Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 22 July 1867 — Page 2

THE EVANSVILLE DAILY JOURNAL. MONDAY. JULY 22. 1867.

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The Farmins Country of lLsouii. Dr. E. II. Sabix, who is now on a isit to Western Missouri, writes to the Rockport Umpire, from Sedalia, as follows: The coantry, I apprehend, is what our readers will Be most interested in. Well, it is emphatically a good -country. Good soil, unusually good timber for a prairie country, and an abundaace of limestone and coal. Improved farms are rated at from ten to thirty-five dollars per acrej according to improvement. Unimproved lands at from four to ten dollars per acre, according to quality add distance from railroad. The city is 180 miles from St. Louis, and is the point at which the Fort Scott Railroad will cross the Pacific road. Good, unimproved lands on the line of this new road can be bought at $4 per acre, and certainly presents strong i . 1 1 . i i inducements to persons auie to main; investments. In the counties ot 'JIain, 3Iiller, Camden and Hickory, there are lands yet to be entered under the homestead act, and with warrant and money. The immigration to Southwest Missouri and Southeast Kansas is immense. Almost daily trains of wagons may be seen moviDg in this direction. Whether this is a good country or not makes no difference; the people think so, and acting on this belief, they are crowding it in large numbers. They pay here $3 50 for breaking prairie, and fencing forty acres at one time costs $3 50 per acre, making $7 per acre for breaking and fencing their and. They calculate the first crop, if wheat, to pay 25 or 30 per cent, more than cost of breaking and fencing; if corn, it is regarded as about equal to these two items. A farmer in Spencer County told me that he paid flG 50 per acre for clearing three acres, and still his field had roots and stumps in it, while the prairie farmerhas a field ready for meadow. Were I a young man, I would he disposed to emigrate to this country for a permanent home; but I expect to die and be buried in the old IIoosier State. My advice to young men is, come out to this live country. The Increase of National WealthHarvest of ISO. From the Cnicago Tribune. It is now unascertained fact that the crop of wheat which has been gathered, and is now gathering in the United States, is generally the largest and best which has ever been raised in this country. The cotton, stig:ir, rice and tobacco crops give promise of a larger yield than has becu known 6ince 18G0, while the corn gives an assurance that it will exceed in amount that of any previous yield. There is no material blessing t qualms in value this general success of all kinds of, agricultural pioJuct.. Its benefits are direct, and re;ich every human being iu the land. The breadth of wheat sown this year in all parts of the country is greatly in excess of any previous year, and the crop has reached a successful harvesting more free fioui casualties of ' all kinds, than has' ever been known. The wheat, both Winter and Spring, wili be of a superior quality. This will be cheering news to coirsun.ers, and will lighten the hearts of thousands to whom bread has of l:te been luxury. The fruit crop, kind, will be a LinTe" and" aunost a f every hue one. ft smaller We have already eitj oyci ,1 r' r. iruits. which have been r t ii p.eu'y x and of a good quality, wh: fhe rIe and peach crop promises a apabundance. It is true that in some , portions of the Mississippi Valley the cotton and sugar plantations have cu!'- ; fered seriously from the overflow of the rivers, but, notwithstanding this i fact, the general crop in those articles will be at least equal to that of 18G0. All over the Southern States there has been this year an unusual attention paid to the growth of cereals,and this fact will not only relieve the districts which have been distressed by the want of food, but will indicate to these people the value and importance of applying the hand of productive industry to the whole soil, in a variety of crops, instead of hazarding all chances upon the success of a single product. The aggregate value of the general crop of the United States may be estimated by taking that of 1SG0 as a standard of an average yield. Iu that year the yield of the leading articles were as follows: Cotton L154,K2'sX poundsWheat , 171,1(1.!) 4 bushels' '01 u KkS,7S2.T 10 bushels'ye 21,U1,:SS0 i.ushelsUts - 182.4:f,lS5 bushelsKai ley.. lo.KJ..sys bushelslluckwhcal 17,571 818 bu-diels-Potatoes 111,148 8;;7 busiulsButter "j9.6si.:J72 poundsCheese 103,(i5,-J7 poundsRie -. I7,lb7,;i2 poundsTobacco 4.(4.;!09.-k4 pouuds. fane Sugar 2iO,9S2,(XNi pouuds. Hay- r. . i2,Sis,w2 tuns. These figures show the extent of the crop of 1SG0. That was seven years ago, since which time the breadth of, the land devoted to agricultural products has been vastly increased iu all parts of the North. The prices of all these products have advanced some what. An estimate of the value of the crop of 18G7 may be reached by adding to the amount produced in 1SG0, (except of the cotton and suirur.) rorty per cent., and computing the increased quantity by the ruling prices. The vast sum produced by thjs calculation is so much actual wealth added to the national capital ; it is a contribution by nature to the industry of the peo

