llIGnT OR WUOAG. WUIS HIGHT, TO BE KEPT BIGHT, VBSK WKOSG, TO BE PUT BIGHT. EBEXSCURG: THURSDAy;:n:t::::nnr::m::AUGUST 6 Day of National TlianKsgl vlug. President Lincoln has just issued the fol lowing proclamation, rcquestitg that Thurs dav. Auerust 6th. be set apart as a day of National Thanksgiving : It has pleased Al mighty God to hearken to the supplications and prayers of an afflicted people, and to vouchsafe to the army and the navy of the United States, ou the lana and on the sea victories so signal and so effective as to fur nish reasonable grounds for augmented con- - fidence that the union of these btates will be maintained, their constitution preserved and , their peace and prosperity permanently pre served. But these victories have beeaaccord- ed not without sacrifice of life, limb and lib erty incurred by brave, patriotic. and loyal - citizens. Domestic affliction in every part of tbt country follows in the train of these fearful bereavements. It is meet and right to recognize and confess the presence of the Almighty Father, and the power of Ilia hand equally in these triumphs and these sorrows Now, therefore, be it known, that I do set apart THURSDAY, the sixth day of AUGUST next, to be observed as a day for .national Thanksgiving, praise and prayer, and I invite the people of the United States to assemble on that occasion in their customary places of worship, and in the forms approved by their own conscience, render the homage due to the Divine Majesty for the wonderful things lie has done in the nation's behalf, and in Toke the influence of His Holy bpint to subdue the anger which has produced and so long sustained a needless and cruel rebellion : to change the hearts of the insurgents, to guide the counsels of the government with wisdom adequate to so great a, national emergency, and to visit with lender care, and consolation throughout the length and breadth of our land all those who through the vicis situdes of inarches, voyages, battles and sieges, have been brought to suffer in mmd, body or estate and family, to lead the whole nation through paths of repentance and submission to the Divine Will back to the perfect enjoyment of Union and fraternal peace. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the City of Washing ton, this 15th day of July, in the year of our Jjord one thousand eight hundred and sixty three, and of the independence of the United States of America the eigbty-eighta. Abraham Lincoln. By the President : William H. Siward, Sec'y of State. The Great Union speech of lion. Alexander If. Stephens, Vice- President of the Southern Confederacy. There are many well-meaning men in the party called "Democrats," who, through party spirit Lave allowed them pelves to be committed in Javor of the Peace-and-Secession Doctrine of the men whom they have permitted to become their ' leaders." To such men we recommend a careful perusal of the following extract from a speech made by Altx. II. Stephens, before a convention of the people of Georgia, called to con aider the propriety of Secession. He showed clearly that the South had no juct cause of complaint, and predicted what would be the consequences of the terrible act. Mr. Stephens has since yielded to the spirit of party, against which he so long ' struggled, but his de fection does not disprove his own argu ments, the truth of which every day is demonstrating by the painful logic of fact. Mb Stephens said ; ' Thia step once taken could never be recalled ; and all the baleful and wither ing consequences that must follow (as they would see) will rest on the conven tion for all coming time. When we and our posterity shall see our lovely South desolated by the demon of war, which thia act of yours will inevitably invite and call forth; when our green fields of wa ving harvests shall be trodden down by the murderous soldiery and fiery car of war sweeping over our land ; our temples of justice laid in ashes; all the horrors and desolation of war tipon us, who but this convention will be held responsible for it? and who but hrnr who shall have given his vote for this un-wise and ill timed measure, as I honestly think and believe, shall be held to-strict account for this suicidal act by the present generation and probably cursed and