Beautiful Minerals with a Selection of Exquisite Barber Bottles

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Beautiful Minerals with a Selection of Exquisite Barber Bottles

14 February 2015

Apple-Touch-IconANow here is a display that you don’t come across too often at antique bottle shows. Check out this email from Sandor P. Fuss reporting from the Tucson Gem & Mineral Show. Make sure you check out the pairing of the specific minerals with the barber bottle.

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Hi Ferdinand,

Attached are a few quick pics of an exhibit case that was at the 2015 Tucson Gem & Mineral Show. It is going on right now at the convention center in downtown Tucson, Arizona. It is my 23rd year in a row attending the show. I spent three weeks there and I had a wonderful time, business was good.

Gail and Jim Spann, very famous mineral collector’s, put in a group of their beautiful minerals with a selection of exquisite barber bottles from the David P. Wilbur collection. All of my dreams have come true, minerals and bottles together in the same case! It was just gorgeous!

See you in a few weeks in Baltimore.

Regards,

Sandor 

Read More: A Sampling of the Famous David P. Wilber Barber Bottle Collection

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Posted in Barber Bottles, Collectors & Collections, Cologne, Display, News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

I recently picked up a Summer/Winter GX-15 Pontil Pint Aquamarine Flask

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I recently picked up a Summer/Winter GX-15 Pontil Pint Aquamarine Flask

12 February 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAIt seemed like a nice day to do a post on a Summer Winter flask and put the Winter side on the top of the page. I’ve received some e-mails from folks up North where the temperature is approaching zero degrees. Yes it is winter. This e-mail is from Abel Araujo Gouveia Da Silva, up Canada way.

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Hi Ferdinand,

I recently picked up a Summer/Winter GX-15 Pontil Pint Aquamarine Flask with very strong embossing. I was checking on what Glass Company made the flask. The McKearin Bottle & Flask book had this flask as unknown maker.

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To me it seems very simple. The Washington Taylor flasks were made by the Dyottville Glass Works in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Twitchell Philadelphia Pontil soda’s, The Howell & Smith cobalt blue Buffalo Pontil soda’s, The Summer/Winter GX-15, and some of the Washington/Taylor flasks have the exact same shaped tooled top. I believe if someone used a micrometer and checked the tops of these bottles they would find they were made by the same tool. That being the Dyottville Glass Works in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. I think this puts to rest on what company made the Summer/Winter flasks.

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Please let me know what you think.

Regards,

Abel Araujo Gouveia Da Silva

Read more from Abel: Buchanan Brass Printing Plate – Figural Cannon Series

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References:

Posted in Glass Companies & Works, Glass Makers, Historical Flasks, Questions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Peters & Smith – Drugs & Medicines

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Peters & Smith – Drugs & Medicines

The Dandelion Bitters Co., Allentown, Pennsylvania

12 February 2015

Apple-Touch-IconACollecting bitters bottles is just too much fun. I realize to some, or probably many, that there is monotony in looking at all of the various dandelion bitters. My apologies, I am just consumed with all of this. I think this is the tenth dandelion bitters brand we have looked at lately. This one is exciting because there is an embossed Dandelion on the bottle and I have been looking for an example for years with no success. Maybe that will change.

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles for the Dandelion Bitters from Peters & Smith in Allentown, PA is as follows:

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D 8  DANDELION BITTERS
DANDELION BITTERS (AU) / TRADE motif dandelion MARK // c //
Manufactured by Dandelion Bitters Co., Allentown, Pennsylvania
7 1/4 x 2 1/2 (5 1/8)
Round, Amber, NSC, Tooled lip, Rare
Label: Unparalled remedy for kidney and liver complaints, general debility and urinary troubles.
Copyrighted July, 1883, 1884 by Henry E. Peters of Allentown (Application in 1883)

Peters & Smith

The primary player in this bitters product is Henry Eugene Peters who was born in North Whitehall township, Allentown, Pennsylvania, on January 14, 1858.

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The Peters & Smith logo on their letterhead is a work of art with all of the typographic treatment.

Peters entered the drug business in 1881 when he purchased the drug store property at 639 Hamilton Street in Allentown and next received his patent for Dandelion Bitters on July 24 1884. Henry G. Smith joined him in 1886 and the concern was renamed Peters & Smith, Manufacturing Pharmacists and Retail and Wholesale Druggists. They also were the proprietors of The Dandelion Bitters Company as their product was so successful. They dissolved their partnership on March 2, 1898 as Mr. Smith retired. The firm was in existence for twelve years and enjoyed a large and profitable trade. Mr. Peters continued in business at the same location. During the summer of 1909, he remodeled the building. In 1909 his son, Harold Peters, was admitted into the firm. Much more information is noted below about the partnership and the men involved.

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Front and back cover of THE DANDE-LION published by The Dandelion Bitters Co., Allentown, PA. – Meyer Collection

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Inside of THE DANDE-LION published byThe Dandelion Bitters Co., Allentown, PA. – Meyer Collection

THE HANDSOMEST AND BEST EQUIPPED DRUG STORE IN ALLENTOWN, THE ESTABLISHMENT OF MESSRS. PETERS & SMITH, DANDELION BITTERS, &c

THE fact is probably unquestioned that the recently refitted and restocked drug store of Messrs. Peters & Smith, at No. 639 Hamilton street, Allentown, is the leading establishment of the kind in the Lehigh Valley. No seeming extravagance of language could do full justice to its present appearance. It is the model pharmacy headquarters in this city, and quantity, quality and constituency are all fully in keeping with one another.

Young in years, but old in experience, Peters & Smith form an admirable combination. Practical pharmacists, thoroughly skilled in every department of their specialty, they are also sufficiently actuated with the spirit of the times as to keep abreast in all that materially contributes to the convenience of the public and that ministers to the pleasure of the eye. Their drug store, aesthetically considered, lacks nothing to render it attractive throughout. The recent changes the building has undergone have completely revolutionized its interior appearance. New shelving, counters and flooring lend it features not elsewhere to be met with in the valley. While the internal improvements are chiefly of yellow pine, the handsome front is of hard maple. The painter has lent his art to embellish the place, too, and he has been eminently successful. The office in the rear is capacious and both finished and furnished in a style befitting the surroundings. The second floor is devoted to the wholesale department and the laboratory. Even the deep, capacious cemented cellar, extending under the whole building, is pressed into service as a subterranean drug store in itself. The attempt of an ordinary layman to describe the contents of such an emporium would be manifestly a failure, so lest the failure would be too glaring the attempt will not be made. You and the rest of the Lehigh world know very well that nowhere else within the low-ranging mountains that environ the county is there such an assemblage of drugs, druggists’ sundries, perfumeries, toilet articles, fancy goods, and everything else that can contribute to your health, your comfort or the gratification of your luxurious taste. Among this medical wilderness, however, it would never do to omit special reference to a great specialty of Messrs. Peters & Smith, one that has creditably spread their name throughout the Middle Atlantic States. The merest tyro knows that reference is here made to those well, widely and favorably known specifics, Dandelion Bitters and Dandelion Liver Pellets. They are their own manufacture and are pronounced by the highest medical authority to possess all the virtues claimed for them. At last, it is a pleasure to have something to relieve our pains whereof we know the compounders. The world has long been imposed upon by unknown outside charlatans, the virtue of whose compounds chiefly consists in extensive advertising. In Dandelion Bitters and Dandelion Liver Pellets, on the other hand, we are surrounded by those whose health gained material benefits from their use. They are our friends and neighbors who speak loudest in praise of the virtues of their superior remedies. The witnesses are at our doors.

Among other specialties of this complete medical hall might be mentioned Gross’ Rheumatic Remedy, death to your aching bones, and Hassler’s Worm Syrup, that never fails to carry havoc to worms wherever it goes.

In the line of flavoring extracts Peters & Smith carry a stock as varied as it is select. Dealing in the products of the Standard Extract Company, the fact lends emphasis to this statement. Indeed, the truth is tersely but inadequately put when you are told that this complete drug and medical house, with its frontage of 21 feet and its depth of 75 feet, is filled with every conceivable article that goes to constitute the model establishment of to-day. Even a duplicate drug store on the second floor as the store proper is not lacking in completeness.

Henry E. Peters is a native of North Whitehall township, this county, and was born January 14, 1858. His, boyhood was spent in attendance at the Unionville school; his early youth at the Weaversville Academy, and his later youth at Muhlenberg College, which he left in 1875. He immediately devoted himself to mastering the drug business and embarked for himself in 1881. Henry G. Smith was born in Allentown, March 9, 1859, was furnished his education here and graduated from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, in 1879. After a long and exhaustive practical experience as a druggist, he became a member of the present firm in February, 1886. The leading drug store in the valley, descriptive comment is idle as to those qualities that have placed Peters & Smith in the first rank both as pharmacists and members of our business community. Their beautiful drug store is a credit to the city, and the members of the firm are an equal credit to the calling to which they have devoted their lives. Whenever skyey influences affect you, or your aesthetic taste needs pampering, remember that the number is 639 Hamilton street, Allentown. [Past, Present, and Future of the City of Allentown, Pa., 1886]

Pictured below Dandelion Bitters cabinet card – Joe Gourd Collection

D8 Dandelion Bitters Cabinet card

Henry E. Peters

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Henry E. Peters

HENRY E. PETERS, head of the Henry E. Peters & Co. firm of druggists, was born on a farm in the township of North Whitehall, Lehigh County, in 1858. He attended the country schools. In 1869 his parents moved to Coplay where his father built the Eagle Hotel which he continued until his death in 1873 when the family moved to Allentown. Mr. Peters then entered Muhlenberg College, attending that institution until his junior year, when he entered the employ of Dr. Charles L. Lochman in the pursuit of the study of pharmacy. Later he attended and was graduated in 1880 from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy as one of the honor men of the class of 160 students, being a classmate of the successful pharmacists, George B. Evans and George G. Behringer, the latter now a trustee of the college. Mr. Peters returned to Allentown and entered the employ of August Weber, and after a year purchased the establishment of Barnes & Hartzell, 630 Hamilton Street. He continued here until 1881, when he purchased the property at 639 Hamilton Street, the present site of his business. During the summer of 1909, he remodeled the building which now is one of the most up-to-date equipped drug establishments in Pennsylvania. He carries the largest and most complete line of merchandise of any business of its kind outside of Philadelphia. In 1909 his son, Harold Peters, was admitted into the firm. [Men of Allentown, 1917]

Select Listings:

1858: Henry E. Peters born in North Whitehall township, Allentown, Pennsylvania, on January 14, 1858.

