gretchen bulova: edward was very dedicated. he actually became an elder in his faith and that would be the focus of where he was taking it in the next stage of his life. so he left the business to his oldest son, william. so the business transfer is really from edward stabler to william. the name stabler-leadbeater while the apothecary stays in yearssame family for 140 it does transfer in marriage. , john leadbeater had been working here with william and fell madly in love with william's sister and came back to work here and took ownership and it switches than in the family from stabler to leadbeater. it is really under john leadbeter that the building get remodeled to the way it looks today. by 1862, it has a new interior that you can see with the ginger breading and a more updated, gothic revival style. because they were trying to stay current and trying to keep attracting a new and fresh clientele. i had a pretty loyal customer -- they had a pretty loyal customer base. have a lot of the primary stores, ledgers, letters, orde