execrated by posterity for all coming time, for the wide and desolating ruin that will inevitably follow thlsact you now propose to perpe trate. Pause, I entreat you, and consider for a moment what reasons you can give that will even satisfy yourself in. ca!mer mo ments1 what reason you can give to your fioIIaw-Eufferers in the calamity that it wili bring upon us. What reasons can you- givo to the nations of the earth to justify it 2 They will be the calm and deliberate judges in the case ; and to what caufle or one overt act can you namo or point on which to rest the plea of jus tification ? What right has the North assniled What blerest-of the South has been invaded.? What justice . has been : deiULd I and irh.l claim foundtd' cn jus tice and right has been withheld ?' Can either of you to-day name one govern mental act of wrong deliberately and tmrnoselv done bv the Government of Washington of whiah the South has a right to complain ? -I challenge the an swer. ... "' While, on the other hand, let me show the facts, (and believe me, gentlemen, I am not nere tne advocate oi me jortn, but I am here the friend, the firm friend and lover of the South and her institu tions, and for this reason I speak thus plainly and faithfully for yours, mine, and every other man's interest, the words "of truth and soberness,) of which, I wish you to judge, and I will only state facts which are clear and undeniable, and which are records authentic in the history of our country. Wrhen we of the South demanded the slave trade, or the impor tation of Africans for the cultivation of our lands, did they not yield the right for twenty years ? Wken we asked a three-fifths represen tation in Congress for our slaves, was it not granted ? When we asked and de manded the return of any fugitive from justice, or the recovery of thoso persons owing oath or allegiance, was it not in corporated in the Constitution, and again ratified annd strengthened in the fugi tive Slave Law of 1850 ? But do you reply that in many instances they have violated this compact, and have not been faithful to their engagements? As in dividuals and local communities they have done eo j but not by the sanction of Government, for that ha3 always been true to Southern interests. Again, gen tlemen, look at another fact. When wc have asked that more territory should be added, that we might spread the institu tion of slavery, have they not yielded to our demands in giving us Louisiana, Flor ida and Texas, out of which four States have been carved, and ample territory for four more to be added in due time, if you, by this unwise and impolitic act, do not destroy this hope, and perhaps, by it lose it all, and have your last slave wrenched from you by stern military rule, as South America and Mexico were, or by the vindictive decree of a universal emancipation which may reasonably be expected to follow. But again, gentlemen, what havewe to gain by this proposed change of our relation to the General Government? We have always had the control of it, and can yet, if we remain in it, and are united as we have been. We have had a major ity of the Presidents choseu from the South, as well as the control and man agement of most of those chosen from the North. We have had sixty years of Southern Presidents to their twenty-four, thus controlling the "Executive Depart ment. So of the Judges of the Supreme Court we have had eighteen from the South and but eleven from the North ; although nearly four-fifths of the busi ness has arisen in the free States, yet a majority of the Court have always been from the South. This we have required so as to guard against any interpretation of the Constitution unfavorable to us. In like manner we have been equally watchful to guard cur interests ia the legislative branch of Government. -Inchosing tbe presiding Presidents (jro tern.) of the Senate, wo have had twenty-four to their eleven. Speakers of the House we have had twenty-three, and they twelve. While the majority of the Representatives, from their greater popu lation, have always been from the North, yet we have so general! secured the Speaker, because he, to a great extent, shapes and controls the legislation of the country. Nor have we had less control in every other department of the General Government. Attorney Generals we have had fourteen, while the North had but five. Foreign ministers wo have bad eighty -six, and they but fifty-four. While three-fourths of the business which demands diplomatic agents abroad " is clearly from the free States, from their greater commercial interests,- yet we have had the principal embassies, so as to se cure the world's markets for our cotton, tobacco and sugar, on the best possible terms: We have had a vast majority of the higher officers of both army and navy, while a large proportion of the soldiers and sailors were drawn from the North. Equally so of clerks, auditors and comptrollers filling the Executive Department ; the record shows that for the last fifty years, of three thousand thus employed, we had more than wo-thirds of the same, while we have but one-third of the white population of the republic. Again, look at another item, and one, be assured in wnich we have a great and vital interest; U is that of revenue or means of supporting Government. From j official documents we learn that a fraction over three-tourths of the revenue collec ted for the support of Government has uniformly been raised from the North. Pause now, while you can, gentlemen, and contemplate carefully and candidly these important items. Leaving out of view, for the present. the countless millions of dollars you must expend in war with the North j with tens of thousands of your sons and brothers slain in battlo and offered up as sacrifices upon the altar of your ambition aud for what, we ask again ? Is it for the over throw of the American Government, es tablished by our common ancestry, cemen ted and built up by their sweat and blood and founded on the broad principles of right, justice and humanity And as sueh, I must declare here, as I have often done before, and which has been repeated by the greatest and wisest statesmen and patriots in mis ana pmer lana, mat u is the best and freest Government, the most equal in its rights, the most just in its decisions, the most lenient in its measures, and the most inspiring in its principles to elevate the race of men, that the sua of Heaven'ever shone upon. Now, for you to attempt to overthrow such a Government as this, under which we have lived for more than three quar ters of a century in which we have gained our wealth, our standing as a na tion, our domestic safety while the ele ments of peril are around us, with peace and tranquility, accompanied with nn bouoied prosperity and rights unassailed is the height of madness, folly and wickedness, to which I can neither lend my sanction or my vote. The above, saysthe Pittsburg Chronicle, is a correct copy'of the celebrated speech of Hon. A. H. Stephens, of Georgia, made in his own State before the war began. Our readers will remember that speech. It was gladly published all over the loyal States as an earnest, eloquent, and logical argument against tho crime and madness of secession, which had possessed and infatuated the Southern heart. It was the calm voice of reason speaking out of the wild whirl-wind of blind passion then sweeping over the Cotton States. The above curt, but emphatic speech, made by the. ablest statesman in the South, and now Vice President of the Confederacy, will ever stand as a protest and unanswerable argument against the crime and the folly of the present wicked rebellion. When traitors and demagogues endeavor to de lude the honest mass of the people into the belief that the war was none of the South's getting. When timid or sympa thizing reasoners whisper "peace, peace, when there i3 no peace," it would be well for all to carry in their memories the fore going deliberate remark of a wise and pro dent statesman, who afterwards was bribed to stifle his conscience ; prostitute his pa triotism, and acquiesce in a most hellish plot by the gift of a high place. Did any thing happen after the delivery of this speech, which made secession and the civil war which Stephens predicted would be its inevitable consequence, less a crime ? Not at all. Our Government was kind, clement, forgiving and forbearing, even to weakness. When the rebels were breathing forth vengeance, organizing armies, occupying United States forts, lynching and expelling Northern citizens, and stealing Government property of all kinds, Government was still mild, patient, forgetful, and never lost faith in the belief that the Southern storm was too fitful and violent to last long, and that our "erring sisters" would awake to see their folly and wickedness. 'Twas the bombardment of Fort Sumter and the demoniac laugh at its capture which rang round the tabic at Montgom ery, where sat the " architects of ruin' that first awakened the loyal North to a realization of what was really intended by the rebellion then inaugurated. When any person jgrows tender and forgiving to the rebels, let him ponder over what fol lowed that overt act 6f the rebel junta. How North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, and other State3, were juggled out of the Union in spite of heavy popular majorities against secession j how every artful means were taken by the managers of the rebel lion to inflame and mislead public opinon ; what tremendous pressure was brougbt to bear by the wire pullers to get Virginia with them ; the secret expeditions which were sent to Harper's Ferry and Norfolk, after, mob -intimidated legislators were sworn to secrecy, and then think of all which has followed, and which was pre dicted from the first, and be less than just if you can. The -more this gigantic rebellion is studied, from its very first inception, through all its horrid details, down to its present satisfactory condition, the more is every loyal man startled and shocked at the stupendous fraud, hate, malice and devilish ingenuity with which, it is filled, and the more should he be determined that it must be so completely crushed that nothing like it shall evereither North, South, East or West raise its horrid head again. If its suppression required thirty more years, ten billions more of dollars, and a million more of men, the eternal overthrow of thia slaveholder's rebellion is richly worth all that could bo sacrificed for it. Bgk.A letter from a gentleman in Salem, Indiana, says : 'It would do you or any one good to hear the copperheads (that used to be) curse the secesh. They have got their eyes opened wide. One man told them that they ought not to take his horse, for he was their friend, had always .stood up for them, &c. One of the rebs struck him on the head with his gun and knocked him off his horse, and told him that he didn't come to talk politics, but he wanted his horse. They cot it. W--re--U Union men now, getuer with the womtn ahd children. Ohio and Pennsylvania. The first rebel campaign in these States resulted very disastrously, to the armies which invaded both, to desolate their homes, carry off their property, and tem porarily to destroy their resources. In Pennsylvania, Lee was thwarted in all his plans. He was permitted to penetrate the very heart of one of the richest vallies of the State, and when he most believed that his progress would be a triumphal march over the entire commonwealth, he was met, whipped, humiliated and hurled back upon the dreary shores of the Poto mac with a force which has certainly im pressed him with new ideas of celerity and dispatch. In Ohio, the cut throat and robber, John Morgan, was even more summarily dealt with by the loyalists. His army was not only beaten, but he himself was captured and now occupies a criminal's cell in the Ohio Penitentiary. In ono sense, Morgan is the first rebel allowed to live and still considered as re ceiving his just due ; and if there was a penitentiary sufficiently large it would be an admirable plan to consign all the rebels to its cells to enjoy the reward of hard labor and solitary confinement for the rc mainder of their miserable lives. . Siuce the first rebel campaigns in Ohio and Pennsylvania resulted so disastrously to the South, we may safely venture the anticipation that the campaign of the rebel sympathisers in the same States will have a similar result. In Ohio these sympathisers are headed by a genuine rebel. Vallandigham is as ardent a trai tor as Jeff Davis. ITc has done as much as any man whose hands are unstained with blood, to destroy the Union and dis place the legal authority of the Govern ment. Without John Morgan's courage to devastate the fields and desolate the free homes of Ohio, Vallandigham is still as sincere in his desire for the tri umph of treason. His soul is in the work of treason, and that is as much as any coward can cive to a bad cause. But the loyal men of Ohio will deal with Vallandigham as they did with John Mor gan ; and while Morgan awaits his sen tence in the Ohio Penitentiary, Vallan digham will take his trial before the people of that State. We do rot doubt the result. Neither do wc question the result in Pennsylvania. Here wo beat the rebels in an armed contest, such as the world never before beheld. Here we are about to wage an unarmed contest of equal magnitude. Lee came boldly to destroy freedom. Woodward is secretly set up insidiously to advance and defend the cause of slavery, which is of itself the essence and the animus of treason. Does any man doubt the result of the campaign against the treason syrapathi zers in Pennsylvania after that which followed the traitors ? Does any man doubt that, after the true " men of the Commonwealth contributed to the defeat and overthrow of Lee, the same bravery, the same fortitade will not be invoked to overthrow and humiliate Woodward ? He who doubts the ease in one result after having beheld it in another, bears no allegiance to his government, and is in sympathy with the cause of treason. The country will watch with anxious t .1? il r.i . jeeiing ine progress or tne campaign in Ohio and Pennsylvania, against the rebel sympathisers. As the first was a victory over the rebels, so, with the help of the truth, we feel that the other also will ter minate. It is at least worth struggling lor. .Let loyal men remember this fact and g& to work. Rebel Barbarities in Tennessee.- The Nashville Union of the 22d inst narrates the following : "Mr. Bell living eighteen miles from Clarksville, was rob bed one night last week of one thousand dollars by a party of Confederate soldiers. Learning that he had two thousand dollars in gold in addition, they drasced him from his house into the wcods, and bending a small sapling, they fastened a rope round his neck and tied the other end to the bending sapling, then let the young tree upwards and dandle the victim, writhing in pain, between heaven and earth. After a few moments, hanging, they let him down again, and asked him if he would tell where the gold was secreted. He answered as before, that he could Dot, as he had never had it. They pretended to uouds nis earnest assertions, and hung him no less than seven times. When he was let down the last thne ho was so near dead that the devils thought longer torture would be useless, and taking the one tnousand dollars left him to his fate. He was found in a helpless and almost dvin J . i . .. - - f o conumon, ana carried to the house by his friends. His recovery is thought to be very aouDtiui. A German Movement in Ohio. The German Democratic organ at Cleve land has taken the name of Vallandigham from its columns and raised that of John Broui;h for governor. The editor explanation of his course : "As will be no ticed by our readers, we put, to-day at the head of our naner the name nf Mr iv. for Governor. This is nohaatv sfcen. .t we have concluded, after mature. onnA. eration and consultation with Democratic friends, to lay aside for the present party differences, and by the ut most of our influence to aid to victory the panj mat, a&vocaies tne suppression of the rebellion. The disgraceful which a few davs a"ro occurred in Wn York city proves that it requires the uni ted efforts of all good citizens, without regara 10 party, to sustain the public peace and order, it is most certainly tne ,it. of every one who cares for the welfare of our country to put aside consideration to Bpport our; constitutional Government:" AUDITOR'S NOTICE. The undersigned Auditor, appointed by tb Orphan's Court of Cambria county, to distribute the money in the hands of William Kittell, Esq., Adm'r., of Anthony Litzinger, dee'd., hereby gives notice that he will attend to tbe duties of said appointment, at his office in Ebensburg, on TUESDAY, be 18th day of AUGUST next, at one o'clock, P. M., when and where all persons interested may attend. J. E. SCANLAN, Auditor. Ebensburg, July 16, 1863-3. LIST OF LETTERS Remaining in the Post Office, Ebens bug, Pa., tip to July 1st, 1863 : Maria Arthur, 3, Mrs L S Ames, II II Adams, Andrew Anderson, J G Attart, . George M Brown, Uriah Brown, Phelix Boartroau, Richard Jones, Thos Jervise, Miss Maggie James, A E Kimble S, Aaron Murphy, J A Kenedy 2, Robert Reese, George Leslie, - Mrs M Morley, 2 Susannah D Brown, Miss Susannah Berkey .Francis M'Cord, Elizabeth Berkholder, Michael Noon, Miss Janey Calaghan, Patrick Normile, Mrs Jennie Davis 3, Anna Maria Davis, Catharine Donaphon, Mary Donegan 2, Thos E Davis 2, Thos Edwards, John Henry Evaas, Evan G Evans, Annie Evans, John E Evans, David L Evan, Lottie A Evans, Joseph Funk 2, Wm Farimer, Joseph First, Nimrod Foeller. Miss Marg Powell. Geo S Paul, A Pike, Gusten, Miss Ann J Reese, Miss Rachel Birk, Mrs Helen M Reed, Mrs Robt L Russell, C S Robison, Lucinda Riplet, Miss Mary J Roberts, Mrs Nancy Rodke, Dav Rowland, (Miller) Rev VTm E Roberts, Mrs Marg Shoemaker, imam feelders, Miss Catharine Floot, Mary Ester. Smith, Miss Mary A Griffith, Catharine Stoltz, John Garvey, Lewis Snyder, Mrs Elizabeth Glover, Mrs baner, John W Gillaepie, Gotfried Greip, Frederick Hart, Mary Jane Hughes, Joseph Heiner, L J Haines, Miss Kate Ivory, David Jones (Ve6t) Mrs Evan O Jonc, Evan "W Jones, Daniel A Jones, Wm A Jones, Miss Mary James. Frederick Sharp. Mrs Pamelia Snyder, Mrs Susan Smith, Thos Shumate, Thos J Scott, Wm E Smith, John Snyder, Miss Ann Trexler, Mrs Esther Kimble, Edwin Thomas, Maria J Taylor, Richard J Thomas, Thos W Williams, Jno D James, (North) Julia Ann Williams, Miss Mary Jervise, Hannah E Westover, Owen M Jones, William P William B, Mrs Emma Jones, Margaret White, Thos James, Mrs Mary Williams. 5,'Persons calling for the above letters will please Eay they are advertised. JOHN THOMPSON, P. M. O- "I S Z a s. g- o S" S ' 5 B p err" B o c- a o 5 - o co fa. 2 5 CO to 1 B re P a .f " tr1 Mi O tT o ts a- a t H er " ts ts o o r - cr O a " w 5 ? S o c 13 cr a r o 5 9 OH CD ' o 2 - O tS to - Z 5 2 cr -3 S3 o" O a w H H h CO El 2 K O DO 3 2 to B CD n O p CO g ?0i s &sr "T3 S3 CJ o c X n B M a p g O o a 53 r o E3 o 2.V 2. e 5 o no f ft :5 P . o D ua M p n 0 e B o c o p g. 5 3 CO CD A o p S" p St3fl O S3 O O !2HO H W H C co CO M CO P P o e rt - j o er co S, . a c cr a. p s: ST" cr n or as a ? "1 S3 - . 5S ft.." n 93 W 2. - C SB a - m o P p taM CD 2, 3 p o CU m CB -I IB 10 0 a e4 -i 5? o 0 50 5 HI s 0 u jr O P P 9 . O A Joint Resolution proposing certain Amendments to the Constitution. Be it resolved bv the SlenatA anrl Tfmr of Representatives of the Commonxcealth of T " t m . . Pennsylvania n general Assembly met, That the following amendments be proposed to the Constitution of the Commonwealth, in accordance with the tenth article thereof: There shall be an additional section to the third article of the Constitution, to bo desig nated as section four, as follows : Section 4. Whenever any of the qualified electors of this Commonwealth shall be in any actual military service, under a requisition from the President of the United States, or by the authority of this Commonwealth, such electors may exercise the right of suffrage in all elections by the citizens, under such regu lations as are, or shall be prescribed by law, as fully as if they were present at their usual place of election. There shall be two additional sections to tho eleventh article of the Constitution to be des ignated sections eight and nine, as follows: Section 8. No bill shall be passed by the Legislature, containing more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in the title, except appropriation bills. Section 9. 2?o bill shall be passed by the Legislature granting any powers or privileges, in any case, where the authority to grant such powers or privileges, has been or may hereaf ter be, conferred upon the courts of thia Commonwealth. JOHN CESSNA, Speaker cf the House cf Representative JOHN P. PENNEY, Speaker of the Senate. Office of Skc't of tbi Commohwialtb, "l Hakrisburg, July 1, 1863. ' f PENNSYLVANIA, SS : J jSjH&fv 1 do hereby certify that the fore- &1Ji$& BinJ? Rod annexed is a full, 3 troe and corct copy of the "feSsJwr original Joint Resolution of . "m the General Assembly entitled A Joint Resolution proposing certain Amend, ments to the Constitution." aa th mains on file In this office. In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand, and