Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 17 July 1867 — Page 2

r it " ' 1 1 THE EVANSVILLE DAILY JOURNAL. WEDNESDAY. J UEY 17. 1867.

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RECONSTRUCTION.

Speech of Thaddeus Stevens, Delivered in the U. S. House of Representatives, July 9th, C losing the Debate on the Sew .Reconstruction Law. The Speaker. The gentleman from Ppnnsvlvania (Mr. Stevens) has now remaining twenty-eight minutes of his boar. Mr. Stevens, of Pennsylvania. I trust that inXhat time I shall be able to state the position which I hold to be the correct one with regard to this bill, without attempting to answer the various remarks which have been made by gentlemen on the other side. I confess, sir, that a small portion of the blame with reference to the acts of the President since we adjourned, may be attributed to Congress, in that it used improper language in the acts heretofore passed. And this, it appears to me, was owing to an indistinct conception of the condition of the Territory for which we were legislating. If "we had then all agreed, as we have since, that the States .that were lately in rebellion were conquered territory, and as such subject to the power of this nation, and had treated them aecrdingly, we should have had very little trouble in reconstructing government in the South upon the principle of the admission of new States. But, sir, we were not all perfectly agreed in our understanding of the laws of nations as applicable to this question ; nor is it wonderful that we should thus have differed, when even some of the judges of the Supreme Court have differed in their opinions upon this subject. I will state what I suppose to have been our real position. The nation was afflicted with a civil war which for a time was an insurrection. Some twelve million of the inhabitants of the country claimed that they no longer belonged to this nation , They pet up an independent government. They established all the Sachinery of government, both of a ational - government and of States under that National , government. They raised large armies to defend their pretensions. "VVe, at the period when s we declared against them a blockade, admitted them to be, not an independent nation, but an independent belligerent rising above the rank of insurrectionists, and entitled to all the privileges and subject to all the liabilities of an independent belligeren. The nationsjof Europe so treated them. We so treated them in our dealings with prisoners of war. In a Ill 11 n . f-nort, mere could De no aouDt ot the fact. We were, then, at war as two independent nations; and ii depended upon the will of the couquerer whether the defeated party should be treated merely as a vanquished nation, or whether we should, in addithe violation of the sovereign rights of the nation. We conquered. Wtiat did we conquer? We conquered the confederate government. We conquered all the States forming the confederate government. We conquered a government that had been erected and maintained by thoae who declared that they owed no allegiance to the Government of the United States. For these conquered rebels to pretend that they had any rights tinder a Constitution which they had thus repudiated and attempted to destroy, and that the States which had been arrayed in hostility to the nation were still States within this Union, as asserted to-day by the eentleman from" Wisconsin, Mr. Eldridge, seems to me a bold absurdity. Yet that was the doctrine of the President. That is the doctrine which some gentlemen maintain here. Under military law we treated themj as conquered provinces. What is the law with regard to provinces conquered from a foreign independent belligerent? When you conquer territory from a foreign nation or an independent belligerent, the territory thus conquered is governed by military power, by-the Commander-in-Chief of the Army, being in this case the President, until the legislative power of the nation shall have spoken and directed what laws . shall govern. But the moment the legislative power of the nation interposes, the military power ceases to have sway, and the Commander-in-Chief has no more to say in regard to thismatter than a corporal of militia. He is to do just what the legislative power orders him to do, and he can do nothing else. ' A great deal is said about the President acting as Commander-in-Chief of the Army. Until he was superceded in his authority by Congress I have no fault to find with his maintaining military rule in the South. But he assumed to exercise legislative powers; he assumed to establ is a. governments; he assumed to appoint civil officers ; he assumed that these conquered provinces should come back at once to the enjoyment of all the rights of loyal States under the Constitution, and be entitled to all the privileges which they had possessed prior to the rebellion. Now, sir, as I said before, nothing of this kind came within the jowtr of the Commander-in-Chief. What is the duty of the Commander-in-tJhie ? If Congress sends an army to que! 1 the Indian war in Nebraska, .what;is the Commander-in-Chief to do?',, Con-, press orders that army to ' go there. It raises and equips the army.- What do - the 'officers do? ' They pass no act of legislation ; they go there and order the troops when to charge and when to retreat; they drill them; they put them

through military exercise. But they can do no act that looks like regulating the object of the war or the object with which the army is sent