pie; it is the product ot the Jabor of cuss any, or sich; akase if yer doo I'll the agriculturist. It will do much to call the perlice." This cheerful little relieve the finances of the country, j joke was"received with much laughter and will revive the money market, j by the roughs, who obeyed him, howIt will be of special value to the peo- ever, one battle-scarred veteran re p!e of the South. They have had lit- 1 marking, " Oh, he is a healthy toma-

tie or no money since the war ; they have not been able to employ the labor they wanted, because they had not the money to pay for it. An abundant crop will place money in their hands, with which they can recruit their stock and employ good labor at the wages of good laborers. Labor being paid for according to its value, the condition and industrial habits of the freedmen will' be directly benefitted. Between the first of July and the first of November, this vast volume of actual wealth will be added to the national capital, it represents so much gold, but is more indispensable than gold. The abundance of the crop in the articles we have mentioned contributes also to alike increase in countless other articles. The grass crop of this year which, perhaps, will surpass any of its predecessors, indicates an in

crease of pasturage, and consequently of fat beeves and other live stock. The corn crop points to an immense addition to the number of hogs to be slaughtered. The products of the garden show the general bounty of nature, and from countless sources will be added the contributions from the crop of 1867 to the aggregate wealth of the country. ---<>--- The Mormons. The Mormons appear to be increasing rapidly by proselytism. About two weeks ago a steamer left Liverpool with four hundred on board. An English paper says there was about an equal proportion of men and women among them, the principal part of whom were young, perhaps ranging from eighteen to twentyeight years of age. A small minority was made up of persons who must have reached between thirty and fifty years. The forward part of the ship was devoted to their exclusive use, and according to contract with the company no persons were permitted in that part of the vessel, or to associate with the Mormon proselytes. The emigrants belonged to Wales, the western counties of England, and some came from Scotland, hut there was not a single Irishman or Irishwoman among them. About four hundred have lately arrived at New York from Denmark, Sweden, and Norway, bound to Salt Lake. Late dates from Salt Lake say the secret of the difficulty between Brigham Young and Orson Pratt is that Young stopped Pratt's checking against the church fund in the Bank of England. Pratt says the funds belong to the church, and that Young is not the church, and he has come home to look into the matter. Brigham Young, jr., who is now in New York, says only one influential member of the Mormon Church at Salt Lake has left it, and that its power will not be affected by the apostasy. He says they have five hundred miles of telegraph in operation in Utah, and that 500 men are constantly employed on public works, one of which is the Tabernacle at Salt Lake. New York city is the Mormon market, where all kinds of goods are purchased, and Philadelphia is their market for machinery. Four large woolen factories are now being freighted from Philadelphia. Cotton is raised in large quantities in Southern Utah.--<Boston Journal>. ---<>--- [From the N. Y. Tribune.] A Ito ugli-an-a -Tumble Convention. On Saturday morning last, at the early hour of three o'clock, a select party of roughs, thieves and murder ers had assembled in the vicinity of rort Lee for the purpose of assisting at a rough-and-tumble prize-fight for the sum of $200, between two very notorious characters, respectively uamed in the nomenclature of the prize-ring " Blister Cunningham " and "Nosey Redmond." Now, to the readers of the Tribune, who are very ignorant of all these rowdy doings, there may seem to be no distinction whatever between what is termed a regular " ring prize-fight and a " rough - and - tumble " encounter which we shall describe. There is however, a very material difference between the two. For a regular ring fight the contestants have to be trained for weeks before the fight takes place, and when the men enter the ring they have to submit to established rules, which enjoiu upon the combatants a system of what is termed fair play, and enforces upon them the necessity of standing up while beating each other's laces to pieces. In a rough and tumble it is altogether different, as the rowdies are allowed every iatitude and brutality, inasmuch as biting, gouging and kicking the eyes and heads off are deemed worthy of the highest praise from the ruffians who attend the worse than gladiatorial combat. It was a fight of this kind that the sixty or seventy roughs who assembled at Fort Lee, on Saturday morning, were to witness. At 3J o'clock, seventy or eighty of these gentlemen had collected iu a pleasant, grassy field, fringed with huge, overhanging trees, between English Neighborhood and Ternia. Neither stakes nor ropes had been furnished for -the combat, and a hard-looking tellow named Blinky Sam, from the Twentieth Ward of New York, with a piece of his nose eaten off, and two fi-gers missing from his left hand, which he stated to our reporter had bceu shot away in " as nice alittle muss as he ever s-e-e-d," cried ut to the spectators that they " must set in a ring and make no noise, or

