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ff 4 1 Ct|e Democrat. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNE8DAY. O. B. BRONSON. E. M. OARR. BRONSON & CARR. Editors and Proprietors. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. Yearly,in advance... II GO If not paid in advancb 9 00 NOTICE.—On tha/'sllp of paper upon which tao name is printed/appears the date to which the paper is paid for, and a renewal is always respectfully solicited. The writer's name must aocompany any arti cle for publication, as an evidone of good faith to the editors Bring the Children to 13 ,.C, YORAN. H. F. ARNOLD. M.J, YORAN YORAN, ARNOLD ft YORAN ATTORNEYS AT tAW, and Real Estate KX Agents. Office over Delaware County State Bank,Manchester, Iowa. C. E. BBONSON. JS. M. CABR. BRONSON ft CARR. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Speolal attention given to collections. Office in Demoorat Building, Franklin Street, Manchester, Iowa. FRED B. BLAIR. A TTORNEY AT LAW. Office In the City Hall i\. Block, Manchester, Iowa. PHY8IOIAN8. A. J. WARD, "PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, will attend to calls •L promptly at all hours of the day or night, 'framoafclowa. H. H. LAWRENCE. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Speolal at •L tention given diseases of children. Have also made a speolal study of Gyneooology, Obstetrios, and Reotal Diseases. Allohromc diseases successfully treated with the aid of various Thermal and Massage treatment. All •ohronlos solicited. Consultation free. Office •over Work's market. All calls promptly at tended. Realdenoe on Main street, tbe old Dr. SCelaey property. DENTISTS. O. A. DUNHAM. D.D.S. TVENTISTS, Office over Carhart & Adams' t-s hardware store, Franklin St. Iowa. C. W. DORMAN. ENTIST. Office on Franklin Street, north of the Globe Hotel, Manchester, Iowa. Dental Surgery In all its branohes. Makes irequent visits to neighboring towns. Always it offloe on Saturdays. C. LE1QH. D.D. S. DENTIST. •tore on Franklin street. Crown •7 bridge work a specialty. Will meet patients at Farley Wednesday of each week. satf VETERINARIAN. DR. J. W. SCOTT, -\rETERINARY Surgeon, and Dentist. Offloe In H. O. Smith's Drug Store, Main St. At might oan be found at rooms over Ralph Con ner's Store. MANUFAOTURINQ. MANCHESTER MARBLE WORKS T8 prepared to furnish Granite and Marble .. 1 Monuments and Head Stones of various de signs. Have the oounty right for Sipe's Pat ient Grave Cover alBo dealer In Iron Fenoes. 2tf M. V'- •v' to us and have their feet ,, S1.00 Tan and Black, Button and Lace, size 8 to 11 only $1.00 Same in Misses sizes SEND US YOUR MAIL ORDERS*... WM. THOMAS GIVEN, #~1ontraotor and builder. Jobs taken in town \J or oountry. Estimates furnished. First class work guaranteed. Prioes reasonable. Shop on Howard street near Franklin, Man chester, Iowa. 95tf W.N.BOINTOR. J. F. MoEWBN. BOYNTON ft MoBWEN, CX7ATCHMAKERS, Jewelers and Engravers 1. VV dealers In Watohes, Clocks, Silver and Plated Ware, Fine Jewelry, Spectacles, Cutlery, Musloal Instruments, eto.. Main street. A. ealer in furniture etc., and undertaker, Main Street. F. WERKMEISTBR, GENERAL DEALER IN FURNITURE, AJF Coffins. Picture Frames, Etc. A oomplete retook of Furniture and Upholstery always on hand, at prices that defy competition. A good Hearse kept for attendance at funerals, fiarl ville, Iowa. J.H.ALLEN. pILOTHING and Gents furnishing goods. Cor ner Main and Franklin streets. L. R. STOUT, flLOTHING and Gents furnishing goods, City Hall Block, Franklin Street. KIDDELL ft CO., fvHY GOODS, Carpets, Millinery, Hats and J-J Caps, Boots and Shoes, eto., Main St, Manchester, Iowa. A. THORPE. •PROPRIETOR OF "KALAMITY'S" PLUN 1 der Store and Dealer In Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Notions, eto. Masonic Block, Manches ter, Iowa MARTIN GOLLOB1TZ MERCHANT GRASSFIELD BROS., (Successors to Seth, Brown.) TNSURE YOUR PROPERTY against cyclones I and tornadoes In the old reliable rhoenlx Insurance Co., BRONSON A CARR, Agents. HOLLISTER LUMBER CO. UMBRR and all kinds of building materials, li Posts and Ooal. Corner of Delaware ana Madison stroets JFC**. RTFA-ERED AT TI1B POSTOMCB AT HAHCBBSTEK. IOWA, AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER, t, fitted correctly in a