pail; Ctitgrapte HARRISBURG , THURSDAY EVENING, SEPTEDIBER 15, 264. NATIONAL UNION TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, Abraham Lincoln, OF Er.z.raolo. FOR VICE PRESIDENT. Andrew Johnson, Or TENNESSE,M. COUNTY TICKET. CONGRESS, GEO. F. MILLER, of 'Union county. ASSEIIIILY, CoL H. C. ALLEMAN, Harrisburg DANIEL KAISER, Wiconisco. PROTHOTABN, JOSIAH C. YOUNG, Harrisburg DZGISTEB, GEORGE MARKS, Union Deposit COUNTY coma:mm . l.4 - En, HENRY HARTMAN, Washington, DIRECTOR OP TEE POOR, PHILIP MOYER, Upper Paxton. AUDITOR, ALFRED SLENTZ, Harrisburg. The Address of the National Executive =I We give a large portion of our space to-day to the publication of the Addfess of the National Union Executive Committee. As an appeal to the judgment and common sense of the'people, it is a document of rare value and excellence of composition, As a political paper, setting forth the issues of an important elec tion, it deals inflicts whi. b cannot be resisted, and abounds in arguments which are irrefu table. Indeed, we have read nothing in con nection with any of the campaigns for years past, which equalled this address, and we therefore urgently recommend it o the peru sal of our readers and the re-publication of our cotemporaries in every county in the State of Pennsylvania. £n Old Soldier Opposed to M'Clollan. Msj. Gen. M'Call, an old soldier, and a steady Democrat of many years' standing, as well as the Democratic candidate for Congress in the Chester District in 1862, is now opposed to the election of George B. M'Clellan to the Presidency. It will be remembered that Gen. M'Call organized the Peralsylvania Reserve Corps, a body of men whose reputation gave honor and credit to the Keystone State on both shores of the Atlantic. This veteran now takes ground against the nominee of the Chicago Convention,for reasons of 31.'Clellon's personal, unfitness and his utter perfidy in accepting a nomination at the hands of men wno Ignore rue justice 01 Taw Myrutzgao cto treason, and treat the valor of our brave de fenders as a mere exhibition of the brute force of ruthless invaders. These are argu ments sufficient to turn every soldier in dis gust from 3l'Clellan. The Nominee for Congress in the Twelfth District. Hon. W. W. Ketchum has been nominated for Congress in the KWh District. We would be unfaithful to a long cherished feeling of high personal regard, if we failed to give this faot the prominence it deserves, as Mr. K. is one of the most able men in the political or ganization with which he •is identified, and eertainly one of the most faithful representa tives ever placed in a legislative position. He will of course be elected, and on the floor of Congress, enlarge his already great reputation asi a legislator. Lucerne County. The Union men in Luzerne county are in the field, with the following good ticket up for their support: Pie Assembly—Col. Wm. N. Monies, Bob ert Love and B. C. Vincent. Prothonotal --A. O. Thompson. .District Attorney—D. U. Harrington. Clerk of the Coat—Daniel Buckley. Commissi tier—Samuel Vanhorn. • Aud tors—James Tinkhoxa and Wm. If —The nominees for the Assembly are un exceptionable, and cannot fail to poll more than their party vote. THE Auaunv bF SUCCIRSS.—We have come just to the time that is to test us and that is to decide the fate of the nation. If we hold steadily on, we shall save it, and that quickly. It is impossible to think that we are about to give back now. The stake is too great—we have done too much already. We cannot al lord to lose all that we have gained merely for the want of a little resolution in the Grit. ical time when the decision is just ready to be made up. Let every man, then, make up his mind to ,tend by. The patriotic way is the best way. It is the cheap way. It is the safe way. And if anybody tells us how hard it is getting to be, the answer is: "By that we know that i t i, short." Ggoattz B. M'CLEmax, in his letter accept ing the nomination for the Presidency, as a candidate of a party notoriously in sympathy with the rebel•traitors, promises, in the event of his election, to restore economy to the management of the affairs of the nation. In the face of this hypocritical pledge to catch the votes of ignorant people, George B. Id'- Clellan is receiving say IHOUSAND DOLLIHs YEAR /PROBE THE TEEdSURY Or THE NATION, WITH- our BENDEETNO ANY SERVICE TIMP I 7O/i TO THE PZOTIJS Lot George B. M'Clellau resign and return the unearned money he has already taken from the Treasury, before he talks of economy in the Government EVEIM COPP/V=7AD Onosti now assails Mr. Lincoln, because, as President through the will of the people, -he prosecutes the war in execution of his official oath, and at the same time they Urge the people to 'vote for' a man as Mr. Lincoln's successor, who helped to prosecute the wee undergr,V*Oin as a vol unteer. The Notutuee forClongrese in the Four- teenih Darlet. The Congressional Conference which met at Sunbury yesterday, completed its business last evening, by