, while the vote indicated that uone of them were in serious doubt as to how the order felt. The action on tho head office removal as completely reflects the will aud de sire of the order as any action taken at Madison, ami ail conjectures to tho coutrary, or in fact of any other nature, are childish. The Child That llcranie Crown. Dy way of peroration the Journal says: "The head ollice has been in Fulton since the Modern Woodmen existed and the order has grown like a green bay tree. The citizens of Fulton and many Woodmen believe it will continue to grow just as well with the head ollice in Fulton as it will with the head oliice in Hock Isl and, or any other city. The position taken by the citizens and Woodmen of l'ultou who procured the injunc tion was recently forcibly delineated by a Woodman who said: In Fulton the child was born. In F'ulton he has grown to a lusty youngster, aud we do not propose to stand idly by and sec him kidnapped by a few schemers and taken to Kock Island.' " City Attorney Haas neatly an swered this child"' talk in his speech in Market rqnarc on the re turn of the Kock Island delegation from Madison, when he advanced the logic that wc might as well say tha, because a eMid was born in a village and had developed there, it should be kept there all its life, de spite the best interests and opportu nities for its future by going to a larger place. No matter what the advantages offered elsewhere it must not put foot out of its native land, because the pejplo who had seen it all its life did not wish to have it go. They were proud of it. but selfish, and preferred to haeit take chances on cautioning its career among them than go elsewhere according to its own best judgment. It might also be added for the in formation of the Journal that we are told in holy writ that while as a child we may do as a child, but when we become men wc should put away childish things. The Aitais. loc a week, delivered every eve-mug at your door. A FALSE NOTION. The Muline Mecttoca to Proscribe Bock l.laod Worktagmen. For a short time meetings have been held in Molir.e by workingmen belonging there to proscribe, if possi ble, fellow workingmen residing in Lock Island. It is gratifying to know that the sentiment predominat ing in these gatherings does not ob tain in Mo'.ino generally. The spirit of clanishness so voiced docs not bear the endorsement of people who appreciate and understand the situ ation. Kock Island Capital's Share. The jwviple in Moline who know whereof they speak have bo disposi tion to make issue against Kock Isl and, whose capital owns one or two of the biggest factories there and is interested in more or less extent in almost every industry there, togeth cr with bank stock and other in flu ences which contribute to Moline's industrial and mercantile imnor tanee. From a conservative stand point it is not to lie expected that the object of the recent meetings will bo attained in any particular. It is too narrow-minded and too short-sighted. Karly Mornluc Wedding. This morning at 0:80 was solemn ized the marriage of Stanlield II. Keeney. of Terre llaute. Ind., and Miss Klizulieth Grace Kcmblc, the event occurring at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Kemlil, fin Seventeenth street. In the piBiience of the family circle the ceremony was performed by Key. Ira KimiiIm', of Muscatine, an uncle of the bride. A wediliug breakfast was served, and the couple departed for their homo at Terre llaute, where the groom is now located. The bride is a daughter of one of th city's best kuown and re- speetud families, an accomplished aud winsome lady of lovable and modest manners, and her hosts oi ad mirers will shower upon herself and husband all the blessings of a happy and prosperous life. Mr. Keeney formerly resided at Crawfordsville, where through in dustry and business capability he established a lucrative drug busi ness, lie removed to Terre Haute a few years ago to accept an impor tant federal position under President Cleveland which he is now lilting. Knights of the lllekory. The Southern league champion ship his been captured by the Nash villes, with whom our "own Paddy Lynch finished the season. Faddy may get excursioued around consid erably in a season, but he generally ends up with a Hag-catching team. Lynch will probably roll snow halls with us for a while at least this win ter. Jacksonville Courier: "Mont. McFarlnnd. the Whitehall base ball 'phenom,' has signed with Anson's Chicago team to play the balance of the season. McFarland has been moving toward the top very rap idly." The High school organized a ball club last evening, with Joe llesen lield manager, and Jerome Appel uist secretary and treasurer. The boys will commence training for the fall season and arc open to all en gagements. Society Scrne. Pike county has a scandal in social circles. W. W. Scobley is a young man of wealthy parentage and always stood high iu the community until he suddenly departed recently to evade a marriage with a young lady whose confidence he had be trayed. His victim also moved in I'ike county prominence. The lady's