THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL. ESTABLISHED 1823. WE HAVE IN STOCK A CHOICE BABY GRAND STEINWAY PIANO. This Piano has been from the factory about seventy days, being the last of a lot of six shipped us. We will give special discount on this beautiful in strument to any one who will purchase within the next five days. D. H. BALDWIN i CO., 64 and 66 N. Penn. St. TANITE . EMERY WHEELS AND GRINDING MACHINES. E. C. ATKINS & CO., CLEMENS YONNEGUT, INDIANAPOLIS. fife Operites with Energy Upon the Kidneys, liver, Bowels and Pores of the Skiu, Neutralizing. Absorbing and Expelling Scrof ulous, Cancerous and Canker HUMORS, The oanse of moat human ills, and curing wheu physl iaus. hospitals, und all other methods and remedies fall, Scrofula or King’s Evil, Glandular Swellings, Ulcers, OM Sores, Milk Leg, Mercurial Affections. Erysipelas, Tumors, Abscesses, Car buncles, Boils. Blood Poisons, Bright's Disease, Wasting of the Kidneys and Liver, Rheumatism, Constipation, Piles, Dyspepsia, and all Itching and Scaly ERUPTIONS Os the Skin and Scalp, such Salt Rheum, Psoriasis, Tetter, Ringworm, Barber’s Itch, Scald Head, Itching Piles, and other Disfiguring and Torturing Humors from a pimple to a scrorulitic ulcer, when assisted by Cuticura and Cuticuru Boa**, the great Skin Cures. CUTICURA, A sweet, uuchangeable Medicinal Jelly, clears off all external evidence of Blood Humors, eats away Dead Skin and Flesh, instantly allays Iteb ings and Irritations, softens, soothes ami heals. Worth its weight iugold for all Itching Diseases. CUTICURA SOAP, An Exquisite Toilet, Bath, and Nursery Sanative. Fragrant with delicious flower odors and heal ing balsam. Contains in a modified form all the virtues of Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, and is Indispensable in the treatment of Skin and Scalp Diseases, and for restoring, preserving and beau tifying the complexion and skin. The only Medicinal Baby Soap. Cuticura Remedies are the only real curatives for diseases of the Skin. Scalp and Blood. Price: Cuticura Resolvent. $1 per bottle; Cuti cura. 50c per box; large boxes. $1.00; Cuticuru Medicinal Toilet Soap. 25c; Cuticura Medicinal Shaving Soap, 15c. Sold everywhere. Principal depot. WEEKS & POTTER, Boston. CATARRH Sanford’s Radical Cure. The Great American Balsamic Distillation of Witch Hazel, American Pine, Canadian Fir, Marigold, Clover Blossom, etc., For the Immediate Belief and Permanent Cure of every form of Catarrh, from a simple Head Cold or Influenza to the Loss of Smell. Taste and Hearing, ('outfit, Bronchitis and Incipient Con sumption. Indorsed ty Physicians, Chemists .and Medical journals throughout the world, as The only complete external and internal treat ment. One bottle Itadical Cure, one box Catarrhal Solvent and Sanford’s Inhaler, all in one puck age, of all druggists for sl. Ask tor Sanford’s Radical Cure. WEEKS fc POTTER. Boston. ELECTRICITY, \A rJ V yi* Gentle, yeteffectlre, united \vln/ywith Healing Balsam, reu der COLLINS’ VOLTAIC 111 ELECTRIC PLASTERS i one hundred times superior Y "to all other plasters for g|gg& every Pain, Weakness and 0/ Inflammation. Pnoe 25c. STt” Sold everywhere. CHARLES MM k CO. MASKS, DOM TNOS, BEARDS, MUSTACHES, MASQUER A I>E TRIM MINGS, GOLD AND SILVER LACES, STARS, BPANGLEB, BELIES. t >9 and 31 W. Washington St. INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 6, 1883—TWELVE PAGES. M’KENZIIi’S INDICATIONS. „ SATURDAY.—PartIy cloudy weather, with local rains or suow, stationary or higher temperature. OLD FRIENDS MEETING. A man from Kokomo, who had been West two years ago and saw a few Indians there, was in the city yesterday morning, and passing near the clothing house of J. A. McKenzie, discover ed an Indian cigar sign, approached it and said: “Good morning, Lo.” (He wanted to be friend ly.) “I say, good morning; don’t you hear? Do you belong to (hie) Sitting Bull’s tribe! Are you waiting to see a (hie) friend? Have you stood on that (hie) 6toue all night?” Still the Indian was silent. . “Will you step in and (hie) take a smile? Well, if you ain't the doggonedeet Indian I ever saw’d, to refuse a drink; I never beam tell of such a thing afore. Will you shake hands with me! Your hand is as cold as a door knob. Mr. Lo, that ’ere bow and arrow won't keep you warmer than a paper collar. I’ve tried the collar, but never tried a bow and