Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 5, Number 36, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 6 December 1883 — Page 2
gtapjratitt ®tMg gfrni . — *X . NAPPANEE. is INDIANA. NEWSDPTHEVIEK. BY TELEGRAPH AND MAIL. I DOMESTIC. ' Cow-boys robbed an express train on the Southern Pacific Road, near Gage, A.T., on the 24th, killing the express messenger and securing a large amount of booty. ' James Ruddy and his wife, son, and a lady visitor were murdered at Laconia, 11. H., on the night of the 24tb, and the bouse set on fire. Thomas Salmon, a boarder, was snspected of the crime, and was In jail. His trunk was searched, and was found to contain the mangled remains jof a Mrs. Ford, with whom be had previously been boarding. i At Lanesville, Vt., on the evening of the !23d a wagon containing William Mclntosh, a venerable farmer, and his wife, accompanied by Rev. Joseph Honse and hit .daughter Mary, of Berlin, was struck by the engine of an express train, and all four were killed. Henry Miller, charged with the murder of the King family near Hickman, Ky., was arrested on the 25tb. Rosenstein, an alleged accomplice, had also been arrested. 1 The trial of the colored rioters concerned in the murder of Wyatt, in Howard County, Ark/, resulted on the 2tth in the sentence of three Os them to the death penalty, and twenty-nine to terms of imprisonment varying from five to eighteen years. Lewis Houston, a negro in jail at Birmingham, Ala., upon the charge of assaulting a widow lady, was taken.from the prison by masked men on the night of the 24th and hanged. The extensive glass-factory of Thomas Evans Sc Cos., at Pittsburgh, Pa., was destroyed by fire on the 25th. Loss, SIOO,OOO. ’ Five prisoners wore publicly whipped on the 24th at Newcastle, Del., a colored b-use-breaker named Groome standing one botn< D the pillory, and receiving twenty lashes, jtub others got ten each. IVEsTK tTIO „ g in the neighborhood of Wichita, Ka. on the 24th to the discovery of ovev two■ hundred fraudulent entries on public -sods, Thb annual repo*. of of the Life-Saving Service, nade on the 24th, showed that at the end u the last fiscal year the number of life-sa, in g stations was 194. The number of disasters to vessels in the field of life-saving 'derations was 300. Os 3,792 persons on board these vessels only fifteen perished, and of o* er $7,000,000 worth of property in these ship, and cargoes, only $1,500,000 Was lost. v ‘ During the week ended on the 24th the exchanges at twenty-seven leading clearing houses in the United States aggregated $900,727,963, against $1,079,142,347 the previous week, indicating a general decline in business throughout the country. The United States Supreme Court on the 26th decided that the Brooklyn bridge could not be declared a nuisance or an unlawful structure. Eleven business houses at Wellington, Kan., including the telegraph and two express offices, were burned on the 26th, causing heavy loss. Or a street corner in South Chicago on the 26th John L. Smith, a butcher, fatally wounded his wife with a revolver and then took his own life. The woman bad of late refused to live with him. Ait unknown youth entered a Parsons (KaniYhardware store on the 26th, asked to see a ; revolver, placed a cartridge in one of the chambers and shot himself dead. He was about eighteen years old, and said he came from Illinois. Buno lars at Atlanta, Ga., stole $4,000 from James Askews’ saloon the other night. At Eaton, Ind, Ral Scott stabbed to death his wife and child and then killed himself with morphine a few nights ago. Scott deserted his wife some time ago, and her refnsal to live with him after his return caused the tragedy. A HURTisft party composed of Frederick Jenkel and his two sons, jewelers, and Richard Harting, all of Dubnque, la., went fishing on ttie Mississippi River on the 25th, their boat capsized, and it was supposed that all were drowned. Mr. Jenkel leaves a wife and two children, besides the two that were drowned. !For the possession of a gas well in Murraysvllle, Pa., the forces of Milton Weston, a Chicago capitalist, and those of the Pennsylvania Fuel Company engaged in a pitched battle on the 26th—the former being armed with guns and the latter with dnbs. Two men were killed, and several were seriously wounded. Information received on the 20th at the Internal Revenue Bureau in Washington showed a large increase in the capacity of distilleries, and the reopening of many heretofore closed. The number of distilleries in operation in the country was over five hundred, with a total producing capacity of 258,000 gallons daily, an increase of 83,000 gallons daily. Illinois was now making more than double the amount of whisky made by any other State. At Jersey City, N. J., Michael McCabe tried on the 26th to drown his mother by bolding her head in a wash-tub because she refused him money to get liquor. The child of James Haggerty, of New Haven, Conn. Ailed a few days age and was embalmed. The undertaker left a poisonous mixture to be applied to its face, and a two-year old sister drank some of it, dying soon after. Both were buried in one grave. , Birminoiiam, Ala., was on the 20th guarded by military, the authorities anticipating a rising of the negroes, who threatened to be revenged for the recent lynching of Lewis Houston. Tbe Commission appointed by the State Department at Washington to examine into the trichina problem recommended on the 20th the appointment of a special com-
mission bo maks a long and thorough investigation of tbe matter. . Evans Davis, of Eaoeeville, 0., a few days sgo put a cap on a gun which he supposed was not 1 loaded, pointed it at the breast onitir eight-year-old I6n, and then called bis four-year-old boy to pall tbe trigger and shoot bis brother. The gun was loaded and the boy was killed. Three cars of an express train on the Grand Trank Road jumped the track at Elsdon, nine miles from Chicago, on the 27th, and a brakeman was killed, the conductor fatally injured, and several others were badly braised. C. B. Hendrick and wife, of Jonesbnrg, Kan., visited Thomas Maguire’s honse o few nights ago, and Mrs. Hendricks shot Maguire dead for calumny. The Hendricks were arrested, and later an unknown person fired through tbe prison window, wounding Hendricks fatally. Excavations in Cole’s Hill at Plymouth, Mass., recently opened the graves of two pilgrims who came over on the Mayflower, and who were buried during the first winter in America. Tbey are tbe only graves of first settlers positively identified. The President and thirty-eight students of the National College of Pharmacy at Washington left on the 27th because a colored man was admitted. So serious was tbe strike of the freigbthandlers at New Orleans on the 27th that protection by the Mayor was asked by tbe Illinois Central and Louisville Roads. A loss of $90,000 was incurred at Minneapolis, Minn., on tbe 27th by the burning of a store owned by Lyman Brothers, and occupied as a wholesale drug store. Dr. W. D. Flowers, of Wellsburg, Pa., whose bride died two weeks ago, killed himself on the 27tb with poison. Nearly the entire business portion of Albany, Green County, Wis., Including tbe post-office and both newspaper offices, was destroyed by fire at an early hour on the morning of the 27th, causing a loss of over $75,000. Edward Dodge, a young man, was killed by failing walls, and five other men were fatally injured. Several persons were also badly wounded. Edgae Grover and Robert Leh, aged eight and ten years respectively, were ran down by a train on tbe Lehigh & Susquehanna Railroad at Catasanqna, Pa., on tbe 2?tb, while on their way to school, and Instantly killed. , Four hundred miners at Pittsburgh, Pa. struck on tSe 27th against a reduction of one-fourth cent in the mining rate. The Mississippi River Improvement Committee has issued a call for a convention to be held at Washington, D. C., February 5,1884. Each State and Territory is requested to send delegates according to a plan proposed by the committee. As a result of the recent gas-wcli Hot at Murraysvllle, Pa, Milton Weston, Browser, Dr. Crawford and two others were on_ the 27tli held on a charge of murder by the" kroner’s Jury at Greensburg, Pa., and othir members of Weston’s band were cliargn w ith assault with intent to kill. Ter bi-.jii.-ss houses at Waverly, Tenn., were by fire on tbe 27tb, causing a loss of $75,(50, PERSONAL AND POLITICAL The Grand Jury at WashirXon was at work on the 23d on c*, e s agMnst claim/ agents. The Government had) evidence that twenty persons or ftmis hatt'flled papers for pensions for Conv,derate soldiers. W. H. H. Burns, father of the n>u-dered Zora, reached Lincoln, 111., on the lad to consult, as was alleged, a clairvoyant touching his daughter’s taking off. Bus. picions were aronsed that mischief was meant toward Carpenter, but the latter showed no fear, and was said to be paying detectives large sums of money to secure clews.
James W. di Neale, a citizen of Toledo, 0., now in his ninetieth year, has recently discovered that the extensive estate of his father at Alexandria, Va., only awaits bis claim with proper papers. In a newspaper office on the 23d at Brighton, N. J., a Democratic politician named J. L. Van Syckle shot the editor, John Cheeseman, in the breast. The wounded man threw his assailant to the floor and fatally pounded him. The Massachusetts Supreme Court has decided that a .woman may be legally appointed on the State Board of Health, Lunacy and Charity. This decides in the affirmative the question whether or not a woman is a person, under the statute. Bernard Boland, who ten years ago was sent to the Massachusetts Penitentiary for life, on conviction of murder, has Deen pardoned because of the discovery that the statutes will not permit a boy to be sent to State Prison. J. W. Wiogins, of Brooklyn, has secured a verdict of $4,500 against Edward Day for calling him an old fraud. Sergeant Mason, who was sent to the Albany (N. Y.) Penitentiary for eight years for an attempt to kill Qulteau, was pardoned by President Arthur on the 24th. Walter S. Haines, a Chicago chemist, reported on the 24th that he was unable to discover traces of narcotic drugs in the liver of Zora Burns, recently murdered at Lincoln, 111. The Grand Jury of San Francisco on the 24tb indicted Miss Aggie Hill, who claims to be the wife of Senator Sharon, and W. M. Nelson, her attorney, for forgery, perjury and conspiracy. The centennial celebration of the evacuation of New York by the British was celebrated in New York City on tho2otb. Governor Cleveland unveiled the statue to Washington; President Lane, of the Chamber of Commerce, formally presented it to President Arthur, as representative of the United States, and George William Curtis delivered the oration, after which Bishop Potter pronounced the benediction. SoroCßXEii, Troth, the noted colored lecturer, died at Battle Creek, Mich., on the morning of the 26th, aged one hundred and eight years. She gained her freedom in 1828, under the Emancipation act of York, and for forty years she had spoken to the public on liberty, temperance and woman suffrage. •
Jq£* VAlerai an Mthdf, haa Mb appointed Sftinish Min later qt WaMtthgton. In an interview in Hew YqrifrCity on tbe 27th Governor Murray, qf Utah, said; that a combination to dMjr the lajrs at Congress had long existed in Utah, atid defeated she will of tbe President and Congress. He warned the conntry of the dangers that beset the Government, and said he was on his way to Washington to make an appeal for tbe establishment of good government in Utah by Congress. He said that a strong sovereignty was growing, and that the one remedy was to abolish the Legislature, repeal tbe organic act, and appoint a Territorial Connell. Thomas A. Doyle was on tbe 27th elected Mayor of Providence, R. 1.. for the fifteenth time. FOREIGN. There were twenty deaths from yellow fever at Havana, Cuba, during the week ended on the 24th. Cairo advices of the 25th state that the feeling of panic over El Mahdi’s success bad been intensified by reports received that the False Prophet was rapidly marching towards Lower Egypt. The Khedive was making desperate offers to tbe Bedouin chiefs to induce them to organize an army of resistance to the Prophet. A corps composed of six thousand Bedouins and two thousand gendarmes was being rapidly organized to march against the invader. Roux de Frassainet, a Paris (France) banker, failed on tbe 24th for 18,000,000 francs, and James & Cos., Manchester (Eng.) merchants, made an assignment for $550,000. The village of Port Perry, Ont., suffered a loss of SIOO,OOO by a fire on the 26th. The small steamer Eclipse went down off Pine Tree Harbor, Canada, during the recent gale, and John Drew, tbe only survivor, reached shore on a scow which he cut loose from the steamer. Throe bodies came ashore on tbe 26th with' life preservers marked Eclipse. One waa identified as that of Captain Bush, of Sarnia; one as tbat of Engineer James Moore, and the other was unknown. Thirty-five wheat-laden craft are reported ice-bound at the month of the Don, in the Caspian Sea, and must remain until spring. The Dutch bark Judith was wrecked on the Norwegian coast a few nights ago, and foiirteen persons perished. The King of Spain on tbe 27th issued a decree pardoning ail fugitive corporals concerned in the late uprising, on condition that they return within two months. The business portion of Rat Portage, in Manitoba, was destroyed by fire on the 27th. The loss was heavy. News was received at Matamoros, Mex., qn the 27th that the schooner Bnso bad been lost at sea, on a voyage from Agcorbumpo to Guaymas, Mex. Four of tbe crew and twelve passengers were drowned. The French Cabinet Council has rescinded the decree'forbidding the importation of American pork.. The Mpdri-d-Government has decreed that slaves in Cuba'shall no longer be punished with stocks and fitters. /Thirteen hundred men were on the 27th (thrown out of employment by tbe failure of Dobie Sc Cos., the Glasgow shipbuilders.