1859: Henry G. Smith born in Allentown, PA on March 9, 1859.

1881: Henry E. Peters enters the drug business.

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Henry E. Peters advertising trade card before Henry E. Smith joins him as a partner (dated 1881-1886)

1884: Dandelion Bitters patent and label registered July 24 1884 by Henry E. Peters of Allentown

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Dandelion Bitters label copyrighted July, 1883 by Henry E. Peters of Allentown

1886: Peters & Smith Manufacturing Pharmacists and Retail and Wholesale Druggists formed in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

1891: Peters & Smith billhead notes Proprietors of Dandelion Bitters in upper left corner, September 5, 1891 (see below)

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Peters & Smith billhead notes Proprietors of Dandelion Bitters in upper left corner, September 5, 1891 – Joe Gourd Collection

1898: The well-known and the popular firm of Peters & Smith, Allentown, dissolved partnership on March 2nd. Mr. Smith retiring. The firm was in existence for twelve years and enjoyed a large and profitable trade. Mr. Peters will continue in business, and being an accomplished pharmacist and a good business man will have no difficulty in maintaining the popularity of the store.

1898: Henry E. Peters drug store formed.

19o0: Henry E. Peters, age 42, Druggist, Allentown Ward 5, LehighPennsylvania – United States Federal Census

1905: Dandelion Bitters “Graft Whiskey in Berks” article (see below)

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Dandelion Bitters “Graft Whiskey in Berks” article – The Allentown Leader, Saturday, May 20, 1905

1907: Harold Peters, son of Henry E. Peter entered the drug business.

1909: Drug store remodeled. Harold Peters joins the company.

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Odd looking Health Dilating Syringe for Women on Sale at Henry E. Peters, Druggists – The Allentown Leader, Friday, March 26, 1909

1920: Henry E. Peters, age 60, Druggist, 527 Turner Street, living in Allentown Ward 5, LehighPennsylvania – United States Federal Census

Read more about other Dandelion Bitters

Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters – Bangor, Maine

Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters – Iowa

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

The Beggs’ and their Dandelion Bitters

Dr. J.R.B. McClintock’s Dandelion Bitters – Philadelphia

Dr Grant’s, Dandelion Bitters, New York.

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters – Fort Wayne, Indiana

Smith’s Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters

Lucius W. Bissell and his Dandelion Bitters

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Lucius W. Bissell and his Dandelion Bitters

Lucius W. Bissell and his Dandelion Bitters

Bellows Falls Vermont & Keene, New Hampshire

11 February 2015 (R•042419) (R•051019)

Apple-Touch-IconAWow, another in the Dandelion Bitters series inspired by bitters ephemera authority, Joe Gourd. The three advertising trade cards used in this post are Joe’s. Sometimes these cards are the only clue we have of a bitters brand. This time it is Bissell’s Dandelion Bitters put out by Bissell’s Manufacturing Company in Keene, New Hampshire.

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This one is a surprise because I have a couple of Bissell’s Tonic Bitters (see picture above) from Peoria, Illinois. I wonder if they are related? This brand also appears to be unlisted in Bitters Bottles and Bitters Bottles Supplement. If you look on the card below, you will see the bitters listed on the left of Bissell’s portrait.

[Reverse of both Trade Cards top of post]

The new listing for Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

Trade Cards
B 108.5 BISSELL’S DANDELION BITTERS, Bissell’s Mfg. Company, Dealers in Drugs and Medicines, Keene, N.H., Established 1874, L. W. Bissell, M. A. Bissell, Trade Mark portrait, Lucius Warren Bissell
[Trade Card 3]

Lucius Warren Bissell

Lucius Warren Bissell’s first American ancestor, John Bissell, came to Massachusetts Bay Colony from England in the 1600s with one hundred others, under the leadership of Thomas Hooker. He settled the towns of Hartford and Windsor, Connecticut. John Bissell also received a charter from Charles I for a ferry across the Connecticut River at Windsor, which still retains the name, Bissell’s Ferry.

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Lucius W. Bissell portrait photographed in Brattleboro, Vermont

Lucius Bissell was born in Wardsboro, Windham County, Vermont on June 8, 1833. He married Abbie Minerva (Howard) Bissell in 1857. Miss Howard was of Scotch-Irish descent, her ancestors having come first to Nova Scotia and then were among the first settlers of Brimfield, Mass. Later John Howard was one of the first settlers in Dover, Vermont. One of the Bissell’s children, Leslie Dayton Bissell, Ph.D., would later graduate from Yale and once was the Owner and Principal of The Coit School for Boys in Munich, Germany. Lucius W. Bissell would go on and become a druggist.

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Portrait, Abbey Minerva (Howard) Bissell

Lucius Bissell’s early years were spent as a farmer where he lived with his wife Abbey, in Dover, Vermont. Bissell served more than three years in the Civil War, including being a Private in Cos. G and H of the 8th Vermont and 19 months as a Lieutenant and First Lieutenant in the 75th United States Colored Troops. This service permanently disabled him physically and the remainder of his later life was spent in Keene, New Hampshire, and Lynn, Massachusetts. He apparently came from a long line of Bissell’s serving in American wars as you can see from the article below.

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Following the war, Bissell worked as a travelling salesman in Bellows Falls, Vermont and in 1874, opened a drug and medicine manufacturing firm in Bellows Falls. It is unclear where he received his pharmaceutical training, if indeed he had any.

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Thirteen years later, in 1889, Bissell moved the firm to 322 West Street in Keene, New Hampshire and took on Charles Bissell, probably a nephew, as a partner. They called themselves The Bissell Manufacturing Company. They were advertised as Dealers in Drugs and Medicines. For a trademark, he used in all of his advertising, a portrait of himself (see above). Charles Bissell was a longtime Keene resident who worked as a clerk at Cushing’s grain store. The Bissell’s were the proprietors and advertised White’s Army Stimulant, Bissell’s Celebrated Liniment, Bissell’s Jamaica Ginger, Bissell’s Magic Hemlock Powders, Bissell’s Great Indian Remedy and of course Bissell’s Dandelion Bitters of which I see no record of a surviving, probably labeled bitters bottle example. They also manufactured bay rum, vanilla, and a variety of other extracts. The label on a Bissell’s Syrup Tulu bottle indicated that it was good for “coughs, colds, hoarseness, and any bronchial trouble. Also the best remedy for whopping cough. Try it and be convinced of its merits.”

Charles Bissell soon left the firm and Lucius continued with M.A. Bissell as a partner in Keene until 1897. He had relocated the company to Forest Street by that time. Bissell moved on in 1898 to Lynn, Essex County, Massachusetts where he died on 21 September 1911. His bitters will not be forgotten. As to a relationship to the Bissell’s Tonic Bitters brand from Peoria? Look for a future post.

Reference: L Bissell Manufacturing Company, Monadnock Moment No. 109, Era 6: Development of the Industrial United States – 1870 to 1900

[Receipt September 1895]

The new listing for Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

Receipt
B 108.5 BISSELL’S DANDELION BITTERS, Keene, N.H. Sept 1895, Bought of Bissell’s Mfg. Company, Dealers in Drugs Medicines Extracts and Perfumes, Proprietors of Bissell’s Dandelion BittersTrade Mark portrait, Lucius Warren Bissell

Select Listings:

1833: Lucius Warren Bissell born in Wardsboro, Windham County, Vermont on 8 June 1833. Father Austin Bissell of Wardsboro, Vermont, Mother Abigail Minerva (Howard) Bissell, daughter of Herbert Howard of Dover.
1857: Marriage to Abbie Minerva Howard on 10 November 1857 in Brattleboro, Vermont, Children, Mary A Bissell, Stella J Gibbs, Arthur E Bissell
1860: Lucius Bissell, Farmer, age 26, wife Abbey, home Dover, Windham, Vermont – United States Federal Census
1861: Leslie Dayton Bissell, son born February 7, 1861m in Dover, Vermont, died September 28, 1947 in Norhhampton, Mass.
1863: Lucius Bissell served almost three years in the Civil War, including 19 months as a First Lieutenant in the 3rd Regiment of the U.S. Colored Troops. Following the War. Enlisted December 30, 1863, Mustered: January 5, 1864, Mustered out of service: July 17, 1865.
1869: L. W. Bissell in the U.S., Indexed County Land Ownership Maps, Windham, Vermont (Dover; West Dover; East Dover)
1874: Lucius Bissell opened a drug and medicine manufacturing firm in Bellows Falls.
1880: Lucius W. Bissell, age 46, Peddler, home Rockingham, Windham, Vermont, Father born in Connecticut, Mother born in Massachusetts – United States Federal Census
1887: Leslie Dayton Bissell gets a B.A. at Yale – Yale University Obituary Record
1889: Lucius Bissell moved the firm to 322 West Street in Keene, and took Charles Bissell, probably a nephew, as a partner.
1889-1890: Lucius W. Bissell and C. H. Bissell, Bissell’s Manufacturing Co. manufacturer of medicines, office and manufactory 322 West, Keene, NH – Keene, New Hampshire City Directory
1891-1896: Bissell’s Manufacturing Co. (L. W. Bissell and M. A. Bissell) medicines etc. office and manufactory 322 West, Keene, NH – Keene, New Hampshire City Directory
1897: Bissell’s Manufacturing Co. (L. W. Bissell) medicines etc. office and manufactory 14 Forest, Keene, NH – Keene, New Hampshire City Directory
1910: Lucius Bissell, Boarder, age 77, home Lynn Ward 7, Essex, Massachusetts – United States Federal Census
1911: Lucius Bissell died on 21 September 1911 in Lynn, Essex County, Massachusetts

Read more about other Dandelion Bitters

Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters – Bangor, Maine

Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters – Iowa

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

The Beggs’ and their Dandelion Bitters

Dr. J.R.B. McClintock’s Dandelion Bitters – Philadelphia

Dr Grant’s, Dandelion Bitters, New York.

