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— THE DAILY VJU LY %9 1682 COUNCIL BLUFES . O.OCD COMMISSION City Market, Co K S OO, MERGHANTS, nneil Bluffs, Tows, WHOLESALE FLOUR HOUSE, Getieral Agonts for the_Celebrated Mills of 11, 1 Kansas, and Queen ¥ asabtlurence, Smith & Critonden, Conr Bluf ). Wueh & Co., Golden Eagle Flour, Leavenwosth tilis, Sionx Falls, Dakota, H. B. SEAJ.\[E_A_:L\T WHOLESALE STATIGNERY AND Thi LE AB Lands a.nd Lots ROT Q'JLJM“\H TO LOA COURCIL BLUFFS - - COUNCIL BLUFTS, |RAG1 AND RSTAIL PRINTER'S GOODS IOWA. LOFFICE Bou%ht a.nd Sold. N AT LOW RATES PUBLIC AND CONVLYANCERS. 10WA, . LARSON, 156 North Main Street. WHOLESALE DEALER IN SHOE FINDINCS. od uppors, in t0 the shoe trvic LCO NORRIS' NEW MRS, - FOR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY. cnlt skin and kip, Go-ds sold 88 cheap as in the liast. Oak and Hemlock SOLE LEATHER, and al gt e MILLIN iRY STORE PATTERN BONNETS AND CHILDREN'S HATS A SPECIALTY. 105 South Main Street. WA SRR AR That never require erimp t Mre. J. J. G any other haie dealer. Also o full lin swil Vilver v solored ats, | Waved kst elsewhere. All goods warranted a8 repressntod. dics’ own hair. Do no - Council Bluffs Ia. WA WVIES 0od's Tlalr Store, at pricus nover bofere touched by tchos, cte., ot & ducod prices. Also gold, il to all before purch sing MRS, J. J. GOOD, 20 Main strees, Council Blufls, lowa Bethesda BATHING HOUSE! At Bryant's §pring, Oor. Broadway and Union. Sty Cour IL BLUFFS Plain, Douch, petent « always o por, Tilee'ric, Plunge, d 'Cold Baths t 106 Up, Dr. Studiey: Troatment o mude a specialty. CARGERS AND OT: LR t TUMO &S male Dis-ase of Venerial dis.ases. d. r Broadway. chronie diseasos ) without the nds, Al Kidney and Heworriods or Piles cured All diseases treated upon the principleot voget- able reform, without the use of mercurial pois- ou2 or the Knife. Elscten Vapor or M-dicated Baths, farnished e who dosire the Herala or Rupture radically cured by the use the Elastic beit Truss and Plaster, which has superior In the world, CONSULTATION FREE. CALL ON OR ADDRESS Drs, B Rice and F. O, Hiller, T UEIVERY: i Feed and Sale Stables, 18 North iFirst Street, uncil B ufls, Towa. D SMITH, Prop. Practitioner of Hemeopathy, consulting Physmla,na,nd SUrgeon. anid residence 616 Willow avenue, Coun- BINTON & WHEST. DENTI&STS. 14 Pear] Etreet, Council Bluffs. Extracting and filiing a specislty. First-class work guaran| DR. A. P, HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. itice, No. 14 Pearl Street. Hows, 8 a. m. to nd2 p,m., to b p, m. Residence, 120 Bancrcft streef, Telephonic connection ' with Central office. F. T. SEYBERT, M. D, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - IA. Oftice No, b, Lvurot' Block, Broad way, over A, Louie's Reltnurnm. Mernhants Restaurant!: J. A. ROSS, Proprietor. Corner Broadway and Fourth Streets. Good_accommodations, good fare aud cour- teous treatment. 8. E. MAXON, ARO X T, B O . Office over savlngs bank. OOUNCIL BLUFFS .. REAL ESTATE. W. C. James, lv connection with his law and . Iolu. sollection businessbuys and sells real estate. Persons wishing to buy or sell city property call of his office, over Bushuell's book store, Pearl EDWIN J. ABBOTT, Justice of the Peace and Notary Public. 4156 Broadway, Council Bluffs . drawn and scknowl < ged strect. Dee 's" andmor HAIR GOODS. WATER WAVES, In ftock a;i;d Manufactur- ed to Order. Wayves Made From Your Own Hair, TOILET ARTICLES, All Goods Warrauted as Represented, and rice Guaranteed. MRS. D. A BEREDICT, 337 W. Broadway, .