parents vowed to make him fullill his obligations, and notified the authori ties of surrounding counties. Sun day evening Bailiff Hull located the much-desired gentleman in Musca tine, and brought him to Kock Nland. Last evening Sheriff Knox, of Tike county, came here and re turned with young Scobley to faao the music. The Modern Iteauty thrives on good food ami sunshine, with plenty of exercise in the open air. Her form glows with health and her face blooms with its beauty. If her system needs the cleansing ac tion of a laxative remedy, she uses the gentle and pleasant liquid laxa tive Syrup of Figs. A llonschold Necessity. No family should le without Fo ley's Colic ami Diarahnea Cure for all bowel complaints. For sale at M. V. IJahnsen's drug store. The Akois delivered every even ing at your door at 10c a week. What Zoa h Phora won't do for WOMANKIND no medicine will. Sold by T. If. Thomas and Mar shall & Fisher, druggists. aasskgn IBANTSU I""' - - . : t- - We have placed on sale a large It of the celebrate. I D.intsu rugs, in great variety and colorings, at prices heretofore unknown Dantsu Rugs 9x12 feet. (108 rquare feet) for 15.40, think of it. a carpet for a whole room for 5. 4U. Larger ones 10x12 feet tt, 12x12 feet only $7.2J. . You pay more f jr a cheap carpel which you would have to new together. A Kid Glove Opportunity. I We offer for ins'clion the largest importation of Kid Gloves ever shown in this section. Tho newest ideas in color-tones and stitchings, ISlack. Browns. Tans. Modes, Navies, Pearl and White black stitched. The Vendome at C2e, reds, browns, taas nnd black, without a doubt as good a glove as vou have often paid fl lor. The Florence 5-hook. French Kid, si'.k stitched, should bo f 1.25, our price 8'Jc. The Marguerite, four large pearl buttons, gussetted fingers, Keul Freuch Kid. value $1.!5, at $1. The -Carnot." finest French Kid. heavy piiie stitched, beautifully made, worth f 2, for 1.60. Other well known makes such as Alexander and Centemere, just re ceived iu both the Glace and Suede. Gents' Furnishing Depart ment. Plain White Night Shirts, value Wk at 3:1.;. Fancy Trimmed value 75e, at 4:e. Night shirts. Teek Ties, Hegant new line just in, all silk, at l'Jc, 1'Je, lite cat. McCABE BROS. 1720. 1722. 1724. 1726 and 1723 Second ave. AaSAAxVAAsVAAAtAAAAA $nd Annual Opening OF ROCK POPULAR The Foundation Rocks on building our business x Our 4 Fall and Winter Stock ("overs everything in desirable anil seasonable goods from low priced to liest grades. We have an un rivaled selection in such makes of goods as are suitable to the times. 2 Boy's Suits and Overcoats. i Children's Suits and Overcoats. S Have you seen our Boy's Combination Suits? Two fl pair Paats, Coat and Can. $3.35. Vou should bv Ir" y a K all means. i Sommers Li 804 Second Avenue. WANTED! "WANTED ! 10,000 Men, Women and Children to help us move our stock. Come at once to the great REMOVAL SiYLIS Where you can buy Children's Shoes from 25 cents to $1, kUu's (SCO shoes rr - - $4 01 Men's $.VM thoe for - - - S.73 Men's S6.M) ihot-s for ... .S Men's 1 1 nn sbusa for - - 2.75 Meu's 1 50 shoes for - Men's 00 rli' for - - - - -MS Men's 1 1 TTi oboes for - 1 HI Men i'J snd thot; for - - I.S5 Men's ll.Ti shoes for - - - 1 W. L. Douglas' $3 shoe for $2.25. Gilt Edge and Raven Gloss Dressing 15c. Come and sec our IJargain Counters. Schneider's Central Shoe Store; 1818 SECOND AVE. JOHN KOKOSKY, Carpenter and Builder, OFFICE, NO: 2821 SIXTH AVENUE, Shop on Vine street, ROCK ISLAND ROSENFIELD BROS PRACTICAL Plumbers, Steam, Gas Fitters. Houe Heating nd Sanitary Plumbing. Baaemeat Sock Island Nat. Bank RUGS. Women's Mackintoshes. To introduce our fall stock of Mackintoshes wo name the following exceptional prices: Single rape cloth Mackintosh, value 2.00, at $1.25. $:1.75 Navy Serge, single texture Mackintosh, double texture at $3 75. $1 ft') lllaek and Navy Serge Mack intosh, double texture for $3.75. $S.M) Navy and Pdack Plster Mackintosh, full fancy wind lined, SG.H7. $10.00 Heavy Serge, doub'e capo Mackintosh, tine all wool Scotch plain lined, a beauty at $7.50. m: r r misses ivcciers. Just now we are showing tho very newest Misses' Jackets and Keefcrs for fall, double breasted, large sleeves, etc. Misses and in fants' long Coats just opened up. We quote some special values: At $1.25 Cheek F.iderdown braid trimmed, (cotton.) At $2.12 Fancy cotton F.iderdown trimmed with Angora and ltraid. At $:l.75 Fine all wool Ladies' cloth, deep collar, beautifully made. Crockery Department. Plenty of Mason Fruit Jars for all. ijuarts .rie, half-gallons tic each. All this week, at least. "9 ISLAND'S MOST CLOTHING HOUSF. which we have built and arc ate Faets and Low Prices. a & LaVelle One l'rice. Ladies' $5 hors for - - 12 Ladies' SI shoes for . l-diV :t.rfl shoe for - '." Indies' tl.OI shoe for - . IM LalieV J.."hi nl ft ;s shoes for - I tatties $2 shoss for - - l.f-'i l.ideV s'lliTfortls for - - - 2 l( I a-4ie Jl.Ml hi S2.v u fonts for I.".", I .Kins' finnil f.'ft'iKfoni for - 1 .'.ri l.ollrV f I.TMf.rls for - I X. I.Kllcs il.i", anil llMtxtolt for I K 1IAUPEK HOUSE BLOCK.