arrow. See here, old Indian, if you want to make friends in this clearin’ you must be a little more (hie) social, and not staud there on that stone on your dig nity in this way. Say, Lo, will you loan me ten cents until (hie) I see you later? I have a mind to massacre that Indian for his impudence to me.” STOCKMEN ALARMED. All Order Placing Honest Men am! Rogues on the Same Plane. Caldwell, Kas., Jan. 5. —There is consid erable excitement here among cattle men herding on the Cherokee outlet, growing out of a Washington dispatch to the effect that orders have been issued from the Interior Department for the removal of all stockmen from the outlet. This state of affairs seems to have been brought about by an attempt on the part of the Standard Oil Cattle Com pany to fence in a large range, which is and has been occupied by small stockholders, who ha ve paid taxes to the Cherokee Nation for the privilege of herding their cattle on the outlet. It seems these small stock herders, together with parties in Kansas who have been in the habit of letting their stock graze on the Cherokee lands without paying anything to the Indians or the State of Kan sas, have made certain statements to Secre tary Tellfer which have induced him to issue a sweeping order against all stockmen, as well as the Standard Oil Company, without regard to any injustice that may be done those who hv;e paid taxes to the Cherokees in good faith, and bought the privilege of fencing and erecting buildings for the ac* commodation of their herders. A POSSIBLE REVOLUTION. Rumor that Kalukaua’s Coronation Will Re Made the Occasion of an Outbreak. San Francisco, Jan. s.—The United States ship Alaska is ordered to Honolulu, to he there at the time of Kalakaua’s coronation. The Lackawanna is now at Honolulu, and will remain there. It is expected the Wa chusetts will be ordered there. The princi pal naval powers will send war-ships to Honolulu. The avowed object is to pay the proper courtesies, but it is understood that the real object is to protect, for eign interests in case of trouble, which may arise from the opposition to the extrav agant arrangements for the coronation. A rumor is circulated of a possible revolution. H. W. Severance, Hawaiian consul at this city, places no faith in such rumors, which, he says, are the talk of a lot of disappointed officeseekers. J. D. Spreckles, who has ex tensive interests in the islands, says he fears no trouble. Failures fur the Week. New' York, Jan. s.—The business failures for the past seven days, reported to R. G. Dun & Cos., number 224, distributed as fol lows: Eastern States had 24, the Western 72, the Middle 38. the Southern, 42, the Pacific States 15, New Y r ork city 17, and Canada 16. Compared with last week, this shows an in crease of 31, but the number is doubtles swollen by numerous small assignments made at the close of the year, though the parties had virtually failed long before. The prominent New York assignments are W. H. Dudley & Cos., canned goods; J. I. Brower & Sons, hardware, and Brower it Leeds, hardware. In the country, Francis Carvill A Son, of Halifax, N. S., and Carvill, McKeen & Cos., of St. John, N. 8., stopped in conse quence of the failure of the partmt concern in England. The other failures in the coun try are not prominent, although a consider able number of fair-sized houses have suc cumbed. Marriage of a Sister of Charity. Chicago, Jan. 5. —The Inter Ocean’s Balti more special says: “Last Sunday, at the Cath olic Cathedral, Miss Lizzie McDonald, a sis ter of Charity, teaching in Mobile. Chicago, Milwaukee, and elsewhere, was married to Patrick Moore, of Washington. By permis sion, being ill, she left the convent five years ago. After recovering, she nursed her father through a protracted illness. Going to Washington she met Moore, fell in love at first sight, and did not return to the sister hood.” _ Insurance Suit Compromised. Richmond, Jan. 5.—A compromise has been reached between the Richmond & Dan ville Railroad Company and the insurance company, growing out of the fire at West Point, in November, 1880, when wharves and property to the value of over $500,000 was de stroyed. All the insurance held by ship pers is brought into contribution with the railroad company’s insurance. Not the Husband of ilie Lily. Boston, Jan. 5.