ontrost Pemocrat A. J. GEARITSON, Editor.. TVESDAY, e2AY• 6, 1868. . ° FOR. AUDITOR GENERAL, LION. CHARLES E. BOYLE, OF FAYETTE COUNTY FOR IitIRFETOR GENERAL, GEN. WELLINGTON H. ENT, OF COLUMBIA COUNTY. Election s Tuesday October 13, 1868. The Impeachment Trial. April 25th, Wm. S. Groesbeck, one of the counsel for the PreAdent, made an ar gument• for the defence that caused a marked change in the current of opinion itf , reference to impeachment. The speech is . the ablest and most practical one yet Made, and at the same time was univer sally praised as an oratorical effort. He tore the falsezpretences of the impeachers into shreds—completely annihilating their (ifiaiges. A candid reader of hiteargu , Mot cannot fail to be impressed, with the belief that a Senator-who votes to convict does so from motives not based npOrt the law or the facts. On the 27th, Thad Stevens and Repu diator Williams of this State delivered speeches. Thad broke down, and Butler read his violent harangue, which seemed mainly designed to stir up party hate and ballY, senators into voting under the. lash. Aside from.that influence, such a speech wotild only damage the prosecution,— Williams read a windy political *tide which scattered that portion of the .audi ence which had been able. , to endure to the close of Thad's speech. He finally tired_ out and finished it the nest day.. On the 28th, after Williams finished his piece, md some time had.been spent by Butler, Logan and others, in explaining about the Alta 'Vela guano case, Mr. Ev erts opened his argument for the defence. A large audience assembled to listen to him, anticipating a masterly effort, and they were not disappointed. Like Mr. Groesbeck, be was listened to with marked attention by .court and audience throughout his entire argument, which occupied the balance of Tuesday, and was continued on Wednesdnv_and_ Thursday. alairas completed on Friday morning. The speech was a successful combination of legal argument, eloquence, and sat. calm ; his exposition of the ridiculous features of the impeachment charges and speeches,often calling forth the uproarious laughter of the attentive listeners. His quotation from the debates in Congress wherein Butler accused Bingham of being the murderer of an innocent woman, (Mrs. Surratt,) and Bingham's retort that such charges were "only fit to come from a man who lives in a bottle, and is fvd with a spoon," was most excellent ; and those two managers who had thus photograph. ed each other's characters, and afterward joined in the malicious persecution of a President, sat at the tab'e and listened with regret and shame to the recital of their mutual recital of each oilers folly and baseness. Stan bery's argument was commenced on Friday and continued on Saturday. Manager Bingham will close the gen eral debatg, and will no doubt occupy one balf of this week. How much time will be occupied after the case closes, by debate among Senators, none can now conjecture ; but a vote can hardly be reached this week. To those -who anticipate.a result depen dent upon law and testimony, an acquittal is certain ; but if partisan politics control the verdict, as impeachers intend, the end it to be judged according to the fears that Radical Senators may entertain of going too far with a party issue. The elections and a loud warning that the people, are in dignant at the contemplated outrage, and will quietly punish the evil-doers at the ballot-hoz. But even - this mode of re buke from the peopli enrages the more reckless class' of impeachers, who Look for defeat, any bow, 'but hope that under Wade, with-Grant as their candidate in command of the army, they can force his election with the aid of military power.— How far they base their hopes upon not only a false. ; but fatal foundation, future events will determine. ggrAugust Belmont, Esq., Chairman of the National Democratic Executive Committee, in his official capacity, urges organization'everywhere. In his letter he expects "such measures to be taken that will bring to our aid in the contest before us, the combined strength of all those who are' opPersed to congressional usurpa : . tkitr and negro 'supremacy." These: pie, the true 'and only grounds upon which we ought to stand. " Democracy" and "coo: servatism." are absorbed W" constitution al liberty," 'Welvizut' iv) other diatine- Oa* . - -* We have from time to time called at-' tention to the fact bat. the i,adicalaitalie adopted wounningdevice for malting sim ple and credulous people believe that they are making some atteMpt to reduce the 'l enormous expenditures of the govern ment. One of the favorite devices is to set out at the beginning of the financial year by making low estimates for the