Looks up the Business Interests of the
Town And is Prompted to Make Personal Mention.
(Continued from last week, December 1894)
Zel Pixley, Blacksmith, is the sign of the man that can do at his shop
anything in iron, from ironing a buggy or wagon to scientific
horseshoeing that he may be called upon to do.
This new livery barn is Vertrees, where good horses and fine carriages
are always to be had.
This blacksmith shop is Higgins & Whittaker’s. An old, well-known place
where horses almost stop of themselves to get new shoes that save their
corns; for horses sometimes have corns as well as their masters.
Ross Brothers have a fine livery barn here, none better in the city, and
none where courtesy more uniformly prevails.
Ed Taft is in this rusty old place, but the chances are even up that he
clears as much money with his tin shop his second-hand stoves and the
Round Oak stove, of which he is the agent, than any store of the kind in
the city.
This handsome new building is the Savings Bank. The building is an
ornament to the city and the institution a convenience to the people.
Above is the office of Withrow & Kopp, which at the beginning of the
year will be known as Babb, Withrow & Kopp, and it is to round a period
rather than to give information, that we say, that it will be a strong
and leading law firm.
On the same floor, but fronting east and north is the studio of Miss Sue
T. Davis, who opened these rooms about six months ago, with the
intention of making a vocation of china painting and art needle work.
Miss Davis is a Mt. Pleasant girl, and for many years has been an orphan
and wholly dependent upon her own energies for self-support. Miss Davis
is an excellent teacher and is deserving of the support of those
interested in this line of art.
This church here is the home of the Congregational denomination in this
city. Its membership has steadily increased during the last decade under
the devoted pastoral charge of Rev. O.W. Rogers.
L. F. Willard’s harness shop and salesroom for general horse and
carriage equipment supplies is on the ground floor of the next room
south, with Dr. Punton’s dental parlor above. He is steadily crowding to
the head? for recognition as a successful worker.
This fine front is the double room of R. Eshelman, the oldest and one of
the heaviest clothing houses in the city. Mrs. Eshelman occupies a
portion of the south side with a large stock of ladies’ wraps, notions,
and fine millinery.
Henry Mosley, a good barber, is above one-half of Eshelman’s rooms, and
John Tauchert is in the suite above the other half where he makes prime
cigars and has done quite as much, if not more than any other to
organize successfully the cigar makers’ union.
Schliep conducts a large cigar factory in this room which has made him a
fortune with good sound business management.
The Western Union Telegraph office is above where George Owens speeds
all messages of love, life, labor, or legislation to the satisfaction of
the community.
Hettich’s lunch room and fancy groceries are behind those handsome
windows. Should we enter, we should receive the greeting of one of Mt.
Pleasant’s most courteous men of business.
W.R. Jane’s hardware is in this large room where he makes a fine display
of stoves, tinware, and shelf hardware.
Wallbank & Jones’ extensive stock of gent’s clothing and furnishing
goods is next door, where a corps of good clerks is kept busy from early
morning till late evening. This place makes a point of goods and prices
that go with the most tempting bargains.
Hunter has merchant tailoring parlors above, where his acknowledged
skill is placed at the service of his patrons.
Henry Timmerman’s shoe store is next door. Timmerman prides himself
goods of standard excellence and prices to suit. This is essentially a
“one price house.”
Wm. Schnurr is above Timmerman’s in the room looking east. He is a
skilled workman, a worthy citizen, and deserving of patronage.
T.A. Bereman has his law office in the front room on the same floor, and
is a safe, intelligent, and conscientious counsellor.
Henry Mills is on the corner. The mills of this store grind sure upright
and genial, careful, painstaking and pursuing the cash system, the
proprietor is laying up riches in the things of this world, and great
satisfaction mentally, from square and honorable dealing.
Galer & Goan, in the suite above, are doing a large loan, real estate,
and law business, and are prompt and agreeable to deal with. They are
young men who are bound to win success.
Van Allen & Van Allen’s law and abstract office is in this brick
building set apart from all others east on Washington street. It has a
fine safety vault for the protection of a set of abstract books that the
proprietors value at many thousands of dollars. That they are as nearly
perfect as such books can be, is true however.
We must not neglect the ladies who are relating themselves in a business
way to the public. Three blocks east on Washington street, we find
another of our young lady artists, Miss Finette O’Kell, who has classes
in oil, water color and china painting, and is teacher of those arts for
the I.W.U.