—J. H. Langtry, of the firm of Hills & Langtry, went to Europe in the interest of his concern in November last, and returned to New York in the same steamer with Miss Langtry. This circumstance gave rise to the story that the husband of the Jersey Lily had arrived. Officers of the Mutual Trust. New Y’ork, Jan. 5.—-Henry 1). Moore, ex- Treasurer of Pennsylvania, has been chosen president of the Mutual Trust Comany, and Congressman Charles B. Harwell, of Illinois, and ex-Secretary of the Treasury Boutwell, vice-presidents. THE NATIONAL CAPITAL. The Presidential Succession Bill Con sidered by the Senate. The Enormous Losses Entailed Upon the People by the Prevalence of Plero- Pueumonia Among Live Stock. Outline of the Bill for the Preserva tion of Yellowstone Park. General Grant Confident of the Passage of the Fitz John Porter Rill—Social and Other Gossip of the Capital. PRESIDENTIAL SUCCESSION. Consideration of the Bill In the Senate— . Amendments Suggested. Special to the Indianapolis JournaL Washington, Jan. s.—As a legislative day, to-day has been decidedly devoid of interest. The Senate devoted most of the afternoon to discussion of the presidential succession bill, but apparently without making much pro gress. Mr. Garland, in advocating the bill, said the practical objection to the present hybrid system, created by the law of 1792, had been strikingly illustrated at the time of President Garfield’s death, and after the 4th of March next, unless Congress should legis late upon the subject in the meantime, the life of the President would be the only one standing between us and anarchy. On the other hand, one advantage of the system pro posed by this bill was that it devolved the duties of the presidency, in such cases, upon the Secretary of State. No inferior man was ever nomi nated for that office. Under the existing law the President of the Senate would be come, in a certain contingency, the acting President. This provision rendered the char acter of the administration very uncertain. For instance, when the Senate met after the death of President Garfield, the Senator from Delaware, Mr. Bayard, was chosen President of the Senate, and if he had becon'c Presi dent of the United States the Chief E* outive Office would have been filled by a member of the party defeated at the polls. But as if by magic Mr. Bayard was deposed, and the Senator from Illinois, Mr. Davis, was put in his place—a distinguished Senator belonging to no party, but walking in an atmosphere of his own, above all par ties—cerulean, ethereal or what-not. [Laugh ter.] If he had been called to the presidency by the death of President Arthur, what ver dict of the people would hav® approver? him or his “party?” Mr. Garland, in the course of his remarks, expressed an opinion that the President’s term of office ought to be six years. Mr. Morgan moved to amend, so as to pro vide for the officer succeeding to the acting presidency shall hold the office until the President's disability is removed, or until the vacancy is otherwise lawfully filled, instead of until the end of the regular term, as pro vided in the bill. Mr. Edmunds moved that the bill be re committed to the Committee on Judiciary, with instructions to report, as soon as may be, a bill to further provide for and regulate the duties of President of the United States by the President of the Senate pro tempore and the Speaker of the House of Representa tives, respectively, in case of vacancy in both the offices of President and Vice-president of the United States, and for the administration of the duties of the office of President of the United States in cases in which there shall be, at the time beiug, neither a President of the Senate pro tempore nor a Speaker of the House of Representatives. Mr. Edmunds said this motion presented clearly the alternatives of either perfecting the system devised by the fathers or depart ing entirely from that system, as proposed in the pending bill. Mr. Blair offered an amendment providing that the cabinet officers named—(in suc cession)—instead of acting as President in the cases contemplated in bill, shall so act only until Congress can come together and provide by law for filling the presidency. Mr. Jones, of Florida, offered an amend ment providing that no cabinet officer shall succeed to the acting presidency who would not be eligible for election as President. Without acting upon these amendmeiru, the Senate went into executive session, and soon afterward adjourned. DISCOMFITED MR. COX. An Illustration of the Dangers of Furnish* Ing Advance Copies of Speeches. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. Washington, Jan. 5. —The House strug gled all day with the District of Columbia appropriation bill. Owing to the anomalous status of the District, her people having no voice in the control of the governr tent or representation in Congress, little interest seems to be aw’akened in either branch of Congress over what are termed District mat ters. Occasionally a day is assigned by the House for District business, which is gen erally. regarded by the members as a good time to attend to their private matters, and it it rarely that a quorum can be obtained on such days. There were rather more than usual in at tendance to-day, as it was understood that the District bill would soon be disposed of and the shipping bill would be taken up. The latter, however, went over till to-mor row, when a lively debate may be expected. Sunset Cox, who takes ground violently opposed to some features of the bill which was prepared by the joint Shipping Committee, will make a character istic speech to-morrow. A joke is told in connection with this speech, which it is said Mr. Cox does not appreciate nearly so much as he weald were it told on someone else, Expecting that the bill would be called up some days since, Mr. Cox carefully prepared a speech and furnished proof-slips to several New York papers in advance, to be used, of course, after the speech had been delivered. Unfortunately, however, one of those thus favored chanced to be an afternoon paper, and, with the characteristic recklessness of afternoon papers, in its desire to get ahead of its morning rivals, the propriety of waiting tiff Mr. Cox had spoken his piece was quite lost sight of. The speech appeared two days ago in cold type, with the startling explanation that Mr. Cox would, in a few days, deliver it in the House. Mean while, Mr. Cox had revised his remarks and secured another set of proofs, which he kindly offered to a New York correspondent to-vhy, in view of the certainty that he would speak to-morrow. His chagrin was genuine when his attention was for the first ti'ae called to the fact that his speech was published two days ago. It is safe to assume, no matter what Mr. Cox.may say to-morrow, L.’*i the gentlemen in the reporter’s gallery will associate it with his remarks already in p*.at, and devote their attention to some gentleman who has been less previous. The Ways and Means Committee have not perfected their tariff bill, but expect to re port it early next week. THE GAY SEASON. A Brilliant Opening—The Cameron-Rodgers Wedding. 6peclal to the InJtfciiapons JournaL Washington, Jan. 5. —This week will be a brilliant inaugural of the gay season. There have been several entertainments each after noon, and in the evenings besides; dinners and luncheons by the score. Mrs. Loring, wife of the Commissioner, has issued cards for an “at home” on Saturday evening, which will divide the honors with the mu sicale to be given the same evening by the wjfe of the Portugese minister, Madame Nagerasc. The marriage of Miss Virginia Cameron to Lieutenant Rodgers will take place early in January, not February, as hats been an nounced, the exact date being Jan. 12. The invitations which have been issued to wit ness the ceremony are less general than those to the reception following. It will be an ele gant home wedding, the ceremony taking place at the Senator’s house. There will be no bridesmaids, but the bride will be at tended by her two younger sisters. The young couple will return here after the wed ding journey, when a round of festivities will be given in their honor. YELLOWSTONE PARK. Extension of Iti Limits—Bill for Reserving It for the People. Washington -lan. 5. —On the Ist of Sep tember last Acting fJtrcreuu y of tne Inferior Joslyn agreed to lease to Carroll T. Hobart and Henry F. Douglass, of Dakota Terri tory, 4,440 acres within the Yellowstone National Park, for hotel purposes. Hobart & Douglass associated with them Rufus Hatch, and a lease was drawn,ready for signature. On Dec. 7 the Senate, at the instance of Mr. Vest, instructed the Secretary of the Interior to furnish the Senate with copies of the agreement and proposed lease. The matter was referred