there. Why, sir, the Constitution of tne uniieu oiaics warns caics's enervation of all such power to Congress. It expressly declares that Congress shall have power " to make rules for the government and regulation of the land and naval forces." The Executive has nothing to do with it. Congress is the only and the controlling power. Congress has enacted the rules and articles of war. ' Could the President of the United States interfere with those? Could h add new articles, new rules, new regulations? Certainly not. The military officers that were sent as commanders in the States were simply appointed as agents of Congress. To be sure, the original bill provided a military supervision simply, and we had intended to follow it ud with a law put ting reconstruction in the hands of civilians'. 1 hat is what I should have been disposed to do now, (and I had prepared a bill with that view: using the military simply as a police and appointing civilians to reconstruct. But if Congress chooses to take officers of the Army and assign them to this duty, they then beoome the agents of Congress, and neither the President nor any officer under him has any right to interfere or do anything but execute what Congress commands. Now, sir, it being reduced, I think, to a plain proposition, that Congress is the only power that can reconstruct and reclaim these outlying States, the President had no right to call upon the Attorney-General or any other officer of the Government to interfere in any manner in such reconstruction. There is but one appearand that is either to the agents appointed by Congress or to Congress. It has been well decided in Dorr's case, that all power on the subject is vested in Congress. But, sir, we need not look to any such decision. It ought to be known before this time by the President of the United States it is known, I trust, by the scholars in every colored school in this district that the Constitution of the United States does not apply to any Territory. The , States, are parties to the Constitution ; they are the contracting powers: they are the substantive body. Territory, however, acquired by purchase or conquest, or by inheritance, is the property only of that substantive power, of that power bound up by the Constitution, and that power alone is governed by the Constitution, but does not extend for any purpose into any Territory or conquered Province. Why, then, talk about the Constitution regu'ating the action of Congress in a Province, in a Territory, in a conquered State, whether conquered from a legitimate State or an illegitimate State? I may be asked how we would treat the confederate States of America ? Just as Congress chooses. They are our property; their citizens are our subjects. Their lives, their liberties are subject to the supreme will of this body, always controlled by the laws of nations, the laws ot war, and the laws of humanity. There is no other power on earth; there is no branch of the Government; there is no power in the Government, except what I have mentioned, that has any right to interfere or to say one word on the subject. If you wish to punish the malefactors for violated majesty, that is another matter. Possibly you might do so through your courts of justice. At least you nMght attempt it, but I do not suppose you can do it. But there is one thing clear: that territory not being yet declared by Congress to be in a state of peace or restoration is under the military authority of the Government, and any tribunal constituted by the military authority, any military tribunal any court-martial can try any one of these who belonged to the belligerent forces. Jefferson Davis, or any man of the army of the confederacy conquered by us, is this day liable to trial by military tribunal and to sentence. Mr. Speaker, while I would not be bloody minded, yet if I had my way I would long ago have organized a military tribunal under military power, and I would have put Jefferson Davis and all the members of his cabinet on trial for the murders at Andersonville, the murders at Salisbury, the shooting down our. prisoners oS, war in cold Dlood. Every iuau of thera is responsible for those crimes'. It wasa mockery to try that: wicked fel-, low, Wirz, and make him responsible' for the acts which the confederate cabinet' was guilty "of." - Of course they should be condemned. Whether they should be executed afterward I give nb opinion. I would carry out such punishment as, in my judgment, the justice of the country required. I would carr;r it out through the legal tribunals that. I have mentioned, and which are as much the legal tribunals of the land as the Supreme Court of the United States. This is my view exactly of what would be logical. As to the question of confiscation, I think that a man who has murdered a thousand men, who has robbed a thousand widows and orphans, who has burned down a thousand houses, escaped well if, owning $100,000. he is fined $50,000 as a punishment and to repair his ravages. I sai 1 before that I was not in favor of sanguinary punishment. I trust, in sayin.e that, that I need not be support! to condemn them when they arc necessary. - Fori instance, the chtmor that lias been raised against the Mexican-government for the heroic execution of murderers and pirates, applause, that!amor finds no favor with me. I think that while they have gone far

