V VOL. 2.-N0. 35. CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 1856. BY S. B. ROW. OH, TELL HE NOT OTBBIOHTIE CLIMES. BY riSLET JOHSSOX. Oh. tell me not of brighter clime, - And fairer lands thin ours ; "Where all day long the sunbeams sport With fairy elves and flowers ; For though their ikies may clearer ha, Their stars more brightly shine ; . Yet there's no land can give to me Such blissful joys as mine. . Upon the land that gave me birth, Ko tyrant's feet hate trod ; And freemen there ne'er bend their knees, Save to their Maker, God. Her daughters, too, are fair and brave, Iteposing, pure and free, Eeneath the spreading branches of Fair freedom's lofty tree. Tho' France may boast her sunny vales, And Italy her flowers: Ye none enjoy such liberty, And happiness, as ours. Onr skies to us appear as bright, And none would wish to roam - -In search of beauty, which abounds Within our own loved home. THE OLD RANGER'S LEGEND OF THE SG'IOTA. ' : - T HEBROX BELL. - Nature's great Tolame lay open before me, and I was regaling my intellectual appetite with brilliant eems. written by the Creator. - I was seated in his cathedral ; the primeval for est that stood in lofty, grandeur, undesecrated by tho . woodman's axe. Iudian summer bad wrapped its hazy atmosphere around the vari ed scenes of Central Ohio, a season of the year most fitted for musing, for ideal imaginations to league with the favored nine, and cull the fairest flowers that bloom in the garden ol posey. Poetry was written on the leaves that had commenced to fall before the autmnnal blast. Music was to be heard in the sparkling waters of the Darby, that flowed towards the distant Scioto, over a riffle at the foot of tho bank on which I was seated. And sweeter than any I had ever heard from the deep toned organ, and a thousand voices united in the gorgeous temples of the city, was the music that flowed from the tiny throats cfa thousand fair choiristers of the crove. And there was music in the breeze that swept gently by, waf ting a trembling leaf from its lofty home, far away through the air, and anon dropping it upon the gilding stream, where it sailed like a miniature bark upon the river f lite. My rifle, ready loaded, lay unheeded by my side, while the squirrels jumped from branch to branch above me, regardless of danger ; and well they might be, for their gambols were tin noticed ; while my mind was occupied in the glad ripple of the rushing waters, and in the unceasing songs of the birds. The shadows of the surrounding trees were already growing long. A solitary crow lit upon a dead tree near me, but no sooner had he folded his wings, than bv natural instinct, he became aware of Lis proximity to danger, and giving a loud caw he was again upon the wing. Rousing from my reverie, I watched him until he had disappeared beyond the neighboring forest and then with careless purpose, I commenced kicking about the leaves that covered the brow of tho hill : mv foot struck something which sent forth a dull sound, which so excited my curosity, that I cleared the gathered rubbish of years, and found a rifle barrel half buried in the earth. Upon a more careful examination of the ground, I found the breech-plate and remnants of the lock. I was busily engaged in examining each article, and noticing the inroads that rust and exposure had made upon it, when I was aroused by the rustle of leaves; turning in the direction from which the sound proceeded, I beheld an old veteran known far and wide, as "Old Ranger." His true name, no one of my acquaintance knew. When the l(fpst inhabitants settled upon the banks of the Darby, he held . undisputedsway through out the heavy forests, and wild barrens. His head was while with the frosts ofmany winters, and his form was bent with age, yet his eye sight was so good that he could aim a rifle bet ter than half the boasted shots in the surroun dins country. I could have wished for no person more likely to unravel tho mystery that nnrf-loned the rifle barrel. I saluted the Id man cordiallv, and desired hlra to reBt awhile. I have a mystery hero my friend, here is a rifle barrel that I found just now upon this bank and I desire to know if you are acqaain ted with its history," said I. . Indeed," he replied, and his eyes sparkled, u-hila nl.l memories seemed to send the life blood in a swifter current through his veins Ho took the rust eaten barrel from my hand, and giving it a careful examination, contin ued; "You could not havo hit upon a better per son to explainit than Old Roger." ; "Then I am' lucky and should like to hear the story." ' - "You shall hear it," he answered, 'for it can. soon be told.' f a "It is fifty years since I first trailed deer along tho banks of the Darby. Early one fall a man named George Gardner fell in with me, and after a few days we agreed to camp dur ing the winter. Some three miles above on the creek, we built a rough cabin as a protec tion against the weather, the wild beasts and the savages.