Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 18, Number 12, Jasper, Dubois County, 31 March 1876 — Page 2
WEEKLY COURIER,
C. DUST. Publithsr.
JAsrF.n.
INDIANA.
CUKKENT NEWS. co it r.&. In tk Senate, ou the bth, the Mil to eitlul M.ssoari from the provision of the Mining act wa passed la Uw IIou, Mr. Faulkner oft-red a resolution lostrucUnit theCommiesi.Hwir of Korean Affairs to inquire into the yo x-r ronterre.1 uniu A. 11. Meii.berriT Scccul As'etit t u.niissioncr to ll. n-miumu Nl S-nlors l-!.ii". A'i !!!. Tr.c II 'U.-h-t.u v( nt into Cou.n I tiff ol the Whole, Mr. ui in toe chair, u U.e l-cs:tsl.iuy A')ro)rintin owl. ml DuinUrol n-ti'lKH wero tuiiile upon variiu question. In the Senate, on the K'.th, Messrs. Cuieron, West, I-os-sn, ul KiuiurvU Look occasioa to deny the UtiUi ol ccrUiu clisrre tu.ido by ue n:tpT corn u'tnt reflecting upon their official conduct. There ku souie feudal Utbale tu Varou measure, but bo hoi were
passeil 1 Ik IIiHim easssil r ral local bul
aiuoi.c Uh hi one oruvnlii.jr tor 11m hoMniK ol
tern. ( I'lrUc aud tuiu t Court in Kauaa
UtT, Mo The So cite was not in tension on the 17th
The House transacted but little nusiucs l
importance. The ltauk Centennial Committee
ill auUired to ait during U6 recess of Cuu res.
The Senate mas not in session on the lMh.
No buinc of iulcrert was trausacu-d In
the House.
In the Senate, on tie 2tb, Mr. Withers,
from lbs Couimit'ee on Appropriation. re rt
ed the II ius bill to supply the deficiency f r feoliox the noui Indians, fie moved to strike
oat of tlie lull the wnrU $ 100,00 and Inscrl tl.SO.OKf. The amendment u airreril to nn.
in Ixll The hill Ut roiil tor rounlir.
ttie Totes rr rresnteoi, etc. , wit men tatcn up sod itrh.tUsd at otue lesfla la the House,
Mr. Atkini in. veil to uiient the ruin an I pas
the bill repealitiir all provision of tu act ol toe
14th of Jai'tiart . lsT5. for the resumption of sue-
rie psymewts, lUat authorised the orrrt.iry of the Treasury to re-ieera anl cancel I mtel site
notes, ao'l u ell I nius-l stales bono lor the ac-
Corn t'li-.liueiit of that tiuriHi The motion t
tn'iM-nJ tlie rule ant )awi me bill wait r Jr lM , 1, bay, le not two third in the afIrmatire. In the Senate, on the21t, the bill to irort'la or counting Ui vote for Preaitient, eu, waa ax:a uoier o9ideratloa and again wrnl over Inthelloate, Mr. Jooe (Kr.), fruai the Cumniiuee on K.lrad an t Caal, reportd a bill U authorii" the Waahinjrtoa, CilcidUU 2 ! "1. Lnu.t lli:!rj! 1 to c-jOrtruct a nsr-ro-:Kiii(e riinl from tii-waier to M. f u i a and Chit-af. Kromin;llel. Mr. Caulflrld. from the Ju liriary CiuBiitb, reporw l a bill makinc it a mi-Iriiietnor for n y iern in the employment of the I'nite t Mate l aolicit or cotilriiiute fuiiiN for election purpose, or to eanTa4in tnr tln ti m in aur tie, county or diclnrt in t.:e lintel !ut- A nuniU-r of nii-ciinfnu were oa" re.lU) the bill, which Anally w'ul iver.