dif ferent departments. The Philadelphia Ledger, a paper which never makes a mistake about such mat ters, shows up this system of deceit, by giving some figures in relation to esti mates and actual expenditures for the War department. It says :. "By official records, it is shown that the actual expenses are sometimes several hundred per centtim above the official es timates. In his official report to the Pres ident in December, 1865, Secretary Stan ton's estimate for,the War Department expenses, which, he said, is "adequate for a peace establishment," for the fiscal year commencing the 00th day of June, 1866, was $33,814.461. : , His drafts :upon the Treasury for that year were $117,700,080 16. Mr. Stanton% official report dated December, 1866, and reported to Con gress, estimates the expenses for the fis cal year ending June, 1868, at $55,205,- 665. The drafts**, the War Department upon the Treasury - to the 81st of March, 1868, nine mouths; :were $110,908,113 68, (or near $150,000000 fur the year. • General Grant, Secretary ad interim, in his official report last December, esti mates the total expenses of the fiscal year ,at $77,124,807." , With a liko excess of expenditure over estimates, we maYloOk for the satkander ing of *250,000,000 to '8301:000,000 in the War Department this year. Grant is tends to run for President on the negro bureau ticket; arid the puree and the sword of the War Department will need to be freely used lo.give him a show of election; and his estimates, it, will be no ted, areover double those for 1866. Lincoln vs.;,Oarpet Baggers. The followingletter written by Presi dent Lincoln, Nov:,2lst, 1863, is a severe rebuke to the carpet bag politicians now overrnning the §unth : "DEAR SIB Kennedy, bearer of this, has some apprehension that Federal officers, not citizens of Louisiana, may be set up as candidates for Congress in that State. In my view there could, be no pos sible otdect in such an election. • We do not particularly need ,members of Con gress from those States to enable us to get along with Legislation here. What we QV w. aux; Liala GJIMIcrol Ar, i dence that respectable citizens of Louisia na are willing to be members of Congress and to swear support to the ‘onstitution; and that other respectable citizens there are willing to vote:for them andsend them. To send a parcel of Northern men here as representatives, elected as would be un derstood (and perhaps really so) at the point of the bayonet, would be disgrace. ful and outrageous; and, were I a member of Congress here, I would vote against admitting'any such man to a seat." £ AU the elections for the past year have shown radical losses; but they cack led over a " gain" in Rhode Island; the truth of which is as hereunder : —The radical Majority in Rhode island this spring shows, a loss of 362 on last year. The vote is radical 9,494; Demo cratic s,662—msjOrity 3,832. Last year the majority was 4,194. The Radical Conspiracy. When the President, accused of acting in violation of law with intent to violate the Constitution, offered to prove that he consulted with and acted under the ad vice of his Cabinet, both as to the validi ty of the 'law and its applicability to the case in question; and that Stanton him self concurred inie advice, and when the Senate rejected this evidence, it Was- clear what the purpoke 'of the majority' was. The Senatorial mjority-intend to remove the President without regard to his guilt or innocence: The purpose 'is avo*ed: Any pretext is sought, the flimsiest, as a decent cover for the act; and it it cannot be got, the majority are ready to affront the world with bare faced usurpation. There has been at all times a possibility that a few Senatori would'shrink from the crime, and by their =interposition avert it. That hope 'gradually lessens. Intimida tion and bribery are alternately used to force a Aerdiet of conviction ! Who can hope that the weak and wicked men who occupy once honored seats in the "Senate,- will resist ! • ", What remains to the people; and how shall they deal 'With this crime The people have the future before them. They'can effofd'to le patient, for tho day of vengeance is etre to come. Let us prepare the roll 'of infamy for the Perjured Senators.! '.lt will: serve ;as a record of judgment against , them, when they, fall under the bands of ail outraged,people; The New Yorlc Tribune has official re turns from fifty ;counties, in Michigan, which 'show a total vote 0f1+36,657, which that paper thinks hp .swelled to 180,- 000 the,, remaining nine counties. *The majority against the . negro kern!) pen; stitutioo, so far, is '39,477a- amt . *spat prohibition,. 1 . 8,197.., The Sopervi, son, f a, far. officially , reported from thirty counties, staid ,p 6 -2 radicals and 302, Dem9crats:4 Detunc*ictgain of 70.: Ia 1866 the total . , of . tblibtato wss•l64,- 454 -7Ballidid :Tuejoritit-,29,098. UMW 'lnotinskifenOi. The Kansas State Journal, the editor of which is - a native of Michigan, and a de. cided radical, thus comments upon the de feat of negro suffrage in his native state : 'My Michigan,' has dishonored herself and covered the party with shame and' inconsistency in refusing to adopt the new Constitution. That state has a population of nearly 1,000,000 hardy and enterprising sons and daughters. Next to Ohio it is the greatest wool State in the Union, but it has all the prejudices against negro suf frage that South Carolina and Georgia possess. With its 1,000,000 white popu lation it has also about 1,200 negroes, and for some unaccountable reason the state has declared by about 40,000 major ity that the 1,200 negroes shall not vote ; awl yet Michigan has the inconsistency to ask or, rather, force upon the people of the South the very rule with regard to suffrage which she rejects for herself by so large a majority. Michigan ought to be ashamed of herself. To maintain her diabolical inconsistency she should call home Zach Chandler and Jack Howard. If it, is wrong for intelligent negroes to vote in Llichigan, it is wrong for ignorant. and brutalized negroes made so inevitable by the surrounding and associations of a lifetime, to vote in South Carolina. If it is bad state policy for 1,200 negroes to vote in one state, it is bad state policy for 12,000 of the same class to vote to anoth er state. And this is all there is of the negro suffrage proposition. If the thin skinned, white livered and milk and wa ter republicans of Michigan haven't sense enough io appreciate these obvious truths they had better change their names and their politics, and leave their lake bound state, and move off up into Alaska or Brit ish America. Their climate is not more cold and repulsive than are the sensibili. ties of the peoPle frigid and unrelenting." These are plain truths. They should find a lodgment in the minds of sensible Men of the radical party. If white meo in Michigan will not accept negro suffrage, why should th 4 force it. upon white men io other States ? This view of the case is well put by the State Journal, and we hope it, will have an effect, upon those of the opposition who consult, their reason, not their passions. Democratic Victories. Since the commencement of the Im peachment Farce at Washington, the elec tions throughout the country have prov ed a grand series of Democratic victories. Every State, city, town and hamlet is im peaching a fanatical Congress, and giving their soleibn verdict, against the unlawful and disgraceful actions of that body. New Hampshire first gave the people's verdict, in a decreased Radical majority; Connecticut and Michigan in thundering tones, that must have made every radical quake, next added their condemnation of the unconstitutional and despotic acts of toe party m power, and their cry has been kept up since by the people at the polls, in hundreds of cities arid towns in the eas tern middle and western States. Albany, the capitol of the Empire - state, added fifteen hundred votes to her Democratic majority, and now Chicago, the place se lected by the radicals tobold their Nation al Convention warns that body before it meets, to be careful what it does, and that its scheme in Congress to rob the people of their rights has been condemn ed by that great Illinoisan city in a Dem ocratic gain of five thousand votes, which redeems the home of Douglas from radi• cal rule. The people are moving • solidly against the revolutionists at Washington, and it is doubtful whether even with Grant, the great mule rider, at the head of their Presidential ticket, there will be a shadow left next November of the once great Republican party. The people are aroused to the fact that they are being robbed of the last vestige of a free gov ernment, and are determined to hurl from power their unfaithful and dishonest ser vants. That they may succeed next No vember, is the earnest wish- of every pa triot and defender of the Constitution of oar Fathers. What is the President's Offense ? Under this bead, the Cincinnati Com nzerriai (Black ,Republican) thus talks We commend it to. the Jacobins : It seerns to us that the.wrattgle over the War Office resolves itself into this.: Has the President the right to test the Con stitutionality of a law of Congress in the courts ? That Mr. Stanton holds the of fice of Secretary of war, and that he is objectionable to the President on person. al and partisan grounds, are mere inci dents, having no further relavency to the question than that Mr. Stanton furnishes occasion for the issue. We suppose the fact of his being the Presidant does not deprive him of his rights as being a private citizen, and yet there is no citizen' who may not under given circumstances, go into the court of law for a decision upon the constitutional ity ofany law, either of Congress or a State Legislature. This, according to our information, is the extent of the Presi dent's offending. It is claimed, we are aware, that when the Senate is sitting, the power of remo val is limited, and that the act of Mr. Johnson is unirecedented in tbi particu lar. But this is Ininply puffing, the mat ter into another shape, for the prohibition of the exercise of this power, except with the Senate's consent, is a pay,t Of the very I. law in dispute, and the constitutionality of which the President desires to test. Why does not CongresS await the de cision of the court on the law before it . proceeds to 'an indictment of Mr. John son ? Should the court pronounce the law unconstitutional, of cinthie the in "dictment, if baied on alleged violaiimis _of law,the would fall to the ground: • Even 'lithe law were'sustained by die court, it is iliketioiyas `NWstated,:,Theffier").be I=l=2l President tense in precipitating the issue resulting in a decision which all must admit is very greatly needed to put an endto the other wise interminable wrangle over a question orjurisdict iOD. Impeachment. • The Tribune of Thursday, has a long article giving its views of what the Imp peachment trial means. It admits that it is not a trial in accordance with law, but says it is a political or partisan trial. It then goes on to defend the ';impeach ment on the groundi that " the republican PuitY is the “'goveriimaut;"' thatVitid rev Johnson is. opposed to'said "government;" is placing obstacles in the way of their carrying out their ,ends; and that for said crime, Congaess, in- the " name of 'the whole people, (that is the republican par ty,) impesched him for " high crimes and misdemeanors" against the government, or what is the same thing, the Republican party. It makes light of the charges which the house broughtagainat tire Pres.- ident, and claims that the " solid grounds and foundation for impeaehmentpow, and for its justification hereafter," is the " ob structions," be placed in the way of carry ing out the reconstruction schemes of the majority in Congress, or the government as the Tribune is pleased to call the ma jority. The Tribne closes its article, with the conviction it, says, that, the President will be•removed from office by the Senate. It conviction fails, it says it " must be be cause a few minds will have conceived their conclusions from certain regal as pects of the case." It thinks it should be decided free from legal, aspects. When the leading radical paper in the country advises the Senate to decide the impeachment triat from a partisan rather than a legal stand point, what, hope has the President of a fair decision P Com ment is unnecessary, and we leave it for the people to render a verdict on next No vember. Chicago Redeemed ! The election in Chicago on Tuesday re sulted in a glorious victory for the Demo crats. On Friday, the Chicago Post, in speaking of the election, said that a Demo cratic victory in that city, would afford the party more comfort and encourage ment than any other event that had hap pened during the past 'year." The Post continued : "We entreat all republicans to rem'erti ber that the election is the opening of the greatest political campaign• of the Centil ry and that the party cannot now afford a defeat in this its ancient stronghold. Illi nois is the home of Grant, Chicago is the home of North , western Republicanism, and both are expected to do theie duty in November." The radical majority in Chicago for years has been from four to seven and eight thousand. The city goi•ernment was entirely in their hands. The fact that the radical Convention Was to meet there in May was thus commented upon : "Shall our Republican Convention be asked to meet in a Democratic city ?" in- . ("aired the-party organs. And what is the result ? Chicago, " the home of lien)) licanism," give's a Democratic majority of nearly one thousand, a Democratic gain' of five thonsand since the last election. So much for Grant's popularity in Illinois —his own home. So much for Impeach ment and radicalism Opinions of Distinguished Statesmen against Negro Equality. AnAms.—l have never read reasoning more absurd, sophistry more gross, in proof of the Athenasian creed, or Tran substantiation,, than the subtle labors of Helvetins and Rossean, to demonstrate the agtural equality of mankind. JEFFIMSON.