BY DAVID OVER.. KANE'S ARCTIC EXPEDI TIONS. THE Arctic Explorations of Dr. EUSHA KANT KANE, have just been published by Petersen & Child® of Philadelphia. The work is one of deep interest, and ntust have .m extensive circulation. We copy a few extract* which we find in a late number of tL New York Tribune -The specific features of Dr. Kane's plan cf research, consisted in making the land ini.v- tne north of Greenland the basis cf operations, assuming, from the analogies <.f geographical struoture, that Greenland v be regarded as a peninsula approach ing the vicinity of the Pole, rather than as a a z.uNs of islands connected by interior glaciers. On this hypothesis, the course v.to pass up Baffin's Bay to the most L rthcin attainable point, and thence, press ing on t-ward the Pole, as far as bouts or AeJg-'-i eoald reach, to examine the coast -1 .ties for vestiges of the missing party. The Ex; ..;i'n which sailed in the Advance to:. !- tl cf seventeen man, besides the t, unmanJer The equipment was simple.— A quantity of rough boards to serve for liOLt-the vessel in winter, snuidndia rub l.r u i canvas tents, and several strong sh built on a convenient model, cotn piirt-.d the outfit. For provisions, they took a liberal supply of pemuiicau, a portion of R.'irdeuN meat-biscuit, some packages of prepared potato, a store of dried fruits and vegetables, beside piek'led cabbage, the salt 1 ef an i pork of the Navy ration, hard bls •c .ii and flour. A moderate supply of li quors m. Jo up the bill of fare, although t_: party were pledged to total abstinence from this article, unless dispensed by spe •cial order. Leaving New York on the 30:h of May, 1853, the Advance arrived at the harbor of i'irkc ou the Ist oi July. They pro ceed J gradually along the coast, until on the 27:b of July, they uearcd the entrance of Melville Bay. Here they encountered their first serious obstruction from the ice; Dr. Kane promptly decided to attempt a passage through the Lay by a new track; uni after a rough transit of eight days, the uKiorn of the plan was confirmed by its L. lu.-. than a week (bey entered Smith's Sound, and landing near Littleton's i-.'-.ud, deposited a boat with a supply of st': -, witi, the view of securing a retreat in case of disaster. "\Ye found to our surprise that we vere E: t the first human beings who had sought 5..-iter in this desolate spot. A few ruin ed walls hero and there showed that it bad o:K-e been the scat of a rude settlement; and 'ii ;be little knoll which we cleared away, to cover in our storehouse of valuables, wc found she mortal remains of their former inhabitants. '•-'ot'.i.ng car. be imagined more sad and Ifm. -.t-s than these memorials of extinct l'fe. hardly a vestige of growth was traec ''! eou the bare ice rubbed rocks: and the ! '> resembled so much the broken frag - that surrounded them, that at first ' /'it i; was hard to distinguish one from tzo other. Walrus bones lay about in all 'Ore/'ions, showing that this animal had fur nished the staple of subsistence. There *erc some remains, too, of the fox and the narwhal*, but I found no signs of the seal * reindeer. " i hese Esquimaux have no mother earth '" c "o their dead, but they seat them as 'n tne attitude of repose, the knees drawn to the body, and inclose them in a ""•it of skin*. The implements of the liv lnr man arc then grouped around him; they : -t" covered wtih a rude dome of stones, and " d tuirn is plied abovs. This simple ceno "•ph w:!i remain intact for generation after r-'.-ration. The Esquimaux never disturb grave." On the western cape of Littleton Island >oy erected a cairn, which might serve as * • -con to any following party, wedged a " -tT into the crevices of the rocks, and spreading the American flag, hailed its folds 1 • three cheers, as tthey expanded iu the c / Uiiuiiigbt breeze. They immediately resumed their course, bearing toward the north agaiu*t wind and tide, and soon arriv :Rc the regions of thick-ribbcd ico, where 1 ie y were compelled fo moor their vessel to •be rocks. Among the petty miseries which now began to suffer, was a pack of eoaiq fifty dogs, whioh formed a very incon venient appendage to the travelling patty. Iheie animals were voracious as wolves.