VAIIIfiTOt. The I).'rox rjit:o Financial Cauoua, by a ot of (4) to 4i, hai airreed to report the I'ajne bill, the i rincij.al feature of which are aa follow: It proviJe for th gradual reumption of rpeoie payment by making it the duty of the Set-rttary of the Treasury annually to retain, in coin, an amount eiui to 3 i r cct. of the leal-tendcr notf a ouu:anIic?, to cntit'ite a resumption fund, and al reiuiriii national bank! to act a.-ide an amount of coin eiial to 2 per ernt. of their circulating note. The bill, in aJithn, providi for the repeal of ao much of th fpe ie IJi xuroptloo act of January II, 1ST3, aa designate the lt of January, 179, aa the date f resumption. Charge katring Mnn wade afft-ctini; the literary reputation of Mr. Kicbari II. lana, Jr., to the effeet that a runideratie portion of hi published writing had leeu plagiarized, the artionof the x-nate upon hi nomination a Mitii-tcr to Knzland La been uupcnJed MiitilMr. Iana ha had an opportunity to meet hi aevuT chief of w liotn U (ien. 1)U r and repel thtir amimtln4. It 1 eneraJly umt-itood in Waihinton that Li nouiinaiiiio ill not bo confirmed. Mr. Tm, A. Ianforth, f C'hioago, tetifled lefore the II oue Committee on IV-t-
ofEcea, etr. , on the 17th. He aaid he was an Intimate personal frind of Mr. Jandern, of the flrin of Uarlw, 5ander jn & Co., MVntern nail contractor, and the latter bud admitted to him that the firm paid larjre turn to various orticialu in rout-ilia terfeiirl Crewell' I' partment in one caao not ban than $.i,io per quarter to one peron, and to another pirty thpy had given I carriage and pair of home, and to another a diamond pin, etc. o name were mentioned. Tb witness ald he bad eu one cf tie book of the firm, which bowed that they net aide a considerable proportion of their receipt from mail eontract b be devoted U u h paymenti. The witness aidth.nti"jbeiucntlj Mr. Sanderson informed hiui that they had burnod tbtir lKok, and urK"ted that be had better not remember what Lad been told him on this aubjeit. The KepuMican Senatorial Cauetn ha agreed that the nweepin? reduction in the cuttoinary annual appropriations proponed by the Ibiune committee will keriouxly Impair the citil aervicc, and that the Senate
hall therefore Inhictujion panning upneach item aej'arately, and concurring only in tho reduction which irini compatible with the efficiency of the service. Mr. C. 11. Teek, of the firm of Iurfee A reck, who were post-truder at Kortn Sully, tice, Stevennon, and Huford, tcntilied lefore the ( lyuier Committee on the 17th. All of thene traden-hlps were taken from thi Crm, that of Fort Sully btin piven to Mr. Athry, a firmer clerk for IV. C. Hahock, hurveyor-Gvneral of Kanan, and brother of G.neral' IJaNock, late the rrenident' Frlvate Secretary. Athey had no nif-an to pun hane aupplie, and Ue firm entered into an arrangement with him through W. C. P.beock, by which tln'y agreed t rmploy Athey at a Hilary of jer year, until he could rai-e the tueaunto purchaic the nto k and atippliea owned bribe firm; and in eon-idoratl.m of I'.aU .x k' n n ice in procuring the contract tin y pail bin the ntimof J.'.V) in three S'lartcrly in-tallnient. Thin pot was con.i b re 1 worth 0,) a year. The wltnenn furth-r tent t ib-il hi belief that varb.nn other trademhip were taken from bUfirm throtmh
the tullin nc! of (irvil (irant, and Kien to! other par! icn. . linamiiity from arre-t Laving been prom J
