All transitory verbis or 11'regulnr cust ners I handed in for insertion one year, ï¬rst insertion .. Each subsequent insertion. . . 20 inches L0 be considered one column. Advertisements without written direction serbed Lil forbid (1 charged accordingly. All transitory \‘erbisemcms Immnrngon 55 or irregulnrcust mars muaL be paid for when TUE YORK HERALD will, always be 11 mm to contain the latesc and most important Foreign and Local News and Markets, and the greatest care will be taken to render it necepmlfle to the mnn of business, and a valuable Family N3 'spapey. u . 7 Thinks .«Ejne Dollar per mlnum, in advance lfnot, puld withln two momhs, one Dollar and F11!" Cents will be (gllzll‘qu. One inch, one, year. Two inches, one yezn Three inches, one year. . . Overthree inches, one year†Advertisements for a shorter pmiod than Cheap 1300k§‘ Job Printing Establishment. Angl dispatched to subscribers by the enl‘lies m- ls Q1:()Lhcg'convvyangg, when so dew ‘ d. No paper discon nned mutilallan‘oarnges are paid; andparlies refusing papers without, paying uu will be held accountable'for the subscription. All letters addressed to the Editor must be ost-paid. every description Every Friday Morning, TIIE I-IEI%ALI) BOOK AND JOB PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT. Orders for any or the undermentioncd des- cription of Plain and Colored Job Work will be promptly attended to: Fancy Bills, Business Cards, Circulars, Law Forms, Bill Heads, Blank Checks, Drafts, Blank Orders, Receipts, Lemar Heads, Fach Cards, Pamphlets, Large and Small Paste , and every ()Lher kind of Loner-Pref ‘ P " l‘ng u~v-.;-- -r w a Having made large mldiLions m lhe printing material, We are better prepared than ever to do the neatesb and most beautiful printing OI THE YORK HERALD LICENSED AUCTIONEER FOR THE Counties of York and Pool, Collector of Notes. Accounts, &c. Small charges and plenty to do. ICENSED AUCTIONEEH FOR THE County of York. Sales attended to on the shortest notice and at moderate rates. 1’. 0. Address, Buttouville. Markham, July 24, 1868. 2 497 HUME from S to .M. George A. Lungsnall' As authorized to collect AccmmLs. Richmond Hill, ()ctLI}, 1869. 12 - 5W4 ICENSED AUCTIONEER FOR THE Counties of York. Peel and Untmin. Residenceâ€"Lot 8, 6th 001)., Markham. P. O. Unionvillc. Sales attended on the shortest nonice and on reusomwle terms. orders left. at the “I-Iera‘d" ofï¬ce for Mr. Caner 8 service wi|1 be promptly attended to. 1v Slnoeons, England. Residence: North of Richmond Hill, at, the Elgm Mills. All calls (nighL or any) promptly attended to. Elgin Mills, Jun. 1, 1870. ~ 12 598 JOHN N. REID,Â¥_M.D., CORNER OF YOUNG AND COLBDRNE STREETS, TlIUHNllILL. Consultations in the Ofï¬ce on the mornings 0f Tnusduys,’1‘hursâ€" days, and Saturdays, from 8 m 10 A.M. ‘ *fAll consulLaLions i9 “10 Uflice, CASH. Corner of Young and Centre street. East, have constanuy on lmml a good assortment of Drugs, Palms, Perfumery. Chemlcnls, oils, Tollet Soups, Medicines, Varnishcs, Fancy uniulcs Dye stuï¬'s, Patent Medicines, and all other articles kept by Drugglsts generally. THOMAS CARR. DEALER IN DRUGS, MICDXCINES‘, GRO- - CERIES, Wines and Liquors, Thornhill. By Royal Letters Patent, has been appointed Issuer 01‘ Marriage Licenses. Our stock of Mediéï¬ues warramed genuine, and of the best qualities. NEW METHOD OF EXTRACTING TEETH without Pain, by the use of Ether Spray, which atfecls the teeth only. The tooth and gum surrounding become insensible with this external agency, when the tooth can be extract- ed with no puinand WITHOUT ENDANGERING THE LIFE, as in the. use of Chloroform. Dr. Robinson will be ln the following places pre- pared to extract teeth with his new apparatus. All ofï¬ce operations in Dentistry performed ln :workmanllke manner: Aurora, 1st», 8Lh, 16th and 22nd of each month. u A. .NcwmarkeL . . . . ‘ . . V . . . . . . 2nd Richmond Hill 9111 and 24th H U Mt. Albert.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14m “ “ Thornhill. . . . ‘ . . . . 23rd “ “ ,Maple . . . . . . . . . ., 215m †“ B rwick..0.......... .zmx h “ 'nhnrg . . . . . . . . . 29111 “ ‘ Noblewn . . . . . ‘ . . . 30th “ V “ “Markham. P. 0: AdLi1:essQâ€"J§llt,t()xlville. ParLies requiring Mr. Sanderson’s service can ake arrangemean at the Herald ofï¬ce. V Counties of York and Peel. flqsiqqnceâ€"Lgn Np. 202 your 013m Concession lquUluAn . To those who have favored him with their patronage in the past, he returns his sincm‘e thanks, and to “lose who may (10 so in the future, he would say that no endeavor on his part will be wanting to meot. their approval. REFEImN('Es.â€""hc following gentlemen can with conï¬dence recommend 6. H. Husband 1.. all requiring Dental mu: Dr. Reid, Thornhill. Dr. Bull \Vcsnon; Dr. D’Evlyn, Burwick; Dr Carson, hi‘ampton. to unnéï¬liééitrbat he will be at Unionville. . . ...1st. Monday of each month. \Veston. . .. “ mh day “ Kiinebm‘g. .16Lh u Bm‘wick. .. .2".an u Scm'horo’ . . . . . . . 23rd .. ‘Where he will be prepared and most, happy to wait on those who may require hi 'el‘vices. G. H. II. having had owr Ema ,x YEARS’ PRACTlCE, feels conï¬dent of giving entire satis- luctdon. . ,. ‘ . ,,,. __:n_ 4L-.-“ EDWARD SANDERSON, IUEHSED AUCTIONEER FOR THE Wilbur: . . . . . . . . . . . . ‘ . . . . 29m “ ‘ Noblewn.....‘...... ..‘..30tyh “ “ Nitrous Oxide Gas always on hand at, Aurora January 4, 18.65. Laskay, March 2, 18%. ‘QZDEN CE JNO. D. MCCONN ELL, M.D., }RAI)UATE 01“ TORONTO U NIVERSIRY. RESIDEXCE-Thox‘nhill. July 22; 1869. m†12 "" ï¬xéï¬iliiu, June 9, 1w") June 27, 1867. Richmond H1â€, .1331. 25, ’72‘ PROPRIET 0118 OF THE RICHMOND HILL DRUG STORE, ALEX. SCOTT, yUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR OF DR. HOSTETTER, EMBER 01“ THE, BOYAL CQLLEGEA V01. XIV, No. 23 Aurora, April 28,70 G. H. HUSBAND, L. D. 54, ENTIST, mags .310S2‘ï¬ESIjECTB‘ULLX’ OFFICEâ€"YONGE Sun, RICHMOND HILL. -DOU'I‘~'“RS 0F lVlEDllthE. DR. JAS. LANGSTAFF ILL GENERALLY BE FOUND AT Terms: 3! per mmum in advance H, SANDERbON a; sum, FRANCIS BUTTON, JR., ADVERTISING RATES A. ROBINSON’S, L “ Tm: YORK HERALD." HENRY SMELSOR, AUCTIONEERE. JOHN CARTER, Mm. 17 1868 IDRUGGIS’I‘S‘ IS PUBLISHED DENTISTRY. . ‘Tnonxzum. 