pair of GOOJJ SHOES AT LOW PRICES. Lie m'S tes shoes warranted to wear, sizes 9 to eeemBmem ATTORNEYS, 3. W. DUNHAM. B. D. STILES W. £J. HORH1S DUNHAM. NORRI5 ft STILES. ATTORNEYS AT LAW AND NOTARIES *V Public. Special attention given to Collec tions Insurance, Real Estato and Loan Agts. Office in City Hall Block. Manchester, la. $1.35 12 2 TE'JY W flanchester, t: Iowa Our Business Directory. GEO. S LISTER, tTARDWARE. STOVES, TINWARE, ETC. -LJ- Keeps a flrst-olass tinner and does all kinds of repairing with neatness and dispatch. Store opposite First National Bank, Main St. THOS. T. CARKEEK A RCHITECT AND BUILDING SUPERIN TENDENT, S. E. Oor. 8th and Main St., Dubuque, Iowa SCHARLES ft SEBECK. Mtap: ERCHANT TAILORS and Gents Furnish Goods. Bradley & Sherman bUlf»., Man chester, Iowa. HARRY STEWART. DEALER jn Groceries, Provisions, Fruits, etc. Franklin Street, Manchester, Iowa. CAL. ATKINSQN. TiEALER in Groceries, Provisions, Fruits, otc. AJ Masonic Block, Manchester, Iowa. WM. DENNIS. .""R, Tk 111 manner. saviS' faction guaranteed. Plans and estimates fur nished. Work taken in town or country. Shop My the stand tower on West Sifis of river. E. S. COWLBS. /"1ITY DRAYMAN. Am prepared to do all *. u.ne- Manohestor, Moving household goods and pianos a specialty. All work will receive prompt attention. A share of your patronage Is solicited. Charges right. Give your draying to a man who has come to stay. B. CLARK. T)RY GOODS, Notions, Carpets, Gents fur L/ nishing goods, eto. Franklin street. QUAKER MILL CO. •OUR and Feed, Manufacturers of the cele brated White Satin and White Pearl Flour. GREGG ft WARD. D-.tSper\street.dealers&c-Paints, ruggists and in Oils, Wall Sto51°nery rranklln J-' entiit. Office over Ander & PhlUpp's Drug Store Corner Main and Franklin streets, Manchester Iowa. Telephone 196. I7tf EI E. NEWCOMB. 17U TAILOR—Fine suits made to order and guaranteed to lit. Prices reason able, Shop first door north of Globe Hotel. 5tf MANCHESTER LUMBER CO. UMBER and Builders Materials, Potts and Ooal West slrW near depot. RAOKET STORE. T|RY GOODS, Clothing, Hats, Caps, Boots, XJ Shoes, notions, eto. West side Franklin treev south of Main. Atwator's block, W. A.ABBOTT. T)RUGS, Wall paper. Stationery, Paints, Oils eto. City hall blook. ANDERS ft PHILIPP DeaieJ£.iIV??rug".' WBi' Paper' Stationery, 01s oto- Corner of Main and ranklln streets. Office over Clark & Lawrence's PETER BOARDWAY. D.ealer In flour, feed, hay, straw, Maquoketa stucco and common and Atlas cement, •telephone 113. Lower Franklin Street. NOBLE ARNOLD. (GROCERIES, Provisions, Fruits, eto. First aoor north of Delaware County Bank. PBTBRSON BROS. ln„G,roS?rt6s. Provisions, Crockery, Frult8,etc. Main Street. T. F. MOONEY. A ^^{Successor to Lee Bowman.) TLACKSMITH and Wagonmaker, Delhi, Work done MCINTOSH. Will meet all oompetltlon, promjltly and In a work- uharKea PAINTINGt0 reasonatile. Your patronage solicited. isu C. E. PRATT., AND PAPER HANGING, I am •Sry0?, 4° l18!161 Iiangmg andjualntlnR short notice, in town or country, Win irlYe Imates on all work In my line. Leave orders on s. estiinates on all work in mylTne! at H. c. Smith's drug store J, M. PEARSE. TUSTIU O OR. D. BROWN. }E OF THE PEACE AND COLLECT .M 1*?° AJiAUii AnU WiililSUT OR. All business entrusted to htm given Office in City Hall block prompt attention second floor. Mason Work. I am prepared to furnish estimates and guar antee satisfaction on all kinds of Mason work. C. P. MILLER, Manchester, Iowa, Chimneys Cleaned. I have got a patent devise for cleaning chim neys, If you want yours cleaned leave orders for me at Heth Brown's or Graham & Son's. I doali kinds of mason work and white wash* lpgt build chimneys and cisterns and do repairs. •All work warranted to give satisfaction. 8tf JOHN TOWSLEE. Horses Wanted. A few good horses for eastern markets, must be souua and In good condition. Enquire at my "•Of on Union street In Manchester. Wtf T. W. ROBINSON Homeseekers' Excursion Tickets. To nearly all points in tbe United States on sale at all ticket ofllces of the Chi cago Great Western Hailway on tbe first and third Tuesdays of May and June at the very low homeseekers' rate of one fare plus $2,00 for the round trip. Tickets good for return within 21 days from date of sale. Persons contem plating a trip will save money by calling on any agent of the Chicago Great Western Ky aDd obtaining detail of in formation regarding the homeseekers' rateB or addressing F. H. Lord, G. Small families are not the rule among I the English upper ten. The average is six or seven. The queen is the mother of nine and the princess of W ales of six children, Lor I Abergavenny is the father of ten, the duke of Argyll of twelve, the dowager countess of Dud ley is the mother of seven children, the earl of Ellesmere boasts of eleven, the earl of Inchiquin of fourteen and the earl of Leicester of eighteen. Among the employes in the treasury department at Washington are three or four blind women typewriters, and so satisfactory haB their work been that it is proposed to engage more next year, Their work is as good as the beBt of the operators with full sight, it is said, and haB forced their superiors to expect as much from them in dictation and copying as if they wore in complete possession of their faculties. What Imperialism Means. "I oppose this novel, un-American policy of imperialism because the grounds on which its advocates sup port it are puerile, inconsistent and dis honest because it Involves the exist ence of a standing army to menace liberty and to oppress labor by dimin ishing wages because it is cowardly to Invade the rights of the weak while re specting thoBe of the strong because it would divorce the American flag and the American constitution by sending the one where the other cannot go be cause it is a policy of inconceivable folly from a material point of view,and a policy of unspeakable infamy from a moral point of view. "I favor the traditional American policy of expansion bccause I want this republic to continue in the path which leads to higher achievements of pesce and progress because I want this coun try to remain the land where the patriotic workingman who produces, is more honored than the paid fighting man who destroys where the laborer's overalls enjoy equal dignity with the Boldier's uniform where a dinner pail is more highly esteemed than a knapsack where a spade is deemed more valuable thau a musket, a hospital than a bat tery, a school than a fortress where the enduring glory of justice is pursued and the vain-glory of conquest de spised where the flag which typilies liberty and the constitution which se cures it, enshrined in the hearts, sus tained by the arms, glorified by the memories of a free people, Bhall re main invincible, indestructible, insepar able forever and forever,"—Bourke Oockran in St. Louis Post-Dispatch Oen.ua Queries. The blank schedules to be used In the next census are uow being distributed by the census office to the enumerators, who will start to work on June 1. The schedules contain questions which some persons may think prying, pur poseless, or excessive In number. But their number end character have been determined by congress, not by the cen sus office, and all of them have been asked in previous censuses. The only important change since 1890 iB that some questions have been abandoned. People are often offended at the question, "How old are you?" and are apt to wonder what use the govern ment can make of their replies. Taken as a whole the replies are BB Important as any class of information the census office collects. Age returns penetrate and elucidate every other branch of statistical knowledge. They show where child labor is prevalent, atd where the proportion of persons able to support themselves is large or small. They reveal the great number of col ored children and the short life of the negroeB under present conditions. They make it possible to ascertain whether the average length of lite is increasing or decreasing, how many men the na tion contains who are capable of voting or of bearing arms, and whether the relative number of children is increas ing or decreasing. In Mohammedan or semi-civilized countries like India householders are often unwilling to answer the question regarding the sex of persons in the house, but in civilized countries where the sexed are regarded as on an equal ity, such unwillingnesB.does not appear. The answers to the questions show that in nearly all cities the females out number the males and that the same IB true of moBt of the states along the Atlantic coast. The belief is wide spread that taking the world in general there are more females alive at any given time than males, and that if it were not for immigration there would be more females in the United States than males. But censuB statistics show that we cannot explain the great excess of males (over one and a half million) in the United States by immigration alone, for when the foreign-born are left out of account, there are still above 600,000 more males than females. Few would dispute tbe necessity for asking questions regarding race. All arguments regarding the future of any particular race in thiB country, like the Indian, tbe negro, or the Chinaman, must hinge upon the returns in the census. With the Indians, moreover, it is of the highest importance to learn what success tbe policy of tbe govern ment-has met with in establishing them apart from their tribes and reservations and whether such Indians are increas ing or decreasing. P. & T. A., 113 AdamB St. Chicago. 17W8 uni 1 sn HURRAH FOR First-class Horse Shoers. Also PLOW WORK and GEN ERAL REPAIRING. PRICES RIGHT! CALL AND SEE US1 At foot of Franklin street. Some mothers may shrink from stat ing the number of children they have had and the number who are living. But from the answers to these ques tions, the country will learn whether the native American population is hold ing its own, or whether, as some have claimed,It is being gradually supplanted and displaced by the children of recent immigrants. In tbe light of Buch explanations,and only a few of the most important ques tions have been touched upon, it may perhaps be clear to the public that no question has been ordered by congress, or has been asked b'" which answered^ been asked by the census office, if properly and correctly sred, will not lead to suggestive idlng wore, inferences regardlni people and their suggestive tbe American tifbefte a? nen tlie Snn's Gone Down. By Eliza J. Carr. Wiiou Ine suns gone down In the glowing wost, And the tolls and caros of tho day are done, While swift o'er meadows the cool winds come, Bringing the scent of tho forest trees And hedgerows sweet, with each freshening breezo, On the cottage porch wo sit and rest, 'Wliero the blossoming woodbine sways and swings, To the merry song that tho orlckot sings, Then a smile has takon the place of a frown— When Oil, blessed hour of tho even-tldet When tho din of labor has seemed to cease, And naught can mao thy perfect peace While the dews of heaven are kindly lent,' To All their hearts with a glad content, Then we drluk of the joy of tbe whole earth wido, Again our strength and hope renew. While gathering courage to dare and do, And we think of those who have won renown— When Tho Sun' j- Gone Down Within the room with voices sweet, There are white robed children murmuring low, An old sweet strain of long ago How one of old did sweetly rest Xn pastures green, on tho grasses breast And by quiet waters his Lord did meet. Then the father sits by the lamp's bright glow, And reads with a manner grave and slow, Of Christ's deciple who feared to drown— When Tho Suns „v bono Down Whllo the hymn is sung and the chapter read, We sit and listen an.l whisper there, A low "Amen" to the eirne it prayer, That Is sent to the One on the great, white throne. That he will comfort and keep His own, And mako them ever Ills path to lit!ad. Then the mother prays for her wayward boy. That he may become her pride and joy, And travel safely from oross to crown- When The Sun's Gone Down **, Though tho incon shines bngnt on tne cottage floor. Such a mist has gathored before our oyos, Wo scarcely can see the way that lies So plainly bofore us. But we resolve, To please those who love us and- those we love, As we grope our way to the chamber door. Oh, 'twould make them open their eyes no doubt, If Uioy knew all a follow thinks about. Ere sleep comes slowly his cares to drown— Wbcn Tho Sun's Gon° Down. A Big Corn Area. Everything points to an enormous area of corn this year, says The Na tional Stockman. The uses of corn are multiplying. The amount sold from the farms Is increasing every year and BO is thequanity fed to animals. Cattle, hog, sheep and horse feeding are all growing industries as far as consump tion of com is concerned, for they are taking more of it every year. Uuch range stock that formerly went to mar ket almost entirely off grass is now finished with corn. The mutton indus try has been to a great extent trans formed Into a lamb fattening business. In these end other directions, such as manufacturing and exportation, the consumption of corn iB surely gaining on tbe production. Dairy and Stock Notes. Keep a clock at the barn, "lest we forget". The combination—corn, clover, cows, cash. Don't compare your best grade to some other fellow's worst pure-blood. Look out for the horse whose owner Is not willing to have him tried before purchasing, Beputable dealers now permit three days' to a week's trial by responsible persons who are bona ilde dealers. Do you remember how much better the cow did laBt summer when there was a much larger per cent, of wattr in her food than there is in hay and dry meal? Then wet tbe rations of dry meal with warm water. A young horse that isn't afraid of anything is rare and valuable. Hold onto him. A friend has Buch a mare and refused S200 'or her recently. "I decided Bhe was worth $200 to me if she was to the other man, and so I kept her", be said. When some of us were boys tbe farmers used to think that it made "cattle tough" to stand out through the cold days, shivering from head to foot. They did not Beem to know that cold takes off a large share of animal heat which they can get only from food, and that the more they are exposed the more food they will need. Most folks know better now.—Farm Jour nal. Scours in (Jalves Calf scours are nsually due to ne or more of three causes First, and most frequent, damp, ill ventillated and fil thy quarters, or badly cleaned feed ing vessels. Filth or decaying milk generate ptomaines or poison germs that set up the disease. The vessel from which any animal is fed milk should be rinsed with cold water Im mediately after using, and then scalded everyday. After scalding it should be set in the Bun to dry, drain and sweeten Second, feeding cold milk that chills the young calf and checks digestion. From 00 degrees to 100 degrees is the proper temperature for calf milk. Third too long time between feeding, as a consequence the calf gets so hungry that It gorges itself when fed. From two to three quarts is as much as an ordinary six weeks old calf should be fed not lesB than three times a day un til it beginB to take solid food. The remedy is to feed sparingly for a da or two. Give one or two ounces of castor oil in a little milk, end two hours later MANCHESTER, IOWA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1900. give a tablesposnful or teaspoonful the following in a little milk from a bottle In which an egg has been beaten. Tincture of ginger,' four ounces tinc ture of opium, three ounces spirits of camphor, two ounces: tincture of rhu barb. two ounces and essence of pepper mint, two ounces. Mix, In very bad cases give every two hours in mild cases give every four to six hours, until the discharges become more natural. If the calf is small and young, one ounce of oil and a teaspoonful of the mixture will be a dose Keep the calf warm and dry.—Jersey Bulletin. "SHOVING THE QUEER tfhe Graceful War In Which Cou terfelten Pas. Their Product. "Counterfeit money 'shovers' form S^tluct class of criminals," said an old federal officer. "They have nothing to d^wlth making the 'queer,' but simply pdt It In circulation. They go about their work very systematically and re duce the chances of detection to a mini mum. "A woman shover. for example, starts out to unload on the big retail stores. Her dress Is quiet, but elegant and she has the surface appearance of refined lady. In her hand Is a pocket book containing one bad bill and number of good ones. She goes Into a store, makes some trifling purchases, tenders the counterfeit and pockets the change. As she passes out she brush es against a boy, who slips her anoth er queer bill and then drops back a few paces in the crowd. "In that way she makes the rounds, and If she understands her business she can get rid of an astonishing num ber of counterfeits in the course of a few hours. If the bill she offers Is de tected on the spot, she never attempts any argument. 'Dear meP she ex claims. 'I wonder If I have any more of the horrid things!' And thereupon she empties her pocketbook on the counter and asks the clerk to examine the money and see whether it Is all right "In 09 cases out of 100 that disarms suspicion at once. If she happens to be arrested, only one bill Is found In her possession, and there Is nothing to disprove her assertion that she receiv edit somewhere In change. Meanwhile the boy who carries the roll quietly disappears. Often he sells newspapers as blind. 'Have a paper, mlssT* he will cry and hands the Bhover a bill under the folded sheet Altogether It is a highly skilled trade. The upper class shovers are very seldom caught" —Mew Orleans Times-Democrat A COLONY OF YONSONS. Kaajf of That Name In Bueineea In Wlaconaftm Town. "TTp in the central part of Wlscon «lD.'sald a Chicago traveling man who had' got tired talking about the trusts, "there Is a town that Is Inhabited al most exclusively by 'Yonsons.' The name of the man who keeps tbe hotel Is 'Yonson,' the drug store on the cor ner Is owned by a man named 'Yon son,' the proprietor of the establish ment that uses our goods Is a Mr. 'Yonson,' and I noticed when I was riding up town from the station that the grocer and the butcher were both 'Yonsons.' 'What's the matter hereT I said to the bus driver. 'Haven't you any peo ple In this town who don't belong to the "Yonson" family?* 'Vail, Ay tank dare been von or two,' he replied. 'What's your name? I asked. 'Yonson,' he replied. "I was about to make some further Inquiries as to the 'Yonson' family, but at that moment we passed the pub lic laundry, and, looking at the square^, red sign above the door, I read 'Yip Yonson, Laundry.' "Inside the Chinaman who owned the concern was busy ironing and per mitting his pigtail to hang down his back. I am almost convinced now that some of those 'Yonsons' are frauds."—Chicago Times-Herald. FIRST AMERICAN PATENT. Granted at Boaton In 1048 and Call ed a Monopoly. To the general court of Massachu setts belongs the honor of granting the first American patent. This was In 1618 and was then designated as The patent was Issued In this form: "JENKE8 MONOPOLYE. "At a generall Courte at Boston the 0th of the 8th Mo 1018. The cor*t con sid'inge ye necessity of raising such manlfactures of englns of mils to go by water for speedy dispatch of much worke with few hands, and being suffi ciently informed of ye ability of ye pe tition to peforme such workes grant his petition (yet no Othr per sen shall set up or use any such new Invention, or trade for 14 yeares wthout ye li cense of him tbe said Joseph Jenkes) so farr as concerneB any Buch new In vention, & so It shall be alwayes In ye powr of this co'te to restrain ye ex portation of such manufactures & ye prizes of them to moderation If occa sion so require." This Inventor, Joseph Jenkes, or Jenks, as It would now be spelled, came from Hammersmith, England, settled in Lynn In 1018 and died In 1082-88, aged 81. He was a black smith and machinist made the dies for the coining of tho "Pine Tree" money and built tbe first fire engine in this country, altogether a man of great Inventive genius and the ancestor of a large number of descendants. One of his sons removed to Rhode Island, where he built several mills.—Boston TranscrlDt Worth Hli While to Flatter. Art Critic—Your portrait of Snag glns, the multimillionaire there, has a fine technique, but It doesn't look tho least like him. Fashionable Portrait Painter—Hush! How could I ever get $2,000 for It If It aid F—Boston TUDBQ^ Does Coffee Agree With You. If not, drink Grain-o—Made fiom pure grains, A lady writes: "The first time I made Graln-o I did not like it but after using it for one week nothing would induce me to go back to coffee." It nourishes and feeds the system. The children can drink it freely with great benefit. It is the strengthening sub Btance of pure grains. Get a package today from your grocer, follow tbe di rections in making it and you will have a delicious and healthful table beverage for old and young, loc. and 25c. ECONOMY Shonld be practiced in every household. Do ou use Quaker Mill Flour? If not have you ever stopped to consider that you can save ioc to 15c per sack by so doing. By buying home flour you not only save the freight, but you get good flour also. Every sack of QUAKER rilLL FLOUR is guaranteed to be equal to anything on the market—with no exceptions. Try it and get your money back if it does not please you. The genuine has "A Quaker on every Sack" Quaker Mill COMPANY. J. W. MILES. Prest. M. P. LEROY, Cashier B. F. MILES, Asst. Cashier. R, R. ROBINSON 3d V. President, H. C. HAEBERLB.ist V. President. prst Nations 1 BANK, MANCHESTER. IOWA. CAPITAL. $50,000 General Banking Sushess WM. C. CAWLEV CHA3. J. SEEDS, President. Cashier. R. W. TIRRILL, C. W. KEAGY, Vice President. Asst. Cashier. DELAWARE COUNTY State Bank CAPITAL $60,000 —DIRECTOR®— Wm. 0. Cawley. H. F. Arnold. W Edward P. Seeds. G. W. Dunham, Chas. J, Seeds. M. H. Willis too W. G. Kenyon. —•. ae C. W. Keagy. INTEREST PAID on Time Deposits. Prompt attention given to all business. Pas senger tlokets from and to all parts of Europe dlreot to Manchester, (or sale. YJONG TIME MORTGAGE J,OANS Made, Bought and Sold. a monopoly. It was confined to the re gion controlled by Massachusetts, and the one IBSUO apparently Included all the Invention of the Inventor connect ed with engines that depended upon water for their motive power. The limit of the monopoly was 14 years, and the court not only retained power to forbid exportation, but to prevent exorbitant charges upon the public for their «se. SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES For the storage of valuablo papers, etc. for rent. Banking House Henry Hutchinson Hutchinson's Building, Manchester, Iowa. CAPITAL, $70,000 JOSEPH HUTCHINSON, Cashier. COLLECTIONS Fxcaaptly Mew5.e. DEPOSITS on Time, Interest Al lowed and other deposits received. DRAFTS sold on New York, Chloago and Dubuque also on Great Britain and Ire land and European Cities. TICKETS sold to and from all European ports via Cunard or Allen or White Star Steamship Lines. THE LATEST WORK OF Fiction by the best authors can be purchased at the the Postoffice Newstand All the current maga zines and also a com plete line of stationery, tobacco and confection- 1 ery. NIC MALVIN Proprietor. -A- vS'.v- •. '"i- v'-• i. -.v 'v- VOL. XXVT—INTO 9,* IT PAYS Transacted. Interest Paid on Time Deposits. SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOB KENT. DIEECTOES. 8. B. Robinson, M. F. LeRoy, W. Miles, W. H. NoiTls, M.Carr, H. Beehler, H. A. Granger, A. H. Blake, B. F. MUea, H. O. Haeberle, F. J. Atwater. COBBBBPOITDBN 'X'U. First National Bank, Dubuque, Iowa. Central National Bank New York City. Commercial National Bank. Chloaso, TIT. good and reliable Paintf We have the I PAINT in several different colors su'table for barns. Call in and see our line and secure our prices. j* Respectfully.^ ANDERS ®lje democrat. RATES OF ADVERTISING SPACE, One inch Two Inches.. Three inches. Four inehes.. Five inches., SGHAPliES & SEBECK- lw tw 1M 3M •1 00 •160 ttffO •4 nn MM) 1 All ft Ml ft 7ft von SI ou 3 00 4 RO 7 on snn a 60 76 6 75 10 00 IH DO a tw 4 AO 7 00 18 00 unm 4 50 ft0 8 00 ift on 6 00 1HX) IH 00 »oo 40 nn 80 18 00 28 00 SO 00 80 00 Column... Column.... Ooe Column.. AUSTIN D. BROWN We have just received a large and complete line of Spring Furniture of the latest patterns and styles, which we invite you to call and inspect. Wecall especial attention to our large and complete line of Couches MADE on honor—to last—for com= fort. BROWN to paint your roof and barn. Why not use a We are closing out our HATS at nearly cost. Schafles Sebeck. the quickest and best route to Delaware county homes'' r™ f| use the MANCHESTER DEMOCRAT. It is relig iously read in the office, the shop, the factory, on the street and in the home. Your ad in its columns is bound to bring business. FOLEY'S HONEY® TAR MTHIORUT THROAT and LUNQ REMEDY. I FOLEY'S BANNER SALVE o-iREcao- IV 110 00 15 no so CO 95 00 SO 00 40 00 65 00 12ft 00 #Jr. ordered discontinued bo contract will be eharved ac oordlcf to aboTe seale. Business cards, not exeeedlag six lines, 15.0 pw yw. ten oeilU 'or tbe lint »^2t^ rt»nflT"cei,u,perUne'ore"h ,ub"e The FURNITURE MAN- \E^TJ/BUSHED\ /S5/ DOKT NEGLECT YOVR Roor.r BARrt. N\sk75f°\iwizswm To PAIAT EITHER WITH LX.L ROOF and BAR* PAIrtT made by HEATn&nuiiGAn flFfl.CO., CHICAGO. V. S.A. IXL AMD ALLOTftER OMftC novrn niLUG ar pairt frqwos PHARrUCY & PHILIPP I I I I SSi ,' 4 TI4 I is a Healing Wonder, AC IA A-f^-p .S'