| Council Bluffs; - - - fowa MRS, B, J. HARDING, M. D., Medical “iectrician AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduate of Electropathic Institution, Phila- delphia, Penns, Office Gur, Broadway & Glenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. The treatmen! of all disensos and painful dif- ficulties peculiar to feiwales & speci:lty. J. G. TIPTON, Attorney & Counsellor. Office over First National ank, Council Bluffs, fown. Will practice in tnc stato and foderal '"“FRESH FIsh! Game and Poultry, Can always be found & B. DANEHY'?, 1306 Upper Broadway JNO, JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 3814 BROADWAY, Counoil Blnffs, - = W B. MAYES, Loans and Real Estate. Proprictor of ahstracts of Pottawattamie county. Office corner of Bruadway and Main strects, Council Bluffs, Tows. JOHN STEINER, M. D, ¢ (Deutscher Arzt.) ROOM 5, EVERETT'S BLOCK, Council Bluffs, aAnoases of women aud children a_spocialty. P. J. MONTGOMERY, M. D.. Free DISPENSARY EVERY SATURDAY, Towa. Offico In Everett's block, Pearl troet. Resl) dence 628 Fourth street Office hours from § to 23 m,2t04a0d7 08p.m, Councll +luffs F. 0. GLARK, |PRACT.CAL DENTIST. Pearl opposite the postoffice. One of the oldest practitioners in Councll Bluffs. Batls {staction gusranteed in all cases DR. F. P. BELLINGER, EYE AND EAR SURGEON, WITH DK, CHARLES DEETKEN, Offlce over dru¢ store, 414 Broadway, Council Bluffs, lowa. Al discases of the cye and ear tre-ted under the most approved method aud sll curcs guaranteed. JOHN LINDT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Will practice in pll State and United Btates Courts, " 8peaks Gerian Lavgusge DOW CITY. A Lively Young Town in Boyer Valley, Iowa Its Commercial Advantages and Agrionltural Surroun dings Corspondenceof the Bee. Dow Crry, Towa, July 20.—Eight wiles from Duanlap in & northeasterly direction, along the Boyer valley and the Northwestern road, is Dow City, with a population of about 500 and situated a half dozen miles from the southern and western boundaries of The town is locat- river and Crawford county. ed on the east side of the the road, and sproads out over the val ley, which is here about two miles wide. Tho rich valley and gontly m- clined sl nowhere along here are abrupt, a ered with tields of grain, of Towa has to-day the richesi crops, ro everywhere cov- and this part prospectively it has ever known, THE FIRST SEFTLER here, was Mr. 8. E. Dow, a native of Now Humpe! 1855, and, securing 1,600 acres of re, who camne here in land, went into the busincas of stook growing. was a long way off, the being sold for work o The market that time ster pact , used for teaming across the plaias, or were driven all the way to Chicago, on foot, for beef. The advent of the railroad in the fall of 1866 brough: in business, end the new settlers came by families and by ecores. The location ot a station nearly in the center of this farm made Mr. Dow the father of much of the enterprise of the place in those early daye. A postoflics was establishcd here, about a year after the buildiug of the road, and two ycars later, the town was Iaid out by the Blair Town Lot Company, Mr. J. R Blair, of New Jersey, and oue of the principal own- ers of the road west of Cedar Rapids being the leading spirit in tho com- pany. At Dow City the company took half the stock of the towa site and Dow rotained the other halt Soon after the road was established and a side track secured, Mr. Dow builta warchouse, and in company with Abuer Graves, opened the trade in gram, live stock, lum- ber, and farm implements, doing a large and conmstantly increasing business, and laboring to build up the village and get good prices for their lots. Among the early improvements of & substantial nature, was the build- ing of a mill by T. W. Chapman, now of Shelby. A few years aftrward Messrs. Dow & Graves purchased this mill and buit large additions, and introducing important improvements, making it one of the best mills in Western JTowa. During the past winter Mr. Graves, retired from the business, to draw his capital into the banking business, while Mr. Dow's son, A. S, Dow, became a partner with his tather, and the tirm of S. BE. DOW AND SON are to-day one of the prime factors of the town. The banking house of ABNER GRAVES is located on the south sde of Main street, in a neat and comfortable building, and does a general banking business and insurance, and makes g specialty of land. Mr, Graves is also a large farmer, having a number of farms, one of which coutains over 1,000 acres in cultivaticn, and he is heavily interested in stock growing in Shelby county. This