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"\.Dfl. R. Rice and F. C. Miller, B X Gentral offic THE DAILY BEE- WEDNESDAY, 'H,V,‘\ o 28 1882 7 COUNCIL BLUFES ©. 0. Coox & GO, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, City Market, Conneil Blufly, Tows, WHOLESALE FLOUR HOUSE, General Agenta for the Celebrated Millsot H. D. Rush & Co., Golden Eagle Flour, Leavenwoith, ansas, and Queen Bee Mi joux Falls, Dakota. Roterence, Smith & Critt v b STATIONERY AND PRINTER'S GOODS, — COUNCIL BLUFFS IOWA._____ TITLE ABSTRAGCT OFFICE. J. W QUIRE & CO. Lands and Lots Bou\%ht and Sold. MONEY TO LOAN AT LOW RATES, NOTARIES PUBLIC AND CONVEYANCERS. COUNCIL BLUFFS [OWA. - H. LARSON, 15 North Main Street. WHOLESALE DEALER IN SHOE FINDINCS. Ready-fitted uppers, in calt skin and kip, Oak and Hemlock SOLE LEATHER, snd al 00ds appertaining to the shoe trade. Gords sold a9 cheap as in the East. n, Council GO TO MRS, NORRIS' NEW MILLINERY STORE FOR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. PATTERN BONNETS AND CHILDREN'S HATS A SPECIALTY. 105 South Main Street. Council Bluffs Ig.‘ That never require crimping, at Mrs, J. J. Good's Hair Store, at Bvr'.crn never befere touched by Any other hair dealer. Also a full line of swi cte., at greatly reduced prices. Also gold, silver and colored nets. ~ Waves made from ladies' own hair. Do not fail to call before purchusing All goods warranted a9 represented. MRS. J. J. GOOD, 29 Main streec, Council Bluffs, Towa. HAIR GOODS. WATER WAVES, In Steck a;&h;nufa.ctur- ed to Order. Waves Made From Your Own Hair, TOILET ARTICLES, All Goods Warranted as Represented, and Prices Guaranteed. MRS. D. A BENEDICT, 337 W. Broadway, Council Bluffs; - - - Iowa. MRS, E. J. HARDING, M. D., elsewhere, Bethesda BATHING HOUSE! At Bryant’s Spring, Cor. Broadway and Union Sts. COUNCIL BLUFFS. Plain, Medicated, Vapor, Electric, Plunge, Douch,’ Shower, Hot and 'Cold Baths. Com: petent’ wale and female vurses and attendants always on hand, and the best of care and atten- tion given patrons tt:ntion given to bathing children. naud patrouage eolicited DR. A. H SrupLey & Co., 106 Upper Broadway. Treatment of chronic diseases CANCERS AND OTHER TUMOR Rheum, Scald Head, Dropsy, Rheuma- Fever and Mercur- sipelas, Salt inflamed and nluulntod lEy;:l id 0 % Kh: and l‘:; o e emormottsor Piles cured | M€dical Electrician ‘money refunded. Al diseases treated upon the principle of veget- able reform, without the use of mercurial pols- ons or the Knife, Electro Vapor or Medicated Baths, furnished 3 ewho desire them., Hernia or Rupture radicall s Einatic bere Trass and Biastor, which has AND GYGNECOLOGIST. cured by the use superior In the world, Graduste of Electropathic Institution, Phila- CONSULTATION FREE delphia, Penna, CALL ON OR ADDRESS Office Cor, Broadway & @lenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ia. COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. , Ia. LIVERY, Feed and Sale Stables, 18 North First Street, Bouquet's old stand, Coundil Blufts, Tows. WILLARD SMITH, Prop. W.D.STILLMAN, Practitioner of Hemeopathy, consulting Physician and Surgeon. Office and residence 615 Willow avenue, Coun~ el Bluf ows. The treatment of all diseases and lrlnh:l dit- fcultios peculiar to temales & specially. The Star Bakery, HOWARD & ROBIE, 227 MAIN 8T, Employ the best Bread Baker in the West; also & choice hand for Cakes and Ples, Bread dellvered to all parts of the city. FRESH FISH! Game and Poultry, B. DANEHY'S, 36 Upper Broadwi JNO. JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 314 BROADWAY, Council Bluffs, W. B. MAYES, Loans and Real Estate. Proprietor of y. Office JOHN STEINER, M. D, (Deutscher Arzt,) ROOM 5, E R 'S BLOCK, Council Bluffs, W. K. SINTON, DENTIST. 