4&3 ROYAL GAZETTE ”_ BLANK rams FOR SALE at the RO YAL GAZETTE OFFICE. Ilenses 6d each, or 4d by 100, Deeds (long form) o'd each, or 4d by 100, do (short form) do do Sherid’s Deeds under Land Assessm‘t Act, 6d each or N by lot) Sheriff‘s Deeds Statute Execution, do do Precept Deeds, Crown Land Ullice, do do Bond and Warrant of Attorney (old form) 4d each or 35 0d doz. D1 do (new form) do do Warrant of Attorney (new form) 3d each or 23 9d doz. Do do (old form) do do Nil Debit and set off in Debt, 3d each, Civil Subpoenas ls (id doz. Fi. Fa. in Assumpsit ls (5d doz. Common Process ls 6d doz. Ca. So. in Assumpsit ls (5d doz. Crown Subpoena ls (5d doz. Precept for Summary Process 2d each,or ls 6d doz. Power of Attorney for sale of Vessels, 3d each Rule to plead, 5d each. Cognovets, ls 6d doz. Summary Bailable Writ, 3d each Warrant of Attorney in Ejectment, 3d each or 28 9d doz. Absconding Debtor Summons, ls 6d doz. Declarations in Debt, 3d each Declarations in Ejectment, 2d each Declarations in Assumpsit, 2d each Aliidavits to enter up Judgment on 'Warrant of Attorney after a year and a day, 3d each Declaration on Bond and Warrant of Attorney, 3d each Summons and l‘laint, gd each Bills of Sale, 4d each or 35 (id doz. Forms for obtaining Tavern License, 4d each Charter Parties, 2d each. Bills of Ladiug, 2d sett Mortgages, (fill each. Builder s Certificate. 4d each 'l‘arilf for year 1865, 3d each Bills of Exchange in single copies and Books, Apprentices Indentures. 4gd each Affidavits of Service of Process, id each Seamen's Articles, 4d each. Replavin Bonds, 2d each Bond to Sherifi‘ for forthcoming of Property, 3 each or 28 9d doz. Jail Limits Bond, 2d each Sherifi’s Bail Bonds, 2d each Warrant of Attorney to Sherifi, 3d each Blank forms for Sale of Property by Sherifi'. Summons, 3s per 100. Executions, 6d, 38 do. Form of Bond to Constables for the forthcoming on day of Sale of Goods and Chattols taken in Execution, 2d each Form of Affidavit to obtain Capias, 5d each JOHN INGS. Treasurer’s Office, 31st Jan., 1866. ARRANTS from No. 1368, of the date of 16th Aug.,1864,to No. 1881, of the date of the 3d Dec., 1804, (both inclusive,) will be paid at the Treasury on demand, together with the in- terest due thereon. GEORGE WRIGHT, Treasurer. Holloway’s Pills—~Thc Law of Life—The present is a fitting opportunity for drawing attention to the few points on which health hinges. All impurities must be expelled from the system im- mediately their prt-Scnce is discovered. Wenrand tear must be compensated by suitable food, which, when thoroughly digested, must enrich the bloo d with its nutritive elements. The alterativc virtues exortod by Holloway’s purifying Pil-ls exactly meet thesercquirements, and they further exercise distinctive and peculiar powers in strengthening the nerves and regulating the circu. lation whereby secretion and excretion are accu- rately adjusted. Thescexcellent Pills keep all the natural functions so fairly balanced that they prevent or speedily subdue, headache, nausea, diarrhma ,fovors, and similar maladies. SAFETY. One hundred lives are at once destroyed by a terrible explosion. Every eye turns to the scene. In the dark winding passages of the mine, an enemy has lurked, whose spring has been instant destruction. Accu- mulated horrors shock the sense. Instinctiver we dread the hidden danger, more than an open toe, yet with strange perversity, we arm to meet the one, and re- {use to guard against the other. The minor stands in jaws of death, and despises secur- ity. The inevitable catastrophe comes, and horror is intestified by the reflection that the needless misery might have been averted by the use of one of the simplest little instru- ments in the world—the safety lamp. The explosion of fire-damp illustrates, with the clearness of chemical demonstra- tion,the sudden combination ofcerlain gases, and with precisely the same lucidity may be pointed out the slower but no less ruinous of pernicious and poisonous particles with the blood and bodily tissues. by which de- leterious change fevers, inflvunations. ner- vous disorders. gout. rheumatism, skin com-. plaints. &c.. are generated, the consti- union is undermined, and death itself is Ihreatened. Ilolloway’s lamous remedies are a safe- guard farmore effective than the safety-lamp, for their field ol'operation is immeasurably more extensive. Skillfullv contrived for neutralizing all harmful or poisonous atoms existing either in the blood or system, they constitute the traveller’s best friend. Hol- loway’s Pills are the finest medicine ever known in those hot and insalubrious cl'i- mates, where colonists and natives alike live in dread of their enl'cebled strength succum- bing to the insidious attacks of the death- dealing miasmata. From the tropics to the poles no antidote- cnn be found to compare with these Pills. In the East or West indies, Australia,A.ne- rice. or the marshy countries of Europe, Holloway’s unequalled remedies afi'ord the greatest security fo’r health and life. It should be bore in mind, too, that, like gases in the mins,diease, where left unteud- ed .increases or intensifies in the body ; more especially in a variable climate, where out- ward conditions are ever changing. is there the greatest need of constant care and an effi— cient regulator. The virulence of contagious maladies may be defeated by giving purity to the blood and free action to every organ of the holly. A giant in armour, capable of resisting or subduing infection, Holloway’s medicine.by universal testimony, fully accomplishes this end by strengthening the stomach, cleansing the liver. stimulating the kidneys, eVacuat- ing the bowels, and by determining to the skin and equalizing the temperature of the frame. It is notable that Hollowa-y’s treat- ment includes that most important condition -—time. The proper time and best concert- ed means for removing all ailments are dis- tinctly indicated in the ” instructions” is- sued with his remedies, and their practical utility has been established by the patronage and applause of the world.———Milwaxkee Stan.