LATER NEWa A fire tn New York City on the 29tli ult. destroyed the Windsor Theater and several other buildings, causing a loss of $500,000. During services In the Maverick Street Church at East Boston, Mass., on the 29th Rev. Warren H. Cudworth, a Unitarian vas tor, fell dead while offering prayer. THESaxonville (Mass ) carpet mills were burned su the 29th ult., causing a loss of about $2004)00. Theres i Svuiilata, who killed Charles Stiles in the Valmer House at Chicago over a year ago, was released from the penitentiary on the 29th ult., her sentence having expired. The greater portion ot Ocala, Fla., was destroyed by fire on the 29th ult. Loss, $200,000. Two persons were killed by explosions. W. E. Stevenson, ex-Governor 'of West Virginia, died at Parkersburg a few days ago. At Lancaster, Ky., on the 28th ult. Judge George Denny shot and killed Janies H. Anderson in self-defense. Jacobs. Cohen & Cos., fur dealers of New York, have failed for SIIB,OOO. Nathaniel Lee, an aged farmer of Madison, Ind., was swindled a few days ago by three-card-monte men to the amount of $5,500. James G. Blaine, In a letter written on the 28th ult. to a Philadelphia journalist, advocates the passage of a law by Congress to distribute the net. proceeds of the whisky tax among the States in proportion to population. A fire at Paris 0., on the 28th ult. destroyed thirty-five business houses, valued with their contents at $140,000. Near North Worcester Station, Mass., on the 28th ult. a car of a Boston, Barre Sc Gardner passenger train rolled down an embankment, turning over twice In its descent. About fifty persons were in the coach, and all were Injured, a dozen seriously. An explosion in Mayer Bros.’ drug-house 'at Kansas City, Mo., on the 28th ult. set the building on fire, causing its destruction, with a loss of SIOO,OOO. In the State of Pueblo, Mex., a few nights ago robbers murdered Father Cato and bis two servants, severely wounded his nleoe, and carried off everything of value. , A hand-cab on the Ohio Southern Road, containingfive men, wae struck by an engine on the 29th ult, near Bethesda, 0. and three men on the Car were killed. A constable and * deputy In Marion COjmty, Ala,, attempted recently to arrest WUlfam Btandford for Insulting a Mrs* when btandford shot the eoristbble -deed and ran. The deputy pursued, and -he end Btandford both shot at one#, when I both men fell d*d. The three men were •ell killed In ten minutes.
t £“*?• He Favorstlse IMstribotUm of the Sevenn. . from the Winter Tax Among flu Severe PHTf.ADELpmA, NoV. '3o.—The PTCSJ publishes the following letter to its editoi from Hon. James G. Blaine: “I have re ceived your note, inquiring whether I wonlc be willing to give, in the more anthentii form of a letter over my own signature, cer tain views which I expressed in conversatiot -several weeks since touching an Important financial question. I understand yon to re fer to some observations I made to one a your assistant editors on the proposition of tin Republican State Convention of Pennsyl vania for * the distribution of the surplus revenue of the National Treasury amon; the States.’ 1 understand yon to refer stil more particularly to a suggestion of my owl as a substitute for the Pennsylvania propo sitions, to which I thought I saw fatal ob jections. I have no reason for withholding my views, and 1 admit the wisdom of youi suggestion that I would better state then myself than to have them possibly mistatei by others. “ The proposition of the Pennsylvania Re publican Convention is to distribute ‘ amorif tbe States any surplus in the Nations Treasury that may arise from a redundan revenue.’ The first objection which I set to this proposition is the otter uncertainty <t the amount of redundant revenue. Itma) be 81,009,000 or It may be 8100,000,000 Here In Maine they made an absolute pel capita distribution of it among tht entire population—a trifling sum to each. That, of course, threw contempt upon tbe whole measure. There is a second objection to the Pennsylvania proposition, which, in my Judgment, is still mori serious. It would be unfair to Senators anc Representatives to lay upon them obligations and motives which would constant!