Newspaper Page Text
D A. I L Y jjfc» . evening
; r
Savanna >•-' V SA’
1 /«*■
A i-?ii
«
i
VOL IV.—No. 103.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISH EL EVERY EVENING
(Saturday Excepted,)
A * 131 TPt A. ’ST STH13ET.
By J. STERN.
The Rkcoroer is served to subscribers, ln
every part ol the city by careful carriers.
Communications must be accompanied by
the name of the writer, not necessarily for
publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
Remittance by Check or Post Office orders
muNt be maue payable to the order of the pub¬
i lisher. will not undertake to preserve or return
We
rejected communications.
i Correspondence on Local and general mat
ters of interest solicited.
* On Advertisements rnnning three, six, and
twelve months a liberal reduction from oui
regular rates will be made.
V All correspondence should be addressed Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
tne pjace ol the Saturday evening edition
which will make six full issues for the week.
4tf-\Ve do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
Ihe Recorder is registered at the
Post Office in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
How to Keep Children Healthy.
The New York Boad of Health has
issued the following :
NURSING OF INFANTS.
Over-feeding does more harm than
, anything else. Nuise an infant a
month or two old every two or three
hours.
Nurse an infant of six months and
over five times in twenty-four hours,
and no more.
If an infant is thirsty give it pure
water or barley water; no sugar.
On the hottest days a few drops of
whisky may be added to either water
or food; the whisky not to exceed a
teaspoonful in twenty-four hours.
FEEDING OF INFANTS.
■ Boil a teaspoonful of powdered bar¬
ley (ground in a coffee-grinder) and a
gill of water, with a iitte salt, for
fifteen minutes; strain. Then mix it
with half as much boiled milk; add a
lump of white sugar the size of a wal¬
nut, and give it lukewarm from a
nursing bottle. Keep the bottle and
mouthpiece in a bowl of water when
not in use. A little soda may be
added.
For infants five or six months old
give half barley water and half boiled
milk, with salt, and a lump of sugar.
For older infants give more milk
than barley water.
For infants very costive give oat*
meal instead of bailey. Cook and strain
as before.
When your breast milk is only half
enough change off between breast-milk
and this prepared food.
In hot weather, if blue litmus paper
applied to the food turns red the food
is Loo acid, and you must make a fresh
mess or add a small pinch of baking
soda
Infants of six mouths may have tea
or beef soup once a day by itself or
mixed with other food; and, when ten
or twelve months old, a crust of bread
or a piece of rare beef to suck.
No child under two years ought to
eat at your table.
Give no candies; in fact, give no¬
thing that is not contained in these
rules without a doctor’s orders.
SUMMER / complaint ' ‘ ‘ '
Ti t comes fiom ovei-feediug and , , hot ,
and foul air. keep doors and windows
Wash i your well children with ... cold
water twice a day, and ofteuer in the
hot seasons.
^ e ver neglect looseness of the t owels
. lufant; consult the family
in an or
dispensary physician at once, and
will give you rules about waat it
should take aud how it should be
nursed '
A Fool OnceMore.
“For ten years mv wife was confined
to her bed with such a complication
R.lmenUthat no doctor could tell
was the matter or cure her, and I
up a small fortune iu humbug stuff.
Six months ago I saw a United
flag with Hop Bitters ou it, aud I
thought I I would be a fool ouee mo re
tried it, but mv folly proved to be
wisdom. Two bottles cured her, she is
now as well aud strong as auy
wife, and it coct me only two dollars
Such folly pays.— 11. W. Detroit, Mich
The greatest pigeon _ flying on record
in this country was done on the 25th,
a New Jersey bird having made the
distance between Columbus, Ohio, and
Jersey City Heights iu less than five
hours, the distance being five hundred
miles. The best railway engineer on
the same route must acknowledge him
sel/boateD.
Tift’s Tall Talk.
Two of General Gordon’s Questions Answered in
an Unexpected Shape.
In hiti speechi at Perry.General
don said that Nelson Tilt was the only
man who had made charges against
Co quitt over his own name. Who is
Tift. said Genera or on. n
where was be from lbCl to I 860 ?