As we come up Washington toward the west again, we pass the pretty
church of St. Michael’s, Rev. D.C. Howard, pastor.
South on Adams Street one block, you see that handsome new house with
statuettes. That is the studio of another of our Mt. Pleasant girls, the
Misses Schliep, who teach a variety of methods in art, having received
instruction in New York city. Their work is said to be excellent.
We are now brought back to the court house—not for trial by judge or
jury, but to note the modest aspect of the building as a county
structure, and pause to note the fact that the jail is in close
proximity to it.
Rouse Brothers drug store is at the corner of Main and Washington
streets, where a new stock of goods was put in few months since, the
building having been thoroughly renovated, inside and out, and
handsomely fitted up for the purposes of their business.
Palmer’s and McCoid’s law offices are above, where counsel to get into
or keep out of legal scrape is given with discrimination and solid
judgment of law.
H.A. Duncan’s grocery is next to Rouse’s drug store. He started here a
few months since with a nice fresh stock, and with present prospects he
is likely to succeed.
Buchanan’s insurance, loan and real estate office is over Duncan’s,
where he is doing a good business and gaining recognition in business
circles, and is a leading realty man in the county.
Black’s is a place where bargains are found, not only in second hand,
but in new goods of all kinds. It is emphatically the place where it is
safe to ask for anything from a doll to a derrick, from shoes to a shot
gun, from candy to calico, on the presumption that you can find it here.
Dr. J.N. Day has his office over Duncan’s, and is ready, day or night,
to answer professional calls, and minister successfully to the sick.
W.R. Hill occupies this handsome double room with dry goods, notions and
groceries. Hill has a solid trade, keeps old customers and secures new
ones, by fair prices, good goods and easy terms.
This meat shop is O’Connor’s. Meat fit for the king’s table can be
secured here; juicy roasts and tender sirloins, pork cutlets and mutton
chops.
Merchant Taylor, R. Walz, is above, where everything in his line is in
the workman’s highest art.
These marble works are those of Peter Melcher, who has seen other
dealers in his line come to Mt. Pleasant but leave for other towns,
simply because in work and prices Melcher could beat them all.
The office of M.D. Walker, keeper of the records and seals of the K. of
P. for the state of Iowa is in the front room over Peter Melcher’s. Mr.
Walker has been elected to this position annually for twenty-one years.
Other comment as to fidelity and ability is unnecessary.
Koch fills two floors of this store with footwear. His “specialty” is
shoes that fit your feet, and shoes that fit the feet of the other
fellow. With coarse or fine, from his abundance, any can be suited.
One block south where you see the sign, Mrs. S. McDonald, millinery, is
kept one of the largest and best selected stocks of millinery goods in
the city, and where as much ladies’ head gear is inside every twelve
months as any of the larger and more pretentious houses.
This big roomy place is the farm implements and wagon warehouse of
Winters & Foster, who handle car loads of stuff last year and intend to
double their trade the coming year.
This handsome corner window is that of Hurley Bros., who carry a fine
stock of boots and shoes and all first-class goods in that line.
Miss Leedham has her dressmaking parlors above where perfect fitting,
excellent finishing, and good style distinguish her work.
B.F. Millspaugh has his harness shop in this room west of Hurley Bros.,
where he keeps a good stock of drivers supplies, and turns out work
first class in every respect.
These two brick buildings that have no attraction in the windows, are
the overflow warerooms for Phillip Summers’ grocery which we shall
presently visit on Jefferson Street. These rooms are full of car loads
of stuff, flour, salt and various bulky goods which cannot be
accommodated in his salesroom.
C.J. Lang has his paint shop upstairs here. Lang has probably drawn a
skillful brush over more painted surface inside and outside of homes in
this city than any one now in the trade in Mt. Pleasant, for he has been
at it for Many, many years.
That stand pipe is the medium through which the unnamable liquid from
Big Creek is furnished the city and hospital which for all purposes but
those of exterminating fires, watering lawns and supplying engines is of
doubtful utility.
That blacksmith shop is where Charley Morse does good work, and this
iron clad building is the steam laundry where work as excellent as
Chicago or St. Louis can do is turned out.
Above in the second story is the office of Dr. Elliott, an old and
successful Henry County physician.
These bright, tastefully arranged windows on this corner are those of
the dry goods and millinery house of Grant & WIlliams, where good taste
and excellent judgment dominate fancies and fabrics.