led by the (io ernnient to Caleb T. Marh and bin w IV, w ho lied to Canada on account of beinc implicated iu the Fort Sill frauds it wa authoritatively ntated on the UHh that Marh would return to WanbiiiKton In a ft w davn and testify before the tirand Jury in Itclkuap'ii ca-.e. It i ofUclally announced by tbe Pont-ofllce It paittueut, that on and after A iil 3 next the n)tviu of international money-order ext'haii;c mow in force between the United Stale and Canada v ill be exte uded to the prov iucc of New foumtUnd. It in staled that the Indian Appropriation bill, an prepared for the consideration -f thii Cointniiteeon AppropriaMotm, In based upon the an-iiinp:ioii thai the proposed tr .n-fcr of the lii.li.ui bureau froiu the Interior to the War leprtuient will be enact l. It therefore make nu prov inloii for Indian Aenu, v'Ui'eruiteiidentn, lunpectorn, etc., nor lor any hum t llaneoiinol j. cts except such aare reijuired by exprc ntipulatiou of m-atie. The amount", which, in the Judgment of the oiuiiiiiti e, aro needed for nuliitence ami eUthini;, and for transportation for Indian service, w ill hcreafier be provided for in the Army Appmprl ition bill, to be expended by the CominUnary nd Q'l.irtennaster' IVpartnu utn. I'mb r thee heads. Mr. Randall believi that aHcal one and a half million dollar can be saved unualty. The plan contemplate niakinir a rreat navintf In trnnjMirtation by removing all the principal agencies to the vicinity of military Mints. The i'resident han nonilnste.l Joel I. Harvey for Collector of Internal Revenue for the Ftrt Ii-trict of Illinois; Wm. II. Iooliltle, of Minnesota, for Asnl-tant CoruniN-i.-ner of l atentn; Philip Arnbalt, of Min-
otiri, for i run ton Aem ai ot. J u il
John M. Coirhlan, of California, for Chief
Ju-iM'-e of Utah Territory.
J. S. Fvan. ftruierly ost -trader at Fort
Sill, testified before the Clytner Committee
onthe'Jlnt. Witnes gve a tln'ailed ae count of hi transaction with Mvrsh, ae
companied by a statement of hi payructit
to htm. VTituen was tir-t Introduced to
Gen. ltelknan by On. Rice, of Iowa, and
paid him (1, tint for the Introduction. See
retary Relknap told witne4 he had prom
led Mar'h a place, and M irli had
selected Fort Sill. (Kvans at t hi lime htd the position of post trader at that post.) Kvms saw Mrh
who appeared to undertsnd nil about the
matter. He went to New York w itb Marsh
w here a written contract wan aipied. He said he told his friends of hi agreement
with Marsh, and showed (Jen. (iricrsmi.
commanding officer at the pot, the contract
on hi return to Fort Sill. The factn, he
naid, wero w ell known there, and it w as re
garded there an a rreat outratre ami the
ause of extortionate prices.
Oeueral Rt'ioiK'k Can authorized the-fol
lowing statement reirdio the now fatuous
letterfroui the Attornetr-Gcneral to IMstrii t-
Attorney Dyer, the publication of which was
the occasion of such (reneral comment. Ho
nays:
'I found a copy of a btfer lylnp
open upon rayde-kat the Executive Man
nion. I do not know bow or by whom It
came tsere. It was without any enrebuie or direction to any body. It was
not marked official or confidential; there wan nothing to nhow it was intended for the
President, and he inform me that be never
saw it. The copy appear to have been made
in tbe Atterney-Genf ral' office. Finding
this copy, open and w ithout direction, upon
my desk, I presumed it wa put there for
my in -paction au 1 ue, and, accordinrly, I placed it in the bands of in J counsel for sueh
action as they might think proper in regard
to it."
Tbe Foreign Relations Committee ha re
ported back to the Senate the nomination of
Richard II. Dana, Jr., to be Jlini-ter to Kncland, with the reeornnu-ndation that It
te not confirmed. It was placed on t'r calendar with tbe adverse report, for future consideration. Mr. Pana had prev luty written a letter to Senator Uoutwe'.l, in which be refused to appear before tbe com
mittee in his own vindicatloa.