enough, (though not half as far as they might be justified in going.) yet there is ho law nor policy under heaven, and no sense of justice that will condemn that great,heroic, muchenduring man; who for six years has been hunted with a reward upon his head, has been driven from one end of his empire to another, until he got to the very borders, who has no parallel in history thfe I know of, except it be William of Orange, who was driven from island to island, from sand patch to sand patch, by just about as bloody a persecutor as was to be found in Maximilian when he decreed that every man warring against him should be shot down without further trial. I am not going to shrink from saying that I think such punishment proper. I do not say, nor- do I ask that anybody should be executed in this country. There has not to be a sickly humanity

here which Idare not get along side of for fear I might catch it. Laughter.J And it is now held by one of the most liberal and enlightened gentlemen in the country I mean Gerrit Smith that wehould even pay a portion of the damages inflicted on trie rebels, and pay a portion of the rebel debt. Laughter. I shall come some ,day to have an . argument-with l Horace Greeley about that, and he will explain it, therefore I need not say anything further. I believe I have said enough to explain my- views on the subject, and now I ask for a voto on the question. Applause. I withdraw the motion to recommit. A Sensible Rebel. Mr. J. L. Alcorn, Senator elect from Mississippi, delivered a sensible speech in Memphis, Tennessee, on the 27th of June. He declares that when the South went into the war it cut loose from all party, as well as national ties, with the North, and that when the war was over one party at the North was as acceptable to them as the other. In the work of 'the reconstruction a conflict has arisen between two departments of the Government the Executive and the legislative, and it is possible that the Deople may be dragged into a bloody conflict, r When that conflict comes he advises the South to be on the winning side. In 1860 they made the mistake of a political alliance with the Democracy of the North, and when the struggle came they found themselves leaning on a broken reed. The body of the Radical party were not obnoxious to the South; a few leaders might be, but such men as Wilson and Beecher were not. The Democratic party had been dashed in pieces by secession one-half going into the war to fight the South, and the others "still worshiping texts from the resolutions of '98." Had the Democrats of the North stood firm to their pledges, the Republicans would not have dared to make war upon the South. Mr. Alcorn urged that the South accept the proposition to settle the controversy by constitutional amendment. He thought the Southern people should be just in this matter, and look at the subject as if they were in the position of the North. There could be no restoration and no government unless the national debt was guaranteed. The disabled soldiers and the widows and orphans of those who fell fighting for their country, were justly entitled to the care and protection of the Government. The South should hasten to put on record its protest against a repudiation of the National Debt. He declared that Thomas Jefferson was the Wendell Phillips of his day, and bad uttered sentiments as fatal to slavery a3 were ever uttered by any man. Jefferson's ideas were but carried out in giving the negro the ballot. Upon the whole he was in favor of accepting the terms proposed by the constitutional amendment, by which the North forced nothing upon the South but what it had to take itself. Mr. Alcorn is evidently much pearer reconstruction than the majority of his white fellow-citizens in Mississippi. He expresses the "contempt for the Democratic party which is universal among all the intelligent and thinking portion of the rebels, and tells the truth when he assures the Southern people that when they put themselves honestly on the record in favor of maintaining the Government, and upon the platform of the pending constitutional amendment, they will find the Radicals their' best friends in advancing the commercial, agricultural, and other material interests of the Southern States. Chicago Tribune. BUCKEYE ) MOWEE.1 The Best Machine in the World ! AT THE GREAT SATIONAl Field Trial of Mowers and Reapers Is July. IStitf, at Auburn, N. Y., the first pre mi urn, A GRAND GOLD MEDAL was awarded to the Buckeye over oS competing machines. I have con rol of this celebrated machine for the Kvansville market, and am prepared to rill orders pcomptly. They are offered with a number of improvements, aud rrLLY ccARAjyf eed. PICTS SEPARATOR Having the agency of the Genuine Pitt's Separator and. Thresher for this market, I am offei jug them a FourSix, and. Eight Horse Machines, , . 1 WARRANTING them in every particular. Send for Descriptive Circulars aud Price Lists. U. O. BABCOOK, may!6 d2m Kvansville, Ind

INSURANCE.

McNEELY & SCHUBERT, Real Estate and Insurance Agents, Xo. 1 IIEDUERHHS LOCK, (Second Floor,) Opposite the Court-Houie, Evaxsviljj:, Ind. Real Estate bought, sold, and exchanged on commission. Terms reasonable. 5o charge unless property is disposed of as mentioned. . Property of non-residents attended to, taxes pa d, and rent collected. A number or Dargains in unprovea ana unimproved real estate now on our books, and several applications on file to purchase desirable property. Persons having sucn ior sale may nna customers oy applying at this office. We have several applicants who wish to rent dwellings. Three business stands to let. Also a comfortable lodging room. A large quantity of farming, timber, coal and saline lands in Indiana, Kentucky, Illinois, Texas, and Iov a for sale or exchange. A good stand for the cabinetmaking business Id a nourishing town in Southern Illinois. Also a pheasant residence, with large lot; both fot sale on reasonable terms. Kxcellent gardening ground near this eity for sale. Persons having teal estate for sale, exchange, or rent are requested to give us the details of the same for reference. - INSURANCE Of all kinds effected in good companies. Special attention given to LIFE INSURANCE." We are agents for the celebrated CONNECTICUT MUTUAL Life Insurance Coiupauy, the leading company of the United States. . Abo for the F KAN KLIN LIFE, ot Indianapolis;: the WESTERN LIFE, of Cincinnati; and .the WORLD MUTUAL, of New Yo: k. We have authority to do business for the latter In Kentucky. The attention of the public Is again directed to the important subject of Life Insurance. Persons desiring to secure dependent ones against want are invited to call and examine the claims of companies represented by us. - NOTARIAL BUSINESS transacted at this office. ... jy8 EYAlfSYILLE IXSURAME CO. Authorized Capital...... Paid Up Capital....... -Jl.OOO.OOO . 330,000 FIRE, MARINE, A FLAT BOAT RISKS Taken at fair rates. John S. HoPKiirsPresident. James H. Cutler, Secretary. directors: Charles Vlele. John Ingle, Jr., William Brown, Dr. F. W. Sawyer, C. Preston. ' J. S. Hopkins, GllUson Maghee, Robert Barnes, Dr. M. J. Bray, J. N. Knox, Business Atent, who will also attend to Life and Accident Insurance Office, corner of Main and First Streets, in First National Bank Building. apl8(m W. A. Page, Edgar Sharpe. Notary Public. J , : . ., W. A. PAGE & CO., FIRE, RIVER, jLIFX, and ACCIDENT Insurance Agents, Corner Main and Water Streets, (Brown, Dunkerson A Co.'s former office,) EVANSVILLE, ISP. Home Insurance Company OF NEW YOjRK. Cash Capital $2,000,000 Assets, July 1st, 18G6 3,59G,i 00 Washington Insurance Cc OF NEW YORK. Cash Capital ; $400,00C Assets, July 1st, 186rj t&8l Columbia Insurance Company OF NEW YORK. Cash Capital $500,000 Assets, July 1st, 18GG 590,000 FS1TED ' Fire and Marine Insurance Co. OF COVINGTON AND CINCINNATI. Cash Capital... $350,000 Assets, July 1st, 1866 398,000 New York Accidental Ins. Co. OF NEW YORK Cash Capital $250,000 Assets, July 1st, 1866 276,000 Insures against ACCIDENTS of every description. Northwestern Mutual Life' It surance Company OF MILWAUKEE. Cash Assets,.. $2,000, Of ' The greatest success of any Life Compan ever organized. FIRE, MARINE, A RIVER INSURANCE POLICIES ISSUED IX THE ABOVE well-known Companies, and all losses promptly adjusted "and paid at this office. W. A. PAGE CO., Agents, Corner Main and W ater Streets, , ! ; Evansvllle, Ind. (Brown & Dunkerson 's former office.) aul8dly ' : L. PIERS0N, Dealer in STOVES, And Manufacturer of TIN, COPPER, an SHEET-IRON WARE, Wholesale and Retail, Cor. First and Vine Streets, EVANSVTLLE, IN Tin Roofing done on short notice. A 11 work promptly executed in the best nuer. Orders solicited. mch. d3m manner. PHILIP DECKER, Manufacturer ot Compound Lubricating Oils . for all kinds of Machinery. ; - ' Also,' ::!.. LARD OIL, SOAPS, 'aid CANDLES. PURE CATAWBA WIN E of my own Srowth. Imch21 dly