the nomination of George F. Miller, of 'Union county, as the candidate for Congress in the Fourteenth District. We have already stated that four candidates were before the Conference, and when it is remem bered that each of these was supported with great zeal by their friends, and had sound claims to the nomination, the preference of a majority of the conferees for Mr. Miller, must be regarded by him as a mark of high distinc tion, and will be accepted by the people of the District as the evidence alike of his fitness for the station and his abilitiy to condu ct.a cam paign such as is involved in a Congressional contest. —Mr. Miller is a man of more than ordinary ability, a lawyer of largt practice, and re garded in his profession as one of the most successful practitioners at the bar of his dis trict. His private character is irreproachable. Among those who know him personally, he is held in great esteem for his integrity and per sonal virtues, and we think that, altogether, Mr. Miller combines the qualities and the reputation not only to make a popular candi date, but to become one of the most useful and influential Representatives the counties composing the District ever had in Congress. His election is a foregene conclusion; and thus the Fourteenth Congressional District will be redeemed and relieved from the 'disgrace with ' which it is now identified. They Preach Peace and yet Secretly Pre pare for War. The blatant supporters of George B. M'Clel lan are in a great hurry.on all occasions to impress ignorant and timid people with the idea that if he is defeated, there will be an uprising of the people of the free States. At the ,ame time, while these h. pocrites are engag•d' in preac ink peace, they are secretly preparing tor an effort to ra,st by the force of arms the will of he m , j Jrity. While we have little faith in the courage or the manly virtue of the men who, under cover of the protection of northern law and order, have been rendering all the aid in their power to the traitors in arms, we believe that it is part of the plan of a just God to tempt these wretches into a position where they will be sure to reap the full punish ment of their crimes. Whom the gods would destroy they first make mad. All this talk of uprising in the North, in the event (now re daced to a .certainty) of M'Clellan's defeat, is really !he result of Democratic infatuation. It is the destiny of these demagogues to indulge in such threats. They cannot resist when the proper time arrives to become open traitors. And just about that time our victorious ar mies, their blades unbroken, and their bayonets fixed, flushed with their permanent triumph over Southern treason, will be ready to cope with the traitors of the North. Mr. Lincoln will be elected. His friends have no notion of organizing rebellion. Do those who now oppose his election, intena to revoltr It so, it is very kind in them to inform us.before hand, as we shall be prepared for their uprising Tan Marc who claims to be loyal, and yet while denouncing Mr. Lincoln, has nothing to say against J.eff. Davis, is either a fool or a knave.. THE CHICAGO CONVENTION • Appeal of the National Union Committee to the People of the United istates. REAQUAILTEES NATIONAL UNION COMMITTEE, NEw "roam Sept. 9, 1864. The great rebellion, which for more thaii three years has wrapped the nation in the flames of civil war, thaws near its crisis. Its armies have been beaten, its territory has been conquered, the forts and posts which it treacherously seized have been occupied and held by the soldiers of the Republic, its foreign allies have been detached from its support, and its hostile arm, paralyzed by exhaustion and discouraged by defeat, is upheld solely by the hope of political victories to be achieved by its allies in the Presidential election of No vember next. If the People in that election sustain the Government, ft they reassert its just authori ty arid reaffirm their purpose to maintain it by war so long as war assails it, the rebellion will speedily end. If they falter in this de termination, or leave any room tor doubt on this vital point, the rebels will take fresh courage and prolong the contest. Every ut terance of their organs and their agents affirms and confirms this position, Every .rebel in arms and every rebel in office - every rebel organ in the ebel States or in foreign lands --every hater of Democratic Freedom and the Rights of man, longs and labors for the over throw of the administration and theexpulsion of Abraham Lincoln from the Presidential chair. in the Northern and Western States this hostility' has been embodied and organized in the acts and declarations of the uhicago uouvention. That • onveution gives a silent approval of the rebellion itself, and an. open condemnation of the war waged for its sup pression. Without a word of censure for the conspirators who plotted the nation's death, it brands with unsparing denuncia tion the patriots and heroes who defend its life. While