bauk was estab- lished in 1871, THE MILL 15 at present under the management ot Messrs, R, C. Thompson and N, Richards, practical millers, who are kecping up 118 reputation, as well as their own, by their work, Mr. Rich- ards, the business manager, is from Denison, Ia., and & native of North ern Ohio, while Mr. Thompson, the head miller, was four or five years in Omaha with Henry Kruse, and the Jonn Green mill, and afterwards in the Crystal Mills of Council Bluffs, W. C. HILLAS has the largest general store in town, 1t being 26x95 with large wing, anu keeps a half dozen to a dozen hands employed in the millinery and dress- making department. Mr. H. was one of the pioneers of the place, and has a large trade. T. J. RASP & CO,, on the south side, have a full lme of general merchandise and haye a **boss” trade. They have large build- ings, heavy.stock, and are building up businees every day, and like L. E. HARDY, on the next corner eas*, they work by “rule.” Mr. Hardy has a large gen- eral store, with double front, and sells plluu of goods” every yeur, while doing a large farming business, WELLS WHEELER has a good stock of drugs, books and stationery on the main street, and claims to have no faith in advertising, PIERCE & GIBSON are the pioneer hardware men here, and have a general stock of light and heavy hardware, stoves and tinware, and farm tools, They have been in business here for two or three years and are old settlers in this part of the state, THE FALOUTT LROS,, across the way, bave been citizens of the couuty tor nearly twenty years, and from the stock of Falcott's whose banks, hardware houses and music atores are scattered along the western reserve by the shore of Lake Erie, And these, following the natural in- stinots of the family, have within the past week opened wnother hardware store here, and add another enterprise to the growth of this town, and they are already doing a good business J, B. RULE has the monopoly of the harness busi ness, and keeps plenty of heip; has faith in the future of the town, and his own prospects in business; and keeps on hand a large stock of goods, which is “‘made by Rule.” It seems strange that a name will help men aloog 8o much, but it is often true, however, and \hm one is too valuable to be collected in one house; and 80 it BEE-SATURDAY, would seem to a stranger, passing from store to store, that there 18 a Rule in half the stores in town, and the other half not heard from, M. G, WIGGINS has a general blackemith and repair shop, and by the way the farm ma- chinery comes in to b patehed, one would think he inust have a machine shop aud foundey, As it is, ho is do- ing an extensive work, and contem plates building larger, and putting in steam po wer. E. V. GODDARD, just across the way, is another pro. grossive man, who seems to keep him- self and hands busy in the wagon shop, and reads the papers, which ia one of the first signa of an “intelli nt entorprise,” Mr. G. kas boon ro six years, koeps plenty of Lolp, (8 a large amount of work, and docs a good deal of new work of the lighter class. Ho is a young wan, a native ot the atate, and 18 bound to becomo an important factor in the tow: 1 3. ARMSTRONG has planted himself near the railrond rack, with piles of lumber and auy mount of farm machinery, which he is selling overy day; aud after looking through his warehouses and notioir the farmers waiting tor him to load up their wagons, seomed a8 tlough thero must be an immenso amount o building going on in the surrounding | country. He began hore two or threc years ago, be a native of Clinton county, Ia M B. LEWIS, the cflicient postmaster, .hmn a steady and - profitable buasiness in druos, books, stationary and notions, sud s one of the most accommodating men, which is of vital importanee to the public, and he just fills the bill us o prudent and trusted public officer. THE DOW CITY HOTEL has in changed hands, and during tho past yeur W, H, Morton has be- como the host as well as proprietor, and now we find here vthe comiorta of a bowe, as well as a public house, and the t ler may becomea a