12 PER INCH 539 -1y4 61 5-H“ 71 )6 431 $4 on 3 50 3 (>0 2 50 THE ISOLATED RISK FIRE INSURANCE Company of (‘zmad 1. IIEAD 0chn : King ercct,Corner of Church, Toronto. Capital - - - - . $500,000 Deposited with Government, - 50,000 President, ALEXANDER M<'1{EN',(E,ES(1.,M.P. Mmmger, JOHN MAHGHAN, Junr. ADV‘AXTAGES OFFERED: 1st. Absolute securin to policy howers, in 010 shape ol‘avcry large cash capital. 2nd. The importanb foaer introduced by this Company of insuring NON-HAZAIHMH‘S PROPERTY ()Nm'. being 11m means of giving its Policy Holders VMLY Low RATES 0n detached dwellmgs and farm property. 3rd. The Stock-holders, Directors and Agents being all residents in Canada, losses will be ad- Iusted wiLImuL delay, and paid 1N (‘ASJI AT 0 (1c. “4011' Rates as low as itls possible for any Mu- tual Company to make them, keeping in view L11_Q_securi_!y 91' its p9|icy holders; The undersigned having received an agency for me Townships of Whitchurch. King, Mark- ham, Vaughan York and ELoliicx kc, bogs leave to say that. he is now :imivoly ongngvd in mnvnssing L110 same; and those Wishing; to insure before being called on in the ordinary routine of the canvass, that, by addressing him at Newmarket, or at, head (mire, givingNo. of lab and concession and name of township, they can secure prompt attention. The highest, market prices given for Cattle, Sheep, Lambs, 6:0. _LV_L- V V 4)., BUTCHER, RICHMOND HILL, HAS AL- \VAYSOI) hand the best of Beef, Mnmon Lamb, Veal, Pnrk, Sausages, 610,, and sells a the lowest prices for Cash. Also, Corned and Spiced Beef, Smoked and Dried Hams. Richmond Hill, Sept; 27, 1871. 088 T HE SUBSCRIBER 1N RETURNING thanks in his friends for the patronage he haw received since he cnmmenced business as n. Butcher on Richmond Hill, begs to announce to mu m that he has disposed of his business to his son, HENRY Harman, who will in future carry on the business. He also trusts thut his customers will continue to bestow their patâ€" ronage on his successor. OVVELL’S PATENT PUMPS have all the merits of other pumps with- out, their defects. N0 others possess Lheil' pc- vculizu' advantageous features. [)OWEIJHS I’A’l ’1‘ PUMPS as nnw perl've d, are the successful re- sulb of twelve years endeavor L0 supply a want, universally felt. POWELUS PATENT PUMPS are madenndcr genuine patents in Canada and the United States. Are no spurious im- ll‘ut‘ion 01‘ infringement. r i The only Â¥ï¬iclbï¬thre Eangiuvpump,avui1- able in a few seconds, wimo ' and summer, day and Highly. Infringers beware. as now mace have no castings to come loose 01' break. Have all steel bearings guar- anteed. POWELL'S PATENT PUMPS erected within Lhe last ten years, can have recent improvements attached, and guaran- teed supcuor to any other make. PO\VELL’S PATENT PUMPS have already taken the leading place in some parts of mo United States as well as in Canada. PO\ VELL‘S PATENT PUMPS even in their hitherto imperfect form, lmvein all insmmms curried 011' L119 highest prizes from all cumpetiLors. ‘ m (198] QtKVells. Refer- ences to al Depth from cisternbo one hun- red and thirty feet. (11’ l. fvé'aï¬ï¬ki’bé i‘ï¬â€˜gï¬lgdi With nt infringing Powell’s Patents. Users of infringing pumps are liable. C. POWELL, Patentee.Nowwnbrook. [)OWELL'S PATENT PUMPS han hman mufuinml IN the highest IPEal LIV cell éllgtuitlell 1‘ {116 highest legal tribunals, and universally approved byun enâ€" lightened public Wllerever introduced. 1V1 ITSI‘ARI)’S CATARRH SPECIFIC CURES Acute and Chronic cuses of Catul'rh, Neu- rulgiu. Headache, (folds, 0011ng Group, Asthma. Bronchitis, &c., it is also a g00<1S00~ thing Syrup. have a contincn 11f réli ,. , Em, and are fast, superseding all other kinds both in wood and metal. OW'ELL‘S PATENT 1’ UMPS urn mlnntmldhl‘ the doenest OWELL’S PATENT PUMPS while they cannot be approached in wood, have never yet been equalled in metal at dou- ble cost. bIIFSTARD'S PILLS AR Ii THE BEST PILLS vnn mm am, for Dvsnomln. Sick Headache. POWE LL’S PATENT PUMPS 5N n0“! 111mm. thP. 110 east. PUVVELL’S P ATENT PUMPS hnvn n l-nntinnmn] rmmtntio 3:5{1‘ég171 361, for iWï¬ï¬Ã©pJH, Sick Headache, Billiousness, Liver, Kidney Complaints, ‘tc. HAVE YOU RHEVMATISM, WOUNDS. Bruises, ()ld Sores, Guts, Burns, ,Fmst, Bibes, I’llcs, Painful Swollings, Whine Swell- ings, and every conceivable wound upon man or beast? POVVELL’H PATENT PUMPS ’l‘hr- nnlv pï¬iniont ï¬ro mm‘inl POWELL’S PATENT PUMPS cannot be “Valle-d with l Stands permanently above every other Reme- (ly now 111 use. In is invaluable. ALSO, THE PAIN VICTOR IS iNIFALLI- BLE for Diurrluuu, 1)\'smitnr3‘,i“luX, (Yoiic, Choiem Morbus, Pain and Cramp in the Stom- ach and Boweis, &c. Directions with each bottle and box. Manufactured by H. MUSTARD, Proprietor, Ingersoll. Sold by Drnggists generally. THE DOINIINION WORNI CANDY IS THE medicine to expel \Vorm ‘ Try ' 2 7003' .Ww. v, , Boots and Shoes made to measure, of the best materials and w‘orkmnnslup, at, the lowest 1'mmmel‘nting prlccs. T oromyo, Dec. :3 1867. BARRIHTER, ATTORNEY, SOLICITUR-IN- Chancel-y, Cnllveyuncer, M3. OFFICEâ€"Nu 6, Royal Insurance Buildings, l‘omnm Street. Toronto, Dec. 2, 1869 591 Ul’lLV MAIUQUA, hlALV 111‘ AL1 VIVA)“ nn H Dealer in all kinds 01‘ Boots and Shoes, 38 “(est Mzn'lg {Squat-e, Toronto. ACCOUNTANT, Bf)()K-]\'IGEAEH. CON- VEYANCER and Commission Agent for the sale or purchase of Lands, Farm Slock, 610:, &(‘., also 101' the collection of Rents, Notes and Accbuntn i RINGWOOD MARBLE WORKS. P \VIDEMAN, MANUFACTURER OF ALL . KINDS 0f Monuments, Headstones, 610. Call and examine my Stock and Prices before purchasing elsewhere, as you wiil ï¬nd it to your interest. VETERINARY SURGEUN. GRADUATE of Tc erLO Venerinm‘y Coilegc, cnrner 01' Yonge and (Jentre street East. Richmond Hill, begs L0 announce to the public that lie is now practising with H. SANDERSON, of the same pluco,whero they mav be consulted personally or by lollieiyon all dim uses of Horses,CaLtle,&c. All 01' :01's from a distance prompiyly attended i9, and medicines bent be any part of the Pro- Vince. ARMERS' BOOT AND SHOE'STORE TOHN BARROX, MANUFACTURER AN}? TH! DS. ATKINSON, Agent. Newmarkcb, Aug. 16, 1871. 7 (Bi-1y v Alluu- Horses examined as to .soundness, and also bought and sold on com Igaxssion. Richmond 811). Jan. 20 1672. 7 7C5 Richmond Hill, Jan. 7, 1871. 3 CHARGES MODERATE. OFFICEâ€"Richlnond Street, Richmond Hill 6 '700â€"1y ï¬G‘ISSUER 0F MARRIAGE LICENSE Ri ngwpod, Sept. 12 PATENT RIEDIHIFES. PROCLABiATION. Flltiï¬ l‘SUR/QNCE l'0\"ELI.’S I’UfllPS. WILLIAM MALLOY, THE KING OF OILS B u'l‘CllElRl J. H. SANDERSON, NOTICE. D. C. O’BRIEN7 ROBERT HOPPER, 497 Kay Wasr, Fla, Oet. 30.â€"Tl e steamer Missouri, of the Atlantic Mail line, was burned Eli/SL111 in a gale on the 22nd instant, about 25 miles from Abaco, en route for Ha- vana ma Nassau= N. P. Twelve persons were saved, as follows : George ’l‘hnekcry, Enri- que Yauco, W. F. Tunnell, Ebenezer Sauud. ers, 0. E. Outer-bridge, James Culnrer, and John Rebels, paswngeis; Wm. Jones, sea- man; Samuel Cone, seaman; Patrick Mc- Gowen, waitrr; Lewis Boheme, pantryman ; and Richard Murphy, second pantryman. The ï¬re was discovered in the paniry,and sud- dently burst out in volumes of flame amid- ships, spreading over the ship. The boats were lauchedimmedivrtely and all but one were swamped at once. Those remaining on board were compelled, on account of the flames, to jump into the sea. Those saved landed in one of the boats on Abaco, about 6 p. m. on the evening 0: the 22nd, and Were taken from thence in a small schooner to Nassau. It was a terrible sight ior those in the flor t- ing boat to see those in the water clinging to the swamped boats and begging for as- sistance. There were about ten ladies on board. It is not known whether any of the missing have since been picked up. It is said the captain used every effort to save the lives of the passengersgvorking bravely him- self with the hose. Three of the saved pas- sengers are now here. This information was brought here this afternoon by the steamer Anna from Nassau to the British Consul, and communications were sent to the Atlantic Mail Company’s ofï¬ce in New York. The origin of the ï¬re is unknown. ’l'wo of the bums of the ill-fated Missouri were burned alongside the vessel, and them is no probability that any of the others ever reached shore. FURTHER I'ARTICULARSâ€"HEARTRENDING SCENES DESCRIBED BY THE SURVIVORS. It is probable that not a single life would have been saved had it not been for James Culmer, a resident of Eleuthera, and a pas- senger on board. A new boat had been pur- chased in New York and placed on deck, but as the weather had been boisterous she had not been secured either by gripes or by checks When it was known that the vessel would go down, Culmer, with a few others, launched this boat, hold. ing last the painter. When he jumped overboard and swam to the boat eleven others followed him, and even then had it not been for Culmerâ€"who was acquainted with the management of a boat and took charge and piloted her safely through the surfâ€"she would have been lost with the others. The Missouri sailed from Pier N0. 4, North River, New York, at 8 o’clock, 3.111., last Friday, for Havana, via Nassau, having on board a crew of 58, all told, 29 registered pas- sengers and an assorted cargo. Among the saved is mentioned a colored passenger, whose presence was not known at the ofï¬ce of the Company till yesterday. This would make a total of 88 persons on board the doomed vessel at the time or her destruction. Of these, as only 12 are reported saved, 76 seem undoubtedly to have perished. The three passengers who are here were bound to Havana, and will be forwarded to that port by John Jay Phxlbrick, the agent of the Atlantic Mail Steamship line at this port, who has taken every measure towards securing their comlortv Col. Evans was agent for the Associated Press at San Francisco, and Mr. Cleveland was proprietor of the Royal Victoria Hot. Let N assau, The ï¬ve servants, accompanying the latter gentleman, had been engaged in New York for service in his hotel. Nothing further could be harmed regarding the pas- sengers. Of the crew of ï¬ftyâ€"eight men, of whom only ï¬ve seemed to have been saved, the Company had no list, but the follow- ing, all of whom are reported lost, Were named by Mr. Quintin. from memory 2 Capt. M. R. Greene, of Alba! y, N. Y. ; First Olli- cer, John Brown; Second Ofï¬cer, Lewis Fur- iell ; Purser, Wm. D. Hempstead; Chief Engineer, John Islip. A list at the remainâ€" der of the crew can only he obtained at the ofï¬ce of the United States Shipping Commis- sioner in Cherry street, the crew having been shipped by himojust before the sailing of the new]. Capt. Greene, who leaves a family at Albany. was of middle age, and has been about ï¬ve years in the service of the Com- pany, by whom he was highly esteemed for personal worth, and regarded as a faithful and efï¬cient oflicer. Mr. Brown the First Ofï¬cer, has been in the employ of the Company during a long series of years. He was formerly second oflicer of the steamship Moro Castle ot the same line, and was trans- ferred to the Missouri on being promoted some time ago. Mr. Hempstead, the purser, had been acting in that capacity for four years, and was widely known as an obliging and courteous «ilia't-n Tim Islip, the chief engineer, was iU- mil 3 \ “Hineer of the steam- (r Escort, of the New York Steamboat Corn- pnny‘s line to Orient, Sag Harbor, and Green. point. He had been transferred to the Mis- souri, just before her sailing, by A. W. Dimock, who is president of both companies. Ululubby N LIU JD kllvuAuvLAL v; vvvu vv . The Missouri was a wooden, serew s ‘ ship of 1,250 tons burthen, built at Mystic, Conn., in 1862. She was of oak and chest- nut, copper and ironâ€"fastened, and had three decks. of brigantine rigs, she was 210 feet long, 24 feet beam, and 23 feet in depth. She had two steam donkey pumps and two hand pumps, and is said to have been liberally supplied with hose, buckets, and, in short, all ordinary appliances for extinguishing ï¬re. She had six boats rated under the old law to carry 30 persons each, and under a recent amendment, 25 persons each. She was valued at $200,000, and was insured for $100,000, distributed among various companies. Her cargo is estimated to have been worth about $250,000, making a total loss at about $450,000. Her place will be supplied by the company’s spare steamer, Columbia, which will sail on the usual day. Mr. Quinan states that the Missouri was rated AP‘, which is the highest rate ot the American Lloyds. Previous to her departure, he says, she underwent an unusually thorough inspection, which resulted in a removal of her rate. Mr. Quinan is utterly at a loss to account for the origin of the ï¬re, and states that there were no combustibles on board the vessel, and nothing of a more dangerous nature than lard, of which there was a small invoice, properly stowed. â€"-Speak1ng of the climate of the Argen‘ tine Republic, Professor Gould says: “A bow1 of water left uncovered in the morning is dry at night; ink vanished from the inkâ€" stand as if by magic. The bodies of dead animals dry up instead of decomposing, and neither exercise nor exposure to the sun’s rays produces perspiration. --The faculty of the Auburn Theological Seminary has established a. bowling-alley, to set up on their pins those students who are of spare habit. â€"Thc redoubtablc “Buffalo Bill ;’ is now “ the Honorable W. F. Cody,†member of the Nebraska Legislature frcm Lincoln county. He will naturally be made chairman of the Committee of Codyï¬cation of the Laws te- lating to Indians. THE Sl‘EAMSilli’ 110R {01{. RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO, CANADAg,"-FRIDAY, NQV. 8 â€"â€"'I‘he Committee of the Alex ’dra 01‘â€" phauage for Infants have a third .me been favored with a donation of illï¬gd om their generous and anonymous friend"‘D.N.â€â€" Times. 7 -It is stated that last year’s mums de- rived from several large collieriqh in the ShetEeId district exceed £100,000 eich, while the rate for the last quarteris even greatly in excess of that amount. --The Lord Chancellor of England made an example of two quarrelsome magistrates, who had been punching each other’s noses on the bench, by removing them from the Commissmn of the Peace. â€"-The Shefï¬eld Town Council have enter- ed into a contract with the towg} manure company for the disposal of the’Sewage fox 21 years. The company has given security for £20,000. â€"-Rumor points to Fieldâ€"Marshal Sir Wil- liam Maynard Gomm as the successor of the late Sir George Pollock in the ofï¬ce of con- stable of the Tower. Since the time of the Duke of Wellington the ofï¬ce has generally been held by a ï¬eld-marshal. -â€"The threat of the South Wales iron masters and coal-owners to shut down upon their workmen, rather than concede the in- crease of wages demanded, has Created no little excitement. Both parties are buckling on their armor for a. light to the bitter end. â€"A Mr. Thomas Horridge, of Manchester, England, who has the privilege of putting M. A. to his name, has been arrested for shooting his man-servant, who was drunk and insolent. Horridge shot four shots, the fourth of which took effect upon the drunken servant. â€"While a sale was being carried on at Mr. Curtis’s, baker, of Silver street, London, on Monday, the floor gave way, and several per- sons wcre precipitated into a cellar below. Some of them were seriously injured, and the auctioneer, Mr. Sheppard, received a severe fracture of the ribs. â€"-Alderman Lusk has laid down a. salutary doctrine at the London Masion House that roadways belong as much to foot passengers as to cabinen and vandrivers. Following up this principle, he has committed a cabman for manslaughter, in having run over :1 WO- man and inflicted fatal injuries upon her. â€"The public expenditure for ann ‘ties and pensions in the year ended the 3 tMarch was £304,879 23. 5d. 5. stable of the Tower of London, 8 been â€"Field Marshal Sir George l‘ollgk, Con- buried in Westminster Abbey. » ‘L â€"The Freeman’sJoumal is infor ‘ed that Mr. Gladstone’s proposed visit t Ircland will not now take place this year. -â€"A colossal statue of Sir Hum? was unvailed M Punzancc. â€"â€"Large quantities 01 game are ported into the Tyne from Norway. ‘ -â€"â€"It. is stated that coalhai been d ‘ over‘éd in the Isle of Axbolme, Lincolnshi . a â€"-Sir William Gull, the eminent London physician, who‘ attended the Prince of Wales in his illness, went the other day to Cork, having been bmught, specially ’ovcl‘ from London to see the lion. 8.. R. Verney, Lieu- tenant in the 52nd Rngi’nent, ill with a fever. The fee paid to Sir William Gull for his an- tendance was $4,000. â€"A singular event has occurred in the history ofthe city of Bath, England. The Court of Quarter Sessions met there on the 12th inst, and there were In prisoners for trial. This is the ï¬rst time in the history of the city that the justices have had a. maiden sitting, and the bailiffs and other myrmidons of the court are asking themselvesâ€"“ What next '2†â€"-Af. the Berkshire Quarter Ssssions, Mark Flower and James Isaac, two yrivales in the 13th Hmsm's, were tried for assaulting a young lady named Annie Benhum, on the 18th neptcmhcr, on the return march irom the autum: manmuvres. Fluwer was con- victed and {sentenced to twelve months’ im. prisonment, and Isaac was acquittcd, it up. pearing that he was intoxicated, and only helped the parties from the ground. --Mrs. James Austin, whose husband has something to do wirh the advertising ue. partment of the Gallery of Illustratzon, Lon- don, having been deprived of his society for several days, went to his place 0t business to look after him. He received her with a brutal blow on the eye, which knocked her down ainwnsiblo. At Marlborough street police court he was thought worthy of four months imprisonment with hard labor. -â€"The harvest in Scotland is the w§rat since 1 816 . . L > -â€"-At the quarter sessions held at Worcesâ€" ter, George William Prescott, a. solicitor, practising at Stourbridge, was found guilty ot maliciously wounding Nathan Corbett, a groom, by striking him a severe blow upon the head with a cane. He was sentenced to six months’ hard labor, and the comt also Oldered him to ï¬nd sur:ties for his good be- havior for twelve months, and pay the cost of the prosecution, or in default to be kept; at hard labor for three months longer. Mr. Prescott had six times previously been ï¬ned for assault and other offenses. â€"â€"'1‘be health of Sir Alexander Cockburn has, it is stated, sufl'ered considerably by his protracted labors at Geneva; but it is hoped that he will recover his strength by the com- mencement of next tu‘m, when the task of trying the indictment against the claimant to the 'l‘ichborne estates will be undertaken by His Lordship. Lord Chief Justice Bovil], whase health was impaired by the trial of the cause of Tichborne vs. Lushington, has spent a portion of his vacation at Homburg, and is said to have derived great beneï¬t from the air and waters of that place. Mr. Maguire, M.P., is said to be rather seriously ill. Dr. Guthrie is getting better, and is out of immediate danger. â€"â€"A young man in London recently made a slight improvement on the arts of Chicago shysters in the manufacture of speedy divorces “without publicity or unnecessary process.†Perhaps, it ought rather to be said that be included among the “unnecessary process" the summons, bill, reference, proof, report, and the signature of the court to the decree. It seems that he had fallen in love with ayoung lady, and was making good drogress with his suit until the ooject of his addresses learned one day that he was mar- ried‘ When he was confronted with this fact he did not attempt to deny it, but explained that he had separated ï¬nally from his wife and Commenced pro- ceedings to secure a divorce. In a short time he produced a document that purported to he a decree from the divorce court, restoring him to single blessedness. Further to corroborate the statement that he was again in a marriagcable condition, he also exhibited to the young Woman what seemed to be a. clipping from the London Times, briefly announcing his divorce. It proved that the decree was a forgery, and that the young rascal, being a compositor in the Timesoiï¬ce, had set up the paragraph and made a single impression of it to assist his deception. He was recently brought to trial before one of the criminal courts of London and sentenced. to eighteen months’ imprisonment. U HEAT B INTAKE. - Susan B. Anthony has at last an immc- diate prospect of “reaching man’s estate.†A radical reformer in the West has promised to give her his whole property. â€"Mayor Richmond’s little daughter was lefta few moments alone in his ofï¬ce the other day, and on a gentleman entering with whom she was acquainted, she promptly asked him what street he wanted paved.â€" New Bedford Standard -â€"Thc barbarous custom of piercing ladies ears for ear-rings, is rapidly being abolished. Several very ingenious arrangements for fastening in these articles ofjewelry without the usual surgical operation, are now sold at jewelry shops, and are quite exttnsivc y worn. â€"A strong-minded woman in Detroit made the following gentle reply to a poli- tician who had called at her house to get her husband to go to the polls and vote: -‘ No, sir, he can’t go! He’s washing now, and he’s got. to iron to-morrow, and if he wasn’t doing nnythvng he couldn’t go. I run this he house, I do, and if any one votas it’ll be this same Mary Jane.†â€"â€"North Carolina ladies indulge in the 0x- citement of fox-hunting. ' â€"â€"Wedding cards this winter will be smaller and plainer than of late. The days of pink cards, gilt lettering and sprawling mone- grams have departed. -â€"-It is said that there is only one real Chinese woman in the United States, and she is the wife of a San Francisco merchant. The olive-eyed females so common among the Mongolians of the Paciï¬c slope are all of Tartar extraction. â€"A new danger threatens society. An eminent French chemist announces that many of the new evening silks are covered with pier-ate of lead, and are therefore liable to a tremendous explosion at any moment. It would be a terrible thing, while waltzing with a lady, to have her suddenly blow up. â€"Worth, the guat Parisian man-millinur, is said to be bankxupt. â€"It is said that an American lady in Lon- don recently went to the United States Lega- tion for u “ pass " to see Queen Victoxia. There is a passage in Lord Jeffrey’s review of Miss Edgeworth s “Tales of a Fashionable Life,†in which the great critic describe-swim admirable force, the iniseriss of the fashion- able. This wretched hunt after a reputaâ€" tion for fashion, with its constant heartburnâ€" ings and defeats, is, he considers, more proâ€"â€" ductive of real misery than the serious cala- mites of life. ' This may seem a strange as. sertion, he acids7 but is his deliberate convic- tion, and his statements on this head are strengthened by the opiinons of one fully as competent to form just conclusionsâ€"Sir Henry Holland. In his autobiographicalsketch,that ce‘ebrated person states that he has known people to be made absolutely ill by their anxiety and disappointment for Al- mack’s ballads in London. Speaking of fashionable women the London Lancet has lately had some very sound remarks in the same strain. “ Fashion,†it