Replying to t iese ques ions in t e
leegiap , o . 1 sai a
in 18/ , w en ie was preparing go
to Europe to make arrangements fox
throng i so at Liverpool mg an and ow ra al
freight between •
portant points South and West, be met
ena or oi on l .- 8
States _
^Uwited Senatis Chamber, ]
WiOTTTisrrTnw TnnpVlliw UP [
mi I ■ 8 WI ;ii tt,. rr’ Noijrin
r , v 1 , °/ ,n e01 $ - *1
’
o. , t i. f nn
gress rom ia k. .
highly commend him as a gentleman
of the highest character and enterprise.
The fact ot bis selection by the people
of Georgia to represent the important
interests which carry him to England
is a sufficient introduction. I earnestly
commend him and his enterprise to
business men ol Europe.
. John B. Gordon,
U. S. Senator from State of Georgia.
Col. Tift says Gordon also gave him
an equal.y strong letter to Hon S. P.
Benjamin, on which Benjamin, who had
known Tift in Richmond, gave him a
strong endorsement from liis personal
knowledge. Col. Tift dryly remarks:
"Since that time I have tried to main*
tain this good character which Senator
Gordon then vouched for me.”
In answer to Gordon’s second ques¬
tion Col. Tifts says :
As to where I was from 1861 to 1865
the records of the navy department of
the Confederate Government will show
that my brother, A. F. Tift, and myself
in 1861, tendered our services to the
Government upon the express condi¬
tion that we would not receive any pe*
cuniary compensation whatever for our
services. Our proposition was accepted.
We were appointed agents of the Navy
Department and served according to
the best of our ability and to the en¬
tire satisfaction of the Government
during the war. First, in the con¬
struction of the iron-clad Mississippi,
at New Orleans. Second, the conver¬
sion of the British ship Fingall into
the iron-clad Atlanta. Third, in the
erection and management of important
establishments in Albany for the sup¬
ply of provisions—beef, bread, flour and
meal—to the navy, and sometimes sup¬
plementing needed supplies for the
army or for its prisoners.
In the investigation which was made
by the Confederate Congress, through
a committee of which Hon. C. 0. Clay,
of Alabama, was chairman, into the
management of tho Navy Department,
in which our conduct in the building
of the iron-clad Mississippi formed a
prominent part, the committee, in their
report, paid us a high compliment for
the f tithful discharge of our duties as
agents ot the Government.”
These answers will doubtless fully
inform General Gordon as to who Col.
Tift is and where he was between 1861
and 1S65.— Atlanta Pod.
Sad Ending to Love’s Young
Dream.—S everal months ago Robert
H. Coleman, the millionaire, who in
herited the great Dawson Coleman ea
tate at Lebanon, Pa., was married to
the daughter of the Episcopal rector at
Hartford, Conn., where young Coleman
had spent his college life. The newly
wedded pair went abroad on their
bridal trip, but tho honeymoon bad
scarcely waned when death parted
t j iera body of the bride was
brought to Lebanon last week, and oc
copies a tomb iustead of the stately
m;ms i 0 n that had been commenced by
} ler husband as her future home at
Cornwall. The rear part of this
s ; oa had reached the second story, and
j w h en CO mplete it would not have cost
le8a than $100,000. By direction
^ r> Coleman the walls are to be raised
l0 the ground and every trace ot
structure obliterated, even the cellar
excavation is to be filled up and the
site plowed into a field. The work
has already been commenced, and
w ithin two weeks the demolition will
be comp i Pt9 .
---- r^ ~ -----
Sensible Reason.—W T spent . day .
e a
in Pennsylvania lately, and in being
driven from the depotto our point of
destination had the pleasure ot a C0D Re- *
versation with a very intelligent
publican. He said : "I have been a
Republican since I voted for Fremont,
and am one still, but as a good citizen
I look upon twenty years' control of
this Government continuously as long
t enough tor auy one political I party. bett
He further remarked, "Were a
ing man, I d bet every cent I have in
the world that Hancock is the next
President !” Doubtless ho
the opinions of every honest rvepubli- does
an in ihe country. Certainly be
that of the tax payers.— 11 ’asi.Gb.Um
"
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1880.
Seventy Days Without Food.
In the little town of Chatham, Mhs
sachusetts, there once occurred a case
of voluntary fasting, terminating in
d eathi J wbic b ’ for duration, far sur
^ tb9 fo rty daye wbic h Dr. Tan
^ ^ as hia ^ fin(| whkh faI .
myhe(j) as we]1) a most remarkable humarJ il
i U 8 t rs tion of the power of the
wi ij # Although twenty years have
p a9ge( j 8 j nce th e occurrence in ques
t j on ^ -^ g details are st i][ fregR j n mind
^ ere ^ ail( 3 ? besides being of immediate
intereat at the pre8e nt time, are so
well authenticated as to leave no doubt
as tQ itg genu i nene8g The name of
thg ^ ^ Ensig0 Eu
dridge. His only surviving brother,
Mr. Jonathan Eldridge, was called or
this afternoon by your correspond
en ^> anc ^ willingly related the facts
below narrated. Mr. Eldridge is a re
tired sea captain, and, though ad
vanced in years is still hale and vigor
our a pp earanc0( an( j possesses a
clear memory. "My brother Ensign,”
said he, ‘‘fasted for seventy days be
fore death ended his sufferings. He
died on May 31, 1860, when in hie
42d year.
He began his fast in this way: One
day he came into the house and found
bis sister busily at work in the kitchen,
He told her that she need not cook
any more for him, for he should never
eat again. Not much was thought of
this threat at first, but as the days
passed and he still fasted, the family
attempted in various ways to induce
him to eat, but always without suceess.
He would stay closely around the
house, never leaving the premises. He
was very sensitive to visitors, and, as
his fast progressed, he thought every
passer by was watching him, and he
would shrink from observation in va
nous ways. He never seemed to floe
from the sight of food, and I have seen
him often sit in the room where the
rest of the family were eating, never
moving from his chair but sometimes
gazibg hungrily at the food. I asked
him at such times if he felt like eating
anything, and he would "grit” his
teeth, and replied that he could devour
every thing upon that table, but he
would not. He said that he would
never go to the hospital, as I desired taken
that he should do, unless lie were
there by main force. Medicine he
refussd to swallow, saying that it
might prolong his life if he took it He
begged that we might give him poison,
however, though he said that he never
had the courage himself to commit
suicide by violent means. Many a time
be told me be had pulled in his oars
when out rowing fully intending to
jump overboard the next minute, but
his heart always failed him. I was with
him a great deal, and during the latter
part of his fast almost constantly, and
notwithstanding all the endeavors we
made to get him to eat, none of us
never knew of his taking the slightest
stimulanee, except on two occasions.
The first occurred when he bad fasted
for some 20 or 30 days. On this occa¬
sion he passed his sister at work mak¬
ing pies, when he took up and ate a
small piece of dried apple. Several days
afterward he partook in a similar man¬
ner of pudding, perhaps a mouthful.
After both of these occasions, however,
he bitterly lamented his weakness in
yielding even so slightly to the temp
tation to eat, and from the last named
time until his death we know that
nothing but water passed his lips. Oi
water, how’ever, he partook very freely,
bathing himself copiously in it aud rins
ing his mouth, besides swallowing large
quantities. Uutil be had fasted for
about 60 days, no solid excrement had
passed away from him ; none did so
after that time. He was visited re
peatedly during his fast by Dr. N. P.
Brownell, now of Scituate.in this State,
aud by Dr. Carpenter, now of New
j York, and other physicians. All their
(efforts to administer sustenance to the
man proved epually uuavail
ing. He seemed anxious to die He
j would look out of the window of a
rainy day and exclaim : "Oh 1 if that
rain was only falling on my grave what
good first thing that would he.” For
the fifteen or twenty days of my
Vi brother's vvuv-* S3 fast 4(»ev he uu did utu not UUV GU appear UCrti to IU lose iU8t
much ’ in ' flesh, * but toward ... the last he
rapidly became ____ emaciated, so much so
indeed, that when he died he weighed
but 80 pounds, and was little more
than a skeleton. After about 15 days
r .• , , - . ,
a e s rm>
tbat; , , , : A ‘] K ,_ ^ _ ,me
;^bt tco ^ * 0 hia bed D Itvl'be
or e Jav* betore he died 'and
became almost ^ wholly bPnd ^
’
ac j £ na j; y ag u n e' 0 n« C ' OU s for u
j ' J befoie " his death
j m
1 Poisn OlSOn.
It is an understood fact that Yellow
Fever aud its companions, Intermittent
and Remittent Fevers, are the results
of poisoned blood, made impure bv
breathing an infected atmosphere. No
medicine in existence will so qui .:iy
purify the blood, as Warner e Safe Kid
ney and Liver Core, used in connection
wilt Warners Safe Fills.
A Dig Experiment.
Mr. Spaulding’s Flan to Light the Atmosphere
Over the City of Holyoke.
Holyoke, Mass., July 16. —The Pa¬
per World announces that that city is
t0 be tne sceue of an extensive expen
in the use of the electric light,
11 • Spaulding, oi Boston, who was
^ ^ this gpi n city, S to has put his to plans Holyoke into
e ec ln gone
on acCouut of cheap power, and has
made arrangements with the Water
Power Company to put a wheel into
their nfcW P»t near Cabot street express
ly for his use. To make the experi
ruent which he will attempt will re
^“‘{f ” oyer tw0
mul P owe b or enough to iun a p ier
high m _iP. will A tower be built, about and seventy-five surmounted feet by
an immense lantern of such power as
to put all former electric lights com*
pletely in the shade. Mr. Spaulding
will put up his tower and apparatus at
owu expense, but he hopes to sue*
c? ed so well that the city will adopt
the system. He is extremly enthuai
astic, and sanguine as to the result of
the experiment, and his expectations go
beyond the achievement of any
previous electrician. He says that
with seven such towers as he intends
to build he can make the entire city as
light as day, both in-door and out-door,
His idea i 3 that by filling the at
Biosphere above the city witli light, he
will get the same effect that we do from
the s p Q and its reflected light, and that
the shadows will be no darker than
those made by the sun. His idea is to
fid the stratum of atmosphere just above
the cdy so completely with light that
it w T ill permeate spaces which no direct
f a y s reach, just as the sun’s light does
immediately after the sun has set. The
light which he expects to throw out
l rora onti lantern will be equal to 300,
^00 candles, while the largest electric
light yet attempted by any one else has
been of but 10,000 candle power. The
apparatus will cost $15,000, irrespect
i ve °f an y investment for power, but
after the system is once in operation the
eos t of rnnning it, aside from the power,
will be small. The expense of lighting
HoP vke at piebcut, public and private,
ls estimated at $ 100,000 a year, and
for about thatamouut the seven towers
which are proposed could be set up and
thelights put in operation. Mr. Spauld
ing cauie to Holyoke on account of the
public spirit of its principal citizens
aud its cheap power, and because it
will be a good place from which to ad
vertiae toe system,
Colqui t’s Defense Boiled Down,
The l)ady Post desires to give every
public man a lair opportunity to make
himself heard when he is engaged in
vindicating himself, and for that reason
it affords us pleasure to summarize the
main poiuts of Governor Colquitt’s de¬
fense, as we gather them from his
numerous speeches.
Boiled down and condensed, the
Governor’s defense is about as follows :
I am not au ignorant ass.
I am not a fool.
I am not a hypocrite.
J am not utterly incompetent.
I am not a corrupt politician.
I am not a weak Governor.
lam not destitute of backbone.
I am not begging for office.
I am seeking a vindication.
The editors who oppose me are slan¬
derers.
The politicians opposing me are dis¬
appointed office-seekers.
The people generally, who are against
me are liars and thieves.
They are blackguards, thieves and
yellow-eyed cats.
, I am a Christian, a friend to Sunday
schools, and a friend to Joe Brown.
I am tho "Hero of Olustee,” and an
endless variety of other matters too
numerous to mention, and if you don’t
believe my word, ask Henry Grady.
I am sustained by the Christian sen
im-Li o r the . 0 by Joe Brown, and
- l " e Bui out OLt ’cnofcean.