to the Committee on Territo ries to investigate. The committee inclines to the conclusion that the Interior Department has transcended its authority in making the agreement, and has agreed to re port a bill clearly defining the duty of the de partment, and also extending the area of the park on the east to a line north and south through Cedar mountain, and southward to forty-fourth paraliel of north latitude, an ad dition of about 3,334 square miles to the park, the whole area of which would be 6,654 square miles. The bill provides that all territory within the limits of the park shall be with drawn from settlement, occupancy, or sale, and set apart as a public park or pleasure ground for the people of the United States. The present trespassers will be removed ami further trespass prevented, and troops will be used if necessary. Fish will only he taken by hook and line, and the killing of game will be prohibited. The Secretary of the Interior may grant leases, for terms not exceeding ten years, of small parcels of ground, but no more ground shall be leased than is necessary for hotels or storehouses for the accommodation of visitors, and the necessary outhouses, and for gardening or grazing land in connection with the hotels, but no exclusive privilege or monopoly of any kind will be granted which shall.in any manner interfere with the free and unre stricted access of the public to all portions of the park. The extensions of the limits of the park was‘recommended by the committee on the suggestion of General Sheridan, who, as com mander of the military department embrac ing the park, made a careful study of the territory, and was convinced the park should include the proposed extension, on account of geographical and other physical condi tions. THE CATTLE PLAGUE. The Losses Caused by It—Vigorous Action Recommended. Washington, Jan. s.—The cattle commis sion, in discussing the question of the admis sion of American store cattle to Great Britain, says: “It is vain to hope that England will remove the restrictions so long as we fail to show that the last vestige of infection has been wiped out from our land, and nothing short of the absolute and undeniable extinc tion of this disease in the United States will reopen the British market to our live cattle, and save us those millions we are now every year prodigally, we mightalmostsay insanely, throwing away.” The report estimates the yearly losses from the lung plague in the United States at from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000, and the prospective loss at $50,000,000. The capital represented by the present yearly losses at 5 per cent., would be from $40,000,000 to $60,000,000, and that represented by the prospective losses at the same rate, $1,000,000,000. The governing principle in all these recom mendations is that the Federal government shall forbid the movement of stock cattle out of any infected State, Territory or dis trict, except after quarantine such as is now imposed on cattle imported from infected foreign countries. The report recommends that the Secretary of the Treasury be em powered to order the iustaut destruction of all cattle or other animals, which, in quaran tine, give evidence of dangerous contagious disease. GENERAL AND PERSONAL. General Grant Confident of the Success of the Porter Bill. Special to the Indianapolis JournaL Washington, Jan. s.—General Grant has expressed himself as delighted with the test vote in the Fitz John Porter case, which was taken on Wednesday in the Senate, and con fident now that the bill will pass that body. The ex-President is the recipient of much attention during his visit. To-day, at Ip. m. he received the visit of the Chinese minister, who called upon him at General Beale’s, where he is a guest, and later in the after noon the General returned the calls of those foreign ministers who have already called upon him. The Rival Tax-Reduction Bills. Special to the Indianapolis JournaL Washington, Jan. s.—The coup d’etat of the Senate, in getting in ahead with a tariff’ measure, has been made the occasion for a good deal of good-natured bantering, to which the members of the committee reply that the Senate bill is crude and by no means so symmetrical as theirs will be. A bluff senator said to this to-day: “What we want is relief, rather than symmetry;' a hungry man won’t look for symmetry in the loaf of bread that is given him.” The general im pression, however, is that the Senate bill will find the most favor of a measure of reduction. Notes and Personalities. Special to the Indianapolis JournaL Washington, Jan. s.