it passes in utter silence the gi gantic , Usurpations of Jefferson Davis nod his confederate traitors while it overlooks entirely, and thus, by just and ne cessary inference, approves their abrogation of political rights and personal liberties over all that portion of the United States in which they have been able thus far to sustain their usurped authority, it pours out its wrath, without stint or measure, upon every act by which the Constitutional President of the United States has sought to defend and pro tect the life and liberties of the nation, whose executive power is plaeed in his hands. That Convention had no words of exultation for our victories.; no thanks and honors for the soldiers and sailors who have shed their blood to aehieve them. While it denounces our Government for neglect of duty toward our •lellow-citizens, who are now, and long have been prisoners of war in a suffering con , dition," it has not even a syllable of censure for those rebel authorities who, with more 1 than sivage cruelty, and in utter disregard of every - dictate of humanity, as well as of every usage of civilized warfare, have deliberately and with systematic purpose inflicted upon th o se prisoners all the tortures of exposure, of neglect and starvation, and have offered premiums for their murder to the: brutal guards to svhose grim cruitody they have been consigned. Aizd, on the very eve of the most glorious victories that have ever crowned our arms--after .three yeare_of :bloody,. costly and sniaceefilta war; when Ibree-four,tits of the ter iteldbyllietetiels has passed into. our hands ; at. theffssy rttlanUatt when the rebellion itself is tottering to its fall, and and the flag of our country is rapidly advanc ing to its old supremacy, the party represent ed at Chicago demands that "immediate efforts be made for a cessation of hostilittes"—a step which would instantly arrest our conquering armies and snatch from them the glories of 'a final triumph, repeal the blockade, and throw , the whole rebel frontier open to the supplio they so sorely need, secure the recognition of foreign poNVers, and either accomplish their independence or give them the ability to fight for it four years longer. We 'appeal to the people of the United States—lovers of the Union and friends of Freedom—against the consummation of the foul crime against both which the acts and d clarations of the Chicago Convention in volve. We invoke them not to sanction these principles and sentiments by electing the can didates put forward to represent them. We implore them, as they love their country, as they seek the renewed integrity of its terri- tory, as they desire the peaceful protection of its flag, and the blessing of its free institu tions and its equal laws for themselves and their posterity, not to arrest the blow which is just ready to descend upon the rebellion now tottering to its fall ; not to give the reb- - els time to renew their strength for fresh con flicts; not to aid those who would aid them in overthrowing our Government, in destroy ing our Union, in plunging into a chaos of anarchy the great communities of which the Constitution makes one great and glorious nation, and in thus extinguishing finally and forever, the hopes of all who have faith in Freedom and the Rights of Man. We call upon the people to bear in mind that, by whatever sophistries they may cloak their purposes, the Chicago Convention nei ther condemns the action of the Richmond rebels, nor proposes to expel them against their will or by any; exercise of force, from the seats of posfer they have usurped. In all es sential respeots the action that Convention took accords with the results the rebels seek. Both desire a cessation of hostilities. Both denounce, with unsparing bitterness, the Government of the United States, and both alike seek its overthrow. Both demand that the attempt to conquer armed rebellion by force of arms shall be abandoned. And both demand that, when the Government of the United Seates shall have passed into the hands of men opposod to an armed defence of the Government against rebellion, the war shall end by peaceful conference of these al lied powers. What more than this could the rebels ask or need for the consummation of all their plans? We call upon the People to bear in mind that, if they elect the candidates of the Chicago Convention, they arrest the Government in the execution of its plans and purposes on the very eve of their fulfillment, and one-third of a year before any new admin istration can take its place. The interval will be one of hope and confidence for the rebels, and of exultation for their allies in the loyal States. In the Western States armed prepara tions have already been made by the disciples and advocates of secession, to follow the ex ample of the South, and sever the West from the Federal Union. The siiccess of the Chi- cago programme in . November, will be the signal for carrying these design' s into execu: Lion ; and the fourth,of March will dawn upon a new Western cOntiOney, aiming at inde pendence, defying the power of the national arms, and co-operating with the slave power of the Southern States in blotting from existence the free Republic of the Western world. We call upon the people to crush all these schemes, and to brand their authors and allies with their lasting reprobation. We call upon them to support the Government, to quell vlafou.d -preserve the Union. We call upon them to stand by the Presiddut who, tinder circumstances of Unparalleled difficulty, has Wielded the power of the, nation with unfalterintcourage and fidelity, with integrity which even cal umny has not dared to impeach, and with Wisdom and prudence upon which success is even now stamping the surest and the final seal. His election will proclaim to the world the unaltered and unalterable determination of the American People to quell the rebellion and save the Union. It will strike down for ever the false hopes and expectations of the rebel government, and proclaim to the people of the rebel States that their only hope of peace lies in abandoning their hostility to the Government and resuming their allegianceAb the Constitution and Laws of the United States. We call upon the Union Committees and the Union Leagues, and upon all loyal asso ciations in every State, county and town, to perfect their organizations ; to infuse fresh vigor and activity into their operations ; to canvass carefully and promptly their respec tive districts ; to circulate documents and newspapers containing just and forcible ex positions of the merits of our cause ; to com bat by assemblages of the people in public meetings, by public speeches, by conversation, by letters and personal appeals, and in all just and proper modes, the deceptive and perilous sophistries of the agents and political allies of the rebellion. Let them be on their guard againts the arts of corruption and of intrigue which will be brought, with unscrupulous desperation, to bear upon them. The rebel government, and those foreign powers most deeply interested in our destruction, could well afford to expend millions in overgrowing this administration, and placing in Power the; nominees and representatives of the Chicago Convention. The skies are bright and full of promise. The lion-hearted citizen-soldiers of the Re public march with steady step and unfaltering purpose, to a speedy and glorious victory. The heart of the people beats true to the Union. Every triumph , of the Union arms over the rebel troops arouses afresh the cour age and confidence of Union men, and chills the heart and decimates the ranks of the sub mission secessionists represented at Chicago. A. Union victory in November will end, the long and laborious strife. It will, paralyze the arm of the rebellion. It will disperse its armies, destroy the hope by which the des potism at Richmond now holds its subjects in condage, release the people of the Southern States from their enforced disloyalty, and give them again the blessings of self-gov ernment within the Union and under the protecting Constitution and Flag of the United States. It will enable our own government to exchange the weap ons of war for the counsels of peat°, to relax the stern control over public action and public speech which a state of war renders unavoidable > , to restore our financial system, to dissolve all military courts, and hand over again to the civil tribunals of justice the pun ishment of crime and the preservation of pub lic order, and to restore their fireides and their homes, clbthed with honors acid to be held in everlasting remembrance, that great army of our citizen soldiers who have bared their breasts against armed rebellion, and won the imperishable renown of saving the glorious Union, for which their fathers and their brothers died. • Signed by the Committee, H J Raymond, Chair-H W Hoffman, lid roan, N Y S H Boyd, Mo -- Samuel F Hersey, Me G B Seater, 0 John B Clarke, N D Defrees, Ind Abm Mr Gardner, Vt. _Burton C Cook, 11l William Clailit,Ktss- -Marsh Giddings, , ,MlA Thomas G Tnrntr,. - RI S Judd:WlS . ' N D Sperry, Ct D B WSW. kivia Morena L Ward; NJ AW.Qampbell,W Va 4:4": *Wir -7 4 - CuTreegfMatli, - 1Wri:";-: NitikßUit)itire,. Del 3 . "/Pegzittba, Dia Of CV_ 339 EdeurapQ. FROM ATLANTA. A Ten Days' Truce for the Removal of Ditinus of the City, The Rebel Commander Opposes their Removal. ORDER FROM THE MAYOR General Sherman's Order NOTHING NEW FROM FT. MORGAN Rebel Conscription or Negroes. The 'Election of Louisiana. A •UNION Louis - unix, Sept. 14. The Journal's special correspondent, under date of Atlanta, Sept. 10th, contains a con gratulatory order or Gen. Sherman, recount ing his victories, and an agreement between Sherman and Hood for a ten dsys' truce at Rough and Ready; on the Macon railroad, and the country around, it enclosed by a circle of two miles radius, for ten days from Sept. 12, to enable the people of Atlanta to remove to points south. Gen. Hood to Gen. Sherman, under date of the 9th, says: "Permit me to say the unprecedented mea sure y u propose transcends in studied and ingenious cruelty, all the acts ever before brought to my attention in this dark history of war. In the name of God and humanity, I protest, believing that you are expelling from their homes and firesides, wives and children of a brave people.'! Gen. Hood, in a letter to James Calhoun, Mayor of Atlanta, says: "I shall do all in my power to mitigate the terribl hardships and misery that must be brought upon your people by the extraordinary order of the fed eral commander." The letter from General Sherm an to Gen. Hood was not obtainable, but the following news from a notice issued by the Mayor, by permission of. Gen. Sherman, will give an idea thereof: All citizens are required to leave Atlanta, and proceed either South or Nort•. The Government will furnish transportation Sonth as far as Rough and Ready, and North as far as Chattanooga. All citizens may take their moveable pro perty with them, and transportation will be furnished to all moveables. Negroes who wish to do so, may go with their masters, and all other male negroes will be put in Govern ment employ, and the women and elii.dren sent out of the lines. Shernian's order of the 4th inst., com mences thus: "The city of Atlanta being ex clusively for warlike purposes, will at once be vacated by all except the armies of the United and such civilian employees as may be retain ed by the proper departments of the Govern ment." and concludes as follows: "At the proper time just arrangements will be made for the supply to the troops of all articles they may need, over and and above clothing, provisions, etc., furnished by the government, and on no pretence what ever will traders, manufacturers or sutlers be allowed to settle within the limits of its for- tified places, and if they manage to come in in spite of this notice, the quartermaster will seize their stores and appropriate them to the use of the troops, and deliver the parties, or the unauthorized persons, who thus place their individual interests above that of the United States, in the hands of some provost marshal, to be plit to labor on,the fort;or be conscript ed into one of the regiments and batteries already in service. The same general princi ples will apply to all military posts south of Chattanooga." Some rebel cavalry had been seen on Fish river. A. Fort Morgan letter of Sept. 3d, s tys there is nothing new there. The rebels in Alabama are conscripting all the negroes for service in their army. The election in Louisiana drew out 11,000 votes, and •had gone favorably to the Union ticket. Army of the Potomac Continued Picket Firing. PETERSBURG SHELLED Lee Allows the Yankees 14 Days to Leave Casualties in the 3d Division of the 2d Corps. FLEADOIAMTERS Altba OF THE POTOMAC, September 13. Picket and artillery firing have been kept up very briskly since Saturday, the ire of the rebels not seeming to have boiled off yet at being surprised and losing so many prisoners. The result is that some five or six men a day are brought into the hospital, the majority badly wounded, an some few have'died. Yesterday a large mortar opened on the right, and threw a number of shells into Petersburg with great precision. A rebel sharpshooter this afternoon stole across the Appomatox, and watching his chance, shot one of our men out of a battery. He was soon discovered, and as he was making his way back across the river a well directed shot struck the boat tearing it to pieces, and it is supposed killing the occupant. Dispatches report that Lee announced to his troop on Sunday, that he would give the Yankees fourteen days to get away from here, but he did not say what he would do if we refused to leave. These men also represent matters to be in a 134 way over there. They have been living on short rations and those of a poor quality. The first thing they ask on reaching pur camps is, "Where are we to get rations ? We were just going to draw, when we left." Among the casualties in the 'Third Brigade, Second Corps, since Sunday, by picket firing, are Lieut George Essler, nth Pa, killed; Lieut Benjamin F Moorhouse, 11th N J, face; Lieut Joseph S Hobbs, 17th Me, back; Sergt P Goldry, 11th Mass, killed. • The Maine Election. AIIEFIiSTA, Me., Sept. 14. Returns from 156 towns give Cony a ma jority of 11,918. If the vote in the remain der of the State is equal in proportion; Co'ny's majority will reach 20,000. , • , -Avousre, Eiept.,ls. Official returns- from 275 eities,%-towim f a il utoieus, show a,total vote of 86,002;:T1ie majority for OOrty.-aovernor, is 1b. , ;$18: The total voff Itttc.f be ',heard from will amount to al*r424;l4l;:ed - will in - Crease Cony's ma- jority to nearly 18,000, or about the Same as last year. The total vote of the State will be nearly ten thousand less this year than last. Returns from 119 Representative districts show the election of 102 Union, and 17 Demo cratic Representatives to the Legislature. The Senate is unanimously Union, every county in the State having been Carried by the Union party. From New Orleans. NASHVILLE BLOWN OUT OF DOG RIVER NEW Yoax, Sept. 15 The steamer Creole, from New Orleans on the 7th, arrived at this point. Amongst her passengers is the Hon. A. C. Hills. The Metacomet had succeeded in blowing the Nashville out of the water at Dog river. From the Shenandoah--The Mil itary Situation Still Un changed. BiLTIMC/RE, Wednesday, Sept. 14. A special correspondence of the Baltimore American, dated Headquarters in the Field, Tuesday, September, 13, says ; "The military situation still remains unchanged; but I am of the opinion that there will shortly be a re sumption of military operations. General Averill has re-occupied Martinsburg, and the working parties engaged in repairing the Balti more and Ohio Railroad have resumed work. A train of cars, loaded with forage, was sent from Harper's Ferry, yesterday, to a point within five miles of Martinsburg. It is con fidently expected that the road will be opened to Cumberland next Friday. Massachusetts Republican State Convention. WORCESTER, Mass, Sept. 14 The Republican State Convention will meet at this place to-morrow. There is no doubt that Governor Andrew will be 'unanimously nominated for re-election. Hon. A. H. Bul lock and Hon. Edward Everett are promi nently named as Electors at large. DIED. On the 13th inst., Mrs. hfAav WESTER, aged 68 years. The funeral will take pltiee from the residence of her son-in-I iw, Mr. Charles Ureih, In Fourth greet, above Walnut, on Frilay afternoon al 2 o'clock, and which the n latices and friends of the famity are respectfully invited to attend. ADVE KT IS EAI EN 'E&. NOTICE. A LL PERS ON S indebted to the under- L 1 signed, will please tali on H. S Bower, Alderman of vie Fifth ward, Harrisburg, and make settlement, as I have placed my accounts in his hands for collection. sepls4l2awt I-AAC F. tTROH. NoTice. BY the death of 'MICHAEL BURKE, on the lath day of August last, the co•partnership of Burke & Eberly was dss /ved All persona Ind bted to said arm are notified to make tram di ite payment, and those having claims or demands to present them properly autlL.nucated to CHRISTIAN EBERLY, Sury vi g partner, or. to his Attorney, W. T BISHOP. Sept. 14. '64 —{ , epls-dlwl Hard burg. Pa. When will Wonders Cease 1 HE GREAT REMEDY OF THE WORLD! DR. McBRIDE'S KING OF PAIN WILL cure any ache or pain in from 'one to sixty minute., It acts like magic upon the absorbant and glandular systems, reducing swellings and r:gula , ing the secretions and excretions.. It is of a diffusive ' penetr sting nature, molts its influence from the periphery to the centre of the nor•mus erg mism, thenro by reflex action it.; power is felt throughout the en ire system restoring the circa- Mug thuds and checiting•disease with invincible strength. THE SING OF PAIN IS INFALLIBLE! No matter what the Mill, apply the medicine and you will find inu , nt is an internal and external cure THE KING OF PAIN Cures aluto.A instantaneously, Peadache, Earache, Neu ralgia, Deafness, Sore Throat, Colds, Bronchial Affections, Asthma, Dyspcsia, Diarrhma, Dysootory or Bloody Fins, liver Complaint, Kidney Disease, Diseases of the Bladder and Genital Grean3, Cramp, Cholic and all spasmodic pains, Fever and Ague, Burn•, Bruises, Cuts, Sprains and wounds of every description. ft proves itself the mastery, as the teslinmny of thousands prove its meritorious worth. Sold, wholesale and retail, by S. A. KETI.4HEL, druggists, Sole Agent; 118 hfarket street, Harrisburg. SOLDIERS READ! The following letter from a soldier, in reference to the efficacy and powerful restorative qualititics of DR. Mc- BRIDE'S KING OF PAIN, speaks for itself : Newritcs, CCMBERLLND C(IIIXTY, ) Sept. 14, 1804. Messrs. S. A. Kunkel & Beo., druggists, Harrisburg, Pa. : GENTS would inform you that I received the bottles of Ideftride's Great Pain Killer, and enclosed please find five dollars more. for which send me five bottles addition. al to-morrow. I leave for camp to-morrow. Let me know whether you can supply me with it in the army. I am in Company H, 202 d Degiment P. V. I have been in very bad health for upwards of four years, and two of the one-dollar bottles have cured me completely, apd have made me feel like a man. Besides I have oared a num ber of my comrades of various disoases incident to camp fire, and can recommend it to he the best medicine the soldier aan provide for himself. Yours respectfully; JOS. E. WRITE. oar All orders from tt distance I.romptly attended to by S. A. KUNKEL & BRO. A HOME CERTIFICATE. The following orrtificate is from a well-known dozen of Harrisburg : ELSIIRLSBUZG, Aug. 30, 1864. To VIE PUBLIC :-It gives me great pleasure to recom mend to the public the medicine prepared by DR. J. J. ,pIoBRIDE, which he calls the " KING OF PAM." I was Induced to use it as am external remedy for a bruise, which k relieved immediately, and subsequently cured entirely. Its success indticed me to use it Internally for Markel, with which I was afflicted in a chronic form for nearly eighteen months, anu to such an extent that my kidneys were seriously deranged The medicine has cured me, and certainly that is saying a great real in its favor, when I reflect how many other remedies I tried without experi encing anything but temporary relief. For my part, I shall alwsys keep a supply of it in my house, believing as I do that it is a most invaluable family memcine. The unexampled sale of this medicine proves it to be the most wonderful discovery of the age in the medical art. The undersigned are the sole agents for the State, and will supply it wholesale and retail. 6. a. KINKEL & BRO., Druggists, septfi] 118 ilars.et street, Harrisburg. Public Sale. On Tuesdni SPpt.mber 27th, 1864, THE subscriber will sell on the premiss, in Upper Allen township. Cumberlaud county, Pa , on tits road leading from M hanicsburg to Dil aburg one and a half miles southwest of the former place, the iollow iug valuable real estat : No. I—A tract of land, well known as the Reserve Farm, col:gaining 77 acr,s, all in a high slate of cultivation, having recently been limed r and nnder good fencing. The improvements consist of a largo TWO-STORY BRICK HOUSE, With kitchen and *ash-boos e, large Bank•barn, of modern style, and all necessary outouildings. The buildings are all nearly new, having been built within a few }ears. There it a well of excellent water, and two cisterns—one at the barn and one at the Rouse. There is also a splen did young Apple I irohard, in flue be 4r1114 Ondit.o y with peaches, peas, phi= and grapes, in great variety, on the premises. This is in every respect a superior property, and Its nearness to Mechanicsburg, with all its other facilities. renders It one of tho most desidablo homes.hi Cumberland Va ley. No. 2—A tract, of linee-stoue land, tutoining the above, containing 24 =ea. or excellent quality, and under good fonc.ng. The improvements are a TWO-STORY FRAME HOUSE, With kitchen, Wash-house, Bank-barn, and other neces sary outbui.dings, all newly erected. This prim ty is sul.able for a retinal farmer, who althea the conveniences of a farm on a small comp:Asa. Its nearness to the above 77 acres, will enable the owner• to - nffer it as a separate home, or an sun'a vent of 101 if it is found to suit the DurghaFer. It will tie Wined wa. Persona desiring to %late the property previeue to the sale, will please call on 'the underelve redding chanbmburg. gale to ,_""Z____ T ilett,_4 3 at o'clock f . . 14 , when tenon Will be mute aumurrn P. R. LONG. 0 .9*/ 21 • NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. OFFICE Camp CONE:MEANT SUBSISTE"YrE, • • DEreamorr EUSQ.Chahan, RERRISHERG, Pa., September 10th, 166 i. SEALED PROPOSALS, in duplicate, are re eventfully invited by the undersigned, until TUES. DAY, SEPT. 20th, 1864. for famishing the United Stott ; Subsistence Department, delivered in Harrisburg, Pa ' with Fresh Beef, of a good and. marketable quality in pro portions of fore and hind quarters meat, (neck, shark, and kidney tallow to be excluded,) in such quantities may be required, and on such days as shall be designated at this office, commencing eeptember .21. 1864, fgr a perloa of six months. The ability of the bidder to fulfill the agreement mu be guaranteed by two reeponsibl is persons, whose gigu e . tures must be appended to the guarantee. In case of failure, the United Slates reserves the right of purchase elsewhere, to make up the deficiency, charging the ad. vance paid over the contract price to the party failing to deliver. Bids must be legible, the numbers written as well expressed by tlgnres ; and no Member of Congress, office. or agent of the Government service, shall be admitted to any share therein, or to any benefit which may ar:ia therefrom. Blank forms for proposals. containing the form of guarantee, may be had on application at ts i, office. • • - - Proposals must be accompanied by a pricte.tcom this advertisement, be endorsed, "Proposals for Frosi Beef," and directed to BROWNELL GRANGER. Capt. and Chief Commissary Subsistence, sepl3-st] Department of the Susquthanna. FOR SALE. ABAROUCHE and a pair of HORSES al - id HARNESS. Apply at . HRS. BURKE'S. sepl4-3tl Walnut str:eZ N‘r SENACHER, PIANIST! • (From the Conservatorinms of Stutprd and the honor of announcing to the citizens of Harrig.nig and vicinity that he will take pupils on the Paco Forte cc reasonable terms. Orders left (for the present) at 31r. WARD'S EUE-20 STORE, Third street, A - 111 receive prempt attention. N. B.—Prof S. has taught successfully . in Baltimoreans at Lutherville (Maryland) Seminary, and asks but a its' of his ability. (seal4-d3t* TORE-ROOM and CELLAR, in Market 10 Square. now occupied as a dry-von is sore by dup.:. tus Locoman . ro , seion given on the lit or November next. Esopl3-d3tel J. HOUSER. Artillery Hors Wanted. AZSATANT QUARTEP.ILLSTEK); OFFICE', IT S. A.,1 HARB.I2BMIG, PB:SNA UNTIL farther orders, one hundred and seventy-tive (175) dollars per bead will be pa: for Artillery I - lorses, • delivered at the Government stables at Harrisburg, Pa Pay Meat made on delivery or (6, six ho , ses or over. E. C. RE.ECIIENBa H. Capt. and Asq't Qr. Mr. sepl3-dtf Fall and Winter Trade! CIAO S, *:„, CIRCULARS' CEO A.K_S .