—Nothing is more certain ly written in the Look of fate, than that, the two races, equally free, cannot live under the same government. , DOUGLAS.—I believe this government was made by white men, for the benefit of white men,and their . posterity•ferever ; and I am in fa.vor of confining citizenship to white men—nit/11°f European birth and descent—instead of conferring it upon negroes, Indians, and other inferior. races. LarrcoLN.--1 am .not, and never have been in favor of making voters or jurors of negroes; nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with. whites; and I will say further, in addition to this, that there is a physical difference between the black and white races, .which, 1 believe, will forever forbid the two races living to gether on terms of social. and political equality. . • —The. Chicago Tribune, the chief .radi cal organ of the west, says : " Few per sons we imagine, would seriously propose to elect Mr.. Wade. as PreAdent. , Ho has neither the culture, the temper, the,educa tion, nor the judgment requisite for the position. No profane attestation will con vince any one that 1108 In any way Sited for it, or that he will'add one vote to the ticket." —The so called southern elections which have been :recently , perpetrated -under military rule and continued for many days allowing mobs , of negroes to rottm , oyez , the country :kid vote early and often, have generally resulted according to. order. But in Georgia, it isi reported, that o the white mei. have elected a majority of the Legislature. lion."Alexandei IlleDonald, tr. S. Senator pled from Arkansas,:for the short terra,' was formerly, a inerc'tipnt and, bank er:, at rort Smith Kans as. -0* Slate Journal. • ' Yes, and .formerly AJawyer K.Rntani ky, from whence 49 absquatulated with a large amomtt;,ig- Thernt!Ong,,k. his —lt cost Austria $4,000 to recover :-41rs;13loOmer liliving. quietly, cloth in 100 g skirts, and in , ker right mind, at Counnil Bltirtp, —" t t etolel iWilowery banks" says Dr . ....15100fe. stole the spoons," saysliutier. . : _ . —The Independent says: " Andrew Johnson is guilty of usurpation in under taking to make this a white man's govern ment. And for this, the Tribunethiulte, he_" ought to be kicke d out."' —We now pay 800,000,000 and more, annually, to,an army ,whose exclusive dur, ty,.is to, keep the Southern States oat of the Union, until they can ,be forced to come in ender the, rule of negro equality. —The late Legislature of this State had in imemploy one hundred persons, at an average salary of $7OO t When the Dem• ocrats were in the majority in our Legis latorei, sixteen men were employed at $3OO for a session. —Such U. S. Senators as' are suspeeted Of liSviiig any regard for their• oaths, are being subjected to all kinds of intimida tion to prevent 'them from voting to ac quit President Johnson, It remains to be seen whether • they have sufficient man hood to give a verdict according to the law and the evidence. -411inois , is doing noblf3 work for the Democracy. , At Pekin the Democrats carried every ward, and made a gain of 300. On the same day, B'oornington, heretofore the nursery of Radicalism, elected a Democratic mayor by a majori• ty of 235. At Quincy an exciting election closed by ,the election of a Democratic mayor by a majority of about a thousand, a gain of snore than 300. —After Mr. Evans' and Mr. Nelson's truthful expos 2 of Butler, the beast aetu. ally begins to see himself as others see him. Mr. Nelson offered the Manager the Alta Vela papers on' the wholesome MT dition 44 that/ lie should- 'retutn thern:"-= Knowing that 'ihiti• praetiee'• tail 'always been 'never to return the property df oth. ers Credited to his hands; Butler refused "emphatically to receive theni 'on such conditions." We thought the conditions would be too much'for him. ---11. r Clarence Logan, of Philadelpkia, just returned • from Savannah, having ob seiyea the election,_tit,cre;. has made a statement that in one ward in that city several. uegroes were supplied by a wag with labels of " Costar's rat and roach ex terminator" and voted them as e of the very intelligent suffragans no ticing the cut -of .a rat on the supposed ballots,.,, inquired what it_meant.. .They were told it stood for the " rat•ification of the cobstitution." The carpetbaggers had great dacelty in getting these labels from the hands of the darkies, -1 0 - Zack" and Ben. . " 3lack" of the Cincinnati Commerrial was subpmnaed ,by the Managers: He was not examined.. Report has it that Butler, whom "Mack" has told some truths about, sent him word he would rasp him." "Made. replied that he. should she prepared with a spoon tied to a corner of his pocket handkerchief, and that if it made him blush, he should use the handkerchief at the risk of show ing the spoon. Mr. Butler sent him word that such conduct would be insulting to himself and show contempt for the Sen ate. " Mack." rejoined that Butler boast ed his purpose and gave the first insn't. Butler subsided. —About eight miles north of Kitta ningrab a small settlement called " Ore the site of a once flourishing, but now inactive furnace, consisting of sever al very dilapidated hovels occupied by ne g- os, quite an excitement has been caused by the elopement of two or three white (?) with a corresponding number of ne gro wenches, and as a reciprocal move ment, the elopement of a, negro and the daughter of one of the white (?) men men tioned. One man,- we learn, leaves a wife and four-oufwe children, , and takes to his bosom Ott wife of a respectable deceased negro. Report says the parties have gone to Canada. We only hope- so, for this country is well rid of such _ characters. The• men calling themselves white are re lated in this- section:- Eittaning Pa: 'Sen tinel. THE BOND DEur,—l}rom- March Ist to April Ist the gold 'bearing interest bond debt ofthe United States was increased from $1,926,000,000 at' 81,944,000,000. Upon these $18,000,000 the annual in creased interest will be over $1,000,000 in goldl The debt bearing currency interest has been • decreased $16,000,00G in the same month, and tbedebt bearing no id terest $10,000,000. Thirpolicy of those who tontrol the Government . is to red trim as fast as possible the , debtAliat costs the pepte'no interest, or the debt whose in• tenet is payable in7ciirrency, while at the sametime they increase the gold !owns', debt.:. Thus tbe' 'people pond* . to be robbed forAe benetlipethe money shar:tta of irall street. , , " R A Spr."--Many of' curls - dies will re. member being called upon'at ttieit' reW dente, last fall, by a "lady" agent-goini around and selling' radio "corsets" and fitting thirn, at 'a Weep tly in an interini titkvitt tin& Btafe;' the very same woman, by' h4.o.l"iiieg:4 of her stock,'and a decided iliutunwArraiiiid Paiiittlity,shovirki`abeautifullagy customer` aroused' Suspicioni;liad'nn the "lady" be; ingArreated, viasfoutid: to biYa YoUnb } Oicla in'disgnige;fitling iind"selllng,jnat tor',oo He " sari liepaitto4 l tbroUgh 'gastrin,'Afleiitokiri;" Reading, Pi:4.6%111e, „and',iniiiyather, 3 toyine:atil teatiorepti ciAtOtiray tl?eloptintfyouitg, HO GLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS, • :,.:1 ?':._ AND Hoeflandi,s' German::: Tonic. The Grihitlea',lhr all Mohacs of the LORR,t ., FrOiiiiAcß, OR .•10 1 0ESTIVin -2,;ORGANS. HOOFI.4I,I,VB.BERMpi BITTERS, •In ttiMPOsed Of the ptireHtices %lief - ire meal. ctnally termed. entracte) of Roots, Herbs and Berke, making a prc.parationrhighly concentrated, and entirely free froto.sdcotqic thnixture of anyklAtd. HOOIALAND'S GN,II.ITAN 10 Is a combination of all the'ingredieists of the Bitters with the purest quality of Santa Cruz Rum, Orange de. making one of the most pleasant and agreeable Terse. dice ever offered to the public. Those preferring &medicine free from alcoholic le. mixture, will use " goofier Ws German Bitters. Thoqe who have no objections to the combination as stated, wilt use . Hooftandli Gorman Tonic. They are both equally good, and contain the iame me dicinal virtues, the choice between the two being a mere matter Of taste. the Tonic being the most palate. ble. . • The stomach, from a variety of causes,ouch as indl. gest lon, dyq)eositt, nervous debility, etc:, is very apt to have its facetious deranced. The Liver, sympathizing as It closely does with the Stomach, then becomes af fected. the result of which is that the. pattent"Saffen from several or more of the follostlog diaessest; . , Coast. flatulence, inward * plies, fullness of blood to Site bend. acidity of the stomach, nansea,twart.- burn, disgust for food, (Winced or weight in. the stom ach, soar ernetatfon P., sinking or flattering at the pit of the stomach. sorb:an:lll3g of the head. hurried or didicalt breathing, flattering at the heart, choking or . .suffocat inglenantions when in a lying posture, dimness atria. ion, dots. or,Febs before the afght,dull pain fa the head, deficiency' of pertpfration, yellowness of the Bain and flushesai in the alde, hac hest, ltnibs etch, sodden of heat, beining In the flesh, constant imagin ings'ofevih-and'ereat depression of spirits. The suffererfrom these diseases should exercise the greatest caution in the selection of a remedy for his autc o purchaeing Only that which be I. aesered from hit investigations and inquiries posses trne:merlt t is kin. fully compounded. Is tree from injurious ingredients, and husinstablistied for ttmetra reputation for the mire Ofthese diseases, , AnAt k ie copnecthiti tee , AM. mit-those weirknorrniemedies: ' ! BOOFLAND'S GERIRAN BITTERS, 13001FLAND'S GEILIMIN • TONIC, PREPARED BY.,Dr. C. NI. JACKSO N, . !gagaLdeipkta, Pa.- , , , -Tteenty-flie years'alfice they were firet Introdnced te tq,thia,cuudtry from Germany, during which time they have,tindnubtedly performed more cures, and bened ted suffering humanity to a greater extent, than any other remedic.situown to the public. These remedies will effectually cure Liver Coniplaint, Jaundice Dyspepsia, Chronic i.r Nervous DiMinty, chronic liarrhora, disease of the kidneys., and all eases arising from a disordered Liver, btomacit, testince, ~o 13ility„ Resultinz from ony con seNrhatertr , ;.. l"remirrifoo or the Sy.Lep,, watitd by revere lobor, hortbiblpe, tioemre, reverv, Sc There fano medicine extant equal to these remedies to encli,caami.. A cone and vigor .la impajted to the Whole system, the appetite Ia etrengthened. food is en- Joyial, the stomach digeets promptly. the blood Ia pert fled, the complexion becornea auund and tenlllty. the yellow tthge'is eradicated from the eyes, a hltioni Ise!, en to.tbe mitt/16,4nd the weak and nervous invalid he comer. a eiropc and healthy being. PERSONS •ADVAN CED - IN LIFE, and feeling the hand of time t. eighing heavily upon them, with all its attendant ills, ieili find in tkr,- ace of this WlTtElte, or the 'mite, fin elixir that will instil new life into their seine, restore in a measure the en ergy and ardor of more youthful days. -their shrunken forme, ant give health and ampliineat, to their remaining years. -V OTICE It is ttwell established fact that fully one half of the female porton Ofnur population are seldom In the en joyment of good heal h• or, to use their own expression feel well." They are languid, devoid of all energy, extremely nervous, and have no appetite. To this class of persons the arrrxr,s, or the TOSIC, is especially recommended. WEAK ANDDELICATE CHILDREN are made atrorg by the use of either of these remedies They will cure every case of tISRASJIMI. without fall. Thousands of certificates have .accumulated in the hands of the proprietor, but I.paCe n ill allow of the publication of but a few. Those, it will be observed. are men of note and of such standing that they mast be, believed. TESTIMONIALS: Hon. Goo. W. Woodward, Chief Justice of the Saprenze Court of Pa. writes : PEITLADELPItt/L, Mitth lb, MST. " dna •11106flands' German Bitters' is a good tonic, usefulin disease of the digestive organs, and of great benefit In cases Ordebtlity and want of nervous action in thesystern. -tours truly. G EO. W. WOODWARD." IION. JAMES TLIOAIPSON, Judge,of theSupirme Court-of Pennsylva- Putt Atict:lltu, April 0, 067, " Inontider tatonana's German Bitters' a valubla niedielite in case otattacka of indigestion for Dispel?• eta/ r Cart certify this from my enptriente of it. . ~ Y ours, with respect. • JAMES THOMPSON." FROM REV. JOSEPH H. KF.N N ARD, D. D. Pastoral the tenth Baptist Church, Phila. ,delphia. Dn. JAcasoN—Tiettr Sir: I have been frequentlyre quested to connect ra y flame with .recommendations of different kinds of medicines, but regarding Its practice as out of my appropriate sphere, have in all cases deelined;-bnt • with a clear proof in various in stacteea and particularly in =peal* family, of the use fulness of Dr. Rowlands German Bitters, I depart for once from my usual- course. to express' my fall con viction that. for general debility of the system, and e specially for Liver Complaint, it is a safe and valua ble preparation. '74 some fusee tering fail; but usually I doubt not.tWlll be very beneficial to those who enf' fer from the bode causes. ••‘. • ' ; - tour% veryresoettfully• J. 11. KENNARD, • Eighth, below Coates St, 'FROM: REY. E. D. FENDALL, Asafalant Adildr Christian Chronicle, Phil , , aciclphia . X hitv&eicrived decided benefit tram the usecif Boot* laild 4 eGerinin ilitteritand feel if my privilege to rec ommend them nen Most valuable tonic, , to all *he iff suffering Aura EPPeraidebility or; from dlleale arising from dennigement pt the liver. - 'Yours truly,' • fief• •' ••6.: ".11.1)JEENDALL. - 1•7?..1:-r= foots. German RemediMs are counterrfdited, see , Wet the elgnetnro of ft U. JACKSON le on the, wrap perMreach bottle.': All cams are Connterfelt:' Principal office and nulnetectory at the Cll . trnlalk medi eine etnre, No. 631A(cketreer, PhllAcelphLl, Pa. CHARLES.M.: - EVANS;:Proprietor. • •- Itirmesvc.MIVACKSON, m CO. • .7) , • t • . • • i . q`ird'APelanfite"lattc' ,:‘ • Co s e -ta HOonlibintemmilltalinie; put nn in Fort bottles, tipper b,O O / 0 . OcA dozen for 7 60.. vanotinsget VI - examine we the article rip bursin iiniertPleSt,tie • , Aprirl4,lB6B-.=-171