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About The Oregon weekly statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1878-1884 | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1887)
TldiH OREGON STATESMAN FUIDAY, MAEICII 18. 1887. "WEEKLY STATESMAN Published ertry Friday by th STATESMAN PUB. CO. BUBSCEIPTION SATIS: Omtmt.Iii adYnc fl Ot HxnoDUu, in advance it w SUBSCRIBERS DESIRING THE ADDRE8S of their paper Chan red mud MM th mi of their former postofflce, as well as of ta office to which they with the paper caangeo. All subscriptions outside of Marlon and Polk' counties will be stopped promptl when the time paid for expires, unless the su rlber has i weu-anown financial standing. i on mv al ways see to what date your subscription is paid by looking at the tag on your paper. TJO NEW SUBSCRIPTIONS WILL BE il en unless paid for in advance. TAK "Why didn't the Statesman print it?" said a gentleman the other day to an era ploye on the paper, and referring to i "family affair" that had lately come up to be talked about in the city. "The Statesman doesn't believe in stickinjj its nose into domestic matters," was the re ply. "To be sure," continued the friend, "that plan will usually do to follow, but when anything becomes common proper ty, it occurs to me that a newspaper like the Statesman pretends to be should mention it, at least." "Most of which is bosh and poppycock," blurted out the hired hand. "How many men and wo men are you intimate with who are not proprietors of closets with skeletons in them? How is it in your own home? Would you care to have some newspaper man with a sharp pencil and sharper tongue sneaking into your house on a hunt for old bones and dust? And sup pose some boy or girl that bears your name should make a bad alip into sin, would you be able to bear it better and have healthier appetite for breakfast after reading of the whole affair in the morning -paper? Certainly not. The world is .'-ill of men who like 'enterprising'newspapers, bat it is always the case that these are the first fellows to shut up like clams whenever anything off color breaks out in their own front yards or in their neighborhoods." Thus ended the conversation, and it is be lieved that in future this newspaper will have one less faultfinder among its Salem readers. This man who places a ten dollar notice in his local paper and flatters himself that he is a liberal advertiser will be surprised to learn that a yearly advertisement, one column in length, in the Chicago Tribune cost the advertiser $26,000. The New York Herald receives for its lowest priced column $39,000 and for its highest. $48, 000 ; the New York Tribune for its lowest $28,753 ; and those papers, it is stated, are never at a loss for advertising to fill their -columns. The fact is that careful, liberal advertising pays. Nothing better illus t rates this great truth than the rush now to California. Two years ago the southern -section of the state organized to advertise, and they managed it well. The northern section soon took their cue. To-day the hotels of southern California will not ac commodate the visiters, and San Francis co hotels registered laBt wek over 5,000 guests. Shrewd John Sherman is said to have made an alliance with Foraker and Biit terworth f Ohio by which he hopes to secure the presidential nomination. The project includes the lifting of Foraker in to Sherman's seat in the senate and the elevation of Butterworth to the governor ship. This plan of campaign would carry Ohio, but the country cannot be moved from the Buckeye fulcrum. It will be necessary for Sherman to dislodge Blaine's long lever that reaches clear out to the Pacific before he can count on any suc cess. And Blaine's lever is an awful hard one to dislodge. It has too firm a hold for uch tactics as John Sherman's to move it in the least The bill changing the name of a county from St. John to Logan caused a commo tion in the Kansas legislature greater than the telegraphic reports represented. Namerous bitter speeches were made; the republicans denounced St. John as an 'infamous traitor;" most of the dem ocrats voted for the change, and strang est of all about half of the Prohibitionists supported the bill. Mrs. James Brows Potter threatens to stir the jealousy of Mrs. Langtry. As a debutante in London, the American elocutionist claims to be offered three times as high a price for her services as was paid to the Jersey Lily. How much of this sum is paid for her well-cultivated notoriety and how much for her dramatic art is not specified. It is understood that the resignation of Br. Josephi, as superintendent of the Or egon state insane asylum, has been ten dered to the board of commissioners, to take effect July 1st, and that it will be accepted upon the conditions named. Salkm is spending more money propor tionately for public school purposes than any town in the state. A special tax of h mills was levied by the annual school meeting last week. Sunday Oregonian. Mrs. Gbbkly, wife of the Chief Signal Officer, is a niece of the late Senator Nes mith of Oregon, who was beloved of all pioneers on the Pacific Coast. 8. F. Alta. There is no reasonable doubt thai Sa .m will be granted the benefits of the .rp rfplivarv flvstAm tn nnmmania in Tii. THE SUNSHINE AND THE SHADOW, Was there ever a joy without its atten- dant sorrow? Was there ever a sweet without its bitter ? "Was there ever a sky so blue that in all its horizon-bound cir cle, no speck of black, no fleck of cloud appeared? A thousand generations have asked these questions, each man of himself, Philosophers without number have pon- dered over them and'have died without e merging from the depths of their epecu lation. Through all ages the questioners have questioned and the thinkers have thought, and no man has raised his voice to answer, "Yes ; my joys know no sor row ; my sweet no bitter ; my sky is blue without the speck and without the cloud If any mortal, enraptured by the con sciousness of a passing bliss, has thought to give Buch an answer, his thought has perished ere his lips formed it into words, Before a sentence, before a syllable has been uttered, his cloud has appeared above the horizon. It may have been great and it may have been small, but. great or small, it was a cloud, and he the unspoken thought has realized that he, too, was of the mortals who struggl and suffer and bear the burden of human' ity. The sun itself, transcendent in its glory and rendering glorious the day about and the earth on which its rays fall, draw from the body of earth the moisture which forms the mist, and the mist forms the cloud which destroys the perfection of the day. The very perfection of the day has rendered it imperfect. The very in tensity of the glory has rendered the glo rious less glorified. So it is and so it will be. The very ex cess of joy calls up the lurking sorrow The sweet itself contains t he bitter. The cloudless sky is clouded simply because there have been no clouds to turn aside the fierce rays of the sun. It is nature and it is the lot of humanity. If there ever was a mortal whose happiness was true, lasting and unalloyed, it was before the primal curse withered the leaves of Ed,n and drove sinful humanity into out er darkness, to wander there, to battle there, alone. Nay, more it was before the mighty laws of nature had been de creed. It was before the warmth of the sun had formed the cloud, before the per fect had for the first time brought forth the imperfect. It is bo, and it is better so. If there were no cloudy days, who would rejoice in the bright ones ? If there were no bit ter, who would know the sweet? If there was no sorrow, who would realize joy It is only in sickness that we know the blessing of health. It is only when we stumble and fall beneath the cross that we feel how glorious it is to walk erect without the burden. It is sorrow that teaches us the nature of happiness. bo it is. Nature's curse is Nature'i blessing. It is by the surrounding dark ness that we know the light. It is by discord that we learn to appreciate the harmony. The very blow struck by di vine wrath bears the healing power of the divine touch. Humanity is most blessed in being cursed. THK CITlf COUNCIL. A member of the Salem city "council has given notice of his intention to intro duce an ordinance changing the number of meetings of that body from twice a month, as it now stands, to once a month. The Statesman don't favor this move. In the first place, it looks like taking a ret rograde step "advancing backward," which is contrary to the spirit of enter prise manifested in many ways by 8a lem's citizens. In the second olace il would work an injustice to those having accounts against the city, for they would be compelled to wait two months for their money, unless the proceedings were hasty ana irregular. This is all wrong. In the third place, the passage of the proposed amendment would cripple the usefulness of the Statesman as a news organ, for we could then publish the report of the delib erations of this honorable and much c teemed and abused body only once month, and every fair-minded and broad- gauged citizen will agree that this would not be giving us a fair shake, after equip ping a splendid printing establishment and employing the requisite labor and talent for such work. We are in favor of changing the intent of the proposed ordinance and making weekly meetings, the same as Portland mm wuer great, cities. Alter we get a Woolen mill and a fruit cannerv, our council should meet at least twice each week. Far be it from the disposition of the council to brinif tip the rear in the procession of progress. It would be setting a poor example for citizens in the private walks of life. In addition to the pocketing, the presi dent has vetoed 132 bills, twenty-one more than the entire number of vetoes recorded from the establishment of the government up to the Cleveland incum bency. The ex-mayor of Buffalo is surely entitled to the bakery as the king vetoer of America. It is simply the outcroppings of pig-headed stubbornness and selfish ig norance. Bv a strange old law, the mayor of Mon treal has to have locked upon his neck a heavy gold collar while in discharge of nis omciai duties. Ihe present Mayor, U6..m0, BtKiBuuBrai cobi z,aw. We suppose that when the mayor is SeimltnUthlSCOlIar be 18 rU" - j HIGH LICENSE. The New York chamber of Commerce .... i nasenuorsea tne nigh license bill now before the state legislature, and as many of the members of that body are whole sale liquor dealers, the indorsement is almost as remarkable as that other devel opement of the New York fight the union of the prohibitionists with the li quor men to oppose the measure. Thong! tne temperance men were in tins way hopelessly divided, it has been thought that the liquor dealers were united. The fight, therefore, becomes a closer and consequently, more interesting one. The temperance societies of New York city have adopted the plan of publishing maps snowing the number ot saloons bv means of black spots, as a disease is indicated in the maps prepared by the health officer, In one district there is one saloon to every seven voters, which, even at the most liberal estimate of the drinking capacity of customers, would mean a starvation business. Doubtless the high license views of some of the larger dealers are influenced by the belief that the suppres sion of the smaller saloons would improve business for them. New York city as whole has 8,688 saloons, or one to every twenty-three voters. It is estimated that high license will increase that state's rev enue by over a million dollars, and the temperance men are daring the legists to defeat the bill. In the city, of course. the liquor men are supreme, but the rest of the state offsets the city's power. It is, therefore, evident that the resolutions of the Chamber of Commerce, coming from the city and from so important a body will be very likely to throw the balance in favor of the bill. WHAT SENATOR BALE THINKS. In an interview with a New York Tri bune reporter Senator Hale, of Maine, recently said of the last congress : "There are two things that have been shown very clearly and stand out distinctly above every thing else. These are the utter lack of the administrative and the legisla tive faculty on the part of the democratic party in the first place, and secondly, the unpatriotic attitude of the democratic party. They entirely failed in everything relating to fiscal and financial legislation, I expect that this unpatriotic attitude of the democratic party and its indifference to national security and national honor will become thoroughly understood by the people during the next year, and will become a prominent feature for discus cussion in the next presidential election. There is very little hopefulness in the minds of the democratic leaders in con gress as to the future. They have very lit tle confidence in the administration. think the democrats are likely to renomi nate Cleveland. Personally Blaine is not thinking about the subject, and he has no desire to become again a candidate. If he is a candidate, it will be because he cannot help it and because his party is bound to make the fight again with him as its leader." It is quite likelv that Blaine cannot help it. -That's our prediction. STILL PA1CINO REVENUE. Even though the radical prohibitionists continue to contend that the Maine pro bitory law fully and absolutely prohibits the traffic in liquors in that state, yet the United States government continues to collect its special revenue tax there "all the same." Bradstreets, one of the ablest of the A'ew York weekly journals, and the national authority on finance, states in its issue of March 5th, as follows: "As regards the efficacy of the law, re ferring to the Maine prohibitory, it is worthy of notice that the United States government continues to derive a share of its revenue from the liquor dealers Of Maine. During the special tax year end ed April 30, 18f&, as many as 41 retail liquor dealers and 6 wholesale dealers paid special taxes to the United States government. During the same year 3 brewers, 7 wholesale dealers in malt li quors and 73 retail dealers in mult li quors paid taxes to the government." It was thought that the lamented Ste phen Maybell had made himself, or at least his name immortal, when he penned those beautiful lines on the '.'Bridge ac cross the Willamette"; but it remained for a Yamhill county man to destroy all the pleasure tuat estimable and gifted orrttar hail muan tl.A .,.....1 .. 