„ B Ft OCHE .1, AM) 2.IOURNING SH WLS BALMORALS AND SCARFS ! FU $. 14 ! 'UT., teit The Largest and best selected stock In this city at the New Cloak Store, IN D. W. GROSS' NEW BLOCK, HARRISBURG, PA. sep2-tf MEDICAL DEPARTMENT OF Tat lINXVERSITY OF MARYLAND. The FIFTY-SEVENTTFI SESSION' OF THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE in the Co - trErtsrrr or Manyworn will com mence on ANNDAY, the 17th of Ocfrgyr, 18E1, and end the Ist of Mare ~ 1,65. A MIS. COURSE OF LECTURES WILL BE GIVEN ON ALL TRI lIRANCRES AS FOLLOWS : an Surgery—ty Prot. N. IL Smith. On chemistry and harmacy—By Prof. Wm. E. A. Akin. On Obstetric's and Diseases of ironva and Children—By Prof .G W. Miltenberger. On Principies and Practice of Medicine, and Maim , Medicine and dygiene—By Prof. Richard McSherry. On Anatomy and Physiology—By Prof. Christoph, Johnston. On Malaria Medics and TherapcutiN—By Prof. Sgoal. C Chew. Practiced Anatomy will be taught by James H. Bur' M. D., DeMonstrator. During ttio e,ontinumee of the war, Mai Cary Saz rP . and Military Bygiene will be introduced as a regalia ran of the course. Matriculates of the School have access at all times to the wards of the Baltimore Infirmary, where they can witness the performance of all the principal operations 111 Surgery, and can observe the numerous forms of (issue under treatment. The Infirmary is a spacious hosbiral attached to the Medical School, and it is open to the Stu dents daily throughoutthe entire year. without any adds tional charge. The fees for the full Course. of Lecturos:ase SSO fa. Matriculation, $5 ; and for Practical Anatomr, $lO. GEORGE W. SILLTUNSERGER, 3i sepfi-doaw4t AUDITOR'S NOTICE. In the matter of the settlement of Peter Reed, Jr., Ail ministrator, &c., Peter Reed, Senior, late of SUE:O3 banns township Dauphin county, deceased, the Orplaas Court of said county hes appointed the subscriber Audit Or, to make distribution of the estite of said deceased and among his beirg and. cre :itors ; and the Auditor tae appointed MONDA Y,, at. 10th day of October next, at office in Ilarrbiburg, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, for the purpose of making said distribution, 'ghee and where all persons Interested aro notified to mcl , e' known their claims. JNO. ROBERTS, Aud;Lor. September 7, 1504.-1 - sepB-deaw4ie AUDITOR'S NOTICE. _ . In the matter of the settlement of John Lent, .ir a :. ministrator, .ke . , of John Lentz, Sr., late of Upper Pa . ....L 0 a township, Dauphin county, deceas al the Orphans' coati of said county has appointed the Eubacriber Auditor, tt , make distribution of the estate of sa.d deceased to an among his heirs and credltois ; and the Auditor his ap pointed MONDAY, the 17th day of October next, at hi. office In Harrisburg, at ten o'c in the fo•enoon of sal day, 'or the purpose of making said distribution, when and where all persons intereited are n oilled to make know. tl eir claims. J.No. ROBERTS, ALditor. September 7, 184 1.--(sepB-do iw4w DANIEL E. WILT QUARTERMASTER GENERAL'S OF FICE, FIRST DIVISION, WASHINGTON CITY, September2,lB64.f Will be sold at ?U6llO Auction w the highest Wader : at the tune and places named below, viz : You, Pa., Thursday, Sept. 15 1864. Altoona, Pa., Thursday, Sept. 22. 1864. Lebanon, Pa., Thursday, Sept. 29, 1864. TWO HUNDRED CAVALRY HORSES Al EACH PLACE. These Horses have been condemned as li ttnfit for the cavalry service of the army. For road and farm purposes many good bargains be had. Horses sold singly. Txams—Cash, in Ignited States currency. JAMES d. Ems, Colonel First thvisinn, Quartermaster Ge. eral's Office. seps•tee2B] PROVOST MARSHAL'S OFFICE, 14TIE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA, naioussuito, September 3, 181114 The following notice is published for the information ‘N all interested : TO VOLUNTEERS. Volunteers will be accoPied and counted on thef d of the present call, up to the last practical moment- the drafted men are accep ed and sent to the rn ndezveor Townships a..d sub-districts which have not filled 15 e' r quotas a e urged to do so at once. All time that can possibly be given, will be allewe 4 ' but the draft will commence as soon atter the sth of FA' tember as practicable. Crafts will be given., and Government bounty paid n volunteers until further orders, By order of Capt. RICHARD L DODGE, A. A. p. M. General IVILLLIM SCHEFFLRic Captain and A A A General- JOHN KAY CLEMENT , Captain and Provost Marshal 14th District of H 6 uns 'arrisburg, August 31, 1884. seta ECONOMY MESS SHAD.—We received s fresh Let this itiorniag, at SKE PURE SWEET OMER reoewed tcHlsy BOYER 4 =PER'S_ Proposals. Musical Notice. FOR. RENT N3EW CDE'I..I%II - TbiG, FOR