That small building sandwiched in between its taller neighbors does a
good grocery business. Hoaglin runs it, and he literally runs the
business. Mrs. Hoaglin conducts millinering successfully in the rooms of
the second story, and has a fine trade, especially from the country.
This three-story building is Summer’s retail grocery, where immense
quantities of staple food supplies are sent out to the community every
year.
Miss Lucy Roberts has parlors above, where she teaches piano and guitar,
has a good patronage and is highly esteemed by her pupils.
Wingate deals in musical instruments, silverware, firearms books, and
conducts a repair shop for fine mechanical work, behind that three-story
front.
J.L. Brunner & Brother’s fine taste is displayed in that immense window,
behind which is a complete stock of fine furniture which is literally
crowded into the three stories.
Chas. Howe in this extensive room has a large stock of groceries, and
has won and holds trade by reason of close attention to business and the
purpose to please his customers.
The Ross sisters conduct a successful trade in queensware in the room
behind those windows where you see the handsome china. Quiet, careful
and painstaking, they have established a reputation for fair dealing and
good business qualities.
Miss Prince above, with the aid of quite a corps of seamstresses, runs
one of the leading dressmaking shops in the city.
Thomas Lash’s dry goods house is next. Not as pretentious as some of his
competitors, yet he keeps a steady patronage and paying trade. That is
the oldest dry goods house in the city, that has neither changed
location or hands in more than three decades.
This is not Delmonico’s, but the Palace restaurant, where Nichols
successfully caters to the appetites of epicurious.
The Gas and Electric Light Co. occupy that handsome room behind this new
glass front. The gas works and electric light plant are at the foot of
West Monroe Street, but the general office management is here, under Mr.
Howard Snider.
And this busy place where you see three ladies entering is Morony &
Baker’s, popularly known as “Dennis’s”, where most ladies go to look for
goods before deciding their purchases.
Those handsome windows are Van Cise & Co’s, druggist and accomplished
pharmacists, presumably the equal of any in the city, as Mr. Van Cise is
a graduate of the Philadelphia School of Pharmacy, and for years in
business here.
Miss Maggie Rourk is one of our most careful and painstaking dressmakers
and has a good trade with people of exacting taste, and has her shop
upstairs here over Morony’s.
No. 107 has recently been occupied as an auction room for the surplus
stock of ready-made clothing of Coopers, which is next door and is
selling out.
In connection with Cooper’s is a merchant tailoring department under the
charge of T.O. Thorson and John Woodburn, both well-known and skilled
workmen.
In the suite above, are the millinery and dressmaking rooms of the
Misses Kaeleon, who do the best sewing and cut and fit in a skillful
manner.
That handsome room next door was the scene of the poultry show a few
weeks ago, and on Christmas day the Salvation Army fed a half hundred
children who would otherwise have had but an “every day” dinner.
The First National bank occupies this corner, is a solid institution and
is conducted by a corps of able and accomplished business men.
The corner suite of rooms is occupied by those fashionable dressmakers,
the Melcher sisters. The telephone office is upon the same floor with
Miss Ida Davis as the courteous “hello” girl.
This barber shop is the good one recently conducted by Charley Davis and
if I am not mistaken, the same men run it that assisted Davis.
Gladden’s sales room is on the north side to the west of this corner
block where fine buggies, wagons of the best make, farm implements of
all sorts and kinds are sold. The bargains secured here have gladdened
the hearts of many a customer in Henry County.
Above is Saunders’ Opera House, just now the scene of the religious zeal
and fervor engendered by the preaching of Mrs. Woodworth, the lady
evangelist who has been holding meetings there for two weeks past.
In Prince’s old iron work shop on West Monroe Street, Arthur Williams,
that most excellent of blacksmiths, has opened a shop, and if skilled
work will draw, Williams will get his share of trade.
Whitney, the master mechanic, has his shop over Williams, and contracts
large jobs or small, as patrons desire.
This church with the Queen Anne front belongs to the Christian or
Campbellite denomination. Rev. Naylor is the well-beloved pastor, and
breaks the bread of life to the people according to his perception of
it, from the Scripture.
The old and reliable house of Ross, the lumbermen, has its office on
this, West Monroe Street, one-half block west of the park.
Mr. Allsup has his carpenter shop here, somewhere near Ross Brothers,
and is a most excellent workman.
While just west of this, Chas. E. McLeran’s salesroom for pianos, organs
and sewing machines is located.
Hargrave & Son occupy this magnificent front with carpets, curtains and
rugs upon the second floor.
Mrs. Pontius’s dressmaking establishment is in the front room over
Hargrave’s, where seamstresses are kept busy, and no thought of hard
times prevails.
This drug store next door to Hargrave’s is Waible’s, removed from Main
Street a few months since.
Templin & Woods do business at this stand, where for many years they
have drawn and held a large trade from all parts of the county by the
simple process of keeping goods of standard excellence, at prices that
compel competition in other houses, and by letting people of the county
know where they are, what they have and how much it will cost.
R.J. Pierce’s grocery is next door and is well conducted, has a good
stock, and accommodating service.
Above Drs. Smith & Linn have their office and consulting rooms and are
recognized as excellent physicians.
Across the hall is the office of the Daily News, under the
proprietorship of Rogers & Throop, with J.D. Howard’s job office in
connection.
Walker & Dallner’s hardware is below the News office, and their
customers are numerous and courteously treated.
The third story over the News office and Drs. Smith & Linn’s suite of
rooms is the Library Hall, a handsome room where a fine library and
reading room is conducted by the private enterprise of a few ladies for
the last twenty years.
The west side meat market is the next, where care is taken to serve the
public to all sorts of meat supplies after the most satisfactory manner.
Charley Clark and John Morony seem to vie with each other as to which
shall keep the cleanest grocery, make the most attractive fruit display
and send out the most goods to customers.
Wheeler’s bakery with the red front, has established itself with the
public and draws a trade of which any house may feel proud.
It is no lie to say that Ly-on’s drug store next door to the north is
one of the best appointed in the city, while the fine display of photos
in Smith’s windows speak of the excellence of their work.
Above, Williams, general all-around worker of general repairs and
tinkering, will help any who need gasoline stoves or almost anything
else fixed up.
Burket’s hardware and tin shop is bright and attractive as a new pin.
No. 1 work is what this home puts out along with right prices for all
their goods.
Wm. Hoaglin’s handsome windows attract our attention. The draping is
artistic and arrangement such as to attract attention and silently
invite inspection to one of the largest and most available stocks of dry
goods in the city, for Hoaglin’s motto is small profits and quick sales.
This three-story furniture house is H.T. Bird’s well-known place. The
presumption is strong that Bird has handled a large proportion of the
furniture sales in the city during the last few months.
Mrs. Anderson’s Millinery rooms are behind those attractive windows, and
she holds her custom by her efforts to please.
There are a few more business places by which we will drive and make a
note or two, for at this season we wish to give greetings to every
person doing business in Mt. Pleasant. Around on Main Street, north from
the square a block or two is Mrs. Hollowell’s restaurant, where meals
are served and lunches at all hours can be had and fruits and
confections abound.
One block from the park on south Main, Dr. O.F. Pitcher has his
residence and office. This physician has a large practice and uniform
success.
Near the college on Main is the Dyall Brothers photograph gallery, and
Ed Moore’s grocery, where all sorts of goodies are to be had.
Fiddler has a grocery nearby, and on North Jefferson, Harrison, the
veteran meat market man, supplies lots of customers from the north side
with first meat of all kinds.
John Morrow’s grocery is next and fills many a market basket from the
north before it reaches the down town dealers.
That rig you see yonder is one of the Mt. Pleasant Oil Co, which
delivers oil in the city, and for a distance of ten miles into the
country, and is a convenience to the public.
That milk wagon is Hill’s, whose dairy is north of town, and the one we
saw near the park is Coles’, whose dairy is south of town. Both deliver
good milk and give good measure and secure the good wishes of their
patrons because of it.
This square, three-story house on West Washington street, is a
hotel—well known as the “Wiggins House”—a quiet place on a quiet street,
where they set a good table with pleasant attendance under the
management of Mr. and Mrs. Pickard.
We will drive south on White Street until we come to the cigar factory
of Leedham Bros., where they fill extensive orders for the wholesale and
retail trade through southeastern Iowa.
Farther down on South White Street, Gus Jericho has machinery for
renovating feathers and mattresses, and will do first class work for all
who need it in his line.
The gentleman we just met with that little daisy of a pony, is McClary,
the successful superintendent of the water works.
Let us now take a drive out to the extensive greenhouses of J.W.
Thompson’s for some carnations for our boutonnieres, and return by way
of the West End green houses for some of its notable rose buds to
decorate our horses’ bridles, as we make the spin down the avenue to the
hospital, where we shall be courteously received and given a look at the
perfect order which pervades the entire building under the general
direction of Dr. Gilman and his able corps of assistants. The grounds
are beautiful and the drives the most perfect in the city. Here many are
restored to health and usefulness in society and the home.
As the roads are fine and our rig nobby, before we stop, we will take in
some outside places that we need our carriage to conveniently reach.
This array of chicken houses belongs to Hanson, the fellow that took so
many prizes at the poultry show a few weeks since.
Farther on, half a mile is the big Ross Spring, where the mastodon bones
were found, and that building on the hill south is the county house
where this big pump needs pure water for the use of its inmates. The
house of hope to the worthy homeless, in their helplessness the world
over. Among all public institutions none are more worthy of good works
than this class, when well and conscientiously conducted as is this one
in Henry County under O.R. Sensibaugh.
This elevator is owned by Ketcham Bros. and in this mill close by is
turned out the car loads of flour that are shipped to all posts east and
west north and south by this firm, beside the great quantities consumed
in the locality.
East here, near the old depot is where the Mt. Pleasant Road Grader Co.
have located their shops and a large number of manufactures were turned
out during the past year and have taken leading place in the estimation
of the public in several states and territories.
This is the I.W.U. That is the main building, the smaller one was the
original building, but is now occupied by Dr. Rommel for the purposes of
the Iowa Conservatory of Music. This new building is College Chapel and
Science Chapel, and Science Hall, and that across the street east, is
the German college.
On South Jackson Street, corner of Front, is the large handsome church,
St. Alphonsus, the religious home of the Catholics, Rev. Father Bassler,
pastor. This new brick adjoining is the parish school conducted by the
Sisters of Humility, in a most thorough and capable manner, with a roll
of seventy-five pupils.
Crossing over to South Jefferson Street, one block to the east we find
this neat unpretentious, but commodious church where the German Lutheran
denomination holds regular services.
Bowman & Kaufman do a leading business in coal and grain and are square
dealing reliable men whose reputation is identified with Mt. Pleasant in
its best business interests.
Comstock’s scale works across from Bowman & Kaufman’s. The simplicity,
accuracy and durability are the special features of these machines. Mont
Saunders has introduced large numbers of these machines throughout the
state.
The cold storage that is to be soon built will occupy this corner here
on Adams Street just south of the railroad where the old meat market
was. It is in the hands of an association of leading business men,
whether they have incorporated or not I cannot tell.
And there is a canning factory also in the thoughts of the people or the
papers. It is in the air anyway and in due course like all other
creations it will unquestionably find expression in material form like
all other good thoughts that become things.
The largest mechanical industry in wood in the county is conducted in
this steam planing mill on east Henry Street by Leedham & Baugh.
Nominally a sash and blind factory, it turns out high grade work in
doors, fancy mouldings and ornaments, and in fact almost everything used
in first class building.
Somebody has said that “Cleanliness is next to godliness.” Realizing the
value of home industries and the need of purifying individual towns as
well as individual people, a factory was established last year for the
manufacture of soap—’94 soap—both laundry and toilet, and both are high
grade and deserve to merit success.
East on Henry Street is the Swedish Lutheran church where Rev. Eckelberg
ministers to the spiritual needs of a goodly number of our citizens, who
prefer the Word in their dear mother tongue. Thank God, the spirit of
truth is the same whatever the national language. There are two churches
where our colored citizens worship regularly, of the Baptist and
Methodist denominations.
At this Christmas season it is pertinent even for the pew to ask “how
long, Oh Lord! how long - “before creeds, which are the notions of men
about the nature and relations of God, Christ and man will be melted
away by the divine loving spirit of Christ in the soul of believers,
when all from the least unto the greatest who have the consciousness of
the divinity within, shall say with Paul, “There is neither Jew nor
Greek, bond nor free, for all are one in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Dr. Farr has his office at his residence a block west of the Wiggins
House, and has a large office and general practice.
And now for Whitford’s livery from whence we started, and if you have
enjoyed the trip, we will pursue our observations later if you like, and
visit our schools and churches one by one, of which we are very proud.
Taken as a whole, a more business-like, wide awake, and upright set of
business men would be hard to find in any city. Each would draw a prize
and every one deserves success.
To all upon whom we have called, we will give cordial New Year greeting,
hoping that pleasant relations will prevail among of the several members
of the Mt. Pleasant business family, one toward another, during the
coming year.
(“The Free Press”, Mount Pleasant, Iowa, Thursday, January 3,
1895, page 1)
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