1 1 . I inc luuiuui man parodies May bell s flowery effusion by making a sort of jin gle that winds up as follows : They're going to move, I fear they will. The county seat to McMinnvillo." The "pome" is supposed to be the wail of the residents of Lafayette, when thev consider the law passed bv the recent legislature providing for a removal of the county seat. The mugwump editor of the New York Times, speaking of the probable presiden tial candidate for 1888, says that Cleve land will be nominated by the democrats for re-election, because they cannot do otherwise. "He is the first man in his par ty, and his administration has been a most admirable one, and receives the ap probation of the whole world (iru rn and California are not in Cleveland's or the Times man's "world." thank God ! Having been granted a new trial by the supreme court, W. W. Saunders should be given a change of venue, to the end that he may have a fair and nnpa.tial uuu vy an uuprejuuiceu jury. DONT WANT A BOOM. Some people who live at a distant are being deluded by the mistaken idea that Salem is hankering after a boom ; that she wants to be propped up on the high stilts of unreal values and panic prices generally. No, this isn't what Salem wants and is going to have. She Bimply wants a quicker step all along the line of pro gress. She wants that confidence that is gradually coming to her own people in her future, and her rapid and steady growth will be assured. Booms are not healthy things for a city. They fly too high, and then drop too hard. We can work out our own destiny. We can go a little faster than we have been going for the past few years, but we must not ex ct too much too soon. The country around about Salem, and the same is true throughout the state, can support better than it supports now its present popula tion ten times the number of people. When the country's resources are all made use of, and the products manufactured at home, then we will be truly prosperous. Our prosperity will then be permanent, and not dependent almost entirely upon one product and one market. This is what we are contending for and what will be gradually brought about. As the coun try prospers, the city will build up, and the city can help the country's prosperity by furnishing a market for her products. The best market is a home market, and the more manufactures that are establish ed, the more non-producers we will have in the laborers that will be required, and the better market for the products of the soil. OVEKLANl) EKEJUHT KOUTEtf. The Northern Pacific railway, it is un derstood has advanced its west bound pas senger tariffs, so as to make west bound rates uniform with the east bound. It is understood that the Northern and Union Pacific will both advance west bound freight rates also, and Portland mer chants' say that should such an action on the part of those two lines occur, they will try to use the Canadian Pacific for a freight route. The Canadian Pacific will prove a good club to swing over the heads of these two transcontinental freight transporters, probably, in order to keep freights down where they should be; but it is hardly likely that Portland mer chants will be able to realize a satisfactory service from that route. First, it stands to reason, that freights transporteel by fast trains alone, a distance of three thou sand miles without handling, if in car load lots, will arrive at its .destination sooner after shipment, than freight that has to be transferred from cars to boat, then from boat to cars again, even though the extra distance and the newness of the road be not considered. The average or, at leaBt, the keen merchant wants his goods at as early a date as possible after shipment; that is, the lesser time they are on the road, the better he is pleased. Even though freight be a little higher, the difference between the two freight tariffs is saved to the merchant in the matter of discount, and interest. If the Canadian Pacific ever expects to com pete with the Northern and Union Pacific railways, for Oregon traffic, at will be nec- essarjrfor that line to come to Portland. CLEVELAND AMU THK JOKMOCKAT8. It is very evident that Mr. Cleveland will not secure a very hearty support for renomination from those democrats whose interente were affected by the presi dents' pocket veto, should he again "bob up" for renomination, or re-election. They have come to the conclusion that his ac quaintance with his own country is too narrow, and bis ideas of his own magni- tude are too exalted. The Benton Leader, one of the ablest democratic papers of Or egon, in condemning the presidential ao tion in vetoing the river and harbor bill very iruiy uuu apuy puis tne matter as follows: "It has been apparent along that Mr Cleveland has not yet reached a full con ception of the greatness of the west and especially of the far west. To live within the influence of even a great emporium has a certain narrowing tendency. The habit of thought induced by a contempla tion of the power and importance of a great city leads to a corresponding belit- tleinent of the rest of the country. The president is doubtless aware, for instance, that there is such a state as Oregon and votes solidly republican every time. That's about all he knows. Other information conveyed in (told type does not impress him. The eastern mind has the notion (we know it from experience) that the liocky Moun tains embody the far west and that on this side they shelve off precipitously in to the sea. They don't know or at least appreciate, that on this side is a country with enough area and enough resources for a rich empire. Tub Mormon who was willing to live with his third and youngest wife, but preferred the penitentiary to his aged wife, rwvealed the true feeling of most of this class of lawbreakers. The women who have grown old in slaving for their husbands are looked ujxm only in the light of incumbrances, and the domestic love whit.-h exists in most monoagmous households is wholly lacking. There was neyer a truer revelation of the selfishness and lust of Mormonism than this old rep- rooaie unconsciously made in the court- room. i I.OVK AND KKVOI.VKItS. The fatal results of the combination of disappointed love and the revolver has been particularly numerous of late. And so far no one can foretell just how the union of these two explosive elements will act in any given case. Within the last week or so several young women have been shot, apparent ly for simply exercising their privilege of declining an oiler of marriage. This is unusual, but it is evident that it is one of the developments that are to be guarded against. Sometimes the rejected suitor elects to find relief in Bhooting the man whom he supposes or knows to be his successful rival. There have been four or five cases of this kind within the past fortnight, one of them quite prominent In other instances the man hikes the more considerate course of encasing the btillot in his own anatomy only. Occasionally he acts UKn the vague idea that killing both the woman and himself at the Bame time will serve as a wedding ceremony for the great hereafter. If the depressed individual is of the other sex there is a similar uncertainty as to results. In the present lack of knowledge in the premises it would be well for all those recognizing the approach of the alleged tender passion to got their lives insured. This is not exactly fair to the insurance companies, but will serve to convince them that love as well matches must be powder. kept away from gun THK AUK OK SHAM. ' It is asserted that people nowadays are not so genuine as they used to be. It pointed out that there is increased super ficiality, sham and pretension in almost all kinds of sociuty. Young people assume1 in these days to be wiser than their elders There is more shoddy on the avenues and thinly veneered ignorance in the draw ing rooms. The people who say these things, of course, are old, and they are set aside with the remark that old people always talk thus. The degeneracy of the times is a never failing topic in all ages But yet there is reason to believe that there never was so little genuineness in Ieople as there is at present. And the cause is not hard to find. To ex -met any one to appear natural- and tell the truth who habitually drinks chiccory flavored with glucose for coffee, spreads his bread with oleomargarine for butter, has his food eooked with cotton-seed oil for lard and stimulates himself on a solution decayed raisins and chemical acids for wine, is, on the faoe of it, pretosturous, The imputation cannot keep regularly fill ing its stomach with fraud three times a day and retain any sense of uiorul region sibility. Humanity is in such a state of paralysis already that reform is hoe less. Those who manufacture the fraudx are the only ones who cun afford to live on genuine diet, and their charai-ter necessarily gone, or they would lie in some other business. There does not seem te be any hope anywhere. HUl'KKME COL'KT CI.KKK. Editor Statesman : It is current!? ru mored that Judge Thayer insists on the appointmont of his son, Claud, to the olice of clerk and reporter of the supreme court. Is this report well founded? Is it possible that one of our judges desires to foist on the public by his own official act his son? Is it possible that one of our supreme judges really has the audacity to do such an act? Do the people want Claud Thay er for clerk ? I think not. It seems to me that the appointment of Claud Thayer by his father and Judge Stratum would be an act that would merit and receive the uni versal reprobation of the public without ro gard to party. It seems to me that it is hardly possible that such un act of official neK)tism is contemplated. The old notion as to the spottiest purity of the ermine does not seem to be cher ished in certain quarters. CrrixKN. C- . . oajjcm wants a iruii cannery and a woolen mill, one or both, swn. A fruit cannery would not only give employment to many workmen, increase our popula tion and help to build up our city, but it would also furnish a market for the vast amount of fruit raised in this section thousands of dollar's worth of which now goes to waste every year. A woolen mill would not only be of benefit to the prosper ous growth of our city, but it would help to furnish a market for the wool grown here. Any kind of manufacturing indus tries should be encouraged j but more es pecially do we want those abeve named established. The right man or men will find plenty of encouragement from our people in inaugurating either of the enter prises. The National Labor Convention which met in Cincinnati recently was described by one of its members this way: "We don't know what we want, but we urn- pose to have it whutever it is, peaceably if we can, forcibly if we must." While the Statesman has its views and is not afraid to express tliem.it res pects the opinions of till, and is willing to admit into its columns correspondence op posed to its way of thinking and constru ing facts as it finds them. The largest farm in the world is not in California.but in Louisiana. It comprises iOUO,uuu acres and has a navigable water front of HOD miles. An Omaha man disposed of his remains in unique fashion. He wished to have them cremated and the ashes dtqtositt d in an urn which will ornament the bar of a saloon in Omaha. It is doubtful wheth er the fellow expects to pose as an awful example or whether he thinks lie would fuel most at home in a bar room with the "boys." Tub congressman who eats the most has been corraled in Washington, and strange to suy, hails from the economical state of wooden nutmegs and bass wood hams known to geographers as Connecti cut. His name is Mitchell and a square lunch costs him four dollars. 1'erhaps he is making up for lost feed in tils early springtime The only persons who have lost money on Lincoln real estate are ttiose who have failed to buy any of it. Lincoln, Nebrasr ka, State Journal. The Bame may be truthfully said of Salem, and the future will more clearly exomplfly this fact than has the past. Nohody seems to want an extra session of congress. The regular session was dose enough, and more than the country will recover from before the end of the year. SUPREME COUItT. C. W.Sunfonl, respondent, vs. II. W. Sanford, appullant; appeal from Coos county: argued and submitted. 8. 11. Hazard for resjiondont, and Judge J. F, Watson and A. W. Crawford for appel lant. March 10. CASES SET FOR HEARING. Monday, March 14 Holland vs. Day, etal. Tuesday, March 15 Philbriek vs. O'Connor; Stapluton vs. Insurance com pany. Wednesday, March 19 Lyons vs. Leahy, et ai ; Palico vs. Byrne. Thursday, March 17 Kay vs. Hodge. Monday, March 21 West vs. Taylor ; I'ittock vs. Jordan. Tuesday, March 22 Fisk vs. Honarie. WedneHclay, March 23 Motive vs. Caesar; Weiler vs. 0. U. it N. com pany. Thursday, March 24 Thompson vs. Holladay. Friday, March 25 State vs. Johns; State vs. Cram. March 15. Elizabeth Stapleton, appellant, vs. Hamburg Bremen Fire insurance comw- ny, respondent ; apca! from Multnomah county ; argued and submitted. (ieo. W. l'hilbrirk, respondent, vs. Pal rick C. Smith, defendant, Thomas J. O'Connor, appellant; appeal from Mult nomah county ; argued and submitted. . Salem, March 16. Ed. Lyon and C. P. Chamberlin, re flpomlents, vs. James B. Leahy and Wil liam J. Leahy and Ella, his wife, and Isaac N. Solis and Maria Solis, appel lants, apieal from Multnomah county ; argued and submitted. C. W. Sanford, resp., vs. II. W. San ford, app. ; judgment ullirined. Opinion by Lord, C. J. BEAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS. The following are the real estate trans actions for the pat week, in Marion coun ty, according to deeds filed in the clerk's office : John Durbin and wife to T,m lmi.; the undivided half of the went half (.f L.t 4, hlk 33, Salem, and lots 6, 0, 7, blk 00: Jacob hcott and wife to (ieu. A, K...iH 135 acres in t 8 s r 1 : h.1n a ti-,-t ! land in t 8 s r 1 e : 5X). T,10U HALECHKAI'.-ONK HAI.XHRRKD PKIt- J Ctieoll HLU llllfl ! vunr. ..1.1 .hi- L'.T,!"' (:,;,'!,nt' two ,ml "''1 mile.; Kjutti of AumvlUe. !M.mw MILLEK IJK0S., DEALKK8 IN FIELD, VEGETABLE and FLOWER SEEDS, lniiirlitl Ekk Kootl, (rmii Tool. l urtlllicera, Ktc, El. oouo toroiir uew catalogue. 8-18-lm I am bettor tretarel with i'i,i..i.,i.. Oheron, ;arrlan, Trotting, Running, aHd'other home nuts, than an tww,m,.. i ,i7' . ""'"I can print home hill on cloth, paper or color ,1 car. board, at a, low rate a can he had Vn Portland, or eluuwhere In the mate. 8i.'l m your order.. K. M.wlrr i'" Steam Printer, Salein. WHAT FOR! Forstner, TiKany Mo. Arinreclatlne thn want. n n,i. ..... are delivering goo to them (ree o charg" at II station, on tfie line of the O. A C. Half road between Oreumi ciiu- .j m.....' , STAPLE DRY GOODS, llootg and hoe Men's Clothing Hats and nap, ladles' and gent'i fur nlHhing good., farming toolx, nails, cutlery and groceries. Thoy nay the hlirli.'Tpl,f.n..i.... . and have tl.ejr Snto flifcu" ,5 M.S n any line of goods of the rame uiiniiiv Fanner' SUire, l3 Bin .1 ret, 8lm, Or. SlHBBILLS 3i7-otdW Forstner, Tiffany & Co.