TRANSPORTATION

, FRED. R. HUSTON, Commission Merchant, AGEXT White Line Central Transit Company, ' : The only Line running Cars through, to New Yoik, Boston, and all New England cities, WITHOUT TRANSFER. Cars are loaded, LOCKED, and SEALED, and never opened until they reach their .des tination, carrying goods between Evansvllle and New York in ! . , ;i ' . :i ' FIVE TO S EVEN DATS TIME. Freight delivered at all tbe Inspection Yards In New York, Brooklyn or Jersey ty. ,;; .;,:rVi' '.,V.-i. " r.r'y,-.-: For PROMPTNESS and DESPATCH this Line has no equal. , , Damages and Overcharges . promptly settled at this office! l.' '1 ' ,r FRED." R.! HUSTON, Agent, '. , Ko. S NORTH WATER ST., , ' may29 , , ' - Evamsviixe, Iy. BROWN, JBIKKEESON & CO. 0RWARDING AND COMMISSION. aiERCHAJSTTS. ; ; And special Agents for.the ... i i ' t ....::! ' - i . ', ' : i .'!( ("-W. u;.- f I ' : :' BElLEFOmiXE B. R. CO., ERIE TRAXSrOKTATIOX CO., And ERIK TIME EIFKESS. Also, A cents tor the Bellefontaine Cotton Express. TIME AND RATES GUARANTEED. SS" Consignmepts solicited. BROWN, DUNKERSON 4 CO., August 13, augU . Agents. LAW CARDS. J. F. WELB0RX, ATTORNEY AT JL.A.W AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Office on the c rner of Main and Third Streets, in Walker's new building, jeia EVANSiVILLK, IND. X. 16. BLACK, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR at LAW . MARION, . Crittenden County, Kentucky. ap!7 wtf ,B. L. D. GUFFY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MOROANTOWN, KY., Will practice in the counties of Butler, Warren, Muhlenburg, Ohio, and McLean Prompt attention given to the collectioc of claims. References Whe-ler A Riggs, KoHId worth & Bro.,Cha.H. Babcock & Co. api. WM. II E A VIS, ; i , . TJ.;S. Claim. -A.eiit. Also, REAL ESTATE and COLLECTI1. .,. , . AGENT. ,., , Office on Main street, between Third and Fourth, No. fco4 (over Keller's Oxm Htore), EvansvUle. Ind. . .m .t TpH't , W. H. & H. BEADLE, A 1 tor ii ey H-a i-lLa. w, THIRD STREET, near, Main, .. .s. j' ' ' ' t EVAneviLLP, Iiir ; , Refer to Hon. James Harlan. Hon. O. K. Wteele, Rockvilie, Int ma3,3m Hcp.R.V Thompton.Terre Hauu JOHH M. CREBS. CBAUNCF.V S. CONGEB CREBS & CONGER, A t tomcy o-Ml-l-n w, Carini, Illinoi. Will practice law in all the Courts of Edward. White, Wayne, Hamilton, Hal i Me, and Oallatin Counties, in the State of Illinois, and in the Supreme Court. Refer to O. Maguee, James K. Minor, Htockwell A Co., Colonel T. W. Stone, with I. A D. Heimau, Gen. W. Harrow, Mt. Vernon. : ruay24 d3rn ARCHITECTS. Robert Boyd, Architect, XO. 1 CHANDLER'S BLOCK. Office formerly oecupied by the late firm of Mursinna A Boyd. , mchTT 6m H. MURSINNA, Office Noli 3 CHANDLEiVa mULLDINU. Corner Fir-t and Locufct Streets. KvanKville, Ind. B3S- Plans and specifications for all kindt of buildings furnished alhhort notice, and on' reasonable traa mchli dciu

STOVE WORKS. SOUTHERN STOVE WORKS.

