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VOL IV.—No. 65.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
R M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
At X81 BAY STHHET,
By JT. STERN.
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corder, Savannah, Georgia.
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the piace ol the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
l9“Wedo not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
Ihe Fecorder is registered at the
Post Office in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
A Letter from Henry Clay.
Himself and the Presicfancy—A Disposition to
Bolt.
[ From the Washington Republican.]
The following unpublished letter of
Henry Clay, now in my possession, was
written to David Graham, an eminent
lawyer of New York and a prominent
member of the Whig party, by the
great statesman himself. It is curi¬
ous as evidencing a disposition on the
part of the illustrious Kentuckian to
bolt and vote the locofoco ticket if he
failed to receive the Whig nomination
for the Presidency. Ilumanum est
errare :
Ashland, 16th June, 1848
My Dear Sir: I have read your
friendly letter of the 9th, so full of
expressions and sentiments alike hon¬
orable to your head and heart. I was
prepared to expect Whig the result of the
deliberations of the Convention
in Philadelphia, and it therefore did
not take me by surprise; but I did not
foresee exactly how it was to be brought
about, and I have been greatly surpris¬
ed at some of the incidents of the.
drama. I have been moat astonished
at the course of the Ohio delegation,
upon a large majority of which I had
every reason to count.
But it is useless to dwell upon the
painful subject. Personally I am
greatly relieved. I ought to have no
regards for myself; but J do feel deep¬
ly the disappaintmeut of my friends. I
lament that I have no way of testify¬
ing my gratitude to yonrself and other
frieuds but by cherishing devotion fond remem¬
brance of their and fidelity.
To my New York friends especially,
city and country, I am under the great¬
est obligations of eternal gratitude.
An eye-witness of tbe proceedings of
the Convention, in a letter before me
says: “Now York, to whom tbe Vice
Presidency and all sorts of other lures
were held out rejected all temptation
and immortalized herself by her perse¬
vering devotion to the Whig cause and
to Clay.”
There is no alternative for me but
that of quiet submission to the decision
of the Convention so far as respects
myself. Beyond that 1 feel under no
obligation of duty to go. I caunot be
bound to support one, who, in a rever¬
sal of circumstances, would have felt
not only bound not to support me, but
who was resolved to oppose me. I can¬
not be bound to support a nomination
of one who, claiming to be a Whig iu
name, Whigs. repudiates the principles of the
But I shall take no precipitate step,
I shall endeavor fully to iufortn myself
of all the And proceedings finally of the Conven¬
tion. if there should be
no other alternative, and l am reduc¬
ed to the dilemma of choosing between
Cass and Taylor, I shall make that
choice which I believe to be pregnant
with least evil to my country.
With many and cordial thanks to
you, my dear Sir, for your long, ar¬
dent and devoted attachment to me,
I am faithfully your friend, \
H. Clay.
David Graham , Esq.
Cure for Toothache. It is said a
certain cure for tb.emoet agonizing of
pains is to mix powdered alum
salt in equal quantities; then wet a
piece of cot ten batting sufficient
make the powder adhere, and apply
to the hollow tooth. ’
Charles Ledwell obtained a
from his wile at Jefferson, Ohio,
at cue e: d ot a weak weut to her with
a proposal cd remarriage 9he struck
Wlth a Cl0b ftDd lrac
turea tus bkuii. i ii
SAVANNAH, TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1880.
A Blue Kibbon Ass.
It would be interesting to
whether that young hopeful, Frederick
Dent Grant, realizes what an odious
and detestable snob he has been m>.k
ing of himself for $ month past. Very
likely he does not, since if he were ca
pable of so much self-knowledge he
would have been warned against such
folly. The fact is, however, that Gol.