- One pleasant afternoon in this same month, we started out to take a range throughout the woods, for the double purpose of getting a fresh supply of venison, and hunt ing for a salt lick that we supposed to exist somewhere between our cabin and the union of two creeks. Several hour were fpent in the examination of the banks as far as this, without any success, and then we thought we would strike out into the woods, and try our luck at game. We struck what is now called the lower end ol Bigot's prairie, just as a small party of Indians crossed the upper end. As soon as we saw them, we put back under cover of the trees, but their sharp eyes detected us, and then began a tight race. ; Certain death would be our doom if caught, and our chance of escape against such odds was but slight. Throwing aside every encumbrance except our rifles and hunting-knives, we started down the creek. . With loud yells they followed closely upon our trails. "For nearly two miles we kept the same dis tance ahead, then taking advantage of a gravel shore, and a high bluff we crossed the stream and started up again on the opposite side. Their yells grew fainter and finally ceased al together, when we pursued our way more leis urely, and again crossed the creek, at the riffle just below what is now called . 1 ord's eddy. We thought we had evaded the savages, and stopping a few moments to rest, we listened attentively, but heard nothing. "We had intended to camp out when we left our cabin, but our race put a different nction into our heads, and we started for home on a well beaten track, that ran along the bank of the creek. Gardner was leading the way ; just as he reached this point, he paused as though he had heard something ; a rifle cracked, and the next instant I saw a big Indian step from behind a tree. Throwing down his rifle, he approached me with his tomahawk raised above his head, a deafening whoop rang through the woods. Quick as lightening I put my rifle to my shoulder and sent a ball through his brain Knowing that no time was to bo lost, I started at full speed to the next riffle above here, where I crossed the stream again. In less than an hour I was in my cabin. My eyes did not shut that night; and my thoughts were any thing but pleasant. I was perhaps the only pale face' within a circuit of fifty miles or more, and at times I could see tho glaring eyes of poor Gardner set in death just as they ap peared when he fell. The next morning I pro ceeded carefully to this spot, and found his body down there at the verge of the water with his scalp gone. At the foot of yonder tree I dug a grave and buried him. Expecting that the Indians had taken his rifle for a prize I did not look for it. They must have overlooked it, for his initials are yet visible upon this barrel." It was growing dark in the woods as I par ted with "Old Ranger," and so deep an im pression had his story made upon my mind, that when I beard two cross limbs shriek as the rising wind moved them, I actually turned expecting to see a hugh Indian step from be hind a distant oak, and level a rifle at my heart. My home, however, was soon reached, and the rifle barrel was added to my stock of curiosities, while its sad and fearful history was uppermost in my mind for months after ward. Genius of the West. Gex. S. IIocston os Pierce.- In a recent speech made by the hero of Ban Jacinto, at Austin, he paid his respects to President Pierce in the following terms : "I charge Mr. Pierce with having trifled with the best interests of the country. Hfe has produced a degree of disarrangement in the political elements of it, which was unknown to any former period. The old Jackson Democ racy stood upon principles. They were con servative, and adhered to the Constitution and the Union. It would seem an attempt had been made to engraft upon them others that were alien in principle, and could not be relied on without a portion of the Ioavcs and fishes,' whilst the capital of patronage was expended in bounties to enlist new recruits, to raise force sufficient to secure him victory in another Presidential campaign. Not relying upon principle he has had recourse to expedience, and finds himself at this time in the most de- at plorable condition that has been known to any former President- "His enemies have reason to rejoice at his situation. It is my country that sustains tho blow, and no matter whether it results from his incompetency, or from a misfortune inci dent to the times, or a want of capacity on his part to govern the country, I must deplore its unfortunate condition." Gov. Wise Issane. The Charleston, Vir ginia, Advocate says that it had its fears as to the sanity of Gov. Wise, and wished that its apprehensions had been wrong, but that this painful affliction to his family and to the State is too true for jest. The Advocate continues ; "We do not know whether the friends of Mr. Wise wilTobtain a commission de lunatico in- quirendo, and turn over the government to Lt. Gov. McComas, or keep the unfortunate Gov ernor under private surveillance, and let bis personal and political friends exercise the ex ecutive function? for him. The difficulty is a serious one, and we hope that no steps will be taken without mature reflection." "Barset, where have you been V "To widow Mulhoney'i ball, and an illigant time we had of it, four fights in fifteen minutes, and knock-down with the watchmen that left but one whole nose in the house, and that belong edto the tea kettle. Bedad, the likes were uti t iv t'e secu since t tt&cu, vuiu vv - , 2 4 n.llr ,J TJIE NEW LIQUOR BILL. The following is an abstract of the new Li cense Law : Section 1. From the passage of this act it is made unlawful to keep any room or place where vinous, spiri tons, malt or brewed liquors, or any admixtures thereof, are sold or drank, except as hereinafter provided. -; Sec. Z. Venders of liquers, with or without merchandize, shall not Bell in less quantities than one gallon, except as hereinafter provi ded ; nor shall any license for sales in any quantity be granted to the keeper of any beer house, theatre, or other place of amusement. Sec.3. Breweries and distilleries shall be clas sed and licensed as before, but shall pay dou ble the present rates, provided it shall not ex ceed $50 ; nor shall they sell in less quantities than 5 gallons, except malt or brewed liquors, which may be bottled and .delivered in quanti ties not less than ene dozen bottles. Sec. 4. This act shall not apply to importers selling imported wines, brandies, liquors, or ardent spirits in the original bale, cask, pack age or vessel as imported ; but the importers shall pay double their present tax. Sec. 5. This act shall not extend to drug gists and apothecaries who shall sell unmixed alcohol, or compound or sell any admixtures of wine, alcohol, spirituous or brewed liquors in the Tirettaration of medicines, or upon the written prescription of a regular physician; Provided, No druggist or apothecary shall sell or keep for sale under any name or pretence, any preparation or admixture as aforesaid, that mav be used as a beverage. Any violation of ; section to be punished as prescribed in the 28th section. Sec. 6. Licenses to venders of spirituous, malt or brewed liquors, either with or without other goods, wares and merchandize, to hotel keepers and to eating houso keepers, shall on ly be granted to citizens of the United States, of temperate habits and good moral character. Sec. 7. Licenses for sales of liquors shall be granted by the Courts of Quarter Sessions of the proper county,(except Philadelphia and AllecrhenY.1 at tho first or second session in Mrh rear, and shall be for one year, ine o ' Court to fix a time at which application for said licenses shall be heard, when persons applying and remonstrating shall appear. Sec. 8. Person intending to apply for li cense shall file with the Clerk of the Court of Quarter Sessions, al least three weeks before presenting the same in Court, (or to the board of Licenccrs in Philadelphia and Allegheny,) and pay the Clerk twenty-five cents for pub lishing notice thereof. The Clerk shall cause to be published three times in two of the news papers of the city or county, a list of the names of all such applicants, their respective residen ces and kinds of license. In the case of hotels, inns, or taverns and eating houses, the petition shall embrace a certificate signed by at least twelve respectable citizens (or in places of less than fifty taxables, by six citizens) setting forth that the same is necessary to accommo date the public, and that such person is of p-ood renute for honcstv and tempersace, and in well provided with house room, &c. Sec. 9. No person shall be licensed to keep a hotel, inn or tavern in any city or county town, which