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters – Fort Wayne, Indiana

Smith’s Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Civil War, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Smith’s Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters

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Smith’s Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters

Ebin R. Smith, Apothecary

08 February 2015 (R•090119)

Apple-Touch-IconAThe Smith’s Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters appears to be unlisted in Bitters Bottles. You have to look carefully as there are about 15 brands of Smith’s bitters of one sort or local or another. This brand was put out by Ebin R. Smith practicing as a druggist out of Ipswich, Massachusetts. The trade card is from the Joe Gourd collection. Another in the series focusing on dandelion bitters brands.

I typically barely crack a smile at some of the odd humor on these advertising trade cards. This one is no exception. With the new telephone era evident, we have an anxious ‘business type’ father being told by his ‘maid looking’ wife, her name is Bitty you see, that there are ‘two are in the oven’ so to speak. The business guys knows things are going to change. Maybe time to get some Smith’s Bitters!

The new listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

Trade cards
S 124.5 SMITH’S GENTIAN, DANDELION AND YELLOW DOCK BITTERS, Humorous illustrations of people talking on telephone. Smith’s Bitters, The Best Medicine Ever Sold. Reverse: Smith’s Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters, Prepared only by Ebin R. Smith, Apothecary.
Ebin R. Smith, apothecary, druggist, Market sq, Caldwell’s blk, home 48 Central – Ipswich, Massachusetts City Directory, 1888-1891

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Ebin Ryder Smith

Ebin Ryder Smith was born in Boston, Massachusetts on December 6, 1862. His father, Theophilus Smith, was a druggist so Ebin Ryder seemed destined to follow his father’s footsteps. Ebin, and you sometimes see it incorrectly spelled Eben, next appears with an Apothecary shop on South Main Street at Caldwell’s Block in Ipswich, Massachusetts in 1884. He would remain in Ipswich most of his career as a druggist. Mr. Smith would practice as a Pharmacist up until about 1908. He died at a relatively young age in 1911.

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The Caldwell Block is a historic block on S. Main Street in Ipswich, Massachusetts. If you look carefully you can see the Smith drug store on the right. That probably is Ebin Ryder Smith standing out front. I do feel that this photograph was embellished or manipulated as the sign is spelled wrong on the store front.

The Caldwell Block is a historic block on S. Main Street in Ipswich, Massachusetts. It is the oldest surviving building in Ipswich that was designed as a commercial and retail space, and is still used for that purpose. It is located prominently in the center of Ipswich, at the junction of North and South Main Streets, and Central and Market Streets. It was built in 1870 by Luther Caldwell, on the site of an old woolen mill that was destroyed by fire a few years earlier, and features Italianate styling. The building has always housed retail stores on the ground floor and office space above. It is notable as the location of the offices of writer John Updike between 1961 and 1974, when he wrote many of his works there. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

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If you look carefully at this 1832 illustrative map of Ipswich, you can see the Smiths Buildings at the intersection of Market and South Main Street. I wonder if this was a relative of Theophilus Smith, the father. He was a druggist in Boston. This would be the location of Caldwell’s Block.

The Smith’s Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters could have been his biggest seller and was probably a labeled bitters in the mid 1880s. I am aware of no examples in collections.

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Ebin R. Smith, Pharmacist, Caldwell’s Block, Ipswich, Mass. – The Agawam manual and directory, 1888

For you legal types in the crowd, Ebin R. Smith and Edward R. Brown had an interesting case where a ‘non-compete’ contract must have been signed between the two. Read about the case below in 1895.

EBIN R. SMITH vs. EDWARD F. BROWN.

Essex. November 6, 1895. – November 27, 1895.

Present: FIELD, C. J., HOLMES, KNOWLTON, MORTON, & LATHROP, JJ.

Restraint of Trade – Valid Contract – Injunction – Penalty – Damages.

B. signed an agreement which recited that for value received of A., and for the further consideration of A. “taking from me my lease of an apothecary shop in I my promise herein being the chief inducement leading him to take said lease, and to purchase the property therein, and in said shop and the good will of the business, – I hereby agree with said A. . . . under a penalty of one thousand dollars (to be forfeited and paid said A. or his legal representatives, in the event of my committing any breach of this agreement) not to engage directly or indirectly, or become in any manner interested, in the drug business within at least two miles of said apothecary shop, whose lease said A. takes from me, without first obtaining the written consent of said A. thereto.” Held, on a bill in equity for an injunction for a violation of the contract, and for the payment of one thousand dollars as liquidated damages, that the contract was valid; that, as there was evidence of laches on the part of A., an injunction was rightly refused; that the sum named was a penalty, and that the judge was warranted in finding substantial damages.

BILL IN EQUITY, filed February 21, 1895, to restrain the defendant from continuing in the drug business in Ipswich, in violation of his contract with the plaintiff, and for the payment of one thousand dollars as provided therein. The answer set up, among other defences, laches. In the Superior Court a decree was entered that the plaintiff recover of the defendant the sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars, with costs, without any reference to an injunction; and both parties appealed to this court. The contract and the facts of the case appear in the opinion.

E. R. Thayer, for the defendant.

E. P. Moulton, (F. V. Wright with him,) for the plaintiff.

HOLMES, J. This is a bill praying for an injunction and for damages on the following contract: “For value received of Ebin R. Smith, of East Cambridge, in the county of Middlesex, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and for the further consideration of said Smith taking from me my lease of an apothecary shop in Ipswich, in the count}’ of Essex, — my promise herein being the chief inducement leading him to take said lease, and to purchase the property therein, and in said shop and the good will of the business, – I hereby agree with said Smith and his assigns and legal representatives, under a penalty of one thousand dollars (to be forfeited and paid said Smith or his legal representatives, in the event of my committing any breach of this agreement) not to engage directly or indirectly, or become in any manner interested, in the drug business within at least two miles of said apothecary shop, whose lease said Smith takes from me, without first obtaining the written consent of said Smith thereto.

“Witness my hand and seal on this fifth day of May, A. D. 1884.

“Edw. F. Brown.”

The decree assessed substantial damages, and by implication refused an injunction. Both parties appeal.

In the first place the defendant says that the contract is an unlawful restraint of trade, because it is not limited to the time of the plaintiff’s continuing in the business, or otherwise. But the covenant may be presumed to have added to the value of the good will of the plaintiffs business more than it would have done if limited. It goes no further than other contracts which have been enforced by the courts, and we shall not be ingenious in discovering new grounds for holding it void. Ropes v. Upton, 125 Mass. 258. Hitchcock v. Coker, 6 Ad. & El. 438, 454, 455.

If the contract is valid the plaintiff says that he is entitled to an injunction enforcing it, or if not, then he has a right to the whole sum mentioned in the contract, which he says is to be regarded as liquidated damages. The defendant, on the other hand, argues that in the absence of evidence directed to the point the plaintiff can recover only nominal damages. We cannot say that there was no evidence of laches sufficient to warrant the judge who saw and heard the witnesses in refusing an injunction. The plaintiff admitted that he knew that a store was being prepared which he had every reason to believe would be an apothecary’s shop, that he had been told that the defendant and one Roberts were going to start a store, and that there was a good deal of talk about it. It is plain that he understood from the talk that Brown and Roberts were going to start an apothecary’s shop at the place in question. This was some months before he took any steps. He gave no notice until the bill was filed, in the latter part of February, 1895. In the mean time the defendant and Robert’s spent a considerable sum, probably more than that mentioned in the contract, in fitting up the place. They have put between twenty-five hundred and three thousand dollars into the business. Furthermore, there was evidence that the defendant signed the contract without reading it or paying any attention to it, and that the plaintiff was aware of the fact, and therefore was aware that there were special reasons for notifying the defendant, if the latter was openly proceeding with seeming innocence to do what his agreement forbade. It is not necessary to go further on this branch of the case, or to consider whether, if this evidence were submitted to us in print without a finding, we should give the plaintiff an injunction, instead of damages. See Ropes v. Upton, 125 Mass. 258, 262.

With reference to the defendant’s contention as to damages, we have no doubt that the judge who tried the case was warranted in finding substantial damages from the defendant’s competition in a small place, without evidence specifically directed to what the damage would be, just as in the case of words affecting a trader in the way of his trade. See Tripp v. Thomas, 3 B. & C. 427; Davis v. Shepstone, 11 App. Cas. 187,191. The damages, being for breach of an entire contract, of course must be assessed once for all, and necessarily are largely a matter of estimate. See Drummond v. Crane, 159 Mass. 577, 581.

The plaintiff s position raises more difficulty. We assume in favor of the plaintiff that the words “under a penalty” are not conclusive against the sum named being regarded as liquidated damages. Lynde v. Thompson, 2 Allen, 456, 459. Ropes v. Upton, 125 Mass. 258, 262. Sainter v. Ferguson, 7 C. B. 716. Sparrow v. Paris, 7 H. & N. 594. We agree that the event to which the so-called penalty is attached is one, in a certain sense, and we do not need to controvert what sometimes has been said, that in this class of cases the courts incline to treat the sum named as liquidated damages. Mopes v. Upton, 125 Mass. 258, 260. 1 Sedgwick, Damages, (8th ed.) § 418. On the other hand, the breach might vary in gravity very much according to the degree of the defendant’s share in helping competition. The judge may have found that the words used were selected by the plaintiff’s lawyer, that the contract was signed by the defendant without reading it, and without advice from any lawyer employed by him, on the faith of assurances given in the plaintiff’s presence, and that the defendant was entitled to the most favorable construction in case of any ambiguity or doubt. We cannot say that no view of the circumstances would warrant the judge in regarding this as being a penalty, as it is called in the contract. Even if the use of that word is not conclusive, it has been declared by this court, and by others, that very strong evidence would be required to authorize them to say that the parties’ own words do not express their intention in this respect. The intention to liquidate damages may not prevail in all cases, but if the intent expressed is to impose a penalty, the court cannot give the words a larger scope. Higginson v. Weld, 14 Gray, 165, 173. Taylor v. Sandiford, 7 Wheat. 13, 17. Smith v. Wainwright, 24 Vt. 97, 102, 104. Smith v. Dickenson, 3 B. & P. 630, 632. Astley v. Weldon, 2 B. & P. 346, 350.