A correspondent of the New York If'ri'J
having furnished that paper with some al
1-eed fa t concerning a "crooked" mule
claim azaint the Government, by some Kentucky partien. In which Secretary Rrin-
tow appeared as counsel before the Court of Claims and received for bis services
a lare contingent fee, Mr. Rris
tow voluntarily appeared before the Committee on Expenditures iu the War
Department, on the 20th, and explained lis connection with the case, which he sai l he believed to lie a Jut and honent claim, and in the prosecution of w hich bin professional senices were employed at a time when he was in no manner officially connected with the Government. Tho recent snow storm appears to have extended to nearly all parts of the country North, South, East and West as well a throughout a larjrc portion of Europe. EAMT.
Tbe w ife of ex-Senator Carl Schurz died In New York, on the l.'ith, of puerperal fever. Gen. Sargo, Chief Comtnlnsionerof Japan, with suite, arrived a San Francisco on tbe loth, bringing a large calamity of exhibits for tbe Centennial. A State Greenback Convention was held flt Syracuse, N. Y.,mtbe; l.'ith. St. Patrick's Day was celebrated this year with tho usual processions, banquets, etc., In most of the) large towns and cities throughout tbe country. In Ronton the day was additionally celebrated as beln the 100th anniversary of the evacuation of that city by the liriilsh troops. (itn. Schenek, late United States Minister to Great Rrilaln, arrived In New York on the ISth. Jonephus Sooy, Jr., the defaulting State Treasurer of New Jersey, has been m nteneed to confinement In the State Prison for three yearn, and until lfc cost f prosecution are paid. He Is over 00 years old, and has a family highly respected. The Elmwllc Woo!-n Mills, at Cranston, R. I., were burned on the lih. bms nearly ?2iS),fXS, mostly insured. As near as can be ascertained by an un-1
ortieial count, Cheney, the Republican candidate for Governor of New Hauipahir, has a majority of 3.W7. The Republican have also carried the Legislature by a majority of 'JO on Joint ballot. WKiT At KorTII. Tho Governor of Kansai, In accordance with tbe rcipue.t of the legislature, b appointed Saturday, April 1, a arbor day for the entire Mate. The Colorado Constitutional Convention adjourned tine -.lie ou the 15th. Tho proposed State Constitution will be submitted to popular vote July 1. The United States Grand Jury at Chicago, on the bith. returned Indictment against Philip Wadswoith, ex-Collector of Internal Reveuuc, I). XV. Munu, cx-Supervinor of Internal Revenue, and K. T. Hrldgrn, exR. venue Agent, for complicity In whisky frauds. Rridges has fled to Canada. Rising, Rehm, and a number of other Indicted member of tho Chicago Whisky Ring, have pleaded guilty to one or more count iu the Indictment found against tluiu. The Council of Administration at Fort Sill hasi recommended the reappoint mrtit of dpt. John S. Evans, who was recently re. moved on the order of President Grant, on account of complicity In the livlknapOlarsh fraud. Wash Rockwell, a well known sporting man, was shot and killed in New Orleans on the 17th by R. Dcsponlto. Adv ices to the Indian Otuco dited Fort Laramie, ISth, represent Red Cloud' baud of Sioux quietly on their reservation, and takiug no part in the warlike demonstration of Sitting Hull. A severe snow storm, accompanied by an
unusually low temperature, prevailed throughout tho West and Northwest on the lMh aud 19th. At Sioux City cn the afternoon of the HUh the mercury fell from fifty degree above to four degree below zero. Hundreds of Black Hi!! adventurer were caught between Yaukton and the Ililln, and It Is feared that great suffering will ensue, as many are beyoud the reach of fuel and feed for their stock, aud unable to move in any direction on account of the) deep snow. The Ohio Democratic State Convention will bo held at Cincinnati on May 17. At Jackson, Miss., on the H:h, J. D. Cell, proprietor of the Te plc'i Defense, liadau altercation w,th a printer mined Augustus Carey, regarding a settlement of account, when Rell drew a pistol and shot Carey d ad. Ib 11 Is under arrest. Fourteen tons of silver coin, amounting to half a million dollars, was shipped from San Francisco to the Treasury Department during the week ending Mirch 'Si. A tire at Charleston, .S. C, on the morning of the '.'1st, destroyed a large numltcr of email wixnlen tenements, and hundreds o' people were rendered homeless and penniless. The Commissioner of Indian Affair has received a dispatch from John P. Clnm, United Mate Indian Agent at San Carlos, Arizoua Territory, in which he say that
Guiid Itoauford made a scout into Tonto
Basin with 15 Indian police, aud on March
C killed 19 and captured 21 renegade.