has not. for the exclusive use of 7 , travellers, four bed-rooms, and eight beds, nor in any other parts of the State, two bed-rooms and four beds, for such use. Sec. 10. Before a license is granted, the per son applying shall give a bond to tho Common wealth of Pennsylvania, with two sufficient sureties, in the sum of $1,000, where the li cense is above the seventh class, and in $500 for all in and below that class, conditioned for the faithful observance of all the laws relating to the business, and a warrant of attorney to confess judgment which bond and warrant shall be approved by the said Court, and be filed in the office of the Clerk : and whenever a judgment for ary forfeiture or fine shall have been recovered, or conviction had for any vi olation of this aet, or any other law for the ob servance of which said bond shall be condi tioned, it shall be the duty of tho District At torney to enter judgment and institute suit thereon, &c. The bond of eating house keep ers shall be in $500. Sec. 11. No license shall be issued until the applicant shall have filed the certificate of the citv or countv treasurer, that the license fee has been paid. Sec. 12. Venders of liquors, with or without merchandize, shall be classified and rated as now, and pay double their present rates, but no such license for sales in any amount shall be granted for less than $50. Sec 13. Hotels and taverns lhall be classi fled according to the estimated yearly rentals of tho houses and property intended to be oc cupied, as follows : Where the rental is $10,000 or more, the li cense tax shall be $1,000. TThora the rental is $8,000 and not over $10,000, the license tax shall be $800.' Rental $6,000 and not over $8,000, license $G00. Rental $1,000 and not over $6,000, license $400. Rental $2,000 and not over $4,000, license $300. ' Rental $1,000 and not over $2,000, license $150. Rental$500 and not over $1,000, liccnse$100 Rental $300 and not over $500, license $50. Rental under $300, license $25. Provided, That in Philadelphia and Pitts burg, no license granted under the 12th and 13th sections of this act, shall be for less than $75, nor in other cities, towns or boroughs containing over two hundred taxables, less than $50. Sec. 14. Eating-houses shall be licensed on ly where necessary for the accommodation of the public and travellers, and shall only au thorize the sale of domestic wines, malt and brewed liquors. Peisons so licensed shall pay double their present rates : and in Philadel phia and Pittsburg no such license shall be for less than $50, nor in other parts of the State for less than $30. - Sec. 15. Provides for assessment and return of licenses, &c. Sec 16, 17 18, 19, 20, 21, refer to the de tails of the board of appraisers, &c, in Phila delphia and Allegheny. Sec 22. All persons licensed under this act shall frame their licenses under a glass, and nut it in a conspicuous place in their chief K . 1 - places of making sales. Sec 23. The Commissioners of the several counties, and Board of Licensers of Philadel phia and Allegheny, shall furnish a certified list of all persons so appraised, with the clas sification made out, and finally determined up on, to the Treasurers of their respective coun ties or of the city of Philadelphia, who aball, within 20 days thereafter, transmit to the Au ditor General a copy of such list , and shall collect the licenae fees in tho manner direct ed bv law. Sec 24. The Auditor General shall charge said Treasurer with the amount payable by the persons in said lists, from the payment of any part of which amount said treasurer shall only be exonerated by producing satisfactory evi dence to the Department that the party or par tics so returned, failed to obtain a license. Sec. 25. Tho Auditor General is to return to the Legislature annually, in January, a tab ular statement of the number and classification and license rates ef all importers, brewers and distillers, keepers of hotels, eating houses and venders of liquors with or without other mer chandizc. Sec. 26. No license is transferable. Sec 27. The number of tavern licenses shall not exceed in the cities one to every 100 taxa bles, nor in the several counties one to every 150 taxables the number of said taxables to be taken from the returns of the preceding year. The number of eating house licenses shall not exceed in any city or county one- fourth of the number of tavern licenses Sec 28. That any sale made of vinous, spir- itous, malt or brewed liquors, or any admix tures thereof, contrary to the provisions of this law, shall be taken to be a