Decree affirmed.

Smith's Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters F2 Smith's Gentian, Dandelion and Yellow Dock Bitters F3

All advertising trade cards from the Joe Gourd Collection

Select Dates:

1862: birth Dec 6, Ebin Ryder Smith, 113 Shawmut ave, Mothers name Mary, Fathers name Theophilus, father is a Druggist, mother and father both born in Boston.
1870: Ebin R. Smith, age 7, birth about 1863, Massachusetts, home Boston Ward 4, Suffolk, Massachusetts, father Theophilus W. Smith, sister Marietta C. Smith, 3 – United States Federal Census
1872-1873: Theophilus Smith, Druggist – The Boston Directory
1880: Ebin R. Smith, age 17, birth about 1863, Massachusetts, home Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, father Theophilus W. Smith – United States Federal Census
1884: Apothecaries, Ebin R. Smith, South Main st., Ipswich – The Essex County Directory
1885: Initiated into Massachusetts Mason Lodge on January 14, 1885.
1888: Advertisement (see above), Ebin R. Smith, Pharmacist, Caldwell’s Block, Ipswich, Mass. – The Agawam manual and directory
1888-1891: Ebin R. Smith, m3, apothecary, druggist, Market sq, Caldwell’s blk, home 48 Central – Ipswich, Massachusetts City Directory
1895: EBIN R. SMITH vs. EDWARD F. BROWN. (see above) – Massachusetts Supreme Court Reports
1898: Boston: B. M. Evans, a well-known Ipswich drug clerk, recently returned from a two week’s vacation. He was employed at Ebin R. Smith’s pharmacy.
1900: DESCRIPTIVE. One of my clerks reported “the other day” that he had a call for “Compound Cataract Pills!” In view of the circumstances, it was funny ; but in view of the pills, and the adjective, it was funnier.” Ebin R. Smith., Ipswich, Mass., April 2, 19oo.
1900: Ebin R. Smith, Pharmacist, age 37, birth Dec 1862, Massachusetts, home IpswichEssexMassachusetts, wife Mattie E. Smith, child, Theophilus W. Smith – United States Federal Census
1908: Druggists, Ebin R. Smith  The New England Business Directory and Gazetteer
1910: Ebin R. Smith, Boarder, age 46, birth, abt 1864, Massachusetts, home Milton, Norfolk, Massachusetts, wife Mattie E. Smith, – United States Federal Census
1911: Ebin Ryder Smith died on July 5, 1911.

Read more about other Dandelion Bitters

Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters – Bangor, Maine

Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters – Iowa

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

The Beggs’ and their Dandelion Bitters

Dr. J.R.B. McClintock’s Dandelion Bitters – Philadelphia

Dr Grant’s, Dandelion Bitters, New York.

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters – Fort Wayne, Indiana

Posted in Advertising, Apothecary, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, History, Legal, Medicines & Cures, Tonics, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Outlandish Fellow Dressed in a Suit with Top Hat and Umbrella

SOSalesman

Outlandish Fellow Dressed in a Suit with Top Hat and Umbrella

Early Snake Oil Salesman

08 February 2015

“A young woman in Lynn, Mass., was induced to try Dr. True’s Elixir. As a result she was relieved of a tape worm, alive, 80 feet in length. Benjamin Hill of Auburn was likewise relieved of a tapeworm upwards of 70 feet long. A child of John Ferguson of Lewiston was relieved of one 60 feet long. A spotted lizard, 6 inches long, was expelled alive from the stomach of a woman in Bangor. From the stomach of a boy in Danville the Elixir expelled a living creature 18 inches long and two inches in circumference, a species of snake.”

Apple-Touch-IconAJoe Gourd e-mailed the following, “Good morning Ferd, came across this photo of an early snake oil salesman in an eBay auction today. Not quite a “Bitters” item for my collection but a really cool card. Wonder who he was? Have a great day………Joe”. I too, thought it was a neat picture and posted it on Facebook and Daily Dose hoping to circle back later, which is now.

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The eBay description from gallerybfa reads as follows. The front and back of the card is pictured above.

Circa 1868 Occupational CDV (carte-de-visite) photograph; Portrait of a “snake oil” or “bitters” salesman.  Outlandish fellow dressed in a suit with top hat and umbrella, poses next to large bottle on table. The label on the bottle reads, “TRIUMPHANT TINCTURE”.  Photograph is by E. G. Tallman of N. Bedford, Massachusetts.  Approximate CDV size is 4″ x 2-1/2″. Mounted on thin card stock of the period.  Condition: light soiling and staining, occasional dings, toning, scuffs, and edge bumps. Please see photos for additional condition review. Questions welcome!

TTT_True

True’s Triumphant Tincture advertisement – Lewiston (Maine) Evening JournalOct 6, 1893 (submitted by Marianne Dow)

Marianne Dow, in true investigative fashion, quickly responded on Facebook, “Meet Dr. J. F. True of Auburn Maine – among other things he created T.T.T. / True’s Triumphant Tincture” and provided the following article link, True’s Elixir ‘made Auburn famous

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Dr. True (left) and Mr. Hyde (right). Did we really need this caption?

Then Brian Gray reponded on Facebook with, “It’s Mr. Hyde!”. This made me a chuckle. We’ve all had bad hair days and I do see a resemblance. It is also interesting that Dr. J. F. True’s illustrations of himself look a lot like President Abraham Lincoln. At this point I am beginning to wonder if Dr. True is really his name and not a brand alias though John F. and Edward C. True are clearly listed as patent medicine manufacturers in city directories. What is odd is that I can not find any United States Federal Census information or early history on the man, say pre-1851. Maybe he is really Mr. Hyde.

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Abraham Lincoln (left) and Dr. True (right)

Interesting that Dr. True sold hair products along with his tape and pin worm elixirs. Look at the display below.

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An original countertop display box of Dr. J. F. True’s Aseptic Hair Wash. True’s was an Auburn, Maine concern that appeared to be embracing government regulation of “family remedies”; this hair wash states on the label that it is guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30, 1906. That consumers could be marketed to with words like “Aseptic”, reveals the growing popular awareness of germ theory. – Maine Maritime Museum

Here is one of Dr. True’s Elixir bottles with the Auburn, Maine address. Most of his advertising states that he was established in 1851.

TruesElixir

This next 1873 map shows Lewiston, Maine. You can click the map to enlarge it. Dr. True’s house is within the red square. Lewiston is a city in Androscoggin County, Maine, and the second-largest city in the state. It is one of two principal cities of and included within the Lewiston-Auburn, Maine metropolitan area.

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Doctor J. F. True map location, Lewiston, Auburn, (Androscoggin County) Maine – U.S., Indexed County Land Ownership Maps1873

The next images represent various Dr. John F. True advertising in dated order.

True1874Ad

A Conceded Fact advertisement, Dr. J. F. True – Lewiston and Auburn, ME Directory, 1874-75

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True’s Pin Worm Elixir advertisement – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, Monday, October 11, 1886

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True’s Pin Worm Elixir advertisement – Lewiston, Maine, City Directory, 1891

TCebay

Advertising trade card for. Dr. True’s Pin Worm Elixir, probably 1894ebay

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Dr. True’s Elixir advertisement – Polk’s Medical Register and Directory of North America, Volume 2, 1904

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Patent image for Dr. J. F. True – Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office, Volume 157, 1910

Auburn firm observing seventy-fifth anniversary

A Lewiston Daily Sun article published on Saturday morning, September 17, 1921 titled “Auburn firm observing seventy-fifth anniversary”:

In 1851, Dr. John F. True of Exeter compounded for his own use the prescription now known as “True’s Elixir.” The success attending his own use of it interested him though he did not realize at the time that he compounded a remarkable medicine. He began introducing it to his neighbors. From that time it has met with success. Two years later, Dr. True came to Auburn, feeling the need of branching out.

“In 1877 it became necessary for the doctor to build a laboratory to keep pace with the ever increasing demand for his medicines. And again, eight years later, the need of expansion was again felt and he erected an addition. The product had by this time won a sure name for itself and its worth was recognized in the medical world. It was fast becoming a by-word in the household and proportionately the firm continued growing.

“In 1891 the present spacious laboratory was built on Drummond Street in the rear of the True home. The laboratory contains a 10 horsepower boiler that heats the building and furnishes the power.

“In these days of the multitude of ‘patent medicines’ widely advertised products of that nature come and go with regularity, flushing forth in big type for a few months or a year and then disappearing forever. But not so with the “medicine that has made Auburn famous.”

“For nearly 75 years, it has been used in these two cities, this State and all over New England, not mentioning shipments dispatched to all sections of the United States and foreign countries.”

Read More: Sometimes when a shot of Bitters is not enough, Tent Revivals, Snake Handling & Faith Healers

Here is a fantastic article about Dr. True that Marianne Dow found in Old Colby College Special Collection – Little Talks #918, January 30, 1972

Everybody of middle age today remembers the mild children’s laxative Castoria. Many gallons of the stuff were poured down kids’ throats, not only in-my own childhood, but in that of my own children. It is possible even my grand-children got doses of it. But who of my listeners recall a similar laxative, True’s Elixir? In my father’s store in Bridgton 70 years ago that medicine was a lively rival of Castoria. What is not even so well remembered is the fact that True’s Elixir was distinctly a Maine product, devised by Dr. John L. True in 1851.

Older persons now living, who remember Dr. True’s manufacturing laboratory on Auburn’s Drummond Street hill, recall the pungent odor of herbs and other concoctions that pervaded the atmosphere for yards around the place.

It started as a remedy for worms in the digestive tract, and was at first called Dr. J. L. True’s Pin Worm Elixir. As late as 1923, when it had adopted the simpler name of True’s Elixir, annual sales reached 155,000 bottles. Older persons now living, who remember Dr. True’s manufacturing laboratory on Auburn’s Drummond Street hill, recall the pungent odor of herbs and other concoctions that pervaded the atmosphere for yards around the place.

All over the United States went cases of True’s Elixir, all bearing in big letters on the wooden cases. “Auburn, Maine”, so that the community in the Androscoggin thereby gained wider national reputation than its bigger neighbor Lewiston. The famous Elixir was not the only product of True’s plant. He also turned out True’s Headache Tablets and True’s Sore Throat Gargle, as well as a hair wash, and various powders. Some of the shipping cases had the name stamped in Spanish, because of True’s extensive sales in the xxx.