— ft was no easy matter to supply such a family with food. They devoured a couple c ' bears in eight days. Two pounds of raw flesh every other day was a scanty &1- ftwacce; but to obtain this was almost im possible. The pemmieau could not be spar fc>l~ core-meal or beans they would not touch—and salt junk would have killed them, TLe timely discovery of a dead nor- A A cekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Polities, the Arts, Sciences, Agriculture, &c., fee---Terms: Two Dollars per annum. whale or unicorn proved an excellent relief affording six hundred pounds of good whole some flesh, though of rather an unsavory odor. But a more serious trial was at hand.— The vessel had been released from her moor ings, and had fought her way through the ice for several days, when the sky gave tokens of an approaching storm. Ou the 20th of August, the storm came on with unmistakable Arctic fury. Its effects can be described iu no other words than those of the journal of the dauntless command er: "By Saturday morning it blew a perfect hurricane. We had seen it coming, and were ready with three good hawsers out ahead, and all things snug on board. "Still it came on heavier and heavier, and the ice began to drive more wildly than I thought 1 had ever seen it. I had just turned in to warm and dry myself during a momeutary lull, and was stretching myself out in my bunk, whec I heard the sharp twanging suap of a coard. One sixMnch hawser had parted, and we were swinging by the two others, the gale roaring like a lion to the southward. "Half a minute more, and twang''' came a second report. 1 knew it was the whale line by the shrillness of the riug. Our noblo ten incb-maniila still held on. I was burr)ing my last sock into its soal skin boot, when MeGary came waddling down the companion ladders. "Captain Kane, she won't bold much longer; it's blowing the devil biui*elf, and I am afraid to surge." "The manilia cable was proving its excel lence when I reached the deck, and the crew as the y gathered round me, were loud ;n its praises. We could hear its deep Eolian chant, swell ing through all the rat tle of running-gear, and moaning of the shrouds. It was the death-song! The stranusgave way with the noise of a shotted gun; and iu the amoka that followed their recoil, we were dragged out by the wild ice at its mercy. "We steadied and did some pretty warp ing, and got the brig a good bed in the rush iug drift, but it all cauie to nothing. We then tried to beat back through the narrow ice-clogged water-way, that was driving a quurter of a mile wide, between the shore and the pack. It coat us two hours of hard labor, I thought skillfully bestowed; but at the end of that time we were at least four utiles off, opposite the great valley in the centre of Bedevilled .Reach. Ahead of us, farther to the north, we could see the strait growing still narrower, and the heavy ;ce-tables grinding up and clogging it be tween the shore-cliffs on one side and the ledge on the other. There was but one thing left for us, to keep in some sort the command of the helm, by going freely where we mu3t otherwise be driven. \Y e allowed her to send under a reefed for topsail; all handa watching the enemy as ae closed, in silence. "At seven o'clock in the morning, we were close upon the piling masses. 1\ o dropped our heaviest anchor with the des perate hope of winding the brig; but there was no withstanding the ice-torrent that followed us. We had only time to fasten a spar as a buoy to the ehain, and let her slip. So went our best bowerl "Down wa went upon the gale again, helplessly scraping along alee of ice seldom less than thirty feet thick; otio floe, measur ed by a line as we tried to fasten it, more than forty feet. I had seen such ice only once before, and never in such rapid mo tion. One upturned mass rose above our gunwale, smashing in our bulkwarks, and depositing half a ton of ice in a lump upou our decks. Our staunch little brig'pbore herself through all this wild adventure as if she had a charmed life. "But a new enemy came in sight ahead, j Directly in our way, just beyond the line of floc-ice against which wo were alternately sliding and thumping, was a group of bergs. We had no dower to avoid them, and the only question was whether we were to he dashed in pieces agaiust them, or whether they might not offer us some providential nook or refuge from the 9torm. But as we uearcd them, we perceived that they were at some distance from the floe-edge and separ ated from it by an interval of open water. Oar hopes rose, as the gale drove us to wards this passage, and into it; and we were ready to exult, when, by some unexpected cause, probably an eddy of the wind against the lofty ice walls, we lost our headway.— Almost at the same moment we saw that tho bergs were not at rest; that with a mo mentum of their own they were bearing down upon the other ioo, and that it uiuit be our fate to bo crushed between the two. "Just then a broad scounce-piece or low washed berg came driving up from tho south- ward. Ibe thought Sashed upon me of one of our escapes iu Melville Bay; and as the sconce moved rapidly alongside us, M'Gary managed to plant au anchor on its slope? and hold ou to it by a while-line. It was an anxious moment. Our noble tow horse, whiter than the pale horse that seemed to bo puisuing us, hauled us bravc-ly on, the spray dashing over his windward Banks, and his forehead plowing up the lesser ice as if in seorn. Ihe bergs encroached upou us as we advanced. Our channel narrowed to a width of perhaps forty feet; we braced the yards to clear the impending ice-walls. "We passed clear; but it was a close shave—so close that our own quarter-boat would have been crushed if we bad not taken it from the davits—and found our selves under tho lea of a berg, iu a compar atively open lead. Never did heart-tried men acknowledge with more gratitude their merciful deliverance from a wretched death. "The day hud already Lad its full share of trials; but there were more to come. A flaw drove us from our shelter, and the gale soon carried us beyond tho end of the lead. Wo were again iu the ice, sometimes escap ing its onset by warping, sometimes forced to rely on the strength and buoyancy of the brig to stand its pressure, sometimes scudding wildly through the half-open drift. Our jibboom was snapped off in the cap: we carried away oar barricade staunchions, and were forced to leave our little Erie, with three brave fellows aud their wards, out up ou the floes behind us. "A littlo pool of open water received us at last. I was just beyond a lofty cape that rose up Ike a wall, and under an ice-l>erg that anchored itself between us and the gale. And here, close under the frowning shore of Greenland, ten utiles nearer the Pole than our holding gronud of the utorn iug, the men have turned in to rest. "I was afraid to join them, for ti.e gale was unbroken, and the floes kept pressing heavily upon our berg, at one time so heav ily as to sway it on its vertical axis toward the shore, and make its pinnacle overhang our vessel. My poor fellows had but a precarious sleep before our little harbor was broken up. They hardly reached th° deck when we were driven astern, our rud der splintered, and tLe pintles torn from their boltings. "Now began the uippings. The first shock took us on our port quarter; the brig bearing it well, and after a momeut of the old fashioned suspense, rising by jerks handsomely. The next was from a veteran floe, tongued and honeycombed, but float, ing in a single table over twenty feet in thickness. Of course no wood or iron could stand this; but the shoreward face of our iceberg happened to present an inclined plane, descending deep into the water, and up this the brig was driven, as if some great steam screw power was forcing her into a dry dock. "At one time I expected fo see her car. ricd bodily up its face and tumbled over on side. But one of these mysterious relaxa tions, which I have elsewhere called the pulses of the ice, lowered us quite gradual ly dewn again into the rubbish, and we were forced out of the liDe of pressure toward tLe shore. Ilere we succeeded in carrying out a warp and making fast. We grounded as the tide fell, and would have heeled over to seaward, but for a mass of detached land ice that grounded alongside of us, and al though it clove our bulwarks, as we rolled °ver it, shoved us up." We must also give bis account of the se quel. "I could hardly get to my bunk, as 1 went down into our littered cabin on the Sunday morning after our hard working vigil of thirty six hours. Bags of clothing, food, tents, India rubber blankets, and the hun dred little personal matters which every man likes to save in time of trouble, were scat tered around in places where the owners thought they might have them at hand. The pemican had been on deck, the boats equipped, and everything of importance ready for a march, maDy hours before. "As our brig, borne on by the ice, com menced bcr ascent of the berg, the suspense was oppressive. The immense blocks piled agaiust her, range upon range, pressing themselves under her keel, and throwing her over upon her side, till, urged by the sue* cessive accumulations, she rose slowly, and as if with convulsive efforts, along tbe slop ing wall, Still there was no relaxation of the impelling force. Shock after shoak jar ring her to her very centre, she continued to mount steadily on her precarious oradle.— Bnt for the groaning of her timbers, and the heavy sough of the floes, we might have heard a pin drop. And then, as settled down into her old position, quietly taking her place among tbo broken rubbish, there was a deep-breathing silence, as though all were waiting for some signal before tbo BEDFORD. PA., FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 18-56. clamor of congratulation and comment could burst forth." By the 22d of August, they had reached the latitude of 78 deg. 41 —a distance greater than had been attained by any pre vious except Barry on bis Spitsbergen foot tramp. About this time, some of the party began to exhibit, symptoms or discon .eut.— The rapid advance of wiuter, the deprivation of rest, and the slow progress cf the Expe dition, tended to produce depression. One person volunteered uu opiuioa in favor of returning to the south, and giving Ap the attempt to winter. It was no time for half way measures. Dr. Kane at once called a council of his officers, and listened to their views in full. With but a single exception, they declared their conviction that a.further progress to the north was impossible, and urged the propriety of returning southward to winter. Tho commander maintained the opposite view explaining the importance of securing a position which might expedite further sltdge-journies, he announced his in tention of warping towards the northern headland of the bay. Once there, he eould determine the best point for tho operations of the spring, and would put the brig into winter harbor at the nearest possible shel ter. Ilis comrades received the decision with cheerful acquiescence, and zealously entered upou the perilous duties which it involved. During the process the gallant little vessel ran aground, and in the night had a narrow escape from fire. A sudden lurch tumbled the men out of their berths, and threw down the cabin stove, wish a full (.barge of glowing anthracite. The deck blazed up violently, but by the saciiiico of a heavy pilot-cloth coat, the fire was smoth ered uutil water could be procured to cxtiu guish it. The powder was not far cfi. A few moments mote might have brought tho expedition to a sudden close. About the tenth of September, the vessel was brought into a sheltered harbor between the islands of the bay, in which she h n d been ying for some time, aud all bands prepared for winter quarters. Of their mode of life during the long darkness, of an Arctic winter, a vivid idea is given bv the follow ing extract from Dr. KANE'S journal : "How do we spend tlie day when it is not term-day, or rather the twenty-four hours? for it is either all day here, or all night, or a twilight mixture of both. How do wc spend the twenty-four hours? "At six in the morning, McGarv is called with all hands who have slept in. The decks are cleaned, the ice-hole opened, the refreshing beef-nets examined, the ice tables measured, aud things aboard put to rights. At half-past seven all Lauds rise, wash on deck, open the doors for ventilation, and come below for breakfast. We are short of fuel and therefore cook iu the cabin. Our breakfast, for all fare alike, is hard tack, pork, stewed apples, frozen like molasses candy, tea and coffee, with a delicate portion of raw potato. After breakfast, the smokers take their pipe until nine o'clock, then all hands turn to, idlers to idle, and workers to work; Ohiseu to bis beach, Brooks to bis preparations in cauvass, MeGary to play tailor, Whipple to make shoes, Bonsall to tinker, Baker to skin birds—and the rest to the "offi-el" Take a look into the Arctic Bureau. One table, one salt pork lamp with rusty chlorinated flame, three stools, and n3 many waxen faced men with their legs drawn under them, the deck at zero being too cold for their feet. Each has his department. Kane is writing and sketching aud projecting maps; Hays copying logs and mcteorologieals; Soutag reducing bis work at Fern Rock.