14 Pearl Street, Council Bluffs. Extractingand filling o specialty, First-class work guaranteed, Can always be found & DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, No, 14 Pearl Strect. Houts, 0 a, m. to 12, and 2 p, to 6 p, m. Residence, 120 croft st Telephonic connection ' with - - TIowa, betracts of Pottawattamie r of Broadway and Main , Town, DR. AMEL'A BURROUGHS, OEELC R No. 617 First Avenue Hours from 10 to 11 8, ., and 2 to 6 p. m. Merchants Restaurant J. A. ROSS, Proprietor. Corner Broadway and Fourth Streets, | Good accomwodations, good fare teous treatment S. E. MAXON, AROE I T B O X. f women and children a_spocialty P. 0. MONTGOMERY, M. D., FREE DISPENSARY EVERY SATURDAY, and cour- | t's block, Pearl trect rect. Office hours fron F. C. GLARK, |PRACTICAL DENTIST. One of lufls Office over savings bank, AOUNOIL BLUFFS, Pear] street, opposite the postofice, wicil Blufls REAL ESTATE, W. C. James, In connection with his law and actitioners in ¢ Eatly | DR, F. P, BELL EYE AND EAR SURGEON, WITH DR, CHA sollection business ud sells real estate Persor wishing to b property call 0, over Bushnel! k store, Pearl DEETKEN, r drug stor e | Blufls, fown, & A B¢ " EDWIN J. ABBOTT. s sehagpeire e, bt o JOHN LINDT, Justice ot the Peace and| Not: Public, . otary Publlo ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Will pra 416Broadway, Council Bluffs, Courts, ' 8p o o all State and United States Gerwan Langusge, Deeds aud mortgages drawn aull ackuowl dged FAR OFF MONTANA 1he Shepeerds of the Rocky Moun- tains-—Life in that High Region De- mand for Women, all of Whom Be- come Pretty in the Mountains -Ths Place to Renew the Race. of the &t. I Ox e Litrie Brackroor River, Montana, June 16, —This territory is becoming well known throughout the ) eastern states as a good country stock raising T'wo railroads enter it, one the Northern Pacific, com from the north, the other the Utah & Northern, a narrow-gauge, running from Ogden to Butte, are using such means as are known to railroads to ad- vertise and e srate the advan here, mineral and agricultural immense tide of emigration has flowed into this valley this spring, composed of poor pocple, with their familios, who find the country entirely different from what they expected to find There are more tramps to-day in this territory than in Missouri, Butte second Leadvillo, except that the cli- mate at Loadville s much milder than at Butte. Hundreds of idlers a day are run out of Butte by the vigilantes, SHEE RAISING. The shepherd’s life is *not a happy one,” but he has the assurance that by sticking to business his income will double itself overy year, He has 10 time to write psalms nor sigh his soul away after women, like David of old, nor are his circumstances pecu- liarly conducive to early piety or later superstition. His chief pleasure is to sce his ewes graze and his lambs suck and to poison coyotes His house is built of pine logs and furnished in bachelor style, and he is as free and independent as man can be. At 8 o'clock he gots his Winchester, a plug of tobacco and a small lunch, and starts out with two shepherd dogs. The herd, numbering 4,500, including lambs, poke along; the lambs, in one bunch, form the advance guard; the bucks and wethers graze together, and occupy one corner of the corral at night; and the ewes nibbla the grass and bleat for all that's out, so that a herd at a mile's distance sounds like the roar of Ningara. Thus they march along slowly, the dogs driving in any detachment that threatens to wander off and keeping the wholo col- umn on the march until they have gone four or five and sometimes ten miles. Then the halt is called. The shopherd finds a high point from which he looks down upon his sheep; the ewes find their lambs, the bleating ceases. This herd, when grazing, will cover about a mile or two of land. We sit on the top of a foot hill 2,000 feet above the valley, the sun is shining bright and hot; the air, however, is cool. We can look down on the Deer Lodge river, sco the town of Deer Lodge, while the houses look like 35 many shining boards lyi flat on the ground. The eye's vision is entirely too limited for the country. A green spot on the opposite table land, which appears about the size of a square on a checker board, is 160 acres ot land in oats. The sheep are at the farthest point, near two miles from us. At this distance a coyote can hardly be distinguished, So the shepherd gives a loud yell. Those near us run up and crowd around us. As the sound trav- els and catches the ear of each sheep, it raises its head and listens intently. Another yell and the whole band hud- dles toward the centre, A bunsh or them farthest away have not heardthe call, 80 the shepherd calls, ‘‘Ike! Here Ike! Way round them.” Ike starts off at arun, and after he has gone perhapa half a mile, he stops and looks back. ‘‘W-a.y around!” shouts the shepherd with a wave of bis hand to- ward the sheep. Then Ike goes on. Down yonder he has a stream to cro: He runs down to it, takes a drink, and then lies down to rest and lave himself in fta ice,cold waters. He is an old dog. After he had rested he appears trotting up the opposite bank, stops, looks back at us as if to apologize for his delay, and then trots on. He charges furiously at the sheep, as if to teach them a lesson, and then drives them back to the herd. The whole band must be moved every two hours, for a sheep may get on its back and suffocate, and this is the only way to discover such, ‘While Ike is away we send ‘‘Dick” after & coyote which has made its ap- arance on & hill off to the left, and is reconnoitring the situation. Dick chases it to the top of the hill, and the coyote chases him back. We wanted Corresponder « Republican, An Y. | to see a fight, but they did not come together. Then we opened on Mr. Coyote with two Winchester riflos and at the first shots he scampers off, but before he gets over the hill a ball has carried away his foreleg, which drags the ground as he scrambles up the hill on the other thres. At night when he has driven the sheep into the cor- ral the shepherd’s labor is at an end. His supper is ready, cooked in bache- lor's style, All the arable land along here for miles is taken up by ranchmen with- out familics, You might travel its entire length and not see a femalo ex- cept in town, A woman here has a a fictitious value —depending upon her scarcity—and the average hazel split- ter of the eastern states would here command an admiration and respect which would be subline. Maseachu- setts should send her sucplus fomale population to this territory, which has room for them all; or the sturdy Mon- tanians might make an onslaught upon damsels aftér the manner of the Romans upon the Sabines, and trust | that time would reconcile the modern Sabines to their new homes. TOURISTS find this countr, Black But‘e are found the elk, black and white tail deer, the mountain lion, the grizzly bear, mountain sheep, and The beauty of the landscape is here =S —————— enhanoced by distance. Flowers grow [the laps of thelr swarthy mothers, ' in the groatest luxuriance from the The men are an ordinary lot, but tablo lands all the way up to the snow | dressed in many colors, their turbans line. 1In the cool recesses of the drip ping rocks, moss and lichen and fer: grow with their long leaves touchi ing the air, rises & peak piercing tI sky, covered with snow and gisteniy 1:ke an immense jowel, Much ot the scenery has been paintod by Moran | and Bierstadt and other well-know American artists, | IN WINTER the weather gots extremoly cold. T cattlo have hair on them as lon that on a buffola; horses and sheop also warmly clad by nature. dure the sovere oold, those who a sed to it wear upon the feet a s mder a woollen one, then a boot and over all an arct A The foot must not be pinc ed but free to exercis every day, The body is so with clothes that exorcise is nex impossibl The people are perfect athletes the men muscled like a Roman war. | rier, the women stout, the girls rosy checked and red-lipped. I have sven a sallow or delicate person yet i the te y. They aroall ener rapid talkers; have an abundance faith in themselves, a vigorous & oconomical way of expressing their thovghts. Their houses are models of neatness, comfortable, and furnished after the later requirements of wsthot. icism, These valleys can mnever be the seat of empire, but they will for ovsr furnish to the world those fine specimens of manhood which, crossed with the inferior breeds of the low lands, improve the race and hasten the advent of that good time a-coming when health, instead of dieease, will be contagious. N —_— How often pe overs! ons have be.u annoyed by burrs cli to their dressor clothin and how seldom have they, when cleanin them, given it a thought that Burdock Root is the most valuable blood cleanser and purifier. known, and is_sold by every druggist under the ne of Burdock Blood Bitters, Price, $1.00. jed.d-1w How He Kissed Her, Taramie Boo rang. Yesterday afternoon the few curious the emigrant train pulled in, were surprised to see an old lady get off with an oilcloth gripsack and fall into the arms of an old weather-beaton forty-miner, who had been In Cal fornia, Montana, Colorado and New Mexico for the past thirty years, with varying fortunes in the mines. Tt would be too long a wle to tell, as he told us,—kow he had lost track of his wife, and how, in the desperation of poverty and his wild determination to “‘make a stake and go home,” the aw- ful truth settled down in his heart that the wife of his youth was dead. A fow weeks ago chance threw in his way a paper from his old home, ard in a little local notice of ‘‘houee to rent,” signed by his wife, he learned that she must be living. He wrote her, and yesterday they met, and to- gether went to Utah, where the old man has a ranch. Thirty years in the happy lives of husbands and wives is a good while, but in the value of uncertainty, trav- eling through more than a quarter of a century of widowhood and loneli- ness, it 1s an eternity. The old man cau, {t her trembling- ly to his breast and for a moment the full of interest. No| g § PARKER W { better hunting or fishing can be found | o o Ciwhile eropsing anywhere, In the “parks” near the | ,ute it to dome fe timber line of Mt. Powell and the [} ¥ bt & species of goat which is not found o | elsew In the waters of Powell’s | Beauty and Filth Combined Form & lake h up in the mountain, are| Strenge and Revoling Picture, | found the t and grayling, and | New York Star every aquat d known in America, | 4 r ¢'rl witha | The here t h d | hau! f Bo- are 80 tame tha an easily | hemianiam as portra b vels, | with of I'e | would be cured of for gypsy | larger & pecially t izzlios, | fter visiting ( Gar and wust be attacked with rifles, and tho | ta 1 y lirty | mc aring huntsman does not ven- | me ) ina | ture to attack i s b by it icx | or or L It w loy ope 1 indifforent v ine [ proj ¢ oV ¢ s of weapon ia th er repeating | civilized life, the women were reclin rifle loaded with explosive cartridges. [ing on the floor of t hed, or The range of this gun is about 2,000 | stret luxuriously on the benches; yards, aud it never suaps, mites of children in swaddliug clothes | gray hairs were mingled and they stood united on the railroad platform. The emanclated valise fell from her hands and was forgotten. The ocruel years of uncertainty were forgotten, : | and those Jovers, on whose head re- lentleas time had set his mark, stood in the glorious light of a love that can never die. Again and again he kissed her with the mighty concussion of ;an affection that had been locked in his lonely old heart for almost a lifetime of shrinking hope and crushing disap- pointment They tried to talk, but the endear- ing words were drowned 1n a low gur- fln and the smacks of an old-fashioned ove, smacks that rent the sky and cracked the glass in the neighboring windows. Tears chased each other down the wrinkled cheeks, yet through those tears the never-dylng sunlight of perennial love was shining. He could only hold her at arms’ length tlll he read the old, old story in her eyes, and then he would grasp her with the zeal that had been dormant all these years, and he would press her to his bosom till her venerable verte- bru: would crack like a pistol. When the train pulled out, they started on their happtest bridal tour, The old emigrant train wasn't very voluptjous, The air was close and the odor of the steerago and bilge water, and polygamy had not been blown out of the clothing and the car by the mountain zaphyra yot, but as the train pulled out the happy lovers, forgetful of the close, hot air and hard and tired seats of the low black emigrant car, sa’ bathed in the atternoon spring sunshine, entering together, the glo- rious vista of a new honeymoon, thé Indian summer of life’s everchanging year, No heart was so hard, no na- ture there so brufal s to speak light- ly of the good, old couplo—this anti- quated grizzly old man, who at the close of the nineteenth century dared to defy our modern social customs and make a bridal tour, accompanied by his own wife, Horsford’s Acld Fhosphate IN BEASICKN ENS, were dumped i coruers or rocked in the water. Higher up, ‘“Levous los yo ix vora jles sainles montagnes,” a |t cloud ¢ y lies in graceful folds half-way up, but above it, as if swin [ bear, monkey and father.” [ to her knees were covered with a thick spectators who were at the depot when | - and scarfs of the dingiest description. A ¢ was born to one of the emi- srant women on board ship, and both resent to Ward's Island. Eleven 1, eleven women and fourteen ildren, with nine bears andtwo monkeys cameo from Bordeaux on the steamship Chatteau Lafitte yestorday, Thei hibi 1 ¥ rpose is to give open air ex 18 throught the country. The f the troupo showed a Turkish rt. avan wife, Georgenick, child, One of the bears is 10 years old, a monster in sizy and a clover perform- e monkeys are a cute set, and ping round the necks of their owners, playing with their jewelry, { yat *he staring crowd and o the nuts thrown at them, Dirty, ragged tonts and much-used camp utensils were strewn about. The younger women wero laid out at full length on the canvas. Most of the WOImEN are uprepossessing in appear- ance, have largo features, with high cheek bones and coarse skin, All of them were barefooted and wore drosscs that scarcely covered their kuoes. They are of deop cof per color and their hair and eyes as black s One woman wd Anna, lounging by herself, was a handsome cnough for a Pasha's harem, Her age was said to be sweot 17, She has a harming figure, a well developed form, large, bright, sparkling oyes, a maes of glossy jot black hair, two rowa of pearly teeth, and the languishing atr of Dadu, Oa her wrists were heavy bracelets and her ears hung To the Consumers of Carriages &-Bixggies. I have a complete stock of all the Latist Styles of Cuarriages, Phaetons and Open and Top Buggies, Consisting of Tae Celebrated Brewster 8ids Bar, The Hamlin 8ide Bar, The Whitney Side Bar, and The Mullhalland Spring. The Dexter Queen Buggy and Phaeton Also the Old Reliable Eliptic Spring Buggies and Phaetons. They are ¢1l made ot ths best materials, and un- der my own supervision, I should be Fleased to have those desirous of pur- chasing to call and examine my stock., I will guar- antes satisfaction and warrant all work. H. F. HATTENHAUER, Broadway and Seventh Streets. COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA. (Successors to J. W. Rodefer) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL MMEAB®RS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG AND ALL Corner down with massive rings. Her logs coating of dirt, and her shapoly feot and hands wore similarly coated, Viewed from a distanco tho scone was full of interest; oloser it lost its charm. That the women enjoyed the novelty of the place and hour was cor- tain, for they puffed at their yellow cigarettes and chatted freely in their guttural tongue, seemingly with- out restraint. They gloried in the dirt, tinsel and squalor of their race, and were as proud of their dirty logs as the wost exquisite lady would be ot the dantiest siiken hoso, One of the characteristics of the show was the brute appearance of the hags old women whose freo life, apart from soap and water, with a liberal use of liquor and tobacen, liad given thom a horrible cast of face and feat- ure. “Where are thoeo croatures going?” IOWA GOALS! ALSO CONNELLSVILLE COKE, CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Office No, 34 Pearl Street, Yards Cor. Eighth Street and Hleventh Avenue, Oouncil Bluffa, COUNCIL BLUFFS STEAM FAGCTORY MANUFACTURE BROOMS, BROOM HANDLES, asked the reporter of an emigrant, who spoke Anglo-German, 5 “'Got is goot; dey go novere; dey vander up und down, und tell for- tunes, play mit deroe tamboreenes und dance mit dere bears; dey vas a ker- veerlot, mine Got.” ‘‘Presumption begins in ignorance and ends in ruin,” On the other hand, the production of Kidney-Wort began with wise cautions and scienti- fic research, and its use endsin restor- ing shattered constitutions and endow- ing men and women with health and happiness. ‘‘My tormented back,” is the exclamation of more than one poor hardworking man and woman; do you know why it aches? It is because sour kidneys are overtasked and need strengthening, and your system needs to be cleansed of bad humors, You need Kidney-Wort, Em—————— An Inquisitive Bright Child. Detroit Free Press, One ot those unnaturally bright children who are always getting peo- ple into difficulties was at a prayer- meeting the ether evening with his mother, when he asked llnufi: ‘‘Ma, say ma—who was Dinah Moore?” “Hu-u-sh,’ whispered his mother cautiously, “‘it's a hymn.” “No, 1t ain’t man,” continued the hopefni, ‘“it's & womaun's name; say who's going home to Dinah Moore!” “Willie,” sald his mother in a ghastly volce, ‘‘you’re disturbing the meeting. It means going to heaven to die no more,"” “Dine no more! eat anything there?” His mother explained as well as she could, and Willie sat stili for half a minute, his bright eyes roving about the church, Then he asked in a shrill whisper: “‘Ma, is GGod out of town?” “No-0-0, no-no,” answered the dis- tracted woman faintly, ““Then what's Mr. Kelly running this meeting for, ma?" continued the sweet child, The choir sung him down, but as the meeting closed with a moment of silent prayer his gentle voice was di- rectly heard, saying: “Old Mrs. Jones' switch don't match her hair like yours does, ma!” 0O, ms, don't they Truth and Honor. Query:—What is the best family medicitie in the world to rogulate tho bowels, purify the blood, romove cos- tiveness and biliousness, aid digestion and tone up the whole system! Truth and honor compols us to answor, Hop bitters, being pure, perfect and harm- ) Poledo Blade CORN MEAL, GRAHAM FLOUR AND CHOPPED FEED The Very Best of Brooms Constantly on Hand. The Highest Market Price Paid for Oats, AND BROOM CORINI Corn, Rye, Barley Parties Wishing to Sell Broom Corn Will Please Bend Sample, MAYNE & CO, COUNOIL BLUNES. MRS, J. P. BILLUPS, PROPRIETOR OF BESTAURANT & EATING HOURE, 818 South Maln Street, Council Bluffs, New houso and newly fitted up in first class " One of the best wndwgm Hotels 10 the | 1s the BROADWAY HOTEL. A. E BROWN, Proprictor, Nos. 684 and 636 Brosdway, Council Blufts, Towa. Tablo supplied with the best the market af- fords. ' Good rooma and first-class bods. Terms | ),V VLT 800 hoUry, Lo cream and leasoe. very . nado every evening. Fruits aud confectioneries! UNION AVENUE HOTEL. 817 l.ower Broadway, Mrs, C. Gerspacher & Son. T CLASS HOTEL AT REASONABLE TRANSIENTS ACCOMMODATED, FOR BALE, GOOD REABONS FOR J. G. TIPTON, Attorney & Counsellor. Office over First National Bank, Council Illu& Tows. Wil practice in the state and fod courts STEAM LAUNDRY. 723 W. Broadway. Il BELLIN SCANDINAVIAN HOTEL, N, Anderscw. - - Proprietor, 782 Lower Broadway. arket af- anslent Table suppliod with the best th fords. Terms §3.60 and £4,00 por we ionx Uity & Pacific HLALLELCOY A XD, ROIU I'e ., Paul Oniy 17 Hours | | | | i | | a s lowa UL makes 1oy W Complesions, 21,00 per dav. LARSON & ANDERSON, Proprietors, 139 Just been oponed for busi- noss, and we are now propared to do lsund, Soups, Meats, and work of all kinds and guaranteo satisfaction. J . spoclalty made of fino work, such a8 collars, hand. Fi | cuffs, fine shirts, ctc, We want everybody to. TTSTARR & BUNCH, |“*“*y< LARSON & ANDERSON. 1f You Wisk o Lunch Go to LOUIE DUQUETTE, Eatables always on ) er_call, Thia laundy ORNAMENTAL PAINTERS. PAPER HANGING, KALSOMINING AND GRAINING, M SEPEOLALI Y . 1 Seot Council Bluffs, Ia. Established, 1866 Dealers In Fo I Doxestic Exchanges and hame seeurd THE KENDALL _;PLMTINH MACHINE! AN URESS-MAKERS' (OMPAKION. om 1-.4 of a n inch to Confectionery, Fruits,Nuts | Cigars and Tobacco, Fresh | vithiatis casmet toteor toesisixs in . ysters and Ice Cream in | que o ot s e i paiklog o fgason never out of fashion, if secn 1t sells itselt, 12 MAIN 8T, Machines, Circulars or Agent's torms address Oouncil Bluffs, Corner B roadway HUGHES & TOWSLEE, DEALERS IN CONGAR & 00,, 118 Adaws 5t Chicaro