FOIIKI..
two uepiorawe marine casualties were reported by cable on tbe Kith. The ship
Great Britain, from Liverpool, became wa
tcr-logged on the 3d of March and wa aban
dotted at sea. The captain and 13 men took
to a boat and suffered terribly from hunger.
Three of the men died, and tbe survivors
were forced to eat portion of tbe re
mains of their comrade to keep from
tarvin. Ou the 11th of March
they were rescued in the last
stages of emaciation. The American ship
Lniueuicles, from l'ort Royal, S. C
was capsied on the 12th of March, and
Capt. Riard and 13 of the crew were
uioMnrd. The second mate aud seven of
the crew succeeded in reaching (Queens-
town in safety.
(Queen Victoria ha mailt? arrangement to
spend week each al Raden Baden and Coburg. She w ill travel incognito, and has particularly requested that no official recep
tion be tcudercdhcr auy where on her Journey.
A frightful railway accident occurred in
Germany on the 17th, caused by the jrivlng way, on account of high water, of n arch of
the railway b.ldge over the river 111, near
Lutterbach. A passenger train from
Mulboufte, near Strasbourg, which wa crossing at the time,
was precipitated Into tho river. The car
riages .ell on top of one another, and were dashed to pieces. Owing to the violence of the storm none of the passengers could be saved, and some ') or M persons were either
erusked to death or drowned.
Venuv lus was reported to be in eruption
on the 17th, and the lava flow ing towards
Pompeii.
Railway communication In Scotland was
almost entirely blockaded by thesiiovr on the isth and 10th.
Ferdinand Ftilgrath, tbe German iost,
died on tbe lMh, aged IX.
The steamer Isabel, from Jtoetellc for
Rristol, was wrecked oiT the English coast
near Land' End, on tbe night of the isth, and her entire crew, .TO In number, wan
lost.
A London dispatch of the 21st sim that on
the preceding day the unprecedented spec-
tacle w as witnessed of 4() wind-bound vessels sailing from the Mersey. 10.1 of these
were bound for foreign ports. The vessels formed a procession sometimes ten abreast.
which occupied two hour In passing.
hing Alphonso made his royal entry into
Madrid on the 20th, at the hmtd of his vie-
orious troops.
The DfiMTtlc Financial Rill. Following U tho text of the Payne bill, which was adopted by tho Democratic Caucus and will bo supported in tho House nn u party tneasuro : A "ILL to provide fr the gradual resumption of specie-payment. fa it tnaelnl hu tht Smalt ttHil UU vt
UruMtnUitir of the I'nitxt Mutt vf
Awrfati in VoHijrtut i.ieinbll. That it hall be the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury during each and cverv year, from and after July 1, 1S7. and until tho legaltender note of the United State shall be appreciated to par value with gold and shall be convertible into coin, to cause to bo set aside and retained In coin au amount eiial to ;i per certiitii of such leal-lcndi-r notes outstanding; and from the date of such convertibility a aforesaid, the amount of coin set aside) aud retained as aforesaid shall be held as a resumption fund In respect to said legal-tender note, and shall at no time be lens than .'slper centum of such outstanding legal-tender noten; provided, however, that tho coin no set asido aud retained as above provided shall be counted an a part of the inking fund for I he purchase or payment of the public debt, as required by .sec. 3,lit4 of the Revised St ttutes. Sao. 2. That it shall be the duty of each National Rank Association during eHch and every vear from and after July 1, IfCtf. and until the full and complete resumption of the pavtneut In specie of its circulating notes, to set aside and retaiu from the coin receivable interest on the bond deposited with the Treasurer of the United State as security for it circulation an amount roualtoS per centum of It circulating note. Issued to uch association and not surrendered, and from the date of Its resumption of specie payment as aforesaid the amount of coin to tie held and maintained an a resumption fund hall at no time be less than 110 per centum of its outstanding circulation; provided, however, that the coin by this section directed to be set aside and retained shall be counted S a pnrt of the lawful money reserve which said association are by existing law required to maintain. .kc. 3. That so much of Sec. 3 of an act entitled "An act to provide for the resumption of specie payments, " approved Jan. 14. 1875, as requires the Secretary of tbe Treasury to redeem legal-tender notes lothe amount of H) per centum of the fim of Natioual Rank notes issued to any banking association, increasing it capftal or circulation, or to any association newly ergauled or provided In said ssctinn, andalsoss much of said Sec. 3 as relates to or provides for the redemption In coin of th I nited Mates legal-tender notes on and after Jan. 1, l.sT'J, an I ill other provision of law inconsistent with this act, are hereby repealed. Keepla; l With the Fashions. I'encath the calm aiirf:icef this Iamitcn neason there are jxreat activities at work. One of tho chief of these is the preparation of the r-prin;; fashions. 1'hey have been announced in general terms, but to get them out in grand display i.s a very different thing. The mWWi'i are making trreat effort to collect the last winter bills, which is. a tedious task, anil heavy losses will be incurred. They make large profit, r.ml
therefore have a margin rr hisses, but this year tha margin will be exceeded. The pressure brought to bear upon these fashion-monger) to grant credit Is beyond all calculation. Ladies mut
be kept up to stylo, for "one might as well be out of the world as out of the fashion," and aa money is scarce they are obliged to beg for credit. What e.xfedienLs are resorted to to obtain it I lave net apace to record. When the upring fashions appear the struggle will be renewed. Few have an idea of tho extent which the credit system has reached in the fashionable world. There are ladie9 in thU city w ho run b.lls at Mewnrt's from l(i,(KH) to .i,(SHy dt,r. ing a year. Many of our no-called rich men pay no bills except those which
have run a few month, and hotne of this class are slow payment. This loads to the employment of collecting clerks and collection agents. Professed collectors charge from two and one-half to live per cent, for their services, and almost every large r;tail house employs an able-bodied mail to tramp d.uly in quest of cash for bills rendered. At the present time a sharp i ll'ort is made for
collections, inasmuch, after the spring styles shall be introduced, the old bills will be praeticallvotitlawed. Xtw York
tor. Cincinnati (Jaz'Ue.
Origin of the Great I.akfs.
A young man from the country
lew out the ras at a Kalamazoo hotel
the other night when ho went to bed. About midnight a strong smell of gas from his room attracted tho attention of flume f the boarders, who forced open the door and found him in the last ga-ps of life. Ho was taken out in tho opennir, and by hard work was brought to consciousness.
Tho question of the- oriirin of the
great lakes is one that reijuircs more observation and atudy than have yet been given to it, savs A S. A berry in
the Michigan (Icological Survey, before we can bo said to hav e solved all the problems it involves. There are, how
ever, certain facls connected with the structure of the lake basins, and aomc
deduction from these facts, which mar t- a . ..
oe regaraeo m steps already taken t-i-ward tho full understanding of tho ub-
ect. I bese facta and deductions are.
briefly, ns follow:
1. Lake Superior lies i i a synclinal
trough, and it.s mode of formation herefore, hardly admits of question, though its sides are deeply scored with icernarks, ami itn form and are may have
ueen somewhat moditied by this agent.
Lake Huron, Like Michigan. Lake
1. 1 in uno iiiKe iintario are excavated basins, wrought out of once continuous sheets of sedimentary strata by a mechanical agent, and that ice of writer, or both. That they have been filled with ice, and this ico formed great moving glaciers, we may consider proved. Tho west end of Lako Krie. iniyhoHtiid to be carved out of tho coniferous limestone by ice action, as It.s bottom, and aides, and Islands horizontal, vertical, and even overhanging surfaces arel all furrowed by glacial grooves, which are parallel with tho major axis of the lake. All our great bskes are probably very ancient, as, since tho c lose of the Devonian period, the area they occupy has lever been submerged beneath the ocean, and their formation may have, begun during the coal epoch. This, at least, may ho positively asserted in regard to iho agency of ice in
the excavation of the lake basins, that their bottoms Hud sides, wherever n. posed to observation, if composed of resistant materials, bear iudi. mitahle evidence of ice actiou ; proy. Ing that these basins were filled w -ith moving; glaciers In tho last ico period, if never before, and that part, at least, of tho erosion by which they were formed is due to these glacier. -- Free I.otr Among the Ilritbk iristocracy. The Munp-inof illandford, llie eldest son and loir of the Puke of Marlborough, who, though aut tlorty-tao ear of age, h:i can.cd for himself , acand.ihms reputation not unworthy a veteran of vice, ami whose lovely wif,-, Lady Allicrtha Hamilton, a d ititlo r of the Duko of Aherconi, was recently compelled by his misconduct to leave him and return to her family, has just run away with tho Countess of Alevf,,nl. Lady Aylcsford, who has not et seen a quarter of a century of summers, is a charming young woman of fashion, who has long; been regarded as a fmifne inctmprit, her husband, Lu d Ayle-fonl, being neither mentally or morally nny bi tter than hia companion, the Manjufi of Illandford. Lord Aylesford, who inherited estates in Warwickshire worth t,lKX, and estates iu Kent worth jcrhaps half as much more, has coiUriws! at the early age of twenty-seven so f ir to bankrupt himself in fortune and reputation that tho Prince of Wale lv. provoked a good deal of scandal by li intimacy with him, and especially by selecting him as one of his .suite in tkt e li'i!iluii to Ibuii. Lord li!.'.i;f..;.l , the elder brother of Ird Randolph Churchill, w ho two or three jimis ;- married a young American lady of New York. The parties have all been identified in the public mind with the Marlborough House set" nud the Prince of Wales. X Y. H'orU. A Deer Attacks a Farmer. A correspondent of the Arttc. t un (N. V.) Jh'inncrat sends th ioi.owit. Mr. Henjamin Sage, residing iu th town of Moriab, has. had a rem.it kasie encounter with a deer. Mr. Sage wet t to his farm, adjoining the one a which he lives, to feed his CMttle. nhout b o'clock p. in., and on turning tlo- corf.er of his barn was encountered hy .hij buck, which, with its head, stiu. k Mr. Sage in the side with such force as to send him some distance in tin- snow, rendering him helpless. I lien the deer sprang upon him with his (our fes t.aml
would have killed him bad it not tsen fur his trusty dog, w hich, oti seeing t lie vl plight of his master, grah'-i d the deer by tho nose, thu.s sav ing tile life of Mr. Sage. The dog and deer cue tinned fighting. Mr. Sage, with great uilliculty, managed to crawl home, a distance of half a mile. I'pon being discovered by his family he was taken into the house and made comfortable, after which his son went to tho barn to ascertain the conditio of the dog and the deer, and found, to his surprise, the battle still going on, though an hour and a half had elapsed. The dog's throat wh badly mangled, but, notwithstanding all, he came olT conqueror." Mr. (). F. Cherry, of Ceno.i, (., i highly esteemed citi.en, hung himself on account of continued financial reverses. Miles Harrington, a merchant of St. I niis, Mich., also took his life on account of business failures. William Hoss, an old citizen of Otter Creek Township, Vigo County, Ind., was lately discove red to have stolen two bushels of wheat from a neighbor, which it is said he took t keep his familv from starving. Ho was so mortified by the discovery of his theft that he took h'n life by poison. THE XAKKLTX
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NKW VUUK, March t!. I" niervKHvii u (si u. n
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