— A fourth, as one of the working members of the hive has long been defunct; you will fiud him iu bed, or studying 'Littell's Living Age.' At twelve o'clock, a business round of inspection and orders enough to £ll up the day with work. Next, the drill of the Esquimaux dogs—my own peculiar recrea tion—a dog trot, specially referring to legs that oreak with every kick, and rheumatic shoulders that chronicle every descent of the whip. And so we get on to dinner-time, the occasion of another gathering, which misses the tea and coffee of breakfast, but rejoice in pickled cabbage and dried peach es iustead. "A dinner, as at breakfast, the raw pota to comes in our hygienic luxury. Like doctor stuff generally, it is not as appetiz ing as desirable, GratiDg it down nicely, leaving out the ugly red spots liberally, and adding the utmost oil as a lubricant it is as much as I can do to persuade the mess to shut their eyes and bolt It, like Mrs. Squeers's molasses and brimstone at Dothc boy's Hall. Two absolutely refuse to take it. I tell them of the Silcsiaus using its teaves as spinach; of the whalers in the South Seas getting drunk ou the molasses which had preserved the large petit oes of the Azores; 1 point to this gum, so fungoid and angry the day before yesterday, and so flat and amiable to-day—ail by a Dotato poultice My eloquence is wasted; they persevere in rejecting the admirable com pound. "Sleep, exercise, Amusement, and work at will, carry on the day until our G o'clock supper—a meal something like breakfast and something like dinner, only a little more scant, and the officers come in with the reports of the day. Dr. liases shows luo the log,l sign it; Sontag, the weather, 1 sign the weather; .Mr. Bonsall the tides and thermometers. Thereupon comes in mine ancient Brooks, and I enter in his journal No. 3, all the work done under his charge, and discuss his labors for the mot row. "McQary comes next, with the cleaning up arrangement, inside, outside and OD decks, and Mi. Wilson follows with ice ! measurements. Aud la'st of ail comes my own record of the day gone by; cvory line, as I look back upon its pages, giving evi dence of a weakened body and a harassed mind. "We have cards sometimes, and chess sometimes, aud a few magazines—Mr. Lit fell's thoughtful present —to cither away the evening." Why the liie. I may be asked, why, if the righteous ar e so de ar to Christ, and so valuable to the world, they arc doomed to death at alt?— Wby does not religion, which saves us from a thousand other evils, release us from this law of mortality! lu answer, I remark:— The reasons are obvious on reflection. Ex emption frctu death us a reward of piety w oukl appeal so strongly to the love of life —the quickest, most enduring in. tine: of our being —as o override the freedom ot choice, and thus mukc rational, voluutary piety impossible. We should adopt it as ' starving man would clutch offered bread, or the man dying of thirst weald seize the cup of cold water. Aud besides the violence done to our nature in making the propensi ties decide a question belonging, under the present econctmv, aud in proper fitness and adaption of things, to the intellect, the heart, the will, the incongruity would fol low of proposing a carnal, earthly motive for a spiritual life. On such apian, Chris tianity must approve what she now repudi ates, aud the holy considerations by which she now seeks to win us from error to wis dom, from earth to heaven, would all be neutralized and lost, and the world to come be doomed to borrow the forces of time to achieve its noblest victories. The evil of sin