( wnat due to
n fic-n-e Oi is my
aitt ‘ u P-sition forbids tha.t I should
eiitt-i. into details, but but if if
* £ i i!* T ' 1 J 1
. to .
T_ U i. f / 1 ™! 0 0
gush l from his necK ■: veins, if not / ,
his face.
w e willing to leave it to any
telhg * f reader oi the Governor a
speeches to decide whether or not the
above is a fair summary of the main
points in his Excellency's defense.—
^ Jnta ^ 0&t
-
Cincinnati has forfeited its nickname,
“Porkopolis,” if it has not already lost
its latsr ambitious title of “Paris of
America” with the loss of Theodore
Thomas. From March 1 to July 14
the Cmcmnati Price Current shows that
she killed only 60,500 porkers, a
of 27,500 from the year before, while
Kansas City killed 146, 7S0 in the same
time. Cleveland 176.851. St. Louis
210.000, Indianapolis 225,400, and
Chicago 1.780,000. Cincmnati wid
Lavr :o fan back on her population
best lot gloij.
Ducks vs. Flies.
When a man is thoroughly interest¬
ed in something he is reading a very
insignificant house-fly can sometimes
worry him a great deal. The other
day one of the officials in a municipal
office was readiug. A fly alighted on
his cheek, crawled up the side of his
nose, and there stood fast, and fastened
its talons in the tender cuticle.
The first clutch with its claws brought
recognition in the shape of a very ener¬
getic sparring back and forth in front
of the official countenance, but the fly
hardly waited for the disturbance to
subdue when he was again snugly be¬
stowed on the nasal prominence. The
persistence of the insect had worn broke out
the patience of the man and he
out fiercely, the flies.”
A quiet stranger who had just drops
ped in remarked in tones of the most
irritating composure, I’ll tell you
what’s good for flies.”
it Well, what’s good for flies.”
"Ducks.”
"Ducks?”
"Yes, ducks. Out to the Lindell
car stables we keep ducks. A car
horse can rest easy at the Lindell sta¬
bles.”
"And how is that?” asked the official
becoming interested. ducks
"Why, they just have plenty of
I tell you. Didn’t you ever see a duck
snap a fty? Whenever the flies get thick
on a horse the ducks gather round and
snap every fly that comes in reach. If
a horse lies down the ducks just crawl
all over him. The horses mighty soon
find out who their friends are, and
they like to have the ducks come. In
fact, if the flies get bad the horses will
lie down to give the ducks a chance.
They are so industrious that they keep
the flies pretty well thinned out. I
tell you there’s nothing like ducks for
flies.”— /Si. Lou 'l 3 Republican.
Spanish Etiquette. —Earl Godol
pkin, who knew the Spanish character
well, said that while the Spaniards
were content to believe that other af¬
fairs might be important in the eyes
of the rest of the world, the only
thing in which they were really inter¬
ested was etiquette. That and the
punctilious ceremonial founded upon
it was the proper business of life. It
is one of the stories picked up by the
elder Disraeli that a Spanish Queen
once lost her life through this deference
to etiquette. Her chair of ceremony
was placed so close to a bright fire that
she was well nigh roasted. Etiquette
forbade her to rise, and neither the
proper grand chamberlain, whose place
it was to arrange the fire screen, nor
the other grand officer, whose duty it
was to move the Queen's chair, hap¬
pening to be present at the palace, hir
unhappy majesty was so heated as to
be thrown into a fever, of which she
most ceremoniously died at die expi¬
ration of a brief but decorous inter¬
val.
Too Smart. —The other day a rough¬
looking man stepped into a clothing
store in Carson aud wanted to buy a
suit of clothes The price was $30,
but after a careful examination of the
texture of the goods he declined to
purchase at the figures named and
started for the door.
"Holt on,” said the proprietor,
"sell ’em at de cost bnce. ’ The clerk
asked how much, ami the "boss” said
in German $16 The countryman
turned around and said he guessed he
take another look at ’em anyhow. He
tried them on and gut before the glass.
"Cost price, you say ?” The clerk as¬
sented, and the countryman handed
him $16, remarking :
"You can tie the old ones up.”
"Hold on, the cost price is $24,”
said the clerk.”
"Guss you’re mistaken; I heard the
boss say sixteen.”
The boss looked up with. "By jemi
! nie! can you speak German? I thought
you vas an Irishman all do vile.”
An emigrant woman lost her baby
ou |. c f a K anaas railroad car window
other day. It was in her arms and
W ent to sleep, and when she awoke !
- t wag g 0ne an q could not be found :
t tliv u ft rfU uai. r Several ? Vi stations ------------- after this the j
|conductor received had been a picked telegram saying about
a baby the construction up
twenty miles back by
train< The chi]d wa8 perfectly unhurt track.
- anJ lay cry i cg by one side of the
It was the emigrant’s child and came
along to her on the next train.
New York Herald Las fourteen
reporters constantly detailed to watch
Dr. Tanner's last. They are divided
| into seven watches, time, and two he being neither with
him all the gets
water nor his mail until it has under*
gone their inspection, which covers!
all his hour. acts and every sleeping or wak-j
- — — —
Two clerks have been discharged
from the War Department for speak
ing well of Hancock. Whom the Gods
destroy they ti -t make mad. The od
ministration may prepare to see
in Xovember. ..
-
PRICE THREE CENTO."
Business Cards,
JAS. McGINLEY,
CARPENTER
YORK STREET, second door oast of Bull.
Jobbing promptly attended to, Estimates
furnished when desired. Jel4-0m
BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTOHEB,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL market, other meats rates. in Orders their season promptly at lowest filled
and delivered. Will victual ships throughout.
Give nim a trial. ocal-tf
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
J P. kinds PHILLIPS, Meats, Butcher, Pish, Poultry and dealer in al
• of and Mar¬
ket Produce. Families supplied at their
residences, promptnessand and dispatch. all orders Satisfaction executed with
anteed. ap6-6m guar¬
C. A. CORTINO,
Bair Cutting Hair Dm, Curling and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
16634 Bryan street, opposite the Market, un
tier Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger
man. mi«l English fipokon. selK-lf
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt,
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s SAVANNAH Drug Stora^
!anI3tl GA.
.............- 'I -mdmmmrnmgtm
Plumbing All d a . aO A .V wing
~
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, ono door north
oi South Broad treet.
Bath Tubs. Jobbing Water Closets, Boilers, RangeSi
Promptly attended to.
ebll Also, Agent of “ BAOK.CS WATER MOTOR,
McELLi.it it ub ikoxALIi,
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Ntt. 18 Whitaker street , corner York st. Lana
N.B, Houses fitted with gas ami ,*t,
shun notice, Jobbing promptly att/hded tflf
and all work guaranteed, at low prlc^—^
W. IL COSGrllOYE,
East side of Bull street, ono door from York,
Practical Plumber and Qas Fitter.
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to givo satisfaction.
SSf Prices to suit the times. mh7tf
Paints, Oils and Glass*
J OHN G HUTLErT
Wholesale aud Retail Dealer in
WHITE LEADS VARNISli, COLORS, ETC. OILS, GLASS,
Ready Mixed Paints, Railroad, Steamer and
Mill supplies. Solo Agent for Hair Georgia Lime
Calcined Plaster, Cements, and Land
Plaster. No. 22 Drayton street,
JanlOtf SA VA NNAH, GA.
9
—Dealer in—
is, Suites, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Ilair and Cemont,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oils, varnishes, glass, &o.
No. G Whitaker & 171 Bay St.,
SAVANNAH, GEORQlr I
mv2tl-tf
JOHIM OLIVER.
— Dealer ln —
Steamboat, Rail Road and Mill Supplies,
PAINTS, OIXS, GLASS, &c.,
DOORS, SASHES, BLINDS, MOULDING
Balusters, Blind Trimminqs,
No. 5 . w hi.Laker st.,
.SA VAM HAH, GEORGIA
nlfitf
S 9
ai (P,
CELLBRAiED
.A (7.
\0m ji 1 /
v -
i.
Pa W
STOMACH
aene n lUJUUCliOU f . Tli mstahe
a thin un i lam;* :«» circulation wftn
pravmitivein’ exHteoce. jai.uUur