misdemeanor, and upon conviction of the offence in the court of quarter sessions of the peace of any city or county, the person so offending shall be sen tenced to pay a fine of not less than ten nor more than one hundred dollars, with the costs of prosecution, and to stand committed until the sentence of the court is complied with, not exceeding thirty days ; and upon a second or any subsequent conviction the party so of fending shall, in addition to the payment of a fine, as aforesaid, undergo an imprisonment in the county jail of not less than one month nor more than three months ; and if licensed, shall forfeit said license and be incapacitated from recsiving any license as aforesaid for the peri od of five years thereafter : and any keeper of any drug or apothecary store, confectionary or mineral or other fountain, who shall sell any spirituous, vinous, malt or brewed liquors, mixed or pure, to bo used as a beverage, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and liable to conviction and punishment as aforesaid. Sec 29. Any person found intoxicated in any street, highway, public house or public place, shall be fined upon the view of, or upon proof made before, any alderman or justice of the peace, not exceeding $5, to be levied with the proper costs upon the goods and chattels of the defendant. Sec. 30. Any person who shall sell intoxica ting liquors to any person who shall drink the same on the premises where sold, and becomo thereby intoxicated, shall, besides his liability in damages under any existing law, be fined $5 for every such offence to be recovered in debt before any alderman or justice of the peace by any wife, husband, parent, child, rel atlve or guardian of the person so injured, and levied upon the goods and chattels of the de fendant without exemption. Provided, That suits shall not be instituted after twenty days from the commission of the offences in this and the preceding sections. Sec 31. The court, mayor, aldermau or jus- tice of the peace, before whom any fine or pen- ally shall be recovered, may award to the in former or prosecutor, or both, a reasonable share thereof, but not exceeding one-third ; the residue to so to school purposes. The in former or prosecutor may be a witness In any such case. Sec. 32. No bottler of cider, ale, fee., and not following in any way the business f hotel and restaurant keeping, shall be required to take out ft license under this act. But they shall not sell less than a dozen bottles at one time, nor permit any of the liquors to be drank upon the premises, and any violation of this is punishable under the 28th section. The pro ducers and manufacturers of domestic wines and cider may sell and deliver the same by any measure not less than five gallons, aiid in any quantity not less than one dozen bottles, with out license therefor. Sec 83. It is made the duty of the consta bles to make return of retailers of liquors, and under oath or affirmation, whether wuum ma knowledge there is any place within his baili wick kept in violation of this act, &c. Sec 34. If any person engaged in the sale and manufacture of intoxicating liquors a aforesaid, shall employ or permit any intem perate poison in any way to assist in such manufacture or sale, it shall be deemed a mis demeanor, and punishable under the 28th sec tion. Sec 35. This act shall not be construed to impair or alter the provisions of tho Sunday law, nor the act of May 8, 1854, "to protect certain domestic and privato rights, and pre vent abuses in the sale and use of Intoxicating drinks." It repeals the act of April H, looo, "to restrain the sale of intoxicating liquors," and all other laws or parts of laws inconsistent herewith : and provides that no license hereto fore grauted shall bo hereby invalidated. CROMWELL. The difference of opinion entertained by such distinguished writers as Hume, Claren don, Carlyle, Macaulcy and Gmzot as to the character of Cromwell, is hardly greater than as to the causo of the melancholy which over shadowed the latter part of his life. Was it remorse for the execution of the King 1 as it dread of assassination t Was it grief for the loss of his favorite daughter ? Was it the disappointment of his hope of founding a dy nasty ? To all these questions we have now to add another : Was it fever and ague 1 One person at least, we think he must be a physi cian, suggests this physical solution of the rid dle. He says "Cromwell died of intermittent fever or a- . . . - j i a gue ; next to tne piague, one oi iue most vir ulent scourges of England in the olden time. Bishop Burnet tells us, it destroyed and weak ened so many in one season, that part of the harvest was lost, from the lack of men or wo men able to gather the crop. Assuming the epidemic form, it periodically ravaged Lon don, until the surrounding marshes, Moorfields, Wapping, and Lambeth, were drained ; unco then, the disease has almost totally disappear ed from the metropolis. Cromwell's father died of the "cruel ague" himself, when his son was a young man ; his mother, brothers, Bisters and servants were grievously afflicted by it; and his first appearance in public life was to oppose the crown commissioners, w ho, with reams of parchment and rolls of red tape, attempted to obstruct the drainage of the un healthy fens surrounding his native town of Huntingdon. "A well-known psychological fact, connect ed with the baneful effects of marsh malaria, is supposed to throw considerable light on the less understood peculiarities of Cromwell's character. Hypochondriasis, like ague, is fre quently caused by atmospheric influence in the form of malaria, and the peculiar debility produced by both these diseases, predisposes the human frame to subsequent attacks. So the gloomy shadow of an apparently perverted religious fervor, that ever enveloped the great man, was probably occasioned by his youthful residence in the marshes of Huntingdonshire. The predisposition to ague accompanied Crom well through life, to the last scene of all. Af ter the battle of Dunbar, he had a severe at tacK, aud the subsequent exposure during an unusually inclement winter, nearly proved fa tal. In March of the following year, he "thouebt he should have died," but recovered till May, when, utterly prostrated, he returned to Edinburgh, where he became so mucn worse that at one time his army really believed he was dead. In June he was so fir recovered as to be able to go out in a coach, but relapsed, and another month went over before he was restored to health. , "About seven years afterwards, the P ; Sec tor, worn and harrassed in body and luind, watched by the death-bed or his ravorite aaugn ter, Mrs.Claypole. For a fortnight, she scarce ly left the chamber, till at hist her excrucia ting sufferings were terminated by her death. Intense grief for this amiable woman, proba bly not unmixed with feelings of remorse, ac ting on an already enfeebled and predisposed system, brought on a return of the ague a last attack of the life-long, insidious enemy, so often repulsed, but now to conquer ; and in the memorable tempest of 1658, in the turmoil of the conflicting elements, Cromwell died. As Waller, in the inflated style of the period, tells us : Nature herself took notice of his death, And,aighing,swelled the sea with such a breath, That to remotest shores her omows rotiea The approaching fate of their great ruler told. "It is an interesting fact connected with the last illness of this remarkable man, that pre- judice prevented his physicians from adminis- Jesuits' or Peruvian bark. The drug had been introduced into England about three years be fore ; but, one Underwood, a London alder man, having died after taking it, strong Pro- ttstani prejudice arose against us use. x.tbb so late as the great no-popery processions that took place in London after the discovery of the pretended Meal-tub Plot, in 1679, a box of Jesuits' bark was carried in mock state, and ignominiously burned with the pope's mgr. Nor was it till the commencement of the eigh teenth century, that by the strenuous exertions of Sir Hans Slcane, that this truly excellent medicine became popular." One other extract from the same writer Is instructive as showing the revolutions which Hm effects in public opinion. The most de voted admirer of the "blessed martyr" at the present day could hardly read it without a feel-- ing of shame. It suggests, too, another torical mystery though of less importance. We read in the Journal of the House of Com-' tnons, that, on the 8th of December, 1660, it was "resolved by the Lords and Commons, assembled in parliament, that the carcasses of Oliver Cromwell, Henry Ireton, John Brad shaw, and Thomas Pride, whether buried in , Westminster Abbey or elsewhere, be with all expedition taken up and drawn on n hurdle to Tyburn, and there hanged up in their coffins for some time ; and after that, buried under the said gallows." In conformity to this resolu tion, two bodiet, saiil to be those of Cromwell and Ireton, were taken from graves or vaults in Westminster Abbey, on Saturday the 26th diy of January, 1661. On the following Mon day, those two bodies were taken on a cart to the Red Lion