caused the seal of the Secre tary's office to be affixed, the day and year ivwie wruien. bul SL.IHSK. Secretary of Commonwealth. gNTIRELY VEGETABLE ! NOT ALCOHOLIC. A HIGHLY CONCENTRATED VEGETABLE EX TJBL ACT. A PURE TONIC. DR. HOOFLAND S PREPAREp BY DR. CM. JACKSON, Philadelphia, Pi. Will effectually cure LIVER COMPLALNT, DYSPEPSIA, JAUNDICE, CHRONIC OR NERVOUS DEBILITY, DIJ. EASES OF THE KIDNEYS, AND ALL DISEASES ARISING FROM A DIS ORDERED LIVER OR STOMACH, such as Constipa tion, Inward Piles, Fulness or Blood to the Head, Acidity of the Stomach Nausea, Heartburn, disgust for food, Fulness or Weight in the Stomach, Sonr Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering at the pit of the stomach. Swimming of the head, Hurried and Difficult Breathing, " Fluttering at the heart, Cho king or Soffocating eensationii when in lying posture. Dimness of vision, Dots or Webs before tbe sight, Fever and dull pain in the head, Deficiency of p erspiration , of the kin and eyes, Pain in the side, back, chett Limbs, c, Sudden Flashes of heat borniof in the flesh, constant imaginings of evil, and great depression of Spirits. And will positively prevent TellOIT Fever, SIUIous Fever, Ax. THEY C03TAIN. NO ALCOHOL OR BAD WHISKEY ! They will cure the above diseases in nk ty-nine etises out ot a hundred. From Rev. Ji Newton Brown, D. D., Editor of the Encyclopedia of Religious Knoirlodge. Although not disposed to favor cr recom mend Patent Medicines in general, throDjh distrust of their ingredients and effects; I yet know of no sufficient reasons why a man may not testify to the benefits be belUru himself to have received from any simp! preparation, in tbe hope that he may ttai contribute to the benefit of others. I do this the more readily in regard to Hoofland's German Bitters, prepared by Dr. C. M. Jackson, of this city, because I vu prejudiced against them for maDy jtm, under the impression that ihey were chitfij an acloholic mixture. 1 am indebted to aj friend Robert Shoemaker., for the removal cf this prtjudice by proper tests, and for en couragement to try them, when sufferinf from great and long continued debility. Tbe use of three bottles cf these Bitters", at ths beginning of the present year, was followed by evident relief, and restoration to a degre of bodily an mental vigor which I had cot felt for Fix months before, and bad almcrt despaired cf regaining. I there fere tbwk God and my friend for directing me to uii them. J. NEWTON BKOW.H. Pbilad'., Jcs 23, 1E61, ATTENTION SOLDIERS! Will build up the constitution, and g health and strength to an overtasked si diseased system. Philadelphia, Augrst 12, 186:. Dr. C. M. Jacksox Dear Sir : While is Virginia, owing to the change of water, 1 w taken with a severe diarrhoea, which seemed incurable, and which greatly weakened me. When we reached Martinsburg, I feared th I should have to come home ; but noticicf some of your Bitters in the store of ilr.U. B. Price, in that town, I purchased a supplj,"4 on taking it was speedily restored to bfM The diarrhoea was quickly checked, and I experienced no return of it. A nnmber of my comrades who suffered in the s1 manner and from the same cause, withwb I shared the Bitters, join me in this certifies! I expect to return to the seat of war with the Legion, and I shall certainly take a supplj" the Bitters in my knapsack. I would not be without it for its weight in gold, particularly on going into a limestone region. Yours, truly, - A. E. ALMEUS, Company 3, Scott Legioa- BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS'. See that the signature of "C. M. Jim" is on the wrapper of each bottle. Price per bottle 75 cents Or half dozen for $4. Blank Summons. Blank Snbnmm Blank Executions, Constable's Returns,- a ' I for sale at tbi office. , . . - '1 Should your nearest Druggist not hTtb article, do not be put off by any of tbe icating preparations that may be offered its place, but send to us, and we will (tt: by express, securely packed. PRINCIPAL OFFICE ako No. 631 ARCH ST. Jones da jE&xrcm0' (Successors to C. M. JACKSON, & PROPRIETORS1- tffl" For sale by Dr. O. II. KEYSEf JJJ "Wood St., SIMON JOHNSON, corner o" nd Smitbfield ts., Pittsburg, and by gists and Denier, ir. ererv town in h l.n. feTake. " Jul 9,