Dr. True had not even come to Auburn when he worked out his formula for the famous elixir. That was done in 1851, in his home kitchen at Exeter, Maine. At first Dr. True peddled his product, house to house, in neighboring towns. In 1853 he moved to Auburn and began the shipment of his elixir to far away places. In Auburn he had the advantage of access to the new Androscggin and Kennebec R.R., making connection at Portland for Boston and more distant points.

When Dr. True died in 1900, his two sons continued the business for many years. In 1947, the True family sold to George Lane, Auburn financier, who made the business a subsidiary of a larger corporation with a laboratory in Hanover, Mass. The next producer was George Tobias of Natick, Mass., who was putting out True’s Elixir there in 1952. Its final producer, when it was abandoned only 17 years ago in 1955, was the same company that manufactured the renowned Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. At any rate, True’s Elixir was poured down children’s throats for more than a hundred years.

Although medical research later persuaded the manufacturers of True’s Elixir to give up all mention of worms, it was parents’ dread of pin worms in children that accounted for the rapid growth of Dr. True’s sales in the last half of the 19th century, True advertised that he had by far the best remedy ever devised, to rid the body of the dreaded worms. His ads showed pictures of curious creatures preserved in alcohol in bottles and jars, which True claimed had been expelled by his elixir. The collection included not only pin worms and tape worms, but even frogs and lizards.

Just listen to a few of Dr. True’s testimonals: “A young woman in Lynn, Mass., was induced to try Dr. True’s Elixir. As a result she was relieved of a tape worm, alive, 80 feet in length. Benjamin Hill of Auburn was likewise relieved of a tapeworm upwards of 70 feet long. A child of John Ferguson of Lewiston was relieved of one 60 feet long. A spotted lizard, 6 inches long, was expelled alive from the stomach of a woman in Bangor. From the stomach of a boy in Danville the Elixir expelled a living creature 18 inches long and two inches in circumference, a species of snake.” There are plenty more of those testimonals, but I’m sure I’ve already given you enough to turn your stomachs.

Yet hold on for just a few. Dr. True used novel devices in his advertising. In one ad was a drawing of a young man carrying a sandwich board over his shoulders, which said: “A wonderful remedy. The most popular medicine of the day is Dr. John L. True’s Pin Worm Elixir. What the White Mountains of New Hampshire are to the mountains of New England, Dr. True’s Pin Worm Elixir is to all other worm remedies. A great discovery! Yes, Sir! There is no use talking; it is a fact that Dr. True’s Pinworm Elixir is the best worm expelling on the market. Tributes to its efficacy are abundant. – Sold at all druggists.”

One of True’s most original ads appeared in 1860 in the Lewiston Gazette,a rival paper to the better known Lewiston Journal. That ad said: “Grand Trunk Canal. As a large amount of freight which should be used for better purposes is being consumed daily by a sponging set of loafers called worms that infest the Alimentary Canal, we would call the attention of those who see and feel the sad effects of those varmints to a safe and effective remedy called Dr. John L. True’s Justly Celebrated Pin Worm Elixir.”

Another of True’s ads was worded: “As a pin worm exterminator Dr. True’s is tops. When True’s Elixir hits the worms, he knows it is useless to struggle and he must surrender. The latest capture was from a man in Melrose, Mass., from whom was ejected a worm 60 feet long in less than three hours, head and all.”

A slogan common in my boyhood concerning this faire-born remedy was itself a play on the doctor’s name. The slogan that heralded True’s Elixir was “How True!”

Select Listings

1851: Dr. True worked out his formula for his famous elixir in 1851, in his home kitchen at Exeter, Maine. – The History of Penobscot County, Maine

1853: In 1853 he moved to Auburn and began the shipment of his elixir to far away places. – The History of Penobscot County, Maine

1872: Physicians, J.F. True, Drummond nr Main (also Proprietor True’s Worm Elixir) – Lewiston and Auburn, ME Directory

1874: Patent Medicines, J.F. True, N. Main – Lewiston and Auburn, ME Directory

1891: J. F. True & Co. (John F. and Edward C. True), patent medicine mnfrs, 15 Drummond – Lewiston, Maine City Directory

Posted in Advertising, eBay, Hair Tonics, History, Medicines & Cures | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters – Bangor, Maine

L138 Lyman's Dandelion Bitters Die Cut_s

Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters – Bangor, Maine

Caldwell Sweet & Bro. Druggists and Apothecaries

06 February 2015 (R•020715)

Apple-Touch-IconAYet another dandelion bitters, this time put out by Caldwell Sweet & Brother in Bangor, Penobscot, Maine. We are now talking about Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters.

The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

L138drawing

L 138  LYMAN’S DANDELION BITTERS
LYMAN’S DANDELION BITTERS // F // C. SWEET & BRO. / BANGOR, ME // f //
Caldwell Sweet & Bro., Druggist and Apothecary, 2 Main Street
10 1/2 x 3 1/2 x 2 (6 3/4) 3/8
Rectangular, Aqua, NSC, Tooled lip, 3 sp, Extremely rare
Label: A tonic and blood purifier. A combination of dandelion, persimmon bark, sarsaparilla, yellow dock, gentian and mandrake with other roots and barks, making it a medic(ine) superior to any in the market for jaundice, dyspepsia, headach(e).

There is also an listing in Bitters Bottles for an older bottle.

L 137 L … Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters // b // S.B.W. CO.
Caldwell Sweet, Wholesale and Retail Druggist, Bangor, Maine
6 1/2
Round
Older then the previous

L138 Lyman's Dandelion Bitters Die Cut back_s

Caldwell Sweet

Caldwell Sweet was born around 1850 in Bangor, Maine. He and his brother were both natives of the city and sons of Abel S. and Abbie B. (Clark) Sweet, who had moved, while each was single, from Atkinson and Damariscotta, respectively, to Bangor, where they were married.

BangorMaineKoch1875CenterStHill

Bangor, Maine in 1875

Caldwell Sweet seemed destined to be druggist. He initially clerked in a drug store in Bangor at B.F. Bradbury in 1869 and then moved to J.F. Patten in the same capacity. Sweet was prosperous in business from the beginning. In 1873, starting with a total capital of five hundred dollars, he partnered with N. S. Harlow, as Harlow & Sweet, in a drugstore just opposite his eventual 2 Main Street address. He sold out his interest after about a year, and engaged in the same line of trade under the old Harriman House, on Main street, which burned down, where he partnered in February 1874 with Isaiah S. Emery, the firm name being Sweet & Emery. They too burned down in December 1874 which marked a good time to dissolved the partnership. Caldwell Sweet then took over the business at 2 Main Street, one month later now, in 1875.

Sweet&Emery_Bangor_Daily_Whig_and_Courier_Fri__Apr_3__1874_

Sweet & Emery copartnership formed on February 14, 1874 notice – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, Friday, April 3, 1874

In March, 1877, Caldwell Sweet added his brother, Abel S. Sweet, Jr., who had some experience with him in the business, as a partner. Their trade steadily increased, and they had one of the finest drug stores in Eastern Maine, with perhaps the largest prescription business in the city. They were also largely in the wholesale trade, commanding purchasers not only from the Penobscot, but the Piscataquis and Aroostook Valleys, and other parts of the State.

LymansDisplay

Advertising Display Sign, polychrome lithograph on oil cloth, “Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters for the Liver and Kidneys,” “Caldwell, Sweet & Bros., Bangor, Maine,” showing a horse-drawn sled with 2 men pursued by wolves, 19/20th century. Provenance: From the Matawamkeg Maine estate. – The Cobbs Auctioneers

The Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters starts showing up in advertising in 1883 and ends in 1886. Unfortunately I have no idea who Lyman was though there is a Lyman, Maine which is southwest of Bangor. Two advertising examples are represented below. The brothers said that Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters was not a patent medicine which is interesting. They said it was a simple, safe, specific remedy and tonic for diseases of the blood, liver, kidneys, skin and stomach. I guess you had to take something else for a headache, but no, there bottle label says it will cure a ‘headach’ though they spelled it wrong.

I also have not personally seen any examples of this bottle as it is extremely rare.

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Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters advertisement – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, Monday, July 9, 1883

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Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters advertisement – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, Monday, April 21, 1884

All of these fine trade cards are from bitters ephemera authority Joe Gourd who graciously helps support many of my bitters posts. We can date these cards to 1883 to 1886 because of the 2 Main Street address.

L138 Lyman's Dandelion Bitters Dude 2_8

L138 Lyman's Dandelion Bitters Dude back_s

L138 Lyman's Dandelion Bitters Dude 3_8

L138 Lyman's Dandelion Bitters Dude 4_s

L138 Lyman's Dandelion Bitters Dude 5_s

L138 Lyman's Dandelion Bitters Dude 1_s

Here are few later pieces below that indicate that Caldwell Sweet Company changed yet again in 1906 when they were incorporated. We can see listings for the company all the way into the 1920s.