—Dr. Susan A. Edson, who gained considerable prominence as the nurse of President Garfield during his long suffering, celebrated her sixtieth birthday yesterday. The occasion was made one of much pleasure to her by her friends, who called in large numbers and extended their congratulations. Dr. Edson has practiced medicine here for over twenty years, having in her professional care, during that time, the wives and children of many of the promi nent men of the day. The President is said to be still somewhat depressed by the melancholy event at the opening of the White House for the New Y’ear. An immense number of individual claims, previously audited and passed by officers of the Treasury Department, were transmitted to Congress to-day by Secretary Folger. Captain John Mullan, State Land Agent for Nevada, is preparing to have the 2,000,000 acres of land granted to the State by act of Congress, June 16, 1881, for educational pur poses, ceded to the Nevada authorities as soon as possible. The matter is now under consideration by the General Land Office, and when the property can be selected free of claimants. N®vada will he given posses sion. R. S. Taylor, of Fort Wayne, and P. A. Orth, of Lafayette, arc guests at the Ebbitt House. Commissioner Loring has returned from his trip to Indianapolis, and expresses himself as greatly pleased with the city and people. The surgeon at Evansville, Ind., writes the Surgeon-general of the Marine Hospital service that the local authorities refuse to receive mariners sick with smallpox, and recommends the erection of a suitable pest house in place of the one destroyed. Between now and Feb. 1 the appointments of 800 clerks in the Pension Office will ex pire. They were appointed on probation, and witli the undertanding that upon the record made would depend their continuance in office. It is understood that about one hundred of them will be superseded by new appointees. General Grant wil dine with Senator Mil ler, of California, on Monday, with the Secre tary of State on Tuesday and the President on Wednesday. The Chinese minister visited him to-day. General Comstock, before the Mississippi river commission, to-day, estimated that the entire navigation of the river could not be improved for less than $66,000,000. The es timate had no regard to levees. The ways and means committee is to-day at work on the free list of the tariff com mission’s report. The committee has struck out quinine, and fixed a duty on prepara tions thereof at 10 per cent, ad valorem. The President to-day nominated Gustavus Gowerd, of Illinois, to be secretary of the le gation of the United States to Japan. Judge Snell will render a decision in the Dickson case early next week. The defense feel confident that Dickson will be held for the grand jury, but considerable interest is manifested in how such a decision will be reached after the acknowledgments of the court respecting Dickson’s good character and Bow'en’s crookedness. The House Committee on War Claims has agreed to report favorably the claim of Cap tain Nicholas J. Bigley, for $210,000, alleged value of the sieamer Hurcules and tow of coal, destroyed on the Mississippi at Mem phis in 1863, and. of Mary J. Veazie, for $3,000, for property taken by the United States at Natchez during the war. Iran and Steel Industries of St. Louis. St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 5. —The Age of Steel, in its review of the iron and steel trade of St. Louis and other industries incident thereto, says there are more than 21,000 hands employed in them; that they do busi ness on $23,287,000 of invested capital, and that their product of 1882 amounted to $50,- 207,000. The amount of pig-iron actually melted in St. Louis establishments during the last year was 163,825 tons. A New Wrinkle in Contested Elections. Belvidkkk, N. J., Jan. s.—Congressman Harris, of the Fourth district, has served notice of contest unon Congressman-elect Jlowey. One ground of the contest is that large sums of money were used for Howey that had been assessed upon and collected from United States officials contrary to law. Steamship News. New York, