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V# agfevw. te?lr, A r1! I •,^^-' I m, JfT5\ **. .* .,- •r \ii rb- &? I Vv 'n ^1 ?l 1 it ADDITIONAL LOCALS —Mrs. C. E. Dodge of Jesup was a guest of Mr. and Mrs.. Rae Dunham on last Friday. —The Mystic Workers will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo.' S. Lister on Friday evening of. this week. —Next Wednesday night the mem bers of the local K. P. Lodge will give a dance at their hall. All K, P's are reminded to not forget this date. .. —Mr. and Mrs, G. M, Coykendall and Mr. and Mrs. Perry Slangy, all of Waterloo were visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. \V. C. Blake on Sunday. —W. C. Blake and B. W.. Grems "were in Cedar Raping one day last week to hear Harry Lauder, the noted Scotch comedian, at the Greene opera house. —Our men readers shohld not ov erlook the advertisement. of Gildner Brothers which appears on page 8 of this issue. They quote prices which will prove attractive. —The Current Events club will meet with the club president, Mrs. Raus, in North Manchester on Friday of this week. All members of the club are urged to be present. —The ladies of the Presbyterian church desire that all those who have old papers and magazines to be (collected will report as goon as pos sible as. they hope to make their shipment at an early date. —Ray Frentress, son of Mr. rand Mrs. E. H. Frentress, was operated on at Park View .hospital on Mon day afternoon, having been stricken with an acute attack of appendicitis. The child passed through the severe ordeal safely, and every indication points1 to a complete recovery. —Mrs. Henry Prowse and Mrs. C. S Lister entertained a large, com pany of women friefids at the Prowse home Saturday at a six oTclock din ner. Hallowe'en table and parlor decorations were neatly arranged, and a highly enjoyable evening at cards wag ppent by the guests. M.fes Dora Le Roy won first honors. 4 'JU Tender' Hearted. Aunt Sukey came into thei house in high dudgeon. "W'ut yu reckon dat crazy boy Jim done, Miss Cassie?" she demanded. "Luke tol' him to cut off dat puppy's tail, an' he says, to mek it easier foh 'um, he done cut it off a 1i*l piece at a, time!" Wisdom-of the Bee. "Our plan is very different," said the bee. "We work in the summer .to lay up a stoVe of food against the season when we foresee we shall want It but those who do nothing but drink and dance and sing in the sum mer must expect to starve in the win ter."—Old Fable. Mixed Nationality. Four-year-old Maggie's father is tfrom Germany her mother from Scot land. One day the conversation turned on nationalities and my husband asked Maggie what she was. With her arm around her little brother Herman she replied: "Mamma and we's Scotch, but papa's he's German." Tastes Change. Funny that the very fellow who begs a girl for a lock of her hair in the courtship days when he kisses it so fondly will swear like a trooper if he finds one of them in the butter after he is married. Died as He Lived. "Easeman is gone, poor chap. Died without a struggle." "Just like Ease man he never was known to exert bimBelf in anything." Esthetic. The Customer—"Oh, but haven't you any other tint in lettuce than this? It won't go with my new blue salad dish a bit!"—-Sketch. A.H. -ms?» '•in *.» W M, mmw'&?^ J"X'lr j(P? pii-r iv/^y mJwlf $? Make Your Money Work *i Invest it in one of our choice farm loans secured by first mortgages on some of the best land in Delaware and adjoining counties. The loans on hand range in amount from $1,500 to $10,000, they net the investor 5% to 5h°l semi- $ annual interest, and we'attend to collecting inter est and principal without charge to the investor. I AMERICAN MORTGAGE & SECURITIES COMPANY A. M. OLOUD. President TEEWIN. Vice-President. F. C. WAPLES. Secretary j! F.'GRAHAM, Vice-President. H. E. HENDERSON. Treasurer Office—Second Floor. A. M. Cloud Building. Telephone 364. BIG FUR SALE JUST ONE DAY I Monday, November 9fh On Monday, November 9th, we will again have with us a representative of Detroit's largest fur house. 1 A New Market for Ivory. Although in recent years tha Ivory Imported into London has decreased, the. falling off has been caused by a new market having been created by the opening up of the Congo free state. The ivory coming from that region is now sold in Antwerp, so that when the quantities sent to both markets are put together the total imports actually show an increase. Easy Way Out of It. "We know a stenographer," says the Peoria Journal, "who refuses to write letters on pale blue stationery because it doesn't agree with her complexion." In tha£ case, if she is a valuable sten ographer, it would be a simple matter for the firm to go to the dru store and buy her a complexion to match the paper.—Toledo Blade. Smile Right. When in doubt—smile. It is a safe play at almost any stage of life's game. But be sure it's the right kind of a smile—not the fawning smile, not the smile of fear which is better described as a grin, but the smile which says that the world is a pretty good sort of a place if you don't take it too seri ously—the smile that says: "Come on in, the joke's a good one."—Pictorial Review. Worth Knowing. The laurel was much in favor in olden days, as it meant "love tri umphs." The Greek bride wore a wreath of myrtle. A bride of today may choose her own flower if she wishes, stamping^ It with her individu ality. Some girls take the flower al lotted to the month, especially if the time happens to be June, with its wealth of roses. Widows usually wear violets-, either white or purple, or a combination of both. The Earth's Shadow. The earth has a shadow, but very few ever see it, except in eclipses of the m6on, or else few recognize it when they see it. Nevertheless, many of iis have noticed it on fine, cloudless evenings in summer shortly before sunset, a rosy pink arc on the horizon opposite the sun, with a bluish gray segment under it. As the sun sinks the arc rises until it attains the zenith and even passes it. .This is the shadow of the earth: Always Easy to Get Spies. It is an .international law, but an unwritten one, that a sovereign cannot lawfully require a subject to serve as a spy, except in a singular case, and that of the last importance.. Never theless, no country will ever lack spies, for. the work that is required of them is so adventurous and so well paid that thousands of men would jump at the opportunity to become a secret service agent. Vanity of Life. It would be difficult to rival the epi taph of Cardinal Onuphrio which, in half a dozen words sums up the van ity of life—"Here lies a shadow—ashes —nothing!" and that of Cardinal Ma zarin's beautiful niece, Marie Mancini, who, after draining the cup of worldly pleasure to the dregs, wrote, as she lay dying, her own epitaph, "Marie Man cini, Dust and Ashes." New Definition. A class in history in school at Kir win was studying Lincoln's Gettys burg address. The teacher asked the class what Was meant by the word "dedicate." One of the small boys volunteered to answer., "Dedicate," he explained, "means raising the money to pay off a church debt."— Kansas City Star. Always Rings True. Behind joy and laughter there may be a temperament coarse, hard and callous. But behind sorrow there is always sorrow.—Oscar Wilde. Chances Are That Escort Didn't. Photographer (taking plain-looking girl and her escort—"Now, try not to think of yourselves at all—think of something pleasant."—London Opin ion. This is the same house whose man made the $ sale so big a success last year. If at all interested in anything in the fur line come in on the above date. You'll find values—quality and style. Re member the date—Monday, November 9th. T3BWW The Gentleman. As a finished product, the gentleman seems to do everything very easily but that ease like the case of the habit, can only come by effort. He is socially secure but whatever his station, he was not born so, for no man" ever is socially secure by birth, even if he was born to be a king. The test of a gentleman is the pleasure others take In his society, and not in his wit or his virtue of his learning, but in their or dinary social relations with him. And this pleasure he cannot give merely by being on good terms with himself. Spared Listeners and Himself. For humor, combined with brevity, It would not be easy to rival the French cleric, who, on the festival of St. James, was called upon to pro nounce a panegyric on the saint. "My brethren," he said, "twelve months ago I preached a eulogy on the emi nent apostle whose festival you cele brate today. As I doubt not, you were all very attentive to me, and as I have not learned anything new of him, I have nothing to add to what I said at the time." Fooiisn uuestion. A man charged at the Liverpool (Eng.) police court with fighting stated that the prosecutor hit him first on the jaw.. "Did you hit him first?" asked the stipendiary. "No, sir," was the reply. "If I had hit him first he would have been in the hospital, not me." Henpecked Husband's Want. An Englishman has invented a lawn, mower like a horse clipper, which is operated with both hands. But what the henpecked husband wants is a lawn mower operated by Christian Science.—Louisville Courier-Journal. The Better Way. A household hint says that books can be protected from mildew by crinkling oil of lavender on the shelves. An easier way, though, would be to read 'em occasionally. But Think of His Friends. Our ideal of a really democratic man is one who sticks to five-cent cigars no matter how much money he may make.—Atlanta Journal. A Means of Approach. Though I am not a smoker I like to carry matches in my pocket. One is always liable to be accosted on the street by some one in need of a light. To be able to give a match is a great luxury. It forms the basis for a mo mentary friendship.—Atlantic Monthly. The Hall of Lost Footsteps. Something of pestry and sentiment creeps into evei department of French life—even into railroad sta tions. In Gare St. Lazare, Paris, there is a spacious hall which is known as Salle de Pas Perdes—the Hall of Lost Footsteps. His Excuse. A San Francisco policeman explains a recent tardiness in reporting on duty by saying that his automobile broke down. That old excuse of the disabled automobile frequently is re quisitioned by men whose valets fall to awaken them on time. Long-Felt Want. This country may get along a great deal better' some day if only the gyroscope is perfected so that it can be applied to keeping statesmen steady.—Boston' Globe. i— Let Nature Have Its Way. Don't waste time picking off the dead leaves in spring, but let the sap go up, and the buds will expand, and the dead' leaves will fall off them selves.—F. B. Meyer. Their Occupation. "In makin' out the list of human oc cupations," says old Pop Crabbe, "na ture didn't forget the dear boys who wouldn't have nothin' to do if it wasn't fer teachin' girls to swim." Life's Paradox. One of the greatest paradoxes of life lies in the fact that you can't make both ends meet simply by keep* ing straight. Population of the Tropics.. More than half of the world's popu lation live in the tropics «f the old world. Under British rule alone are over 325,000,000 tropical natives. Not to Be Wondered At. History fails- to record a single In stance of a woman having fallen in love with a man as the result of see ing him eat a plate, of spaghetti. Optimist Not at His Best. An optimist is no good when he stands on the safe side of the fence and tells you the bull won't hurt you. Area of the United States. The entire United States, exclusive of foreign possessions, contains about 1,900,000,000 acres. Wise Fathers. In these days it is a wise father who does not dread to know his own son.—Life. What Is Your Rank? Man's rank is his power to uplift.-* George Macdonald. Rise Above It Self-love is like being in a mist—* you cannot get rid of it directly all you can do is to seek to rise above it.—Pusey. Daily Thought. The best sort of revenge is not to be like him who did the injury.—Mar cus Aurelius. A Query. If a man gets up just after the day breaks, can he be said to have a whole day before him? Manners. Manners are not idle, but the fruit of loyal nature and of noble mind.— Tennyson. British Coal Consumption. Great Britain consumes 34,000,000 tons of coal annually for domestic pur poses alone. Rice Paper From Wood. So-called Chinese rice paper is from the pith of a Formosa tree. •,'TFrti'^j fjtt'y"*" '"H '*1',,//i „^A MiL...', ......,„,... •.,-.. t». ....,. •..., Where Was Wales? Spencer Leigh Hughes, M. P., tails of the following amusing experience: He was once passing the new war of fice building in Whitehall when bis companion, a Scotchman, pointing to the emblematic devices engraved over the door, indicated the Scotch thistle, the English lion, and the Irish harp. "Where is the emblem of Wales?" asked his friend. "Oh," Mr. Hughes replied, "I expect there is a leak In the roof." Might Have Been Either. In a case tried in a Philadelphia! court the prosecuting attorney had good deal' of fun at the expense of counsel for the defendant, each of whom seemed as stupid as the other. "Ignorance of the law," interposed the judge at a certain juncture, "is no excuse for violation of law.'' "May I inquire of your honor," asked tha prosecuting attorney, "whether your honor's remarks are directed at tha defendant or his counsel?" Way of the Modern Poet. "Here in my poet's hovel is beat ing my wounded heart—My trembling fingers are writing a song of my suf ferings' smart—Got that, young lady? —To the desert I fain would wander and there would languish and die—• Oh, thunder," said the great poet, "I've done enough work for today tell John to crank my machine, ~and get me iny automobile coat."—Man Lacht. If You Are Artistic. If you have artistic tendencies which are crying for expression there is no better way to express yourself than in your personal appearance and the arrangement and- de'eoration of your home. Make yourself and your home works of art. You will find this much more worth while than wasting a large amount of artistic vitality on sepond rate china painting, sketching, modeling and the like. Enamelware Cement For mending enamelware pots and pans where a hole has been chipped off, the following is effective: Equal parts of soft putty, finely sifted coal ashes and sifted table salt. Mix all' together and pack it into the hole. Place the mended article on the stove with a iittle water in it until the ce ment gets hard. It never fails, and it becomes as hard as the enamel itself. Don't Oil Razor Strops. "Never put oil on a razor strop," said one of the largest dealers in bar bers' supplies in New York. 'It spoils' it for sharpening steel. A new strop should need no attention for a year^ at least. If it begins to get dry, Just take a little ordinary lather and rub it well in. This will soften it again,: and nothing more is necessary." Her Husband Died. At a dinner party given to an nounce my engagement we discovered there were thirteen seated at tlie table. One of my friends spoke of it laughingly, but mother said it fore told death. In one month she was in the grave and two weeks after my wedding my husband was stricken with heart disease and died instantly. —Chicago Tribune. Nation's Wiser Part Since the foolish part of mankind will make wars from time to time with each other, not having sense enough otherwise to settle their differences, it certainly becomes the wiser part, who cannot prevent those wars, te alleviate as much as possible the ca lamities attending them.—Benjamin Franklin. Her Gentle Hint. Four year old Alola was visiting her aunt, who was not used to having chil dren around. At the dinner table for the first few minutes Alola was. for gotten in the serving. The child had always been taught to wait, but after what seemed a long time to her she exclaimed, "Aunt Rut', I used to eat chicken." Budding Politician. Little Willie is a kindergarten pupil. His father is a politician. Because Willie had been good all the week the teacher permitted him to choose a game. He lined up his classmates against the blackboard and shouted fiercely: "All who are going to vote for Dempsey hold up the right hand!" Depths of His Love. My little son went into the li\dng room where. my invalid mother was lying on a couch and in the following quaint way expressed his love for her: He knelt down, put his little arms about her, and said: "Gamma, I dess wish they would all die so I tould make pancakes for 'oo."—Exchange. Her Unreasonableness. "He disappeared one day and stayed away five years. Recently he reap peared, and his wife took him back." "Are they happy now?" "No he says she's unreasonable about trifles." "How so?" "She wants to know where he was during those five years."— Louisville Courier-Journal, Quite a Difference. Sir George RoBe, once turning a corner, came suddenly upon some young barristers who were in the act of aping his walk and gestures, "You mistake, gentlemen," said the good natured wit, accosting them. "That is not the air of the Rose it is only the stalk." Setting a Difficult Task. "Since he's there," writes an editor of a representative, "it's all right to give bim enough bills to keep him busy and let him un away home with the idea that he advocated more laws than the people could possibly break." Fortune Tellers' Kesources. A fortune teller's business depends largely on people who get lonesome and are willing to pay for a little flat tery. Device to Store Heat An inventor in Stockholm, Sweden, has devised an electrical apparatus for storing heat. ?, Daily Thought. Impossible is a word only found in the dictionary of fool poleon. 'Involuntary Ignorance. If one-half the world doesn't know how the other half lives it's not be cause it doesn't try to flsd out. pK.'ntlp Copyright Hart Schaffner It Miuz Iowa's Largest Clothiirs. Zest In Uncertainty. It would be fine if the ideas could be manufactured and stored away by conscious effort. But after all that might take away some of the adven ture of living. As it is you never know when you go to the mental cupboard whether you are going to find it full of good things or empty. At least there is 'the uncertainty to give aest to ex istence. Qualified Rebuke. |Pive-year-old Marie likes to see the fqjiny pictures. She had the paper spread out on the floor looking at it wfeen her father turned out the light. Mary was angry at this, and said, "Vou've got your nerve," but as she realized immediately whom she was talking to she hastily added, "But you know your rights." ^7? His Method ef LIVing. "What do '•you do a living?" asked A of B, being the no~t of in quisitive person that everybody wants to kick. "I breathe," answered to A. being the sarcastic sort of per son that everybody else wants to kick. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Thing of the Past Qur memory goes back to the time when the mere sight of a bolt of red flannel in the dry goods store would give rise to the most tender feelings'in a young man's breast, but we suppose the, young men of the present day wo,uld wonder what in the world the stuff was ever used for.—Ohio State Journal. Wanted a Supply. Mr. Highseed (from Worcester, in ItaUan restaurant)—"Say, Si, this here spaghetty's all right, ain't it?" Mr. Meddergrass—"You bet! When I git home I'm a-goin' tew write tew our congressman fer a package o' the seed, so's I kin raise it fer myself." To Brighten Gilt Frames. Rub them with freshly baked, bread moistened with ammonia or try the older method of washing them in wa ter in which onions have been boiled, •and to which a little sulphur has been added. The sulphur, aids in keeping the'yellow color. Hypothetical Question. Fair Lady To lawyer—"Can I sue her for slander, whether she proves what she said I Baid she said or not?" —Judge] As the World Looks at It. The man who suffers in silence may be heroic, but the man who "makes a holler" seems more sociable* and Is therefore more popular. World's Births and Deaths. The average death rate through out the world is 67 a minute, and the average number of births in the same period is 70. Historical. As the great Swiss patriot aimed his arrow at Gessler, he said to himself: "Blood, Will Tall!" Nation's Mineral Waste. Mineral waste .in the United States is estimated at fl,000,000 a day. •Ife «Wf lWW?JW •V 5 Doien Men's Flannel Shirts $1.00. Our buying power again! proves itself in this garment. Good roomy flannels, in grey, blue or brown, well made at.. .. .. .. ...$1.00 500 Dozen Husking'Mitts and Gloves 60c. The sam« big double faced and double stitched busking mitten we sold you last year, good roomy size and perfect fitting, at per dozen '... 60c 50 Sheep Lined Coats $4.95. The greatest value again asserts itself in this magnificent sheep lined coat, dark grey or brown moleskin shell big pelt lined and 34 inches long, ^. ............ $4.95 I A (Life Preserver Shaped Like Tenpln, 6ne of the latest substitutes for the ordinary life preserver is a curious device which, when extended for use, has a shape resembling that of a bowl ing pin. It is intended to be entered by a single person and in that case keeps the user entirely dry, but it is claimed that its buoyancy is so great that, in case of a catastrophe, as many as twenty persons can be supported for an indefinite period by hanging to. the loops around the lower part of the hood. How Llnolltim Kills Germs. German scientists "have discovered thati. disease germs quickly die when they come in contact with the ordinary floor covering known as linoleum. This Is thought to be due to the disinfectant properties of linseed oil which is found In linoleum in large quantities. Curious Astigmatism. A London reporter has been exploit ing American tourists who see London in a day. It is still more interesting to reflect that a lot of these rushing people, although right at home in the city, do not see New York in a life time. Natural Question. Our small daughter is very .fond of her bath, writes a contributor to Har per's Magazine, but she objects vig orously to the drying process. One day, while we were remonstrating with her, she said, "Why, what would happen, mamma, if you didn't wipe me dry? Would I get rusty?" New Cure for Rheumatism. Excellent results are being obtained In Paris by treating sufferers from rheumatism with what are known as paraffin baths. The patients are placed in envelopes made of mineral wax which are raised to a temperature of 66 degrees and are kept there for 24 hours. Left Fatal Evidence. A burglar who broke into an anti quary's shop in Paris has been iden tified by means of a strip of skin torn from bis ear by the broken glass of a showcase. The piece of skin was preserved in a bottle of spirits, and it fitted on to a fresh scar on the man's left ear. Amenities at the Club. Mrs. Dlggs—"At our club meeting this afternoon Mrs Brayton read one of her unpublished poems." Mr. Dlggs—"And what did you do?" Mrs. Dlggs—"Just to take her down a peg I read one of my untried recipes for Hungarian goulash!" New fork Herald. Be Good to Your Eyes. A New York homeopath, speaking at the recent convention in Atlantio City, said that conserving the eye sight was a phase of health conserva tion too often overlooked. He said that 50 per cent of the blindness in this country was due to conditions that might have been avoided. Test for Prospective Father. No man has ahy business to get married until he ran listen to a cry ing baby without saying things that wouldn't look well InVrint (f 1'5'']!!Wf ^JTC^JS,1-4"* it If! ,iT^ "i A a *. r-^-nVA:-. when you buy merchandise from Gildner Bros., you do "Buy in the Light." Your purchase is made permanently satisfactory, because actually you have bought the best for the least. Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits and Overcoats, $18.00, $20.00, $25.00 We list only a fey of t^ie money saving vialues this store lias to offer." These prices are not for one day «r one week but can be had at any time. We do not put out any baits for one day. The genuine values we offer require no "inducements" or "concessions." They effect their own sales. Gildner Bros. .U«*' Unkind Comment. "See, darling," and Mrs. Justwed held up for her husband's gaze three mirrors arrange^ so as to give as many reflections "I can get a triple view of myself!" bXite of "Humph!" gurgled her brtite of a man, struggling with his collar. "You seem to be quite popular with your self!"—Judge's Quarterly. Advantages of Singing. In the last junior scholarship exami nation of the London county council the candidates were asked to explain the advantage it was to children to be taught to sing. One youngster rathef evaded the question, but epigrammat ically answered that "Singers' work is like earning a penny for eating a piece of chocolate." Daily Thought. I tell you—it may be for the hun dredth time, but it is the very truth— that this is the working day that this is the watching hour, and that our su preme duty Is to work untH the day Is done and darkness falls upon the field to watch until the hour is ended. —Haleigh. A Woman's Last Request. The will of a woman, who died in London recently, contains the request that her age should not be put upon her tombstone. Knew of War's Horrors. Take my word for it, if yet had seen but one day of war, you Vould pray Almighty God that you might never see such a thing again.—Iuke of Wellington. Another Victim. "Poor Maud is a victim of the stock market." 'You don't mean to say she's been speculating?" "No, but her fiance has, and the en gagement is broken." STUMPS AND ROCK REMOVED. If your fields are infested with pulders and stumps, let me take out for you. I make a special £f removing them. 43w A. W. WBST, Manchester, la. Buy "In The light" From the store with the one price to all. Every fig ure is bold and plain, and the price shown is the "only" price and the "low est" price. To sell for less would be a business im possibility. Gildner Bros, also give you the "last" price first. Our proposi tion to you is "Pay less and get more." Therefore 35 Men's Chinchilla Coats $11.50. Wonderful pure wool Wilson Chinchilla Overcoats made Ulster or dress coat style in blue or grey, absolutely all, wool .$11.50 100 Jumbo Work Shirts 39c. Good big roomy shirts either heavy or light weights, all colors including blue and grey chambray, each one guaranteed, a regular 50c shirt at 3 for $1.00 or each .. .39c 10 Dozen Men's Union Suite $1.00. Either heavy. fleeced or ribbed, in ecru or white «olor, made good size, vety best of trimmings:.. ..$1.00 Two of a Kind. Three-year-old Katharine was in Uncle John's garden stepping on his new peas. When Uncle John saw the destruction that was going on he called out: "Katharine, get out of that bed at once. I am a very bad man, and I'll punish you if you don't." She came toward him, smiling, and held out her little hand to shake hands, saying: "You say you're a bad. man? Then we'll be partners, for I'm a awful bad little girl." She Asks Too Much. When a woman goes away to spend Sunday, if she would give her hus band directions concerning the four teen or fifteen most important things that ought to be done around the house In her absence, instead of con cerning the whole fifty-seven, he would stand more chance of remem bering at least some of 'em.—Houston Post. Get To Know Us. NOTICE. Aiiyone wisnlng to purchase va cant lota or houses and lots in Man-V Chester, one of the best towns in the state, or farms in Delaware coun ty, call on the undersigned. Any one wishing to buy life insurace, call am1 see M. I. B. RICHMOND, 38tf. Manchester. Iowa. COW FOR SALE. If you want a good cow that will soon be fresh, ,enquire at this office. NOTICE. All orders for light drawing left at the E. H. Prowse jewelr receive prompt attention. (Orders for delivery for the early morning trains Should be phoned to my residence No. 102. All orders during the day should be left at the jewelry store Instead of the A. E. Peterson grocery store. Jewelry store number is 588. 43w JOHN PROWSE. W. C. AMSDEN (17 Years in Active Practice.) Poor vision, also headaches, pho taphobia (sensitive to .light) and other ailments due to eye strain promptly relieved. Optical Office at the Drug Store. Place Your Order I for a slice of the mam- I moth BLUE RIBBON CHEESE,—485 pounds —which will be cut on December 15th, next, IW. H. Lafferty Grocer. It's all foolishness,' "This going to a larger city for clas sy photos," when you can get them at Ternberg's Stu dio at Manchester. I J' •f^fI5Sgl N i41 rayin lrjvg l. O store will II' 1 1 I a ii 1 tl l/i JM a .o ei Je ei •In hi r« tb fr d: et PI re A ith