tose, is Blinkey." The two; combatants were now introduced the crowd by Blinkey Samuel, in a very polite

manner, hirst came Blister.- Cunningham, a stalwart-looking fellow of five ieet eleven inches, weighing about 180 pounds, with yellow pantaloons, a huge plad vest, small piggish eyes, a low, massive, beetle-brow, descending to over his eyelids, and a cranium totally devoid of hair, his smooth crown being well greased for the purEose of avoiding his adversary's ngers. Mr. Cunningham looked around, smiled grimly, showed his teeth, and made a statement that he " was so hungry that a hashed bulldog wouldn't skeer him." "Nosey" Redmond was then introduced, and made a bow to his friends as well as he could, although the dawn was only about to break. Mr. Redmond was a little fellow of 5 feet 7 inches, with a red, face, a carbuncle nose, an under chin like the ram of the Dunderberg, and mouth stretch ing from ear to ear. Mr. Redmonds hair was not so short as that of his opponent, but what lie lost by the extreme length of his hair he gained In the superabundance of greese mixed in its coarse strands. The hair of Mr. Redmond was extremely red. The preliminaries having been settled, and the spectators having taken their seats on the wet grass," Blinkey" Sam advanced to the middle of the rinc and said in anleasinsr manner: "Now, hunkey dories,! wants you all to listen ter me. these ere boys are jest as good boys as ever lived, and consequently I wants fair play fur them. I ain't much to talk, as yer know, but I am wild in a muss. Now if anybody puts his hooks on them lambs while they are going rur each other, I'll take his roof off. That's all. Now go fur it, pooties. Time." " m Time having been called, a fellow named "Puke" MacGinnis held a bottle for Mr. Cunningham, while " Clem " Dudley performed the same service for Mr. Redmond. The two men then stepped forward, and after looking at each other wickedly for a few moments, commenced to spar for the purpose of learning each other's, weak points. The two men jumped for one corner, and ducked and dodged about in the usual pugilistic fashion, much to the disgust of the roughs, who hungered like wild beasts for the sight of blood. After a tew more minutes ngnt exercise " Blister" struck "iosey a powerful blow in the face, which made a deep gash and drew blood amid the yells of the devils around the riug. " v ,.i:,.u.,,i uu ninsham. and after a close struggle succeeded in throwing him on the grass, when he jumped on the pros trate body ot his opponent and essayed laboriously to eat the nose off Mr. Cunningham. The latter gentleman resisted powerfully, and sought to retaliate in a like manner on the left ear of Mr. Redmoud; but "No sey," after a desperate struggle, and to the great delightot his mends, managed to get his thumb inserted in the eye of Mr. Cunningham, who resisted manfully, but did not let go his hold. Blister rolled his opponent over on the ground, and while both men were gouging, biting, and chawing each other's flesh like bull dogs, Mr. Cunningham got on top of Redmond, and commencied to kick hitn in the face with his heavy boot with all the gusto of a New York Common Councilman. Everything was now promising well for Mr. Cunningham, and one of his friends was running around the human ring with a hanuful of greenbacks in his hands. " Blister ia the boy for my money. Who'll b-u-s-t me in the s-n-o-o-t fur twenty d-o-l-l-s? That's my gait Who's looking at me, s-a-y?" At this juncture another rowdy stepped up quietly and said to the man who wanted to get "busted:" " W e-1-1, if y-e-r very hard up for it, why I don't care ef I do take yer bugle off for twenty dollars." Then there ensued an immediate clinch and struggle between those two fellows, which ended -in one of them being beaten almost to pieces and kicked in the ribs, until the other brutS said, " Well, I guess yer sick now, anyhow." Cunningham and Redmond were still fighting, both men rolling all over the field, presenting a most deplorable and distressing spectacle, their faces being all cut like raw beefsteaks, and Cunningham having lost a piece of his nose, while Redmond had parted unwillingly with about an inch of his left ear. ".Puke" McGinnis, while seeking to cheer the downcast spirits of his principal had been struck by a brick on the side of the head, and "knocked stiff," to use the expression of a rough. Mr. McGinnis arose slowly, all bleeding and gashed, and turning around slowly, cried out, "That was no square deal, anyhow; I calls for tKe intervention of Mr. Seward, and if I can't git it, I takes me own," at the same momeut pulling from his breast-pocket a six barreled revolver. A general free fight was about to ensue, when the 'alarm of "police" was given, and the rowdies, thieves and murderers scampered right and left for the boats, some scampering by the road to Hudson City, and others taking to 'the wood' in great alarm. It is needless to say ttiut the fight was declared a draw, owing to the fear of arrest by the principals. Thaudcus Stevens' Crave. Several years ago when the Lancaster Cemetery was incorporated, Mr. Stevens purchased two lots, for which a deed was duly executed. Some years later, in looking over-his papers, he noticed, for the first time,