says, “kills more than toil or sorrow. Obedience to fashion is a greater injury to her physical and mental constitution than the hardships of poverty and neglect. The slave woman at her task still lives and grows old, and sees two or three generations of her mistress pass away. The washerwoman, with scarcely a ray of hope to cheer her in her toils. will live to see her fashionable sisters all extinct. The kitchen maid is hearty and strong, when her lady has to be nursed like a sick baby. It is a sad truth that fashion-pampered women are Worthless for all good ends of life ; they have but little forco of character, and quite as little physical energy. They live for no great ends. They are dolls formed in the hands 01 milliners and servants, to be fed to order If they have children, rervants and nurses do all save to conceive and give them birth; and when reared, what are they ? What do they amonnt,_to but weak scions of the old stock? Who ever heard of a fash- ionable woman’s child exhibiting any virtue and power ofmind for which it became emi- nent? Read the biographies of our men and women. None of them had a fashionable mother. A Pall Mall writer opens an interesting dis. cussion of telegraphic literatiire by suggestâ€" ing the artful dodging which comes ot the go:an of the German tongue. The subject came up at the last International Conference. and when it was suggested that what Eng- lishmen must know and telegraph as six words, the “Rhine and Neckar Steam Navi- gation Company†and the French as no less than fourteen “Compagnie de la Navigation par bateaux a vapeur sur le lthin et le Necâ€" kar,†the Germans compound into the polly- syllable but one word “ltheinncckardalnpfs- chiflahltgesellschaft," it was at cnce seen that any general company which should attempt to do German business at the usual rate of other countries would imme- diately be broken down by the dead Weight of German comptnnds. One would think that stronger wires, indeed, would be- come necessary in that land of weighty word“ But the contercnce contented itself with imâ€" posing double tax upon words of more than six syllables. We expect of the telegraph that it will save not only time of transmission, but of‘ composition. And in our news journals, when in the press of matter which by the opening of the whole world as a ï¬eld of news-gathering is precipitated upon them, space is of so much value, we look to she necessary brevity of the telegraph as the natural remedy. The usual liberal ampliï¬- cation is certainly much beyond that desirâ€" able “doing into English†which shall make the skeleton readable. But it is when the telegraph shall become the ordinary means of communication, to the consider. able lighteningr of the mails, between pri- vate individuals, that we shall have reason to recognize its double time-saving qualities. The time we now waste in “Dear 611's†and “Yours trulys†and the thousand and one polite appendages of what we really want to say, the fashionable and expensive finery of onrthoughts, will all be saved when the amenities of telegraphic brevety allow us to say curtly what we mean and waste neither the the time nor temper of either party. We leave to some ingenious computator how many centuries will he aggregater saved to the world by this new method of economy of time. ' -'I‘he followmg order is republished on account of a iittlc ec-ceut-riciby of spclling. The writer, however, is more anxious to be President of the Unitcd States than town a precedent in spelling: Enlisted men traveling on steamers van- nut 01mm cal in privileges when traveling on steamers by paying the extra rates, but with the con cent of all parties, there will be no objection to they having cabin privilegus. U. S. GRANT, MajonGenoml. Memphis, August 26, 1863. The Flue Art of 'l‘eicg'mpll y. [From the New York Mail.) FOR LA l) i E5 UNLY. Women of Fasluon. The treatment which Shakspcare has given the dog is not one of the least curious traits of our great dramatist. On looking,r out the word dog it will be diseovered that it occurs 174 times in his worksâ€"hound, 31; grey- hound 13 ;spanic1, 8 ; mastiif, 5 ; our, 45. With a few others the amount is nearly 300 ; and they are generally mentiomd with con- tempt and disrespect, never with commenda- tion. Macbeth enumerates hounds, grey~ hounds, mongrels, spaniels, shoughs, water- rugs, and demi-wolves, which with mastifl', beagle, brach, and lym, comprise all the va- rietlx is noticed in the plays._ As ttrms of re- proach, we ï¬nd, “ Out do ?-â€"out cur !" false hound I†“ biasphemous uncharituble dog I‘7 “ most impenetrable curl†“inexorable dog?†Several passages such as this in “ Cymoe- line†oecur, where eornelius speaks oi “ killâ€" ing creatures vile, as cats and dogs of no es- teem.†’l‘rineulo tells his companions, with a double nn'aningz “You will lie like tings.†To fawn, which may simply mean to care‘s, coax, or fondle, is repeatedly perverted to the injury of the family. “ Base sp 'niel {aw ing,†“ i'awned like hounds," “even like v fawning greyhound.†Helena thus pmsum her unrelenting lover : Neglect me, lose me; only give me leave, U “worthy usl am, to follow ~You. Wlmtworsor place can I beg in your love Than to be used as you we your dog?’ Celia says, “ Her words are too precious to be castaway upon ours.†The only dog that appears upon the scene is Crab, who meets with nothing but unmitigated abuse, and is pronounced by his master- Launce “ the soureat-natured dog that lives.†Desdemonia, it may be gathered, had a pet to amuse and comfort her in her distress ; p1‘obably,as we may suppose, a sweetlittle maltese poodle; yet all we hear of it is from the horrid Iago â€"who, no (loxibt, teased ltâ€"V-‘hUI‘C he says of Cassio, “He’ll be as full of qu urel and of. fense as my young mistress’s dog.†Justice Shallow considers his fallow greyhound tr be “a good dogâ€"a lair dog.†Theseus is proud of his hounds, admiring their form, their lleetness, and their music. Yet these are “perfections that are set in bones and nerves ;†here is no commendation of their moral qualities. Some show of kindly feelâ€" ing towards his hotnds is exhibited by the lord in “Taming of the Shrew :" “Huntsmen, 1 charge thee, tender well my “I am your spaniel; and, Demetrius, The more you heal, me I will fawn on you. Use me hub as your spaniel, Splll‘ll 1110, strike “For my part, I do Wish thou wer , :L dog, That 1 might love thee something ;" yet only in bitter irony,to (xpress the inten- sity of his hatred to mankind. Proteus calls the dog to be presented to Silvia “his little jewel ;" in allusion, probably, to its personal beauty, not its moral qualities: We read in “Hamlet 7â€"â€" “Iiet Hercules himself do what he may. The cat will mew, the (log will have his day.†The dog, however, in these inimitable plays never has fair playâ€"â€"never has his day, is never “highly commended 7' How astonished would the spirit of the mighty dramatist be to witness the institution of dog shows, and to learn that the Dog of Montargis was7 at one time, the hero of the stage. “ Give a dog his due," and love me, love my dog,†are ancient proverbs, which have not met with attention at his hands. There is no accountâ€" ing for tastes, and very likely no better ex- planation can be advanced than that of Shylock : “ As there is no ï¬rm reason to he rmnler’d, \Vliy he crinmtubiile a. gaping pig; \Vhy he. a harmless, iieeesmry eat :†so it can only be observed “it was humor."â€" Self-interest, however, peeps out in a pre- ceding line 2 “I would not lose the dog for twenty pounds.†Launcc’s lady-love is said to have “more qualities than a. water spaniel 5" but they are only to be classed with “fevtch and early.†Timon of Athens exclaimsâ€" -â€"Joc L’entlaud, the circus-clown, is an in- mate of the Lunatic Asylum on. Ward’s Is- land hummus, I And sup them well, and 100k unto them 2111 â€"-The Earl of Shafteshury new town for wmkingmen u out of London. -â€"It is stated that Thicrs, 47 years ago: possessed only 40 francs. We dare say he was a good deal happicr than he is nowâ€" and didn’t know it. â€"-Among the best fashion articles written in Paris, We are told, are those of the "Vis- comtess do Bury,†who is, in fact, M. Recorttc, Chin clerk in the oiiice of the chief of police. â€".'l‘he Fremzan’s Jam-Hal is informed that Mr. Gladstonc‘s proposed visit to Ireland has been unavoidany postponed, and will not now take place this year. ~â€"Mr. Thomas Miller, “The Baskctvmakur Poet,†who is now in his 66th year, madre hiï¬ appearance lately as a public reader, 111 Lon» don. He read extracts from his own novel, “Gideon Giles, the Roper.†â€"M. Joigncray, an athlete of prodigiom strength, made his first appearance recenin at the Fulics-Bcrgerc, Pans. Amongst other exercises, bcing suspended by his fwl from a trapeze, hu lifted irom the ground a real horse by the more force 01 his wrlsis. â€"â€"At Soulhcnd, England, the other day, a young girl about 12 years old was Bathing, when she was seized with cramp or faintncss and diiszippcared under the waves. Miss IVelly Power of the Vaudeville Theater was bathing at the same time, and immediatcly dived and brought the drowning girl to the surface; but. not until she had been three times carried down. Once a Week â€"-The Cork Constitution says : Sir William Guzl, the eminent London physician, who, with Sir, William Jenner, attended the Prince of Wales in his illness, was in Cork a few days since, having been brought specially over from London to see lhu Hon. 1‘». ll. Ver- ncy, Lieutenant in the 52nd Regiment, who lies in lever at the barracks. The fee paid to Sir William Gull for his attendance was £800. â€"The ptl‘éOn who ï¬rst used cannon as a musical adjunct was Giuseppe b‘arti, an Italian, who lived at St. Petcrsburg. In 1788 he composud a Te Deum to celebrate the capture of Fort Oczanow by I’otcmkin, and besides enormous vocal and instrumental masses, he had placed the courtyard oftho imperial palace many cannon, of various calâ€" ibres, to deepen the bass at given times. He producel a resonant effect. Catherine 11. ennobled him after this. â€"Professor Tyndall closed his lectures at Boston with a speech from which we give this extract: “During my stay here 1 have heard the ‘old country’ mentioned again and again, You cannot abolish your auto. Ccdenis. Uut of England’s loins you have come. Your ancestry is Stamped upon your faces, your laws, your politics, and your characters. Dc Tocqueville, sympathizing with democratic institutions, says, regarding England and America: ‘I refuse to regard these people its tv 0. One is the outgrowth of the other} Atrocious ignorance of each other is at the bottom of all our diii‘erenccs. I trust that hereafter each nation will rtspect the individuality of the other, while thoroughly maintaining its own.†Samkespmu'iml no' PERSON .\ L. is building a hllOX‘t distance vmmmm . The skill of the lrot‘essionul elephant catchers in Ceylon, the “ panikeas,†as they are called, who inhabit the Moorish villages in the north and north-east of the island is described as having almost the certainty of instinct. “ Hence,†says Sir Emerson Ten- mint, “their services are eagerly sought Dy the European sportsmen who go down into their country in search of game. So keen is their glance, that almost at the top of their speed, like hounds running “breast high,†they will follow the course ot an elephant over glades covered with stunted grass, where the eye of a stranger would fail to discover a trace of a passage, and on through forests strewn with dry leaves, where it seems impossible to perceive a tootstep. Here they are guided by a bent or broken twig, or by a lent dropped from the animal’s mouth on which they can detect the pressure of a tooth. L‘at fault, they teteh a. circuit, likca Setter, till, lighting on some fresh marks, they go ahead again with renewed vigor. 50 delicate is the sense of smell in the elephant, and so indispensable is it to go against the wind in approaching him, that the panikeas on those occasions when the wind is so still that its direction cannot be otherwise discerned, will suspend the ï¬lm of agossamer to determine it, and shape their course accordingly. They are enabled by the inspection of the foot marks, wh’hn im- pressed in soft clay, to describe the size as Well as the number Ofa herd before it is seen ; the hight, of an elephnnt at the shoulder being as nearly as possible twice the circum- terenee of its tore toot."â€"From “Cassel’s Natural History†for OCtObLI‘. If we could see the sokret motives that prompt even the good ackshuns ov men, we should see more to I‘cprovc than admire. Thebest specimen of calm rcsiguashun to their mm that I have met with thus for have been among them who had aninâ€" kum 0v 40 thousand a year, loss govern- ment tax. :Take all tile phoolsuzmd the good 111k But ov this worldme it would bother mennv 0v usfltrew ggt a living. Most 0v the hapiness in this world konsists in possessing whaï¬ others kant gib. Thaw is a great: many ghosts travelling around loose, but no one ever saw one yet. I havé noticed one thing, that just about in propol‘shun that the pashuns are weak, men are seemingly virtewous. Politeness m flit only the most powerful but the cheapest argumjnt 1 know. â€"â€"-At a late election they used a scooped. out pumpkin tor a ballot-box. â€"â€"Mauy gentlemen have pockets made in the sleeves of their overcoats, wherein a lady may keep her hand warm when walking arm in arm with them 7217113 ; One 3 Dollar {per [Amwm Lin :Adt‘dme. Honesty izv like money, you have got to work hard to get it, and then work harder tew keep it. â€"The commerce of Buenos Ayrcs has trebled in ï¬ve years. â€"chrietta Robinson, the notorious “ veiled murderess,†now conï¬ned in Sing Sing prison, is to be transferred to the State Asylum in Auburn. She is reported hope- ltssly insane. â€"â€"’1‘he inventor of “spoon†ï¬shing is said to be an old man named De Castle, who for twentyâ€"two years has been loekmaster on canal around Morsisburg rapids on the St. Lawrence river. He had been ï¬shing on one of the islands below the town with little success, and looking down from his boat into the blear green water, could see the ï¬sh moving lazily about. in taking a pinch ot snuff )rorn his vest pecket he pulled outa siLVer sixpence, which, falling;r into the river: went wavering down through the water. The glitter attracted a large pickrrel, who dashed ior the Sixpence and swallowed it. The sportsman pondered over the matter, and on his return home conï¬scated his wifels brass kettle, and cutting a piece out of it, soldered it to a hook and set out with his new bait. He had not been long on the water before he ha! a very ï¬erce strike. After a struggle for an hour he succeeded in landing the largest ï¬sh he had ever caught, a. museaionge Weighing fortyâ€"right pounds. â€"'l‘hedelig11tfnlpess of English weather is illustrated in the fact that on the 10th inst. great floods occurer in .Yorkshirc, owing to the rapid nwltiLg of snow, which had fallen on the hills in great quantities. â€"-’l‘he Bodon Gazetlc says that the young ladies of that city can quote Goethe and Schiller fluently, but cannot quote a. single cquplct of Pope, nor tell whether Washington Irvng was an Englishman or an Amu‘ican. â€"'l‘he town of Sterling, 111., has hit upon an excellent temperance measure. It has psesed an ordinance providing that if the windows or doors of drinkng saloons shall 1). obscured by means of screens, paint or other devices to conceal what is going on within, the proprietor shall be liable to a. ï¬ne of from ï¬ve to twenty dollars. â€"Out in Indiana the other day a man was awarded a premium for a two-year 01d colt, when the animal he entered was a horse eight year old. The owner had a cult in a. pasture and sent a man to bring him to the iair; the man make a mistake and took the eightâ€"year 01d horse, which was put in the same pasture, and the committee “put him through. --’l'he death is announced of Charles Hal- loweli Uarew, u noted British sportsman. Ho formerly possessod an immense foxtuno, and his lilo was insured for £300,000. He was once lord of 1110 Manor of Walton, and the Derlw was run over a part of his estate. The last horse‘who ran in his name was “Delight.†The animal, the owner, and the jockeyâ€"Kenyon by nameâ€"are alldcad now. â€"Dr. Gross, of Philadelphia, he cele- brated surgocn, was once dangerously ill. Soon after 1115 recovery he met one of his patients, who remarked to him, “Oh, doctorl I rrjoicr; to see that you are out again; had we lost you, our good people would have died by the dozen.†“Thank you, madam,†replied tho “liable doctor; “1 now fear they will die by the Gross.†â€"Two Irish outragr s are reported. Mr. Orme, land agent of Col. Vaughan and Mr. Smith. agent or the Marquis of Sligo,were returning home on the 3rd inst. to Mobanny, near Newport, in the county, the residence of Mr. Orme. Th! 3; were ï¬red at, but fortunate- ly not injured. The attempted assassin had his face blackened. ‘ He was pursued by Mr. Smith and Mr. Orme for a considerable dis- tanee up the mountain. No reason can he. assrgned lor the outrage. On the 4th inst, Davld Murphy, late cashier in the Irishman newspaper ofï¬ce, was tired at while going home about 10 o’clock. The hall slightly grazed the side of Murphy’s head. The as- sailant was pursued and artested, and, as his captors appear not to have lost sight of him, there is no question as to his identity. The outrage is ascribed to a fear that Murphy would betray some of the secrets of the Feuiuua. Ref. UBLISHED AT THE OFFICE ON “THE YORK HERALD,†Issued \ycekly on Friday Morning Huntng Elephants for Sport. 'J llougilts YONGE Six, RICHMOND HILL ALEX. SCOTTSEPROPRIETOR p‘ Kinc~9MEnP WHOLE No, 746. GLEAN PAWS. by Josh Billings