Inn, Uolborn ; and on the same day, another body, said to be Bradshaw's, was disinterred, which, the next morning, Tues day, was also taken to tho Red Lion. On the following day Wednesday the 30th, the anni versary of the execution of tho First Charlea the last indignities were perpetrated on the three bodies, as we are thus informed by a newspaper of the period : "To-day, they were drawn to Tyburn. When these three carca- ses were at Tyburn, they were pulled ont of t their coffins, and hanged at the several angles of that triple tree, where they hung till the sun was set ; after which they were taken down, , their heads cut off, and their loathsome trunks thrown into a deep hole, under the gallows." By another newspaper of the time, we learn that "the heads were placed upon poles, on the top or Westminster Hall,Bradshaw's being pla ced in the middle,immediatcly over that part of tho hall where he had sat as president at the trial of Charles I. ; the other heads placid on either side." "The above are all the traces left of this re volting affair. Why three bodies only were desecrated, instead of the four decreed by the resolution of parliament ; why they were pul led out of the coffins, as the newspaper states, instead of being hanged up in them, as the res olution specially directed ; why they were ta ken to the Red Lion at all, are enigmas impos sible of solution at the present day. Moreo ver, it is, to say the least, exceedingly doubt ful whether any of those desecrated bodies was the mortal remains of Oliver Cromwell. Where he really was buried, is a question that " has never yet, and probably never will be sat isfactorily answered." THE WORLD'S BEHEFACT0&. Who, that has had opportunities of reading, bnt lias heard of the philanthropist, Howard, the greatest part of whose life was spent in vis iting the prisons of Europe, and administer ing relief to countless numbers of suffering in mates, and whose name will go down to remo test time, crowned with the honors which mil lions yet unborn will bestow upon it 1 In the same category we may place the name of Miss Nightingale, the devoted, slf-sacrificing he roine of the Crimea. . But while we give due honors to such names, we should do injustice to a noble and generous heart, were we, for one moment, to forget the name of Hollow At. The possessor of an immense fortune, which would allow him to traverse the world in search of pleasure, he chooses, instead, to devote hia leisure and his talents to the benefit of hia fellow-creatures, by dispensing among them the most remarkable remedies ever yet compound ed, and which he himself discovered after years of unremitting toil and research through out the vast cabinet of nature. To these re searches Professor Holloway was first incited by the enormous amount of suffering from va rious diseases which he everywhere saw a. round, and the sad inefficiency of medical art to meet and vanquish them ; and the success which has met him at every step yet no great er than ho anticipated ias proved his well earned reward. So great, indeed, has become the popularity of his medicines, even in the remotest corners of the earth, that hia parent establishment in London outstrips the largest in the world ; and their marvellous virtue have boen extolled in almost every language from pole to pole. We have seen innumera ble testimonials from persons who have used these remedies stacks upon stacks in which their wonderful powers are extolled in the highest degree. In a climate so variable as ours, the most insidious diseases are likely to take root before the patient himself is aware of it, and an immense amount of suffering is thereby entailed, in many cases causing death in fault of ignorance of the proper remedies, which, applitd in time, would have prevented the fatal esult. In every case of incipient disease, and even in cases far gone, recourse to Professor Holloway'a never-faumg reme dies will save months of painful illness, if not life itself. We do not overrate the man, nor" bis medicines ; but what we are confident of. we axe willing to bear testimony in its favor ; and as far as our absolute knowledge extends, covering a space of years, we feel competent to apeak upon-the subject in the warmest terms. Therefore, it our earneat wish that not a family fn the land should be Ignorant of the Professor's remedies, and that they shoubi always be kept on hand to use in cases of sud den illness, as they will operate aa well aspre ventiyes as curatives ; while there is no poe?i bilitv of danger to the system arising frem their use. Boston neZigenrer.