membor of the family during his sojuorn. Mr Morton comes of the same atock with the honorable O. P, Morton, and with his prudeat and pleasant wife aro building up a gooa |uu|ulu» Th house atands back one block,jin a qu et spot, surrounded by I'u;m ahido trees Thero 13 a good stiile attached, and i8 beooming limmh s ‘the home,” THE MILDER BROS., have been fitting up a new house laboled it the Commercial hotel, will 80 ou be doing business, if th complete the house aud put it in order, and having been vesidonts of tiie county ror fitteen v fwenty yons they should build up a good busivers. But lest the reader weary while ing a long letter, we will pass by for ths Hmu the neat aud udy meat market and grocery house of W. V., Whaley, who also has a good trade in live »md:‘ the Hildebrand *‘mouel farm,” a description of the design of the railroad company laying out their ground and planting o park and tho many other business firms, to notice the number 268 the ship.” “How do gou know it is “Oh, Ican see by the plin they ehowed me in the office.” “‘Pian be blowed! Why, you don't pick your stateroom out by that thing, "do you! You might as well select a room through a clairyvoyant a8 hy one of those inforaal charts Don't you know that there are never more than half a dozen rooms on a hip fit to hive it? and f you expect to get one of these you must look dlive, young fellow, take my word forit.” “What do you mean, si “‘Why, you must go the dock and right in the best part of a8 little attention to what hose chin at the officy as you would to the gabblo of a horse jockey te ) soll you a horse, 1’ tonishing how e room has some inf nuisanee ahout it which does not appear on any rinted plan. 1f yon are nosr the machinery you hive an intolerablo noise and beat, and a of hot, chured oil, 1f you are near the paatiy ot the saloon “you have an indescribablo bad odor from this source, minglod with the constant rat tling of a and the olatier of stew- W are near tho dryis room you are surrounded hy ar mosphere of musty line 1f you are too tar aatern, overy rovolation of the scrow will by like “an augur boring through your vitals, and hore, as well a8 if too far forward you will find the pitching of the vessel un ndurable. You may eseape all these objeetions, and then find what you took for an iron post in your cabin is a dibolical awh shuto, through which tons of ashes will be discharged during tho voyage At miduoight, « 4 1 the mornin, 1 at the hour for your afternoon nap, there will be a tremoandons rattle of tho hoisting machine, the dumpivg of the ashes into the shute, and the sliding through it with a noise as if the tube passed right through the middie of your poor old skull, Thesy aro only a fow of the littlo pitfalls which Teould point out to you all day, you know. Per haps it isie worth whila anyhow, for when you have taien the necossary trouble to get yoursell a goed room ou goenevally find that the other berth is iod chap who will be sick as & dog all the time, and will never turn out lowe enough to let tho steward make his bed. Orif you {on't have thia you have a couple of quailing babica opy “But there is such o oe Arde, 2 dirt site yon,'' ot of frosh air that 1t mvst yup for most of theso 18 that you b been of, oatest humbug in the world, my fine young geatlon All this talk bout fr ir at sonds the groatest gunmon you ever heard of. Why, one of tho 1 steamers defiles the air for mile out her wheroyer sho goes. I1t's worse than living near a second-class livory etoble. Thero is never more thar u very small spaco on deck whero you feel that you can draw BRAKE BROS. , on the north side, who havea full line of furniture, and not only offer the goods but do the business, while C. H. Brake, of this firm is tho prin- cipal of the lugh school. This firm have been here over a year, keep a good stock in great variety and do the undertaking, A PUBLIC LIBRARY owned by the towuship, is kept in this house, and citizens of the town- ship may have free use of the 500 or 600 volumes. This is a worthy pro- juet, is well managed znd very popu- lar. The schoolhouse 13 a fine frame building with four or five rooms, and the school has jnst been modernizad by being orgamzed in o graded school and assigned a regular course of study, and with all, has just been sot off as’ an independent dietrict, The three churches have good substantial houses, the Mothodist being the larg- est, and the Mormon church being a numerous body of the most respectod and honorablo citizens, +nd tho Cath- olic have a strong population in this part of tho country. The county house is located just above this by the river, and has fine buildings, and a section of land for farming purposes, The city contains a weli « ized BAND, . which is only a yoar or twoold, It has some fourteen members, is work ing hard and receiving much ecredit from the public for its efliciency, and the boys are getting some of the finest instruments to be had, The members are all of the -murgetic class of young men, so noticeable in this town and among which we may men- tion FRANKLIN C. PLATT, who has anoffice in tue bauk baild- ing. Mr. Platt came from Chicago four or five years ago, fter receiving acourse in law and settled i this new young city, begavfithe’: pric tice of law and “‘“law only,” To-day he has 2 splendid library, and a large law practice which extends all over Waestorn TIowa ,and brings him to the frout as one of the growing men of the slope, Eastward from this sta- tion there are large tracts of heavy timber, and the thousands of acres seem to be inexhaustible for present purposes, and every cook stove 18 fed from the ‘‘wood pile,” flhe ambitious young men und farmers sons have a ‘‘picked nine” that is gaining some notoriety on the ‘‘dia- mond field;” trade is good, every- body is mulnmq money aud reads Tuk Bee; politics are hardly spoken of, and then by way of ean interoga- !,iun a8 to tho *resuiin” & ., while the corn, Tye, outs, b and wrass are the finest o grown in the county, and more than one hundred and twenty-five equare miles of this rich farming country must come here to trade, BucKEYE, whe Evils to bo Ayoided Over-eitiug T i chd s s iroduotive of ey d both, purified with bu TERs, and you will be rowarded with robust heaith and an invie. ored system., Price 8100, jy2i-dlw HOW TO CHOOSE A STATEROOM. Useful Polnts Given by an Old Tray- eler on Ocean Bleamers Lo & Young One. “Have you selocted your state- room?” said a red-faced cld gentle- wan whom 1 met as I cume out of the steamer office. YO, yee, 1 have a fine one— a long breath, and you ean't even oc- cupy this it the ship is crowded, or the sea i rough, or the wind blows hard, or it raing. In one placo you swmell the machinery, in ano.her you smell the ccoking, in another the steam drips on you, in another you ars enveloped in smoke and cinders. Down below everything is a hundred times worse. You naturally think your port hole will be open at night in fine weathor, but even if tho rea is as still as a mill pond, the stoward will ecrow up the port with a wrench, and then walk off with the wrench, and there you are, sweating and stewing aud gasping for freoh air more than you wonld on the top floor of a third-rate lodging house. You ask him to open it for you emly in the worning, but he tells you he can't do it becauss the smlors aro going to wash tho decks, and tho dirty water will eplush into the port holo and ruin the velvet of the greasy old sofa, and by the time there is any show for alit- tie veutilation you pand dressed, and don't much Of course in stcrmy weather you stand 1o chance atall. Ha! ha! it really makes me leugh sometimes to find myself at sea and bous for a breath of fresh air as diligently as if 1 wore stewing in tho lowest slums of Now York, It 18 eo ridiculous, you kuow. Good day, young man, Bonvoyage,” The red-facod old gentleman was quite correct, Nearly a Miracle. 1. Asenith Hall, Binghampton, N, Y., writes; “I suffered for several months with a dall pain through leit lung and shoulders, I lost my spirits, appetive and color, and could with difficulty ki day. My mother procured Lroon Brrrens; I took them as d huve felt no pain sinve first week a o them, and wm now quite well, Trice $L,00. Jy2h-dlw Sullivan & Fitzgerald; DEALERS IN GROCERILS, PRE:VISIONS, Crockery, Glassware, BOOTS, SHIES, ETG A0 ngents for the following lines of Steamship Companies : Cunard, Auchor, Guion, American, and Stato Btedmship Companies, DI LHE TS For salo on the Koyal Vank of Ireland and Bank , Dubiin, Those w o0 intend to send for 1 to'any part of Europe wil: fius it to thelr st 1o cal i Sullivan & Fitzgerald, A NTS, 343 % Zrondway, Council I Blufs. Ia. ) L;_&‘ULE / & Lanman’s DA WATER, L{w TOILET, BATH i | ANDKE ,CHIEF look at the ship for yourself, and pay | anscating smell | To fno Consumers of I have a ¢ Consisting of 01d ¢ They are der mv own supervision. | I should | Corner Bm'rd way WHOLESALE AND AND Offlce No, 34 Pearl Street, Hlevanth Avenues, MAYNE, GGUML L BLUFFS BROOMS, GOR Corn, Oats Send COFTTNOLT. The Very Best of Brooms Oonstantly on Hand. Market Price Paid for i = = —— 1 Carriages & Buggies, cymylnta stock of all the Latish Styles of Cirriages, Phastons and Opoa and Top Bugges, Toe Uelebrated Braw.ter Sids Bar, The Hawlin 8ide Bar, The Whitney Side Bar, and { The Mullhalland Spring. ° The l‘exlw Queea Buggy and Phaeton ol able uliptic Spring Bugzies and Phaetouns. :1l made ot ths best materials, and un- Alss the he plnzm‘d to have thoss desirous of pur- chasing 1,\ ca'l and examine my stock. antes sal nfu'hon and warrant all work. HATTENHAUER, and I will guar- Seventh Streets. COUNCIL BLUFFS. |A an. L. VAW NI & GO., (Zuccessors to J. W. Rodefer) RETAIL DEALERS I AGKAW A:NA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG ALL GOALI ALSO CONNELLSVILLE COKE, CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Yards Cor, Fighth Strecet and Jouncil Bluffa, C. E. MAYNE STEAM FAGTORY MANUFACTURE BROOM HANDLES, MEAL, GRAHAM FLOUR AND PED FEED The Higheat Rye, Barley A NID BROOIN GCD eyl Parties Wishing to Sell Broom Corn Will Please Samples, MAYNE & CO., TR T ESS. noedlus, cte. ig elsowhere. lrs. J. B. Metcalfe and Mrs, Belle Lewis Aro now dealiug In all kinds of fancy goos, euch as Laces, Embroidories, Ladies’ Underwea of all descriptions. Also Handkerchiois, both in silk and linen, hoso of all Kinds, thread, pins, We hope the Iaaics will call and soe our stock of goods at 688 Broadway betore go METCAL ——WHOLESALE Hats, Caps, RUDZ’S LAUNDRY. n Avenue B, No. 1902. (NKAR BROADWAY.) Clothes gathered up and delivered promptly. Best of Satisfaction Guaranteel. Lost Cloth s made good, NOBETTER LAUNDRY WEST OF CHICAGO. . T BRNVTIID. STEAM LAUNDRY. 723 W. Broadway. LARSON & ANDERSON, Proprietors. This laundry has Just boen opened for bus- near, aud we aro now propared to do L andry vork of all kinds and gu srant tisfaction A specialty made of fing work, wuch as collare, uffy, flie shirts, ote. Weo want overybody to Kivo ua o trial L‘\ll?}'}):\'r ‘S‘ A J 1 KDMUNDBON, K. L #HU Proddent Vice CITIZENS BA \!K Of Counell Bluffy, Organized under the laws of the State of lowa, 8 76,000 200,000 id on time deposite, Drafts lssued pa! citios of the Unitod States sud pecial attention wivon to colloctions pondence with prompt returus DIRECTORS, Pald up capital Authorized capiial and ¢ J.D.Edwandon, E.L Shugart, J. T. Hart, W, W, Wellace, J. W. Rodter, 1, A Milar, (AW, Btreet,2 | Iyt Straw CGoeds, CHICAGO PRICES DUPLICATED, COUMWMOGEIL BIL.UEES, ] XIOWW .A. F BROS, DEALERS IN— and Buck Gloves. STARR & BUNCH, HOUSE, SIGN, AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTERS. PAPER HANGING, KALSOMINING AND GRAINING, L SPHOIALYT Y .- Shop—Corner Broadway and Scott 8t HUGHES & TOWSLEE, DEALERS IN Confectionery, Fruits,Nuts Cigars and Cobacco. Fresh Uysters and Ice Cream in Beason, 12 MAIN 8T, Oouncil Bluffs, One of the best s cond-class Hotels in the West iy the BROADWAY HOTEL. A. E BREWN, Proprictor, Nog. 634 and 636 Brosdway, ¢ ouncil Blufls, lowa. blied with the best the market af- 0oms and tirst-class beds. Terms UNION AVENUE HOTEL. 817 Lower Broadway, Mrs. C. Gerspacher & Son. FIUST CLA'S 5O] L AT REASONABLE PRICE<, TRANSIENTS ACCOMMODATED HOTEL FO4 SALE. GOOD REASONS FOR. SELLING, e ——