} tend to turn them from the straight path o: duty to the National Government. Yoi can not have the National Government am the State Government Joint owners of thi same treasury without mischievous conflict Such a partnership is at war with the wellbeing of the State and Nation. A tbirc objection to the Pennsylvania proposition is that it proceeds upot the assumption of a continuing redundancy of National revenue. Thiels opposec to all sound views of administration. Tin Government wants just enough revenue. A redundancy always leads to extravagance, to many forms of corruption, and to all manner of schemes for getting rid of money. The time is rapidly approaching, however, when, by reason of the terms lit which the National debt Is funded, the payment of the remainder must of necessity be postponed for years—the larger part ot it, indeed, tc the next century. Tills brings with It th necessity of reducing the National revenue. “The present system of taxation is yield Ing more than 8100,000,000 beyond the amount required for the ordinary expense oi Government Its reduction will soon become an imperative duty. Indeed, a strong movement is already on foot for the repeal of the entire system of internal revenue, on tbe assumption, which is justified by facts, that receipts from customs will afford abundant revenue for the needs of the Government The Protectionists desire tide, but not they alone. Judge Kelley is not more earnestly in favor of it than is Mr. Cox, of New York, who is a most intelligent representative of the free-trade interest Many of the leading free-traders in Congress are opposed to the continuation of the tax on spirits. It is, therefore, quite evident—it is at least highly probable—that a coalition ot men holding antagonistic views on the question of protection will, at the first opportunity, effect the abolition of the system of internal revenue.
“Our state and municipal taxation is direct It coines upon the property with crushing force. There are few communities in the United States that pay so little as one cent per annum on the actual value of their real property. There are many communities that pay more than two cents on the actual value. The houses, the farms, the factories, the stores, the shops, all feel It is a heavy burden—a burden unrelieved by any form of indirect taxation. Why, therefore, should not' the States be permitted to have the tax on spirits for their own benefit, if the National Government does not need it? The National and State Governments, as I think 1 have shown, can not safely share the same revenue; but if the National Government has no longer need of the tax on the spirits, why should not the entire amount which it yields annually Be paid over to the States? Could it be regarded as wise statesmanship to continue the heavy, oppressive direct tax on all property under the State Governments, and at the same time command a hurtful luxury like spirits to go free ? That would be a folly which no other Government on the globe could by any possibility commit. The tax on spirits oppresses no one. It is paid only by consumers, and the most extreme advocate of temperance can not maintain that taxing the article increases the consumption. “The more I have reflected upon it the more evident it has become to my mind that it Is wiser to tax whisky than it is to tax farms and homesteads and shops, and that it would be an act of incalculable folly to re-' init the 889,000,000, Instead of giving it to the States for the relief of oppressive taxation. I trust I have made the differences between this proposition and tire Pennsylvania proposition sufficiently plain. The one which I have suggested gives the revenue from a specific tax wholly to the States, and does not depend upon a chance surplus or an accidental remainder In the National Treasury. It makes the tax on spirituous and malt liquors a permanent resource to all the States, enabling them thereby definitely to readjust and reduce their own taxation. Each State could most wisely use its share according to Us own necessities. In Maine, for exagiPl*. our share would enable us to repeal absolutely the State tax proper, leaving only ike county and town taxes upon the ESSSI $7,500,000 which would fall jo your share. Y°ur cJ^qf-Phtladelphia^oP^revive nearly 81, gwfOflßper annum. States, that harej ,i ; I believe the measunfwoukLpriwe a ‘great beneficence’ to the people in ail parts of the Republic. Very respectfully, “James G. Bt.ainr.”
la English Variety Store. An officer of the army who was going ont to Indio to join his regiment, re-t cently made all bis purchases at a famed West-End establishment where the boast is that everything can be had there cheap and of the best. The customer was such a large buyer that the proprietor, contrary to nsage, stepped forward to thank him and to express a hope that the officer was perfectly satisfied and had been able to find everything he required. The Captain thanked the proprietor, and answered: “Nearly all.” “Not all?” was the quick query oi the proprietor; “not all? I hoped, sir, we could find yon everything.” "Why. it is a little out of your line.” “Out of our line? Not at all.” “O. you are quite sure of that, are you?” “Quite certain, sir.” “Well, then,” continued the Captain; laughingly, “I want a wife.” “Step this way, sir;” and the aston, ished military man followed. He went through strange labyrinths, and up and down stairs innumerable. En route the proprietor communicated these facts. About three or four months prior a beautiful, highly-educated girl, of gooij family, whohad lost her parents, and with them all resources, applied t<J him for employment. He had, after listening to "her story, thougtj she was a novice to business, been touched by her friendless situation, ana gave her employment, and he had found her a worthy aDd exemplary S'rl. The Captain saw and admired. e bought of her and introduced him, self. He came often, bought more, amj upon inquiry found all particulars tq have been truthfully stated. His manners and appearance pleased the girl, and when he told her the story of how his last want had been mentfoned to the proprietor of the establishment it ended in a hearty laugh on both sides —but after the laugh they were married within three days, and she is now on her way to India. —London Miscellany. Mathews the Elder and the Judge. Mathews the elder, being in Shrewsbury one assize time, turned into court for an hour's amusement. He had not been there many minutes when an usher put a note in his hand running: “Judge Park hopes that Mr. Mathews will come and sit by him.” Threading his way through the crowd, the gratified comedian mounted the judgment seat and humbly yet proudly took the place awarded him. The Judge shook him cordially by the hand, put the trial on before him and a packet of sandwiches at his elbow, and made him altogether comfortable. Two or three years afterward Mathews was staying with his friend Rolls, and over the wine and walnuts the latter asked the actor if he had met Justice Park somewhere; a question setting Mathews in such praise of the Judge that Rolls could not keep from laughing, and so raising suspicion. " Hid he say anything about me?” queried Mathews. “Well,” was tbe reply, “he was here not long ago and said to roe: •! think, Roll's, you are a friend of Mathews, the actor, who has such a dreadful propensity for taking people off. Imagine my consternation at Shrewsbury two years ago on seeing him directly in front of me, evidently studying me with the intention of showing me up. What do you think I did? I sent a courteous message to him and invited him to come and sit by me; and so, I trust, propitiated him that he will have too much good feeling ever to introduce me into his gallery of legal portraits.’ ” —All the Year Hound. —Governor Roberts, of Texas, refuged to issue a Thanksgiving proclamation during his term of office, saying he would do nothing to “blend Church and State.”— N. Y. Times.
—The utmost duration of a flash of .lightning does not exceed the sixteenth part of a second. —Chicago Journal. THE MARKETS. New York, Novembers*. LIVE STOCK—Cattle 85 00 © 875 SHEEP 375 © SSO _ HOGS 450 © 480 FLOUH—Good to Choice 415 © 675 Patent 680 © 760 WHEAT—No. 2 Bed I ll!i@ 114 No. 2 Spring.: 1 m @ 109 CORN—No. 2 2?4@ 6 >!'i OATS—Western Mixed 3H @ 38)4 BYB 70 m 72 PORK-Mess 13 00 © 13 25 LARD—Steam 865 © 878 CHBESE 10 © 11 >4 WOOL—Domestic 32 © 45 CHICAGO. BEEVES-Extra $7 00 © $7 25 Choice #6O @ 675 Good 550 © 640 Medium. 450 Cm 540 Butchers’ Stock 300 © 450 Inferior Cattle 225 @ 275 HOGS—Live—GoodtoCholce 435 © 630 SHEEP 300 @ 400 BUTTER—Creamery 32 © 41 Good to Choice Dairy. .. 25 © 35 BQGSrrFresh 25 © 2S FLOUR—Winter 6 0(1 © 615 Spring. 400 © 575 Patent 650 @ 700 GRAIN— Wheat, No. 2Bpring 98 1 /,© 98% Corn, No. 2 64%@ 55 Oats, No. 2 31 © 31)4 Rye, No. 2 67%© 58 BR^ite- 2 ■** “ Red-Tipped Hurl 4)4© 6)4 Fine Green...., 6)4© 6 Inferior a © 4 POTATOES—Good to Choice 30 © 40 PORK—Mess 12 90 ©lB 00 LARD—Steam 825 © 8 30 Common Dressed Siding 18 00 © 22 00 uoo ©moo Fencing moo ©l4 50 dfewjli* BHBEP—Poor to Oboloe 800 O 4 0