ANTON HELBLING, (Successor to Brinkmeyer A Co. J ' J ' ' " MANUFACTURER OF COOKING & HEATING STOVES, - - . For Wood and Coal ; Skillets and Lids; Oveas and Lida ODD LIDS; . ' - SUGAR KETTLES; DOG IRONS; . ' JAMB G RATES AIR AND CELLAR GRATES ; . HAM BOILERS; MUFKIN MOULDS; ' WAFIfLE IKONi) Copper, Tin,; and Sheet-Iron War. Dealers In Tinplate, Sheet-Iron, Copper, ,tc.,t'. Also, Sole Agent' for b'Neil's Patent Broad-Gauge, indestructible Copper Bottoms, lor W ash and Coffee Boilers, Ac. Sales-room, No. 93 MAIN ItrEET, opposite tbe Court-HouKe. Foundry, near the mouth of Pigeon Creek. Reorders solicited and promptly filled Jan21 dtf .. , , I, r i Excelsior Stove Woiks. BLEMKEIt, TILII AX I Co. (Successors to H. E. Blemker), MAMTACTl'Rr.RS of the flue and :,'.,; heavy A J. - t EXCELSIOR STOVE, the most durable now made, and tbe famous - CHARTER STOVE, and the good and cheap :' , '. Armada, Stonewall, Kentucky, TENNESSEE, and PALMETTO 8TOVE-J, and a reat variety of HE A TINt UTOVES, all of the latest and most ap proved patterns. Also. Liffht and Smooth Country HollowWare, skillets and Lidx, Ovens and Lids, Dog-Irons, Dinner Pot, Tea-Kettle ; and particular attention paid to the manufac ture or House- w or k CAST-IR0X FR0XTS, CRATES, ., &C. Also Tin-VM.ie ; and Dealers In Tinners' Stock. If denired. Cooklniz Stoves warranted for twelve months. Orders solicited before purchasing elsewhere. Foundery, corner Sixth Sireet and Canal. Store aud Samjilij llomn at No. 11 Second Street, H. k-. i:ierk-r s old siand. ULE.MiiEU, TOLLMAN A CO. may29 Great ,ew England Remedy DR. J. W. POLAND'S WHITE PINE COMPOUND, IS SOW 0FFi:UF.O TO TIIU A -fliced throughout the country, after a vint; been proved uy tne wi ot eleven ears lu the New England States, where its merits have become as well Known as the tree from which, in part, it derives its virtues. Tne White Pine Compound Cures Sore Throat, Colds, Cowjlis, Itpthena, bronchitis, bpUf-ng of Blood, and I'ulmonary Affections generally. It is x Remarkable Remedy for Kidney Complaints, Diabetes, Dif' ficulty of oidi.tig Urine, Ble.caing from the. Kidneys and Bladder, Gravel and otlwr complaints. In November. 1HV. I first advertised it under the name of White Pine Com pound. In twi years from thai time there had oeen wholesaled in Manchester aloneone hundred thousand dollars' worth, where it took the lead of all the cough remedies In the market, and it suil maintains that fiosltion. There are t;ood reasons for tills; t is very sootlilni? and healing in its nature, is warming in the Htomncli, and pleasant withal to the taste, and is exceeding cheap. " As a remedy for kidney complaints the White Pine Compound Mauds unrivaled. It was not originated lur that purpose; but a person in us'ins it for a, coutrh was not ouly cured of the cough, but was also cured of a kidne difficulty of ten years' standing. ince that accidental discovery, many thousands have u ed it for the same , complaint, and have been completely cured." .. ! . ' . THE WHITE PIKE COMPOUND. "It was early iu the spring of '31 that this , compound was originated. A member of my family was atlllcied with an irrliation of the throat, attended with a disagreeable couah.,,1 had for ome months previous -thought that a preparation J.aviug f..r its basis the insi-le bark of White Pine might ! be so compounded as to be very Ubetul in , diseases ot the Throat and Lungs. To test the value of it in the case allude;! to, I compounded a mna 1 quantl y ot the medicine that I had been planning, and gave It . in teaspoonful doses. The result was exceedingly gratifying. Within two days, the Irritation of ttie throat was removed, the counb subsided, and a speedy cure wai effected. The above was writen by Dr. Poland ir lgtiO Since tben, as in .Manchester, thf White Pine Compound has taken the lead of all cough rercedies, as well as preparations for the cure ot kidney difficulties, ir every city, town, village, and hum lei throughout the New England States. This remedy is as safe and pleasant to take as it is effectual. WHITE riNE COMPOUND, EVHG W. SWJEKT, M. IK, , Proprietor., Prepared at therNEW. ENGLAND . BOTAN1PAL DEPOT, , , 106 Hanover Street, Boston. , , ;t Under the mpe'rv'iHon ot Rev,. J.. W. Po- - i t r. .. . , au(J, ' , ' ' ' . ' I cVond!& Akih,' Whtfeiale' 'Agents.' H't 1For saie by Keller & White, Win. H. P Btoddard.T.C B i Iwell. H. J. Schlaepfer and by Druggists generally. feb9 dlw, wit tf.