Fred. Grant has for some weeks been
public an unfailing source of disgust to decent
sentiment throughout the coun¬
try. If half that has been told of him
in Republican and independent papers
be true, he must be an even greater
and more rampant ass than the nation
had dreamed of. For years past the
world has been hearing at odd times
Col. Fred., and in such a manner as to
suggest that in him the peculiarities
the patriarchal Jesse have been Repro¬
duced with a tender and
verdure. But no one ever
that he would bloom out into such
flagrant and complicated idiot as
has shown himself to be of late.
has, indeed, distinguished himself be¬
yond all expectation, and what
needs now is a period of
and self-examination. He ought to
trace, step by step, hia
previous to and during the
Convention. He ought to make a
list of his remarks about what
would do, and what "father”
and what the country owed "father,”
etc. He ought to ponder all his swag¬
ger and loud talk and assorted ill
breeding. And then he ought to throw
his whole soul into one loud, long,
ringing off bray and, like Nebuchadnezzar,
go into the country and graze for a
month or! two. It seems to us that,
after being such a tremendous ass as
Fred. Grant has been, a man would
prefer to consort with-'four-footed beasts,
and to engage in an occupation that
kept his head close to the ground. And
if Fred, were only able to realize the
situation he would feel that way, too.—
New York Sun.
Republican Party—The Fraud
The Hartford Timas in review of the
Republican party, boils down its his¬
tory thus :
At the end of that period it had
become so openly and shamelessly
corrupt that its more decent members
deserted it in large numbers, and in
3 876 it was defeated at the polls, not
only by a majority of the popular vote,
but by the choice of a clear majority
of the electoral college. Nothing
daunted, it at once proceeded to nulli¬
fy the vote in three States, and by
the most palpable aDd stupendous
iraud of modern times, succeeded iu
“counting in” its candidate for another
four years. This is a matter of his¬
tory about which intelligent people do
not differ and which will never be
doubted hereafter by even the most
careless student of our annals. The
fact that the fraud was technically le¬
galised by the iefusai ol the “Electo¬
ral Commission” to inquire into it
does uot change its essential character.
As Charles Francis Adams, one of the
ablest and purest members of the Re¬
publican party, has well said, the
President seated by this scheme “will
wear the braud of fraud on his fore¬
head” iu all future history.
Chinese Justice. —In the treatment
of their state criminals the Chinese
move with characteristic tardiness, and
a doomed man has many months of
life before him. Routine fixes the
month of December as the most conve.
merit season for public executions. The
prisons in all the different, provinces are
all well stored with criminals under
sentence of death, but when the end
the year approaches fhe minister of
justice revises the list of these
victs, striking out any names that
desires to spa-e. The paper is then
submitted to the Emperor, who in turn
reviews the list and exercises the ira
perial clemency. When December
comes round the fatal list goes the cir
cuit of all the provinces. The Gov
ernor assembles his prisoners and holds
a solemn review at the place of execa
lion. The time has now come for for
mality and action. The paper is brought
the in duly sealed. The seal is broken and
list read out. Those whose names
are crossed out learned their good luck
for the first time; the others
needless ceremony or delav, are then
executed. To a European the lengthen
ed suspense would be intolerable,
the Chinese are phlegmatic, and as
majority of tbe convict, get end Pardoned
they are as hopeful to the as New
York murderers.
- m m m _ -
There are some policemen in
feel sold just now. A t
New York who was caught steal
ing thebe aud put in jail, pretended
was sick, was taken to a small pox
hospital, appeared to die, and hia body
was given to his frieuds from
York As soon as they got him
aDd out of eight ’l he tbat stopped had his been shamming alive
8boWt? he
well all the time.
Her Mother’s Honor.
A story of a shrewd daughter s
! told ^ or ber mother’s sake, is beautifully
by a Toledo paper, and may serve
to give a sugyestion to other folk, of a
wa y of saving a scandal and patching
up a wrong. with
A man in Toledo, it seems, a
wile and three children, became enam¬
ored of an intriguing woman and ob¬
tained a divorce in an obscure Indiana
town. He did not say a word about
it at home. One day his oldest daugh¬
ter received a parcel of patterns from
a lady in Indianapolis. It was an old
copy of a country newspaper. An ad¬
vertisement attracted her attention. It
was her an application for a divorce for
father from her mother The
young lady decided to visit her friend
in Indianapolis and to make an ex¬
cursion to the county where the di¬
vorce had been granted. She returned
with ample evidence that her mother
was living with a divorced man She ad¬
showed her father a copy of the
vertisement and told him th -t she had
found out all about him. He walked
the floor for a minute, and then turn¬
ed to bis daughter. "I have been a
very bad and guilty man,” be said,
“but it is not too late to make amends.
I will go to her and confess all and
undo what I have done.” “Confess first
to me, 1 ' said the girl “It is Miss
who is the woman in the case is it
not ?” “It is.” “I thought as much
Are you to marry her ? ’ I was to
have married her.” You must not
go to mamma yet She must be your
wife again before she knows the awful
truth.” The young lady was equal to
the emergency. The twentieth anni¬
versary, of her parents’ marriage was
close at. hand. She invited all their
friends and h^d them married again
by the same minister who performed
the ceremony twenty years before.
She took pains to have her mother’s
rival present, and remarked to her in
a corner, "Papa and mamma are mar¬
ried again as fast as the law can do it.
Wether the truth is ever known de¬
pends upon us. Papa will never tell
it, I am sure, and for mamma’s sake I
never shall. But it does seem3 to me
dear, that some other climate would
suit your constitution better than
this.”
How She Argued.
Mr. Foober wae a gentleman who
lived in the Mormon country. He
had but one wife, and never thought
of taking any more till one day an
elder tackled him and told him solemn¬
ly it was his religious duty to seal un¬
to himself a few others. Mr. Goober
went home and sadlv informed his
wife of what the elder had said, and
Mrs. Goober said she would have no
objection provided the elder would
come round and argue the case with
her piouaiy. Goober told the elder,
and the elder dropped around. He
smiled sweetly as Mrs. Goober ad¬
vanced to meet him. But, alas ! that
a mile was his last.—for a week nr two.
The next thing he knew he was skip¬
ping around the room with his coat slit
up the back and his hat knocked into
pi, while Mrs. Goober whooped him up
with the broomstick, He finally
jumped out of a window and escaped
with his life, a sadder and a wiser
man. The next time he met Goober be
told him he had a celestial revelation
by which he (Goober) was relieved
from the necessity of taking any more
wives. The one he had (Mrs. Goober)
would count for almost a thousand in
the New Jerusalem.
It Should Be Done Oftener —In
this country of ours public men are too
well known to permit officials to go
around like the celebrated Caliph
Al Raschid incognito, and see
if their subordinates are attending to
duties and are courteous °and
polite. Lord Palmerston, in this wa y
once and caught him one what of his putting on airs,' j
gave “the boys” call the
“grand bounce.” A plainly dressed
old man accompanied by his eon, a
few years since, entered one of
'great French lyceuma. The much
swollen official in charge pointed
lesslv with his pen to two chairs and
went on with his writing. When
pleased him he turned sharply
asking: “How old is your
“Twenty-one,6ir.” “Twenty-one! for'?
did you briog him here He is
iFut him to a
That's my advice!” “I intended to
have him act as my Secretary.” ‘
too old to go to school.” “I don't
he shall go to school.”
who are yoo, and what do you want
here Public ?” Instruction, “I am Duruy, Minister
i »ud I came here
;see how you received parents who had
business with you.” Curtain: slow
“ ruutsic
--------------
Malaria
In countries where this is prevalent
| Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver
and Warner’s Safe Pills are used
with wonderful success. These are
highly recommended as a preventive
.to Yellow Fever. Asa cleanser
bioud, they are without an equal
Lee and Davis.
Iu a communication from John W.
| Fairfax in the Alexandria (Va.) Geo
Jtion \zelte, the following occurs as a ravels-*
:
”The seceded States lost life, liberty
and wealth for the want of nerve m
Mr. Davis to make peace with Presi¬
dent Lincoln. Gen. R. E. Lee told
me the night before we left Appomat¬
tox for our homes that he urged Mr.
Davis, in the presence of the Secretary
of War, when the commissioners went
to Fortress Monroe to make peace upon
any terms. Make peace; if you do
not, so soon as the spring opens to en*
able Gen. Grant to move, he will break
my lines at Petersburg and take Rich¬
mond. Mr. Davis said, ‘I am afraid of
the people.’ In honor to the memory
ol Gen. R. E. Lee, I here state what
he further said, to wit: ‘I believe
Mr. Lincoln would have given us all
we aswed, except secession and slavery;
but I believe he would have agreed to
pay for the slaves at fair valuation.
Mr. Davis never gave up the command
of the army to me to do as I pleased,
as was supposed; not uut I wrote
him from Petersburg that my lines
were broken, theu he wrote me, ‘I will
leave Richmond to-night; you do the
best you can.’ That was the first time
he had given up the command to me to
do as I thought best, leaving me to be
sacrificed whilst he fled to take care of
himself.’ Here the good and great
soldier became overcome, and I left
him alone in his tent, where he had
me called in, and he reviewed to me
his course from the time he left the
‘old army’ up to his surrender. The
fear of the people cost the lives and
limbs of every one who was lost from
the time of the meeting of the commis¬
sioners at Fortress Monroe, up to the
surrender of Gen. Lee at Appomattox
Court House.”
War Expenses.
A Washington special to the Balti¬
more Sun says : “On March 8th, Sen¬
ator Kirkwood, of Iowa, offered a re¬
solution of inquiry in regard to the
expenses of the government on account
of the war between the States from
July 1, 1861, to June 30th, 1879, in¬
clusive :
“The grand totals are as follows :
Gross expenditures, $6,796,792,509,
ordinary expenditures, $609,594,124;
expenditures growing out of the war,
$6,187,243,385.
The principal items of the war ex¬
penses are tue following : Interest on
the public debt, SI,764,256.19?; pay
of two and three year volunteers,
$1,040,102,702; subsistence of tbe
army, *381417 548; clothing of the
army $345,543,880; army transporta
tion. 336 793,885; purchases of horses,
$126 572 423; other quartermaster ex¬
penditures (in round numbers), $320,
000,000; army pensions $407,429,193;
bounties (’ncluding additional bounties
under act ot 1866), $140,281,178; and
in round numbers, the following : Re¬
funded to States for war expenses,
$41,000,000; purchases oi arms for vol¬
unteers and regulars. $76,000,000 ; or
dnauce supplies, $56,000,000; expenses
of assessing and collecting internal
revenue, $113,000,000; expenses of na
tional loans and currency, $51,523,000;
premiurnsj $59,738,000. The war ex¬
penses for the navy (including about
$74,500,000 for pay and $6,500 000 for
000,000 navy pensions) aggregate about $412,
Among the other detailed
items of expenditures growing out of
the war are $5,243,034 for national
cemeteries $8,546,185 for support of i
national home for disabled
and $88,000 for the puichase of
Theatre, the scene of President Lin
coin's assassination,”
- - T
Useful TT Animals. The French
—
min * 8ter °f agriculture has issue a
U IC Pj acar d, telung what animals not
t0 kill—animals useful in destroying
F orso P e3t8 than themselves. The
fir8t 13 tbe hedge-hog, which lives on
m ; ce ' 8tQa ^ , rodents, slugs and
11 of them bnrttul to'
the hoige-hog.
111611 COmea the toad, which destroys
.
r3D3 ^'■' en ^y thirty insects per hour,
-, tlie d.
toa
18 ^ which is continup.l
*
destroying grubs, larvae, palmer
WorLUS ln8ecta wtl ° much in
JUr - v ‘ S P are the mole.
And lastly the birds, which are the
j £ reat ^cultural assistants,
nfiects aud capillars by tbe
, ds
pare o ir
.
The Paris AmZHcm cor i-Ts iwi _ n ^ v
Orlccnc aanouncJ th ^ a French
newspaper ki;
can Convention held "in «
capital 0 f in.trnnild tbe dele
ip were t-tei to\ote for •
• v,’ -
T Q °" the
° s ^ ea ^ , era that Mr. G*r
r . en n 3mma f^l a A e
^ ‘ Jr p re ( Ct ^ lca - ^
—— -, «
The Hebrews are said to have
lected a place on Long Island as
i special summer resort for their Deople.
Now they -eaa teach Gentile*
^keepers how to behave.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
LATEST TELEGRAMS.
=
FOREIGN.
London. —Tom Taylor, the distin¬
guished dramatic author is seriously
ill of paralysis. Eugenie after visiting
Ex-Empress Prince Imperial
the spot where the Was
killed is returning to Durban. She is
in good health.
Small pox is raging at Antwerp
Berlin. —Nearly 20,000 Germans
have gone to the United States during
the first quarter of the current year.
The Chinese Embassy here denies all
knowledge of war preparatioue in China.
Paris. — Rochefort has recovered
from the wound received in the late
duel.
AMERICAN.
Atlanta. —The Jessup injunction Florida
bond case va tbe Savannah,
and Western Railway and that against
the Georgia State Railroad Commission
are to be heard to-day.
Attleboro, Mass. — P. M. Carpenter,
brother-in-law of Mrs F. Stillson, of
Atlanta, arrived last night from Nian
tic with the bodies of Mrs. Stillaon’s
two children. The infant, seven months
old, was washed ashore and a child
twenty months old wae taken from the
wreck yesterday afternoon.
Washington, D. C.—In the House
the joint resolution to enforce the eight
hour law was yesterday passed by a
vote of 130 ayes to 57 nays.
Tbe consideration of the electoral
count resolution has been postponed
to the first Monday in December next.
The Senate concurred in the Hou.se
amendment to the bill regulating tbe
pay and appointment of deputy
marshals and the bill now goes to the
President.
The President has nominated Thos
F. Johnson, Collector of Customs at
Savannah.
The Senate has confirmed by a vote
of 39 to 3 the nomination of General
Longstreet, of Georgia, as Minister
resident of the United States to Tur¬
key.
Milwaukee.— Two boilers in Wal
deck Wirtz’s distillery, exploded yes¬
terday, killing one man and fatally in¬
juring another. The building was theu
partially destroyed by fire.
Denver, Col. —The Governor has
declared martial law at Leadville,
with Major Gen. D. G. McCook, in
command. The miners are now going
to work and everything is quiet.
The Chilian successes in the war of
that brisk and enterprising republic
with Pern and Bolivia have culmi¬
nated in the capture of Arioa, one,of
the most important towns on the west
coast of South America, and an in¬
valuable possession of Peru. Arica
has a population which fluctuates. It
holds its people, in fact, upon the
sufferance of earthquakes, which than are
more frequent there, perhaps,
anywhere else in the world. In 1868
500 lives and $12,000,000 worth ol
property were destroyed. Arica is
the port through which the foreign
trade of Bolivia is conducted, and as
long as the Chilians hold it, the
Bolivians will be hard beset, The
capture of Tacna, followed, as it has
been, by the capture of Arica, has
given the Chilians entire possession of
the province of Moquegna. They al¬
ready hold Tarapaca, the seat of the
31 . r ‘ 1 , 0 e P 031 B » and the Chincha
f Pern,,an . ands , - ^bere the last b found deposits of
S““° a,e to “ -
A Mania for Law.—T here is a
named Harrison Wagner
down in Frederick county, Maryland,
who has lately been tried for barratry,
would seem more appropriate to in
veetigaUs him for insanity. He has
thirteen hundred euits
various neighbors in nine years—men.
women, agents, trustees, printers, His eve -
iybody who is responsible. judg
ments amount to about $60,000, and he
a gieat many of conspire,
P er j li ryi libel, infanticide, stealing and
embezzlement.. He lives at Woodsboro,
and has sued about everybody in the
ten principal families for 200
ca ®es each They claim that nobody
8 him a dollar, and that most of
them don’t even know hinv They say
ia a DU i 8a Dce as Eugepe Fair
*, d ai ‘ r ^^ ,f he am80D > a °d we shouidn t won
From the Hub
There i 3 perhaps no tonic offered to
the people _.i that possesses as much real
• . ■ tt -d-.. t 52 ,
wh«
; nurifvin^ ^heane ,
bloods needs H-’p the P t
aa d neat remedy is wort’ B tW- fin
ounce of prevention is a pound
1 erne Don’ wait u t’ ou ,.r mot*
trated ny a mat may take
months for you to recover in .—Boston
Globe.
Business Cards.
TENNESSEE BEEF k MUTTON
JOS. k75AKER,
BTTTOHER,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL other nieats In their season at lowest
and delivered. market rates. Will Orders promptly ailed
victual ships throughout.
Give him a trial. ocSlrtf
ISAA.O IROOS.
BUTCHER.
STALLS 9 AND 10 CITY MABKKT,
K OSHER Customers Tennessee served at Beef their and residences. Mutton,
OrdenB Sunday promptly mornings. executed, also meats deliv¬
ered Ki- rr h!4t/
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,.
J P. PHILLIPS, Meats, Butcher, and de
• kinds of Fish, Poultry__________
ket Produce. S®- Families supplied at their
residences, and all orders executed with
promptness and dispatch. Satisfaction guar¬
ani eed. ap6 6m
C. A. CORTINO,
SHAVING SALOON
• J:
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
• * * i
. . . .
der 16614 Planters’ Bryan street, Hotel. cpposite Spanish. the Italia.., Market «er uu
naan, and English spokon. UAlti.t.f
HAIR STORE:
JOS. E. tOlSEAU & CO., *
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull A Drayton
f ly k"EEP Switches, on hand Curls, a large Puffs, assortment and Fancy of Goods Hair
Hair oomblngs worked in the latest style.
Fancy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
L. FERNAND, HI. D„
Office : No. 9 Whitaker Street ,
[UP STAIRS.] ■' «i
■
Office Hours:—8—9 A. M., !i—4and7)4~6Mi
P. M. myCH-lm
W. B. FERRELL'S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
■ (Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
isnistf SAVANNAH. GA
Plumbing and Gaa-Fitting*
~
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 46 BARNARD STREET, one door north
ol South Broad treat.
Bath Tubs. Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges
Joboinjr Promptly attended to.
ebll -Xiao, A tent of “ BACKUS WATER MOTOR
McELUNN & McFALL, tj
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Ns. 46 Whitaker street, corner York it. Lane
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short and all notice, work guaranteed, Jobbing promptly low prices. attended to
at
i sepTtl
W. H. COSGROVE,
East aide ol Bull street, one door from York.
Practioal Plumber and Gas Fitter
J0BBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to give satiafaotlon. : ’
Prices to suit the times. mh7tl
Cakes, kz.
East End Oakery,
No. BRYAN STREET,
O AKES and Confectionery of all kinds ai
ways fresh on hand. Parl lo i and wed
uiugs supplied at short notice. Fresh Bread
Rolls and hot Pies. the dally at I o’clock p. g. Cus¬
tomers served at Store or Market Stall, No.
US, also from my wagons. solicited. A share of public
patronage 6m is respectfuMy SCHAFER
deci2 PETER
Paints, Oils and Glass*
J OHN U. B UTLE&,
Wholesale aud Retail Dealer In
WHITE LEADS COLORS, &TC; OILS, GLASS,
VARNISH,
Ready Mixed Faint.i. Railroad, Steamer and
Mill Supplies. Plaster, Hole Agent for Georgia Lime
OalclQQU Cements. Hair and Land
Planter. No. 22 Drayton street,
Janl 6 tf savannah, ga.
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer in—
Doors, SJes, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
Paints, oils, varnishes, glass, ao.
, No. 6 Whitaker A 171 Bay St.,
HA VANN AH . GEORGIr
JOHN OLIVER.
— Dealer In —
Steamboat, flail fload and Mill Supplies,
PAINTS, OILS, OLASS, Ac..
*>° OR8 ' sashes, blinds, moulding
Balusters, Blind Trimminqs, &C
No. a . whuaeer st.,
\ SAVANNAH, tfa « georgia
YEAST POWDERS.
;E ATAP8C0, Gra«t’t, Ddoley’a, fforcettord’*
Bread Pbwdt-ra, Preparation, for eat* by Sea Foam ai U Lion’s
#t -
C. L. GILBERT a CO.
JelS W holesale Grocera,
9, iui