cannot be show:; but by it J punish ment. This conclusion is legitimate front what is revealed of the divine administration,and from what is revealed of the divine admin istration, an! from what wo know of the process of conviction in the ndnd of man. God hates sitt. It is a blot upon his do minions. But he has not left the world to learn the fact even from the awful denun ciation of his word, but he has written it :u the catastrophe of nations. The deluge, famine, pestilence, fire and fcrim-tcuc from heaven have been the messengers of Lis wrath and the instruments of his retribu tion. And where, save in the crucifixion of Christ Jesus and the damnation of the guilty will you look for a more impressive demonstration of God's justice and bis in dignation against sin, than in the dying aszonies of infant innocence, or the mortal couvulsiou3 of him who dies unto the Lord. It is written, "The body is dead because f s*.ii, even vvuea the spirit is LFe because of righteousness.— Bishop Pierce. A PRETTY WOMAN. The subjoined waif we have discovered in an exchange: A pretty woman is one of the institutions of the country—an angel in dry goods and glory. She makes sunshine, blue sky. Fourth of July, and happiness wherever she goes, ller path is one of delicious roses, perfumes and beauty. Sin* is a sweet po em, writteu iu rare curls and choice calico, and good principles. Men stand up before hi ias so many admiration points, to melt into crc-am and then butter. Her words float around the car like music, birds of Paradise or the chimes of Sabbath bells. Without her, society wouid lose its truest attiaction, the church its firmest reliance, and young men the very beat of comforts and company. Ilor influence and generos ity restrain the vicious, strengthen the weak raiso the lowly, flannel shirt the hcathcu, and strengthen the faint hearted. Wbcroser you find the virtuous woman, you also find pleasant fireside boquets, clean clothes, or" der, good living, gentta hearts, muste, light and model institutions generally. Bhe ;s the flower of humanity, a very Venus in divinity, and her inspiration is the breath or Heaven. E]r"Laring one of the great political I conventions of the present campaign, a j Methodist church was engaged for a meet- | mg. The boys, who were all alert for ex- j citement, took early possession of the gal- > lory, well supplied with sticks to beat the ' floor in response to the speeches. One of j the excellent Method!-t brethren had been very justly grieved that the house was lent j Jor such a purpose, and hopiug to save it as J much as possible froui desecration, he went j up into the gallery before tho meeting be - , gau, and told the boys that they ought to i remember, that they were in the church, ! and to behave ia a manner becoming o ho- j ly a place; especially, he hoped they would I not disgrace themselves and the place by , making a noise, rapping or shuutiug or | whistling, or anything of that sort. "But j if there should anything le said which j pleases you very much, then, boys, you may f say, 'Bless ray soul,' 'Atnen,' and so forth, as the case may be." The meeting began. The chairman sta ted the object of the assembly , tho great honor he had iu being called to preside, the proudest day of his life, and becoming | warm, he launched out into such eloquence •as to arou;_ the spirits of the boys, who ! would Lave gi.-cn him a round of applause with their sticks, but for the old man's ad j vice, when recollecting his permission, they !at oneebeg'n to cry out, 'Bless my soul! : and at tho end of the nest sentence,' Amen, | and soon a chorus of youngsters cried out, I 'And so forth,' to the astonishment of the J cbairmau, who addressed himself to the j galleries and said he should have them : cleared if that interruption was repeated, whereupon the whole race of them shouted aloud,'As tho case may be!' The excite ment became so greet between the galleries and pit, that the boys Ly.i to promise to j withhold any turther exptessions of their j enthusiasm, and they were then allowed io j remain. % A CIGAR. Dr. >l , as shillfst Mv, physician vs J New Fork can boast of, tells us the follow ing story —wuieh the medicine man voucb j es fur, and which wo feel safe therefore, iu | endorsing as a fact. ; Two or three yeur3 ago, a Spaniard from f Cuba cutae to this city to be treated for a i disease of the lungs. lle came to Dr. | M , described his symptoms, ar.d put himself in the Doctor's hands. "Well," said the Doctor, "If I undertake your cure, 1 shall be obliged to impose one condition—and that is rather a Lard one for you to comply with." "What is i.: ; "That you entirely cease smoking until ' I give you permission to resume." ".Never! I'd rather let the thing kill me. What pleasure is there iu life if one | cannot smoke/'' The Duotor was a smoker himself, and felt some sympathy. So he said: "Well, perhaps that is beyond your pow er. But you must solemnly promise me to smoke but one cigar per day, or I will not undertake your case." The Cuouu promised, for it was Lis only 1 chance. Four or Ave days afterwards the ; Dr. thought he woula call him as he = passed his house, ani thus save him a wait to the office for a nay. He walked up stairs, knocked, —"Come iu'"—behold the Cuban with a cigar eighteen inches loug anj a proportionate thickness. He confessed that he had had that brand made to order i for him—bu', sai l he: | "Doctor, 1 smoke but one a day, as I • promised." CURIOUS HISTORICAL FACT. The wife of the celebrate! lord Clarea. Jon, the author of the History of the lie, bellion, was a Welsh pot girl, who being extremely poor in her own country, jour neyed to London to better her fortune, and become a stevant to a brewer. W bile she was in this huusble capacity, tho wife ot her master died, and he happening to fix his affections on her, she became h:s wife* Himself dying soon after, left her heir to his property, which is said to hsve amount ed to between jC'2O,OOO and £30,000. Amongst those who frequented the tap at the brewery was a Mr. Ilyde, then a poor barrister, who conceived the project of forming a matrimonial alliance with her. — He succeeded, and sor.u ied th orcwor s widow to the altar. Mr. Hyde being en dowed with groat talent, ar.d now at the command of a large fortune, quickly rose in his profession, becoming head of the Chancery bench, and was uflerwards the Hyde, Earl of Clarendon. The eldest daughter, the offspring of this uoioa, won the hparttf James, Duke of York, and was mairied to him. Charles 11. scat immedi ately for his brother, aud having first plied him with oouui very sharp raillery ou the subject, finished by saying". "James, as you VOL. 29, NO. 45 have brewo, so you must drink," and forth with commanded that tins marriage should Lc legally ratified and promulgated. Upon the death of Charles, James the 11, moans ed the throne, but a premature death frus trated this enviable consummation in the person of his amiable dutches 3. He? daughters, Lowovsr, were Mary, the wife 0 f >i 111. and Queen Anne, both grand children ci the ci devout pot girl from Wales, and wearing in succession the crown of England. ARISTOCRACY DOES NOT MAKE THE MAN.— It is the mind—the expanded intel lect—an affectionate heart—and gentleman ly actions. No matter hew broad the purse, if he lacks capacity. lie is no man—that is not one mentally - Were he possessed of the wealth of Croesus, it would cot change his nature or fii I'.pou him with definiteaess the pure Grecian of which is unthrop s. ' The mind is the standard of the man," thd gu-ige of his thought, the metre of Lis ca pabilities, the impress of his greatness or littleness. A Ml MAX LirE SAVED! pow/.aiAC, Mich, March 11, 186C-' • J. A. RHODES, ESQ : Dear Sir—As I took ' your mc-tlieine to sell oa consignment, "no ' cure no pay," I take pleasure in stating its ef fects as reported to nie by three brothers who lire in this place, and their testimony is a fair specimen of all I have received: W. S. CONKLIS told me 1 had taken nine. bottles of Christie's Ague Balsam, and contin ually run down while using it until my lungs ' and liver were Congested to that degree that blood discharged from my mouth and bowels, so tliat all thought it impossible for me to live through another chill. The doctors too did all they could for me, but though I must die. Nothing ah; any good until I got Rhodes' Fe ver and and Ague Cure, which at once rcliev ; ed no of the distress and nausea at my storu | acl: and pain in my Lead and bowels, and pro- I duv.ed a permanent cure in a short time.'' i 11. M. Cot: itt::: s s: I had bean taking mc- I dieice oi as good a doctor as we have in our county, and taken any quantity of quinine and specifics without any good result, from do August to 17th December. But seeing Low nicely it operated or. my brother. I got a l>ot tlr of It II ODES' FEVER AND AGUE CUBE, which effected a perin-aent cure by using two ibir.i ' of a bqttlc." S. M. CofiKLis was not here, but both the other brothers say his case was the same as H. M's. Isold the medicine to both the aamo day, and the cure was as speedy from the same small quantity, and 1 might so specify. Yours with respect. A. II tTNTXJS"GTON. The above speaks far itself. Good proof as it is, it is of no better tenor than the vast rum bur of like certificates I have already publish ed, and the still greater amount that is contifl | ually ; • u:ing ia tome. . On- .bing more* Last year I had occasion I to Caution the Public in these words:— "7 notice one firm whs ,'iare taken one of my gen oral circulars, substituted the name of their zos ! tram for my met-cine, a.id then with brazen impu ! dcnce end their pamphlet with the exclamation, . l Le! ihe proprietor cf any ether medteint say ai j ranch if he dares,' " fc. c. Now I take pleasure in sating -hat tht U'au ; lion referred to the same --Dr. Chiistie'lAgue Balsam" that is monti-ned in the above ccr i titicate. i There arc several other industrious people who are applying to their poisonous trash alt ' that I publhli about my Fever and Ague Cure, 1 or Antidote to Malaria, except the certificates i of Cures, and the Certificate of the celebrated ! Chemist, Dr. James. R. Chilton of N. Y., In ' favor of its perfectly HARMLESS CUAKAC TEK, which is attached to every bottle. These : will always serve to distinguish civ medicine from imitations. JAS. A. RHODES. Proprietor. providence, K. I. " t For Sale by Bruggpts April 25 1856, ?:u. H' E ADLE Y'S NEW BOOK !—TUB SACREB PLAINS. By /. 11. Hiadley. One 12 mo. ! Volume, Cloth,* elegantly illustrated. Price $1,35. Mai!.. 'five of postage on the receipt of the retrit j rre- OIINION3 OF TTTE IEFSS. "This volume will i e read with satisfaction bv those v.ho most enjoyed the -Sacred Moun tains." .V. 1". Kreu:r.g Fist. ! "It is full of deep interest, and written in a most glowing ami bcau.iful stylo."— Lamsvill* ; Journal. "There is merit sufficient in the work to make | it a favorite with the lover at" things associated so close with Biblical history-"— Detroit Daily i Advertiser- "The writer has a powerful use of hwgaage, and though 1 o enters upon b. ; task wTrh a true devotional spirit he invests his theme with an interest sure to fascinate the general reader." B. fiveting (Jazctle. A finished specimen ef style am! workman ship."—rt>ujf-'.lo C ttUHaa Advocate. .'■ He has clothed his ideas with lofty and beau tiful language, and treated the sul jeet in a man ner becoming its importance."—/foW. I nion. "Thesty le is dliferent from J . T- Headley, and perhaps belter adapted to the subject. It is simple aud unpretending, but plain and forci ble." — Hos'ou Journal. "It is written in a style of poeiic prose suited to the subject and makes some glowing picture* of the -Sacred Plains,' spreading them out in all their oriental loveliness, and investing thein with a charm and interest that belongs only to scriptural scenes." — Mcdiui Tribune. "An elegant book, both in content* and ap pearance—titled to adorn and increase fhawah ue, of any library."— flujfaU Doily fle/ruiU* "This volume is handsomely illustrated, with views of many spots made intqrotfhsg by the sacred history."— Be:.' Daily J;hert>s,r. "The author has faithfully executed his design, atid present - d to the public a book replete with interest aud instruction,"— G?ua~ lem Observer. inserting the foregoing and seeding a copy of payer to Publishers, will receive a copy of the above work, aud also the Economic cjottage builder, pre-paid. WANZfcK, McKIM & CO., r'*bM>ere. July 11,1 866. [Duffalo, New York OHAD, it ackrol, and neraing, for aU> at £>SHOEM AKER'S Oolonuade Store, Oct. 8, 1866. * Prime lot of Groceries.jn*t receirwd and for A sale at SfiOEMAKEH'3, Colear.de Store. ; Oct. 8, 1866. >