CaldSweetReceipt1918

1918 Caldwell Sweet Company receipt – eBay

From the Leading business men of Bangor, Rockland and vicinity : embracing Ellsworth, Bucksport, Belfast, Camden, Rockport, Thomaston, Oldtown, Orono, Brewer“, 1899

Caldwell Sweet & Bro., Wholesale Druggists, and Dealers in Surgical Instruments and Dental Goods, Corner Main Street and West Market Square. Those extremely fortunate individuals who, possessing a combination of rugged health and extreme good luck, are consequently enabled to entirely dispense with medicines of any kind, are wont to assume a superior air, and declare that drugs do more harm than good, but we have noticed that when disease does overtake them, they are generally apt to cry as loudly for pills and potions as anybody. It is foolish to deny the importance of drugs in civilized life, and, indeed, it is amply proved by the number of houses handling the same, one of the largest Bangor concerns of this kind being that conducted by Caldwell Sweet & Bro., at No. 2 Main Street, and 22 and 24 West Market Square. This was founded in 1874, and has attained its present high standing in the mercantile community solely by dint of hard and persistent work, honorable business methods, and particularly by handling only strictly reliable articles. The firm is made up of Messrs. Caldwell Sweet, and A. S. Sweet, jr., both these gentlemen being natives of Bangor. Three floors and a basement are occupied, 20 x 61 feet in dimensions, as well as a storehouse having the same number of floors and measuring 30 x 70 feet. It will be seen that ample accommodations are at hand for an immense stock, but large as they are, they are fully required, as the magnitude of the wholesale and retail trade done by this house necessitates the carrying of a heavy and varied assortment. In addition to their other goods, they carry a full line of everything needed for the most thoroughly equipped dental rooms in the land, and have been appointed agents for the S. S. White Dental Manufacturing Co., and also carry a complete assortment of their goods, the best to be found in the market, while at the same time they furnish supplies from other well-known manufacturers. Messrs. Caldwell Sweet & Bro. keep constantly on hand the best quality of Nitrous Oxide Gas. Their arrangements are such that they will be able to furnish dentists with their supplies at the same rates they would pay if they ordered direct from the manufacturers. In the filling of orders from dentists out of town they have the aid of a practical dentist. The firm are proprietors of the well-known and popular preparations Salvatine, Keuchen Cura, Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters, Lee’s Liniment and Warren’s Balsam, and report a very large sale of these goods,as well as of Surgical Instruments, of which they handle the latest improved types.

Select Listings:

1850: Caldwell Sweet born in Bangor, Maine.

1869: Caldwell Sweet, clerk, boards 147 French – Bangor, Maine City Directory

1869: Caldwell Sweet, clerk, B.F. Bradbury, boards 147 French – Bangor, Maine City Directory

1870: Caldwell Sweet, age 20, Merchant, Bangor, Maine – United States Federal Census

1873: Caldwell Sweet (Harlow & Sweet), apothecary, 4 Smith block, bds 147 French – Bangor, Maine City Directory

1875: Caldwell Sweet drug store founded in Bangor, Maine, Apothecary, 2 Main, h 151 French – Bangor, Maine City Directory, History of Penobscot County, Maine

1876: Caldwell Sweet, Apothecary, 2 Main – Maine Business Directory

1877: Caldwell Sweet & Bro. in March 1877. Brother, Abel S. Sweet, Jr., Apothecaries, 2 Main – Bangor, Maine City Directory, History of Penobscot County, Maine

1879-1884: Caldwell Sweet & Bro., Apothecaries, 2 Main – Bangor, Maine City Directory

1880: Caldwell Sweet, age 30, Druggist, Bangor, Maine – United States Federal Census

1883: Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters advertisement (see above) – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, Monday, July 9, 1883

1884: Lyman’s Dandelion Bitters advertisement (see above) – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, Monday, April 21, 1884

1895: Advertisement (see below), For Divers, White Pine Cough Balsam by Caldwell Sweet – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, Monday, February 4, 1895

CS_Bangor_Daily_Whig_and_Courier_Mon__Feb_4__1895_

For Divers, White Pine Cough Balsam by Caldwell Sweet – Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, Monday, February 4, 1895

1898: Caldwell, Sweet, 7 West Market sq, Bangor, Maine – A Practical treatise on thialion (a laxative salt of lithia)

1906: Caldwell Sweet, Wholesale Druggists and Manufacturing Pharmacists founded 1906

$_57CaldwellSweetLogo1906

1910: Caldwell Sweet, age 59, Druggist, Bangor, Maine – United States Federal Census

1920: Caldwell Sweet, age 69, Merchant, Drug Business, Bangor, Maine – United States Federal Census

Read more about other Dandelion Bitters

Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters – Iowa

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

The Beggs’ and their Dandelion Bitters

Dr. J.R.B. McClintock’s Dandelion Bitters – Philadelphia

Dr Grant’s, Dandelion Bitters, New York.

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters – Fort Wayne, Indiana

Posted in Advertising, Apothecary, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, History, Medicines & Cures, Remedy, Tonics, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters – Iowa

D14_7_Meyer

Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters

Farmersburg and McGregor, Iowa

05 February 2015 (R•110715)

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The Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters has been sitting on a shelf in my aqua bitters room since 2004 when I secured it in a Glass Works Auction. A plain but really neat bottle that is rather old. This is another installment in our Dandelion Bitters series.

There are actually three embossing variants; one has “AND“, the other “AND” and the other “&” between DANDELION and WILD CHERRY BITTERS. It would be pretty cool to have all three together but rather difficult to achieve as all three variants are extremely rare. The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles is as follows:

D14drawing

D 14  DANDELION AND WILD CHERRY BITTERS
DANDELION / AND (slanted) / WILD CHERRY BITTERS // c //
7 3/8″ x 2 3/4 (4 3/4)
Round, Aqua, LTC, Applied mouth, Extremely rare
D 14.5  DANDELION AND WILD CHERRY BITTERS
DANDELION / AND / WILD CHERRY BITTERS // c //
7 3/16″ x 2 13/16 (4 5/8)
Round, Aqua, DC, Extremely rare
Farmersburgh, Iowa
The spelling of Farmersburgh was changed to Farmersburg around 1878. (should be removed)
D 14.7  DANDELION & WILD CHERRY BITTERS
DANDELION & WILD / CHERRY BITTERS // c //
8 3/4″ x 3 1/8 (6)
Round, Aqua, CM, Applied mouth, Extremely rare
D14_7Pair_Meyer_

Extremely rare Dandelion & Wild Cherry Bitters – Meyer Collection

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DANDELION & WILD CHERRY BITTERS. D-14. 7 ¼” Applied top. And yet another bitters in aqua. So many of these are in great condition, this one grades a 9.2 with a little scratching. The slanted AND is an anomaly and never seen before on any example known according to consigner. – American Bottle Auctions

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Partially labeled Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters. The label reads, DANDELION AND WILD CHERRY BITTERS, PRICE 25 CENTS, S. HUNTINGTON, PROPRIETOR, FARMERSBURGH, IOWA – Collecting Bottles by State, The Ioway, Mike Burggraaf, 2003 Bottles and Extras

Samuel Huntington and Farmersburg, Iowa

Not much is known about Samuel Huntington other than that he was a dealer in patent medicines and a druggist in Farmersburg, Clayton County, Iowa in 1862 when he was first promoting his Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters. There is also a Huntington’s Writing Fluid and a Lightning Fly Killer mentioned in period advertising. Two advertisements below supports this statement. Interesting that one advertisement for Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters is from a St. Paul, Minnesota newspaper and the other is from Manitowoc, Wisconsin. You have to remember that these were Civil War years and record keeping was laxer and the men usually were sparse and few between.

The Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters were first sold in Farmersburg in 1862 for 25 cents for pint bottles and 50 cents for quart bottles. By 1863 the pint bottles were being sold at 50 cents and the quart bottles for 75 cents. Later in McGregor, in 1865, they were increased to 75 cents for pints and 1 dollar for quarts.

The Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters were first sold in Farmersburg in 1862 for 25 cents for pint bottles and 50 cents for quart bottles. By 1863 the pint bottles were being sold at 50 cents and the quart bottles for 75 cents. Later in McGregor, in 1865, they were increased to 75 cents for pints and 1 dollar for quarts. I guess that was Civil War inflation. I have never seen the smaller size. Huntington said that his bitters contained the best Roots, Barks and Herbs and were best used for liver ailments.

Samuel and Henry Huntington seem to disappear after 1865. I am sure at some point they will show up elsewhere. Some might be tempted to relate this brand to the Dr. Huntington’s Golden Tonic Bitters from Portland, Maine in 1876. This is a different brand.

DWCB_StPaulDailyExpress_June6_1863

Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement, S. Huntington, Proprietor, Farmersburg, Clayton County, IowaSt. Paul Daily Express, June 6, 1863

The small town of Farmersburg is just west of McGregor, Iowa where Huntington sold the bitters in 1863. Farmersburg was first called Windsor when it was surveyed in 1856. The name Farmersburg was given by Thomas Street, a son of General Street, when he was in command here. Street and others laid out the plat for a village on what is commonly known as the old Billy King land, south of National, very near where Mr. Crosby put down on his map “Ancient Farmersburg.” They gave the name of Farmersburg to this place, which name was first given to the post office and then to the township.

The first settlement was made in 1846, by Peter Eastman, on the J.P.L. Clark place, section 13. Other early settlers were W. Barber, D. Barber, M. Vansickle, Joseph Tassro, Obediah Brown, John Francis, James Jones, William Linton and M.B. Sherman. The township was organized in 1850.

The village of Farmersburg was surveyed in March, 1858, by Norman Hamilton. The first building erected on the site of the village, was built in 1848 by Alva Hazen, and was built of logs. It was soon after converted into a school-house, and used as such for sometime for the surrounding community. The next building was erected by Joseph Shaft, on the corner of section 22, and was afterward fitted up by A.M. Cortis for a residence. The next house was built in 1852 by Silas T. Woodward, one of the early pioneers of Farmersburg, and now a resident of Elkader. He built it for a store, and purchased a few dollars worth of goods at Prairie du Chien; but he never opened store, and used his building as a school-house, while he performed the duties of teacher. In 1853, P.R. Moore brought from Galena the first goods of any note, purchased the building of Mr. Woodward, and opened the first store in the village.

The first blacksmiths were Messrs. Peter & Slaughter. W.W. Goodwin came soon after. He has followed his trade for twenty-six years. Mr. Alger was the first shoemaker. He is now in Dakota. A saw-mill was built in 1855, by William Harrar. This burned down, and was rebuilt by Calvin Miller. It is now used as a store-house and stable. The school is graded into two departments. It was begun twenty-six years ago. The teachers are Lucy Kingsley and Inez Woodward. [Farmersburg Township History, Clayton County, Iowa]

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Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement, S. Huntington, Proprietor, McGregor, IowaCedar Falls Gazette, Friday, September 22, 1865

Samuel Huntington and McGregor, Iowa 

As noted above, Samuel Huntington must have moved from Farmersburg to McGregor, Iowa in 1865 as he was selling his Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters in advertisements with a McGregor address as you can see in the advertisement above. In 1865, The Iowa State Gazetteer also lists a H & S Huntington and a S. Huntington & Co., (Henry and Samuel Huntington) as dealers in Patent Medicines and Drugs. Davenport, Iowa was also listed with McGregor, Iowa. In 1879, Huntington’s Celebrated Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters, from Dubuque, Iowa was listed in the Internal Revenue Record and Customs Journal.