the clause prohibiting the interment

of colored people in the cemetery. He at once reconveyed the lots to the company, with his reasons, and asked that they be put upon the record. A short time ago he purchased a couple of lots in W oodward Hill Cemetery, and when the deeds were handed to him he noticed a similar clause excluding the burial of people of color. The brave old man declared that he could not consent to have his bones lie in a eemetery where any ot God's children were excluded for no fault of their own, and he promptly returned the deeds. He then, only a few days ago, selected a lot in " Shreiner's Cemetery," where no such distinction is made among the dead, and there will the dust of the Old Commodore repose not, we trust, however, until he has seen the great work of reconstructing, the negro on an enduring basis of liberty and equal rights, which he has so long and so consistently labored for, triumphantly consummated. History records no instance of sublimer devotion to principle than is exhibited in this incident in the private life of Mr. Stevens. Lancaster Express. Ingenuitj of Belgian Thieves. We all know (some, perhaps, by sad experience) what artifices are put into practice in all large cities, by thieves, to get possession of goods coveted by them ; in many cases exercising ingenuity worthy of a better cause. The last new dodge out was practiced at Bruges, and the Imparrat gives the following account of the description. Two ladies presented themselves at a shop in the Rue St. Jacques, where the elder of . them made purchase of goods, and then taking out her purse, found that she had omitted to bring with her the needful funds; she requested that one of the assistants should be sent home with her for the money, and a shop woman accordingly accompanied the new customers. They went to a Carmelite convent, where the elder lady asked for one of the fathers by name, and on his calling to her held some private conversation with him. In a few minutes the father made a sign to the girl to follow him. "Go," said the lady, "follow the reverend father, he will pay you the amount. The girl complied, and accompanied the friar into a room, where she she was asked to sit down. " I am ready," said the friar, " to hear your confession." " I don't want to confess," said the girl, " I want money." What money? ' said the friar. " The price of goods purchased by the ladies who brought me here." " I know nothing of that," said the friar, " she told me you wished to confess, and being deaf, desired to do so in a private place." The explanation was complete; the girl rushed out to find that the " ladies " had made good their escape, taking with them their cheap purchase. Foreign Littler. FRUIT JARS. XVici t Jars. ITViiit T;nr. AT ISsirlt e& W;irreirs XO. 18 XVlST ST. LETCinVOUTK'S GLASS JAR, Tin top, mbber band, held by a screw. ADAMS'S GLASS JAR, Tin top, wire fastening; sealing wax to suit. CORK TOP. Glass Jars, with corks; sealing wax to suit. BROWN EARTHEN JARS, Tin top, wire fastening; closed with wax. SEALING WAX AND CORKS For sale extra. MARK & WARREN, IMPORTERS OF Queensware, Glassware, CIIIXA, FANCY GOODS, &c, 18 Main Street. Jun20 d2w Frederick GeiL John Rhelnlander. GEIL & RHEINLANDER, Dealers in PIANOS, MELODEONT and all kinds of Musical Instrument' Instruction Books, Sheet Music. Guitar and Violin Strings, &c, kc. North Side Third Street, Eetween Sycamore and Vine, i vansvilie, Ind. s"Sole Agents for Steinway & Sobh Gold Medal Pianos. lapl

GROCERIES.

CHARLES VIELE & CO.. WHOLESALE OK, O O ERS, SOUTHWEST CORNER First and Sycamore Streets, EVAN8VI1.I.K, IND. au9 ut& E. K. WHEELER. JAMES D. K1GGS. WHEELER St RIGGS, Wholesale Dealers 19 GROCERIES, SOUTHEAST CORN BR FIRST AND SYCAMORE STREETS, EVAUSVIIXK, ISD. All orders promptly attended to. uov28 dtf ISAAC HE1HANN. DAVID EEIMANK, I. fc I. II1MANX, 'Wholesale Dealers in GROCERIES, Foreign and Domestic Jiquors, NAILS, COTTON YARSS, GLASSWARE, &c, Ac, Aos. 60 and 62 Main Street, Between Second and Third, EVANSVILLE, ISD. FISH DEPOT. ov20 dtf 1I0RNBR00K & CO., DEALKRd IN Agricultural Implements, , and Oils. Agents for Fairbanks' Scales. We keep on hand a eoneral assortment ot these justly celebrated Balances. They are durable and warranted accurate, and the cheapest, nil thin -ouKldered. Klze trom oile drachm to 100 ion. Jau9 dnm CRESCENT CITY PROVISION STORI ami MEAT 3IAHKET. F. W. BENNETT (r CO ( or. LOCUST and SFX'OXO ST. feb7 dly KEEP -Ok Masters' "5 Minute" lee Cream Freezer. Warn.itea to uive perlecl satisfaction. For sale low at VICKERY KRO.'.H Eureka Ba.aar, 75 Main Street. AIRTIIEBVIIICS-We have jut received the third shipment of those beautiful Baby ISugcies the bjt evidence that we sell low. f ri-e from ii .:) to iJ2 Wl. VICKERY liUO.'S, 7"j Main .Street s IGAlt U Kr.B HAMS, Breakfast Eacou aivJ Lineu lieei. r or sate at . 1CKEKY KltO.'S, 7 Main .Street. risif iiiiiixr Elton nosrov. .Pickled Haddock, Salmon, Herring, os. 1 and 2 Mackerei, Mes Mackerel. Smoked Bloa'ers, &c. tc. For sale chea at ViCKtUYUKO.-, 75 Main bt. St'UARS In anticipation of a good fruit season, we purchased before the it-cent advance, a three months stock of Sugars, which enable. us to sell in any quantity from a pound to a barrel, as low as the lowest. Pi ice from 12 to 18c. Quail ties very superior. VICKERY BRO.'S, 73 Main St, FRUIT JARS OF AS UOOU'ni'ALlTT A.D AT as low price as any in the eity. t'ur sale at VICKERY BKO.'M. Eureka Bazaar, 75 Main Street. DENTISTS. DR. I. HAAS Resident Ietitit, Over First National Bank, Corner Main and First Streets Evansville, Ind., MASl'F.itTlREK OF COXTI.VEous Gum Work, Gold, Silver, Vul cauite.Coralite, and Amber Plates, Carved Work, Artificial Palate, &c. ADMINISTRATOR of Nitrous Oxide (an excellent and safe auathetic). Chloroform, Ether, and also several local paralyze rs. NEURALGIC Affections treated. MY FACILITIES are as good and my establishment as large (consisting of fivb rooms) as any in the United States. I RETURN MY THANKS for the extensive patronage received during the past EIGHT YEARS. mcUd DR. J. C. BIERBOWER, Office, No. 1W FIRST STREET, beL Main KDU LAKUfll, Tender his professional services to the citizens of Evansville and vicinity. Ife2utf Administers Nitrous Oxide tin .to. alleviate pain in extracting tectb.

STOVE WORKS.

SOUTHERN STOVE WORKS. ANTON HELBLING, (Successor to Brinkmeyer & Co..) MANUFACTURER OF COOKING & HEATING STOVES, For Wood and Coal; Skillets and Lids; Oveas and Lids ODD LIDS; SUGAR KETTLES; DOG IRONS; JAMB GRVTESj AIR AND CELLAR GRATES; HAM BOILERS; MUFFIN MOULD; WAFFLE IRONS j Copper, Tin, and Sheet-Iron War. Ac, &c. Dealers In Tinplate, Sheet-Iron, Copper, lc.,fct. Also, Sole Agent for O'Netl's Patent Broad-Gauge, Indestructible Copper BoV toma, lor Wash and Coflee Boilers, &o. Sales-room, No. 3 MAIN STREET, opposite the Court-House. Foundry, near the mouth of Pigeon Creek. Orders solicited and promptly filled JauZldtf Excelsior Stove Woiks. BLEMKER, TILLMA9T & Co. (Successors to II. E. Blemker), MASVFAtTl'KEKS of the fine and heavy EXCELSIOR STOVE, the most durable now made, and the famous CHARTER STOVE, and the good and cheap Armada, Stonewall, Kentucky, TENNESSEE, and PALMETTO STOVE, and a great variety of II E A T I X O STOVES, all of the latest and most approved patterns. Also, Light and Smooth Country HollowWare, skillets and Lids, Ovens mid Lids, Dog-Irons, Dinner Pot, Tea-Kettle-; and particular attention paid to the mauulaclureof House- Woik CAST-IRON FRONTS, GRATES, 4c, &C Also and Dealers in Tinners Stock. If desired. Cooking Stoves warranted for twelve months. Orders solicited before purchasing elsewhere. Founderj', corner Sixth Street and Caual. Store and Sample Room (it No. 11 Second Street, it. K. llli-niker's old stand. BLK.MKER, TILLMAN & CO. miiyt MBDipAXj. Great Xcw Engteml Remedy JJlt. J. W. POLAND'S WHITE PINE COMPOUND, Is xow orn::u: t the a. flirted tliriU!rliout, tlie country, ufter Laving l-eti proved by the" tet of eleven years in the New England btales, where is merits have become as well known art the tree from which, In part, it derives its virtues. Tke White Pia3 Compound Cures Sore Throat, Cold, Coughs, Liptherio. Bronchitis, Spitting of Blood, and Pulmonary Affections generally. It is a ReiwnUuhle Remedy for Kidney Complaints, Diabetes, Djf' jiculty of Voiding Urine, Jiieding from the Kidneys and Bladder, Gruoel and other eomplaints. In Novemler, 1HV, I find, advertised it under the name of White Pine Compound. In tw year from that, time there had oeen wholesaled In Munchestei aloiieoue hundred thousand dollars' worth, where it took the lead of all the cough remedies in t he market, und it still maintains that position. There are good reasons for tills; ft is very soothing and healing in its nature, is warming in the stomach, and pleaxtint wiilial to the taste, and is exceeding cheap. " As a remedy for kidney complaints the White Pino Compound stands unrivaled. It was not originated lor thiit-purpose; but a person in using it for a cough wa not only cured or the cough, but was also cured of a kidne diiMculty of teu years' standing. Since that accidental discovery, many thousaudt iiave u ed it lor the same complaint, aud have been completely cu rfctl." THE WHITE PINK COMPOUND. "It was early iu thespritigot '5J that this compound ws originated. A member of my family was atllieted with an irritation of the throat, attendid with a disagreeable couith. I had for Mime months previous thought that a preparatio i Having f rits basis the insi'ie oara or Whit Pine might be so compounded as to be very useiul in diseases ot the Throat aud Lungs. To test the value of it in the case a.liudel to, I compounde la Mna 1 uuaiiti y ot t lie medicine that I had been planning, and gave It in teaspoonful doses. The result was exceedingly gratifying. Within two days, the ii illation of the throat was rrinoved, the cou-;h subsided, aud a speedy cure wa.effected. The above was writen by Dr. Polatd iE lstio. Since then, as in .via rich ester, the White Pine Compound has taken the leat of all cough remedies, as well as preparations for the cure ol kidney difficulties, ir every city, town, village, aud hamlet throughout the New England Stales. 1 bis remedy is as safe and pleasant to take as it is effectual. 1HE WHITE PINE COMPOUND, UEOKUE W. HWEET, SI. If., Proprietor. Prepared at the NEW ENGLAND BOTANICAL DEPOT, 100 Hanover Street, Boston. Under the supervision of Rev. J. W. Po-. land. Cloud i Akin, Wholesale Agents. For sa.e by Keller & White, Win. H. P Stoodaid.T.C. B Id well. H. J. Schlaepfer and by Druggists generally. It 14 dlw, wit If.