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v i ? AGRICULTURALIMPLEMENTS o A SRR s, ST MDA e M B v g i ORI - e o~ — / [/fi"’("""m T B RO YA T g e S e e Ll L o S B Tt THE DAILY BEE--SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1884, VAN BRUNT, THOMPSON & COMPANY, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - IOWA. N. C. 'f"fifiémpson (G00DS ARE STILL IN THE LEAD, AND BOUND TO STAY THERE. THEY ARE THE BEST IN THE MARKET. \/ It don’t make any differencs what our competitors say, for v | our customers know the N. C. Thompson goods are ahead of "WNss P e oo et anything 1n their line. The N. C. Thompson, Toungless Gultivator” This tongueless Cultivator is a new implement, thoronghly tested and bound to succeed. - N O TOOMEION | Iron Beam Spring Cultivator Will be about the same a3 last year, and everybody knows that it is as near perfection as any- thing ever put on tte market. You Should Have This Cultivator. Your Trade NeedsIt. ' WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF N. C. THOMPSON'S SULKY AND COMBINED GULTIVATOR. S o g “ N. C. Thompson Double Row Stock Cuttor.” We would like to Show Cuts of all Our Gdoods, but space will not permit. If you need a e N. C. Thompson Chain-Gear mower.” This Mower we will sell together with the Mower we have sold heretofore. This Mower is run by a Chain & Sprocker wheel, making it the Lighiest Rumng Mower Ever Ma IT IS THE LATEST THING OUT, AND WILL TAKE THE PLACE OF OTHER GEAR MOWERS. WEH SEOW a CUT OF .. The N C Thompsen Double Row Stalk Cutter: We huve the Single Row Cutter, but as everybody knows the success of these Stalk Cutters, we will not enlarge. = LAY The N. C. Thompson is the one you Want. WE WILL STILL CONTINUE TO HANDLE TEXE: RKETCEITUN W AG-ON. WE ARE HEADQUALTERS FOR ANYTHING xOU WANT : Garriages, Buogies, Spring Wagons, Harrows, Pumps, Shellers, REAPERS, MOWERS, PLOWS, CULTIVATORS, ETC. Don’t Forget! We have the N. C. Thompson Hay Rake. “The N. U. ‘ - COME AND SEE US. IT WILL DO YOU GOOD. “The Celebrated °*5hmw=é°m" : VAN BRUNT THOMPSQN & CO., Nos.12, 14, 16, 4th Street, Council Bluffs, Iowa. The Doctor’s Mistaxe. J or, worse, pitying him and his bargain, [ hard, very bard and cruel, to be forced |always my luck to happen out just ac|led them, than that afforded by his mute \ One of the old mistakes of the LEFT OUT ON LONESTAR MOUNTAIN A light Iaggh ho gave vent to hers start: | to moet them again, What had he dono | such times, 1 dow's meo the necessity | example when he reached the race. Loap. P AV E \ i i lec. him a little, it sounded 8o unmirth- | to sufter this mortification? For a mo- |anyhew of trapesing round the claim now | ing into it without w word, he at on fif:s;gno‘:::r saylshlg}{ ct‘fi-;i‘rtxgd:iei': R PR BTARIE. ful, and so unlike, as he odly fancied, [ ment he actually hated this vulgar treas- | if we calculate to leave it to-night.” began to clear away the broken timbers —WITH— ! Ry fiihosere hichthad Been —_— what he really thought. But~ what did lure that had forever buried under its| Both men waited to observe if tho |and driftwood. Fired by the spectacle groep it : [Continued.] he thi gross ponderability the light and care- |suggestion was taken up by the Right | of what appeared to be a new and utterly dmgbalGtopamim ey gl sl e i Nothing meau nor rovengeful; 1o, they |less past, and utterly orushed out the |and Left Bower, moodily plodding ahead. | frivolous game, the men gayly leaped It is not to be denied that the ST ":sc“‘)“'"%_;“;ll"d 8! a““" "‘l’“'" never would say that. When he had { poetry of their old indolent happy exis- | No response following, the Judge shame- | after him, and were soon engaged ina Docters have done great things for irccnonted ot o oo placo in | taen out all the surface gold and put the [ tence. lessly abandoned his companion. fascinating struggle with the impeded the world. But when it comes right {22 uufrequented part of the mountain, "{:ou wouldn’t stand snoopin’ round | race. The Judge forgot his lameness in | 4 5 instead of lettin’ the Old_Man_ got used ;]l)rin;(ing over a broken sluice box; Union | KJ i 5 b vl > | mine in working order he would send| He was sure to find them waiting a e the real curine of disese, | above an inacoossible canyon, and refl ec PR e A © | the them cuch a draft for a thousand dol- | tho cross roads where tho coach came it must be admitted that Brown's | ot have reached d“‘uf‘:“:‘t‘:!‘l‘c‘g"w}f;',‘: 't |lara. OF couraeif they were sick or poor | past. It was throe miles avay, and yet fto the idea alone? No; T could see all | Mills forgot his whistle in a happy imita- Iron Bitters has done enough to ) t0 | took place, a foverish ingulso led him to he would do more. One of the first, the | he could get there in time if he hastened. | along that he was takin' it in—takin’ it | tion of Chinese coolie’s song. Neverthe- earn 'the generous gratitude of this - : overish ; very first things ho should do, would be | [t was a wise and practical conclusion of |in— kindly but slowly, and I reckoned | less, after ton minutes of this mild dissi- i titnde o descond o fow rods in the track of the | (4 i them aach & handsomo gun, and | his evenings's work—a lame and impo- | the Lest thing for us to do waa to git up | pation, the pastimo flagged: Union Milla whole present generation, including anche. ~The frequent reccurrence of | ¢e)j them that he-only asked in return | tent lusion to his evening’s indigna- |and git until he'd got found it.” The | was beginning to rub his leg when a would perhaps the medical profession. There are ) outorop and angle mude this comparative- | 1,y old.fashioned riflo that once was hus. | tion. No matter. They Judge's voice was slightly raised for the | distant rumble shook the earth, no mysteries or secrets about the | ¥ S8 ) n‘“;‘? 19108500 - AToun A 'l‘lj Looking back at tho moment in after |at tirst think he had come to weakly fol- | benefit of the two before him. compounding of Brown’s Iron Bit- | 102'¢ echoof lus own voice scemed only | ge, 1y e wondered that, with this excep- “Didu't he say,” remarked the Right pounding 5 e a dull impertinence to the significant | ¥ ™ e i B i ddenly and faci ters. ‘This preparation of ironis the | ilence, Ho turned to reascend: the fur. | A0 he made no plans for his own ower, stopping suddenly and facing ' [ro BE cONTINUED, low them—perhaps they would at firat [2oi28 coNapFRLy] doubt his stery, No matter. He bit his Hoods Sarsaparilla h foh il o ; fituro, or tho way he should dispose of | lips to keep down the foolish, rising tears, | the other V't he may that that ; o only preparation which will not in- | rowed flank of the mountain ivure, way Q1AL A o "" | In designed to meet the wants of those v juretecth or stomach. In this it is |luy full in the moonlight. To his exeited | Ha hOMY aoauised wenlth, L binwas the | Bat sl momt gty ormars, il Bex, p“r"‘,“‘,‘i’:i“‘]::“mg, in o ot him have | w1y noud o medicing to build them up, ) o 3 28] i i i ’ s ¥ \ h o 5 iV o) i i ir beyond comparison bcl‘.‘“ than the | fancy o dozen luminous starlike points | ¢'tho five partoces o lic awako at uight |in the dark ills, swathod in luminous | Union Mills turned appoalingly to the kn‘.‘du:HLI'.T.Tllu?l,;{:fiff:lnl;urfi{l.‘(l-';:’;,.‘,:}'i::l ¥ other preparations, whicn are mis- y 9 wdibly comparing with each other what | mists aud hushed in the awo of its own | Judge. That gentleman was forced to [ 7 iy TP Hit WG HE, OF CEEROCEER they would o in case they made ustrike, |loveliness. Eero and ther the moon had | reply, " “Yos; I romomber distinctly ho | we ite: ety the st s e - chievous and injurious. he faced them. Throwing ‘his arm over . You need not fear a mistake in the luf above him, he supported him 2 , PPty #olf for & moment by what appeared to trying Brown's iron Bitters. Yous {},.°, " iuotion of the solid rock, It Ho remembered how, Almaschar-like, | Iid her calm face on luke and overflow, | said it. 1t was one of the things I was they nearly separated once over a diffor- | and gone to sleep embracing them, until | particular about on his account,” re- Sarsaparilla, 1t works like magic, reach- ing every part of the human body through ERIE e, S i el hede prvool) d rock. It} 0 in'this dispossl of a hundred thous- ole plain seomed to bo lifted into |aponded the Judge, with tho air of hav. | {o% ¢yery part of thehus : : the focble, and new 1o 0 the dys. | i toset 1on 1y o io msed himsc | 4,q dollars that they nevor had, nor ex- | infinito quist. Walking on os ina droam, |ing arrangod it all himeolf with, the now | (18 Poob i b ol And your work is done for all time pected to have. Ife remembered how the black, impenetrable barriers of skirt. | trader 1 remember I was easier in my Union Mills always beyan his careor s n [ing thickets opened and gave way to| mind sbout it.” - ; millionaira by & “square meal” at_Dl- | vague distances that appeared impossible| **But didw’t ho say,” queried my Loft COMMEROIAL, ——— inonico's; how tho Right Bo wer's initial | to reach—dim vistas that seemed unap- | Bower, also stopping short, *suthin’ COUNCIL, BLUYYS MARKKT, WE CHAL step was always @ trip home “to seo his | proachable. Gradually ho seowed to|avout its being contingent on' our doing wpring, 7i0; No, 3, 66c; re- f LENGE speptic. Children take it, not only | was simply a fragment detached from the 53 to time to come. ‘with sdfety, but with great advan. [outerap lying loosely on the Jedge, but itage. 6 apholding him by its own waight only Ho examined it with trombling fingers the encumbering soil fell from its sides, | 1o W85 FFE S R Bt e D come & o Jocted, 600; good domar i ; Loft B f pact of the mysterious night. [some work on the race! , B600; g d N N ING s sud loft its smooth and worn protuber- |, diately placato the parents of his bo- | lro was becoming as pulseless, as cal, as | - Tho Judgo turaed for support to Unian | ,, Gofti-<Lisalers ars payiug 880 for old. com 3 ; IMPROVED | uccn slistoning in the moonkight. It was|)oyod wich pricoless gifts (it may bo pa- | passionloss, Mills, however, who under the hollow | *" Aecoand o 206, j SOFT “‘E:‘lfi:”mku T ¢ aftor. | Fenthetically remarked that the parents| ~What was that?. A shot in the direc- | protenso of preparing for a long confor 600 per bale, O ERE el o '("‘ ‘:"T'"’" oeri|and the beloved one were as hypo- | tion of the cabin! yet #o faiut, no echo- | ence had luxuriously seated himself on a ht supply, 3 ELASTIC SECTION |yrord; o remombored that hie was 10t | ihetical asthe fortune)—and how the | low, s0 inefective in the vast silonce,thut {stump, The Judye sat_ down also, and | G 195 por 100 pounds, azod, dazzled, nor startled, Wt did not | yygu would wiake his first start asa|he would have thought it hisfancy but|replied hesitatingly: ‘“Well, yos! Us |, N ood—Good supply; prices at yards, 6 00@ come to him as a discoverv.or an accident a stroke of chance nor a «waprice of for tune, He saw it all in that suprem moment; nature had worked out their onpitalist by breaking a cortain faro bank |for the strange instinctive jar upon his | or him.” oal--Dallvarsd, haid, 11 80 por’ ons ol 7 in Sacramento. He himself had been | sensitive nerves, Was it an accident, or| ~ «Us or him,"” repeated the Right Bow- | 600 per ton! "|to produce a more durable material equally eloquent in extravagant fancy in | was it an inteational nigm:iw him! He|er, with gloomy irony. ‘“*And you ain't| Butter- {:lenty and in fair demand at 20 for street pavement than the ture s r heir | ()lose “penniless days—he who now was | stopped; it was not ropeated—tho silence | auite clear in . your mind if you | cremmery, 85c. Bioux Falls Granite: &aduction, What theirfeebl: B Ol ' 5 9 by s A quite clear in your mind are you, if you | “paps Thianty: 4 salo at 200 i1 moux lalls Grranite, m““yud Ipfllllludlwl‘l‘;"fi:(‘; h‘;‘l’l':l‘:]‘;:f; quite cold and impussive beside the more [re asserted itself, but this timo with an | naven’t done the work already! You're [ T aed—Fairhuics, wholesling at 1o Y ; ! ' extravagant reality. ominous death-like suggestion. /. sud- | just killing yourself with this spontane- | Poultry-Rendy xale; dealers are paying for BS o o Aot bl e | How difforent it might have boon! 1fden and terriblo thought crossed ~his | ous, promiscaous aud premature over. | chickens 124 trkeya, 15 OBDE! wmightior buv maco pationt €ovoos, The | they had only waited & day donger—if |ming. He cast ;flde bis pack and all en- | york; that's what's the matter with you.” b.X;:““?‘;‘.x‘,“";,“:fi';;fi: 00} ’:::m-:vn;';c; oabs slow eapping of the winter rains had | they had only broken their rosolves to | cumbering weight, took a deep breath, | * i rackon I heard somebody saysuthin’ | 208G %" or prime ok Ty * loosened the soil from the auriferous rook, | him kmdl{ and parted ia good will! How o FOR ANY AMOUNT OF TOHM H. F, LEHMANN, lowered his head and darted like a deer | about it being & Chinaman’s three day | “Flour—City our, 1 0G4 00, prTr——— ~———"""| oven while the swollen stream was carry- | he would long ere this :lMIB mlhe& to|in the direction of the challnege. job,” iuwrpoll(adlthe Left Bolwer, with | Brooms—2 95@3 00 per doz, . ing their i ‘enginos | 8reet the n with the ful news! How — equal irony; ‘‘out I ain't quite clear in my LIVE BTOCK, mported Beer | i s shuierd v 5t L8 LG dound i, sung it s i L gle arm could not Jigt the treasure he had | themselves hoarse, laughed down their| The exodus of the seceding partners of | “It'll be a sorter distraction for the 01d e g e g IN BOTTLES. found; what mattered that to untx thoe | enemies, and run up the flag triumphant- | ¢ho Lone Star elaim had been scarcely an bly—“kinder | packing, 500@5 10; mixed, 4 65@b 00, ! A 2 glittering stars would still tax botk skill |1y on the summit of the Lone Btar Moun- | i,y pouing one. For the first five minutes —_— " Erlauger,..... v+ ++++ Bavaria, | and patience! The work was done—the [taie! How they would have ecowned him | yfter quitting the cabin the procession| . Nobody taking the least notice of the t Culmbaeber, . . L Bavaria, | gosl was reacked—even his boyish impa- | the Old Man, the hero of the eamp! How| way straggling and vagabond. Unwonted | remark, Union Mills stretched out his —OR~— Pilaner:, L. . Bokemian | tience was content with that. wose | he would have told them the whole story, | exertion had exaggerated the lameness of | logs more comfortably and took out his . lowly to his fi long- | how some steange iusinct had impelled d feeble: f ral ipe. He had scarcely d: hen the r he i Baiger..: 50 Bremen. | Ll 4 ovol (rom his hasks aavatod 1| i 1o aarens. the summit, a0 how |12 Grodiaposed the odhers 0 obtrustve | Kught Bowor, wheeling suddauly, st oif MACA d DOMESTIC. in the crevice and quietly regained tho [wnothor step on that summit would | pysical tion. Union Mills limped |in the direction of the oreek. Hho Left Swd g Budweiser. ... 8t. Louis [summit. have precinitated him into the eanon'|ang whistled with affected abstraction;|Bower, after a slight pause, followed A . ANBBUEEE + v e s snssrnsrs St Louir, | 1t Was all hisown, Hisown by right|And how—but what i somebody elio | tho.Judge whistled sad limped with af- [ without a word. The Judge, wikely con- Bestls.. v Milvvamcoe, |of discovery under tho law of the land, |~Union Mills ar tho Judgo—had boon | focted curnestnes. The Right Bowr [ceiving it better to join the strongor Sohlitz-Pilaner Kilwsn‘lma' and without sccepting & favor from them. the firs 1scovorer gl 'y Dob|led the way with some show of definite | party, ran feebly after him, and It filled promptly. Samples sent and estimates given upon application. tSP“?“ Co. Ho recalled even the fact that it was his | Bave meauly kept the secret from him;| desigu; the Left Bower followed with his | Union Mills to bring up & week and vacil- Krug’s........ +oveer.Omaka. | prispecting on the mountain that firet [ bave selfishly “helped themselves and hn:s‘m his pookets, The two feebler |lating rear. Atlenta Ga, WM. MoBAIN & CO., Ale, Porter, Do nestic and Rhine | suggested the existence of gold in the |doue-~— natures, drawn together in unconscious| Their course. diverging from Lone Star DRY TETTER. Sioux Falls, Dakota. Wine, ED. MAURER, outcrop and the use of the hydraulic. He| “What you are doing now,” sympathy, looked vavgely ateach other for | Mountain, led them now directly to the - with Dy Teser of the had never abaudoned that belief, what-| The hot blood rusked to his cheek, a8 | support. bend of the creek—the base of their old Y many M.z:. A 1214 Farnam. —- o | @ver the others had done. He dwelt|if a strange voice ware at his car. Kora| *'Yousee,” said the Judge, suddenly, !ineffectual operations, Here was the lb:ty:l)uh:hnn. :‘::.::;...:'u:u.'.nm, s DISEASES OF THE somewhat indignantly ¢ himself on this | moment he could not believe that it came [as if triumphautly concluding an argu- | beginning of the famous tail-race that | B0 R MVt Y eral poisonand menmatism, oum circumstance, and half unconaciously {:um llnin own pale lips until h; h;mul mum,‘"hhua‘;m’t ;uyt:ldug r for a | skirted the new trade lcllullln Am} then he Tottar conti r:.’lyw row worse,and the (tching ¥ faeed defisutly toward the plain below. | himself speaking. He yuse to his feet, | youngfellow than independence. Nature, | lost its way in a swampy hollow. 1t wi it crazy. c0s . ) EYE & EAR But it was slocplag pescofully in tho ful | ingling with shame and. lugun hurriedly oak, points the way. Look at the | choked with debris; thin, yellow strean | dusdf1a'e iies heciiv, i ihe Fouult wae &y Stove ROp&il‘ WOrh, sight of the moon, without life or motion. | to descend the mouutain, 4 that once ran through it seemed to have the Tuiige vas entirely wall, th Marourial Polsouliig 109 South 14th 8¢, J, T. ARMSTRONG, M. D. o looked at the stars; it was still far| He would go to them, tell ¢hem of his & skunk hereabouts,” ssid . stopped work when thoy did, and gone | a5 (s swlis specific. Al live wuflerers should A e e &ay from midnight. His companions had uo | discovery, let them give him bis share, M who was supposed to be|into greenish liquidation. take it. "JAMES DUNNING, Loum e, Kv: furalshing Oculist and Auris doubt long since returned to the cabin to |and leave them torever. It was the only |gifted with aristocravically sensitive nos-| They had scarcel, poken during this | our treatise a;llk-od aud Bkin Diseases walled | burn prepare for their journey. They were |thing to be done—strange that he had|trils, *‘within ten miles of this place, | brief journey, and had received on other | free to sppleasta o L o fonnipig 0o, 1404 Parnam §0ost, opposite Paxton Hotel, Omaba, ) e e 4 h ; . ) . o Neb. . g discussing him--perhaps laughing at him, | not thought of it at once. Yet it was|like s not crossing the ridge. It is | explanation from the Right Bower, who Drawor 8, Atlanta Ga.