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Birds eye view of McGregor, Iowa in 1869

McGregor was founded as MacGregor’s Landing in 1847 by Alexandar MacGregor, a descendant of Rob Roy MacGregor, and the area around MacGregor’s Landing was settled by the extended family. In 1849 it was reported that the original MacGregor seal and signet were owned by Alex MacGregor. The Scots Gaelic clan seal was inscribed, “S’ Riogal Mo Dhream/ Een dhn bait spair nocht”, which was interpreted as “Royalty is my race / End do and spare not“. The signet was a bloodstone from Loch Lomond, and was sketched by William Williams.

McGregor_Iowa_1870

McGregor, Iowa in 1870

Since 1837, MacGregor had been operating a ferry across the Mississippi River between Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin and the present site of McGregor, Iowa. MacGregor planned the new city as a six block development, and it was quickly populated, being incorporated as McGregor in 1857. In that same year, the Milwaukee & Mississippi Railroad finished building a railroad track from Milwaukee, Wisconsin to Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, thus connecting Lake Michigan with the Mississippi River by rail. McGregor quickly became a major commercial center, and served as a hub where grain from Iowa and Minnesota could be transported across the Mississippi and sent on to Milwaukee via railroad. More railroads were built to connect McGregor with cities further west, and the city of North McGregor (now Marquette, Iowa) was established just north of the city to serve as the city’s railroad terminus. After reaching McGregor from the west, trains were disassembled and railroad cars were ferried across the Mississippi to continue on towards Lake Michigan.

mcgregorMeatR

John Goedert Meat Market, 322 Main St., McGregor, IA. Installed over an 1850s building in 1889, this two-story complete front by Mesker Brothers Iron Works is virtually the same today as it appears in this historic photo from 1902. Image courtesy of Barbara Corson.

During the 1870s, the population of McGregor exploded to over 5,500 as the city became the busiest shipping port west of Chicago. In 1874, the system of ferrying railroad cars across the river between North McGregor and Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, was brought to an end when Prairie du Chien businessman John Lawler commissioned the construction of a permanent pontoon bridge to connect the two cities’ rail lines. As the need for men to disassemble and ship trains across the river disappeared, the city’s population began to decline. Today the city’s history is preserved in its downtown business district, which contains many buildings constructed during the city’s boom years. Because of its colorful history and location beside the Mississippi River, the city has become a popular summer tourist destination, and it is known for its many antique stores. [Wikipedia]

DWCB_The_Manitowoc_Herald_Thu__Aug_21__1862_

Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement, S. Huntington, Proprietor, Farmersburg, IowaThe Manitowoc Herald, Thursday, August 21, 1862

Select Listings:

1862: Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement, S. Huntington, Proprietor, Farmersburg, Iowa – The Manitowoc Herald, Thursday, August 21, 1862
1863: Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement (see above), S. Huntington, Proprietor, Farmersburg, Clayton County, Iowa – St. Paul Daily Express, June 6, 1863
1865: Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters advertisement (see above), S. Huntington, Proprietor, McGregor, Iowa – Cedar Falls Gazette, Friday, September 22, 1865
1865: H & S Huntington, Retail Liquors, Apothecaries, 76 Bxxxy – United Stated IRS Tax Assessment
1865: H & S Huntington, S. Huntington & Co., (Henry and Samuel) Patent Medicines, Drugs, Davenport also McGregor – Iowa State Gazetteer
1879: Huntington’s Celebrated Dandelion and Wild Cherry Bitters, Dubuque, Iowa – Internal Revenue Record and Customs Journal, 1879

Read more about other Dandelion Bitters

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

The Beggs’ and their Dandelion Bitters

Dr. J.R.B. McClintock’s Dandelion Bitters – Philadelphia

Dr Grant’s, Dandelion Bitters, New York.

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters – Fort Wayne, Indiana

Posted in Advertising, Apothecary, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Medicines & Cures | Leave a comment

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters – Fort Wayne, Indiana

IrontonMoDandyBitters_IronCountyRegister_June6_89

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters – Fort Wayne, Indiana

1868. — XX. — S-Y-L.

04 February 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAA short post this morning looking at yet another unlisted bitters. This time it is the Bond’s Dandelion Bitters from Fort Wayne, Indiana. The bitters is dated 1868 along with the support advertising. There is scant material and information available and certainly no surviving bottle examples, at least that I am aware of.

I posted the top clipping from the Iron County Register (Ironton, Missouri) in 1889 to remind us how strong some of these bitters products really were. Read the copy as it is kind of amusing as they were drinking some form of Dandelion Bitters.

“Imagine our misery, last Saturday, when we looked upon the streets and saw eight or ten young bloods in a weaving way…”

William J. Bond was born on 23 December 1845 in Madison, Indiana. The first directory listing has him listed as a dealer in drugs, medicines, paints, oils, dye stuffs, etc. in 1866 at the southwest corner of Main and Calhoun Streets in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The next year he is partner with James C. Nones at Bond & Nomes and they are listed as wholesale and retail druggists and dealers in paints, oils, varnishes, glass and dye stuffs at 95 Columbia Street in Fort Wayne.

In 1868, Bond was the Sole Proprietor of Bond’s Dandelion Bitters and also magically becomes a Chemist. James Nones must not have been his partner anymore. He advertised and sold his bitters for one dollar a bottle at 95 Columbia Street. He reported that his bitters contained the active principles of Dandelion, Sarsaparilla, Peruvian Bark, and other Barks, Herbs, and Roots. Bond said his bitters contained no whiskey but used a pure California Wine as a preservative agent. Yeah sure. He also called it a tonic and said that it cleansed the blood and liver. In his advertising, Bond stated that every one of his bottles came with a beautifully engraved label and a signature from the proprietor. He cautioned against counterfeits and said his bitters only came in a bottle and was not to be bought by the gallon or barrel. He mentions no embossed typography so we are looking at a labeled bitters.

William Bond was into selling volume as you will see in the advertisement below where he gives a range of bottles from one to six, and states that the various quantities would cure just about anything. I think I would have ordered and regularly taken six bottles just to have my bases covered.

In 1875, W. J. Bond moved to the southeast corner of Colerick and Fairfield Avenue in Fort Wayne. In 1877 he is located at northwest corner of Locust and Fairfield Avenues selling drugs and notions. In 1878 the concern is renamed W. J. Bond & Sons as sons William H. Bond and Marshall S. Bond join him in business. By 1883 it is W. J. Bond & Son with a son, Seth M. Bond, working with him.

So we have an unlisted, labeled bitters and little information. Maybe we can add to the post with more information. I also can not figure out what 1868. — XX. — S-Y-L. means? Maybe it means buy 20 bottles and it will “Save Your Liver”. Maybe it meant, I am 20 years old and after I make a quick fortune, I will “See You Later”. I doubt it. What do you think?

BondsDandy_Fort_Wayne_Daily_Gazette_Sat__Jul_25__1868_

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters advertisement, W. J. Bond, Chemist, No. 95 Columbia Street – Fort Wayne Daily Gazette, Saturday, July 25 1868

BondsDandy_Fort_Wayne_Daily_Gazette_Sat__Feb_8__1868_

Bond’s Dandelion Bitters advertisement – Fort Wayne Daily Gazette, Saturday, February 8 1868

The new listing for the forthcoming Bitters Bottles Supplement 2:

Newspaper Advertisement
B 139.7 BOND’S DANDELION BITTERS, Price, One Dollar per Bottle
Prepared and Sold by W. J. Bond, Chemist, No. 95 Columbia Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana
Fort Wayne Daily Gazette, Saturday, February 8, 1868

Select Listings

William J. Bond

1845: William J. Bond born 23 December 1845, Madison, Indiana
1866: W. J. Bond, Dealers in Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, etc. s w c Main & Calhoun – Fort Wayne Indiana City Directory
1867: Bond & Nones (William J. Bond and James C. Nones) wholesale and retail druggists, and dealers in paints, oils, varnishes, glass and dye stuffs, 95 Columbia – Allen County Gazetteer
1868: Bond’s Dandelion Bitters advertisement (see above), W. J. Bond, Chemist, No. 95 Columbia Street – Fort Wayne Daily Gazette, Saturday, July 25 1868
1868: W J Bond, drugs &c. 95 Columbia, h 175 Clinton – Fort Wayne Indiana City Directory
1872: W J Bond, Drugs, Medicines, etc., 13 E. Columbia, h 190 E. Wayne – Fort Wayne Indiana City Directory
1873: W J Bond, druggist, paints oils &c, h 190 E. Wayne – Fort Wayne Indiana City Directory
1875-1876: W J Bond, druggist, s e cor Colerick and Fairfield ave, res 107
Fairfield ave. – Fort Wayne Indiana City Directory
1877: W. J. Bond, Drugs and Notions, n w cor Locust and Fairfield ave, res same. Bond Marshall S, bookkeeper W J Bond, bds same., Bond Wm H, clerk W J Bond, bds same. – Fort Wayne Indiana City Directory
1878-1879: W. J. Bond & Sons (Wm J, Wm H and Marshall S), drugs and notions, 108 Fairfield ave – Fort Wayne Indiana City Directory
1883: W. J. Bond & Son (Wm J and Seth M), drygoods, 42 Calhoun – Fort Wayne Indiana City Directory

Read more about other Dandelion Bitters

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

The Beggs’ and their Dandelion Bitters

Dr. J.R.B. McClintock’s Dandelion Bitters – Philadelphia

Dr Grant’s, Dandelion Bitters, New York.

Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, History, Medicines & Cures, Tonics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

D10.5 Dandelion GirlA

Dandelion Bitters – The Great Herb Blood Remedy

John H. Sheehan & Company, Utica, N.Y.

03 February 2015

Apple-Touch-IconAThe other day I noticed a Dandelion Bitters advertising trade card on eBay that I was not familiar with. The bitters was put out by John H. Sheehan & Company in Utica, New York. There are quite a few Dandelion Bitters, a number of them we have posted about before including:

The Beggs’ and their Dandelion Bitters

Dr. J.R.B. McClintock’s Dandelion Bitters – Philadelphia

Dr Grant’s, Dandelion Bitters, New York. (Unlisted)

D10.5 Dandelion GirlB

When I saw this trade card image, I contacted bitters ephemera collector Joe Gourd who promptly provided most of the trade cards for this post. The Carlyn Ring and W.C. Ham listing in Bitters Bottles Supplement is as follows. The listing will need to be updated with the bottle information.

Trade Card
D 10.5  DANDELION BITTERS, John N. Sheehan & Co., Sole Agents, 155 Genessee Street, Utica, N.Y.

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The Mohawk Valley Antique Bottle Club (MVABC) has this low resolution example pictured above posted on their website. Thanks to Marianne Dow for reference. According to the club, this aqua example was dug in a Utica dump and they caption with the pictured example, “Could this have been a Sheehan Dandelion Bitters bottle?” Probably so.

Here is another listing in Bitters Bottles that is also supposed to be related to John H. Sheehan. I believe this bottle should not be attributed to John H. Sheehan but should be attributed with the XXX Begg’s Dandelion Bitters of Chicago.

D12Drawing

D 12  XXX DANDELION BITTERS
XXX / DANDELION / BITTERS // f // f // f //
Manufactured by John H. Sheehan & Co. 155 Genesee St. Utica, New York
7 1/4 x 3 1/4 x 1 1/2 (5 1/4)
Rectangular – strap side, Amber and Clear, LTC, Tooled lip, Scarce
Lettering reads base to shoulder.
Trade card has art work by Kate Greenway. Directory of Utica 1906.
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D 12: XXX Dandelion Bitters (I believe this bottle should not be attributed to John H. Sheehan but should be attributed with the XXX Begg’s Dandelion Bitters of Chicago) – Meyer Collection

D10.5 Dandelion 1A

D10.5 Dandelion 1B

D10.5 Dandelion 2

Dandelion_Utica

John H. Sheehan

John H. Sheehan was born in County Clare, Ireland on 16 March 1838. He lost both of his parents at an early age and came to America when he was about six years old with an elder sister and settled initially in Troy, New York. He attended public schools in Troy and finished with a higher education degree in Utica, New York. When he was fourteen years old, he worked in the drug store of Uriah H. Kellogg as an errand boy. Grove & Hamilton druggists succeeded the Kellogg drug store four years later where Sheehan worked for a short time after. Next Sheehan, in 1857, worked for Dickinson, Comstock & Company who were wholesale grocers and druggists. In 1865, Sheehan became a partner. He worked in this capacity until 1868 when he formed a partnership with his father-in-law, Peter Vidvard. Vidvard & Sheehan sold wines and liquors and were located at 45 and 47 John Street. They continued in business until 1878.

SheehanStoreElevation

In January, 1878, Mr. Sheehan started his own wholesale and retail drug business located at the Oneida National Bank building. This building burned down along with his drug business on June 10, 1886. In 1884, Sheehan partnered with an employee, Charles S. England and Philip Sweeney and the firm name was changed to John H. Sheehan & Co. In the fall of 1886, John H. Sheehan & Co. relocated to 167 Genesee Street, purchasing the site from one of the heirs of the late John Carton. The Dandelion Bitters would have been made in this time period.

DandelionBittersTC_Gourd

Their drug store business was described as follows in The Mercantile and Manufacturing Progress of the City of Utica, N.Y. and Environs in 1888:

The premises occupied for the business are newly constructed, and have been built with a special reference for the conduct of the enterprise. The building is substantially constructed of brick, is very handsome and striking in its appearance, and has every convenience about it which in the least degree would facilitate the advantageous display, or the economic handling of the stock. The lot upon which it stands is 170 feet long with a width of 231 feet in front, and 33 feet in the rear. The front floor is devoted to the retail trade and offices, and in the rear to the wholesale operations. The prescription business is also attended to on this floor. The second floor is devoted to the storage of the stock of proprietary medicines, perfumes, chemicals, fancy goods, &c., and the shipping operations are here carried on. The third floor is used to store powdered drugs, herbs, roots. barks, &c., and on the fourth floor may be found a large stock of druggists’ glassware and sundries, and in addition here is the laboratory, where a variety of elixirs, tinctures, &c., are manufactured. The fifth floor and basement are used for general storage. Messrs. John H. Sheehan & Co. are importers and dealers in everything in the way of drugs, chemicals and pharmaceutical preparations from the most eminent manufacturers, also standard proprietary medicines, dyes and dye stuffs, druggists’ sundries, glassware, fancy articles, paints, oils, varnishes, brushes, the finest wines and liquors for medicinal purposes, and indeed everything required for the complete equipment of a first-class drug establishment. In each and every department the stock will be found ample, varied and of the highest quality and selection. The firm supply a trade throughout Central and Northern New York, and the exigencies of their business require the services of about thirty assistants, including three commercial travelers on the road.

In 1891, Sheehan would partner with a fellow named Martin W. Kelly and the business was called Sheehan & Kelly at 167 Genesee Street. Later in the 1900’s the business was again called John H. Sheehan & Co. and they were still located at 167 Genesee Street.

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John H. Sheehan & Co., Druggists, Utica, N.Y. advertising trade card – eBay

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John H. Sheehan & Co., Druggists, Utica, N.Y. advertising trade card reverse, 167 Genesee Street (prob 1887 to 1908) – eBay

A profile from the period said that Mr. Sheehan was a Democrat in politics, a successful business man, and was charity commissioner for one year, being appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Joseph Fass. He was a member of Fort Schuyler Club and took an active interest in the welfare of the city of Utica. On September 13, 1865, he married Josephine Francis Schaler, step-daughter of Peter Vidvard, and they had six children: Dr. John P., a physician of Utica; Edward J., of the Sheehan Fruit Syrup Company, of Utica; Robert S., who died April 15, 1894, aged twenty-one; Frederick Paul, a student at Fordham College in New York city; and Josephine Catherine and Agnes Emily, students in Mrs. Piatt’s Ladies’ Seminary of Utica.

John H. Sheehan retired in 1908 but kept an office, from which he managed his real estate holdings, which seem to have been extensive. His wife passed away in 1920 and he followed in 1924. According to Fred Capozzella at the Mohawk Valley Antique Bottle Club, several of Sheehan’s children are also known to collectors. One son, John P. (1868-1945), was a physician and liquor dealer, best known from his Sheehan’s Malt Whiskey bottles, in several sizes. He was also a malt rectifier and dealt in drugs, medicines, and paints. He was educated at Georgetown University and the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, but seems to have been primarily a merchant. He was involved with the Sheehan Fruit Syrup Company, along with his brother Edward J. (1870-1919).

DeWolfsDandelionBitters_1886

Advertisement for a DeWolf’s Dandelion Bitters being sold by John. H. Sheehan & Company, 153 and 155 Genesee Street – The Utica Daily Observer, 1886

John H. Sheehan & Company was also selling a DeWolf’s Dandelion Bitters in 1885 and 1886. At first I suspected that the DeWolf’s was the predecessor of Sheehan’s own version of Dandelion Bitters. This may not be so as there are advertisements in the early to mid 1900’s for DeWolf’s being sold by Sheehan. The advertisement for the DeWolf’s does say, “The Great Herb Blood Remedy” just as the Dandelion Bitters so I suspect, after all, it is the same brand. Thanks to Marianne Dow for this lead. 

LabeledSheehanWhiskey

A labeled John H. Sheehan & Co., Fine Old Hickory Bourbon Whiskey, 167 Genesee address – Oneida County History

Read about another bitters from Utica: Dr. Sawens Life Invigorating Bitters

Select Listings:

1838: John H. Sheehan born in County Clare, Ireland on 16 March 1838.
1862: John H. Sheehan (clerk Dickenson, Comstock & Co.) bds Central Hotel – Utica New York City Directory
1865: John H. Sheehan (Dickenson, Comstock & Co.) bds Central Hotel – Utica New York City Directory
1870:  Vidvard & Sheehan (P. Vidvard and John H. Sheehan) wines and liquors, 29 and 31 John – Utica New York City Directory
1877: Vidvard & Sheehan (Peter Vidvard and John H. Sheehan) wines and liquors, 45 and 47 John – Utica New York City Directory
1878: P. Vidvard advertisement (see below) – Utica Daily Observer, July 27, 1878
Vidvard_utica-daily-observer-july-27-1878

P. Vidvard advertisement – Utica Daily Observer, July 27, 1878

1879: Sheehan forms his own wholesale drug and liquor business, at 155 Genesee Street (see below). Excelsior Drug Store advertisement from 1880.
SheehanAd21880

John H. Sheehan advertisement at 155 Genesse Street – 1880

1880: John H. Sheehan & Co., wholesale and retail drugs and liquors, 155 Genesee Street – Utica New York City Directory
1883: John H. Sheehan & Co., (John H. Sheehan, Charles S. England and Philip Sweeney), wholesale and retail drugs and liquors, 155 Genesee Street – Utica New York City Directory
Sheehanat155_1880

John H. Sheehan & Co., Wholesale and Retail Druggists, 167 Genesee Street, 1880 Utica New York City Directory

1886: Advertisement for a DeWolf’s Dandelion Bitters being sold by John. H. Sheehan & C0mpany (see below)
1887: John H. Sheehan & Co., (John H. Sheehan, Charles S. England and Philip Sweeney), wholesale and retail druggists, 167 Genesee Street – Utica New York City Directory
Sheehanat167_1887

John H. Sheehan & Co., Wholesale and Retail Druggists, 167 Genesee Street, 1887 Utica New York City Directory

1891: Bugs! Bugs! Bugs! advertisement, Sheehan & Kelly, 167 Genesee Street
SheehanAd1891

Bugs! Bugs! Bugs! advertisement, Sheehan & Kelly, 167 Genesee Street, 1891

1906-1908: John H. Sheehan & Co., wholesale druggist, 167 Genesee – Utica New York City Directory
1910: John H. Sheehan, Physician, office 31 Devereux, also John P. Sheehan & Co. (John P. Sheehan) Sheehan’s Malt Whiskey, 35 Devereux – Utica New York City Directory
Posted in Advertising, Bitters, Druggist & Drugstore, Ephemera, Medicines & Cures, Remedy, Trade Cards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment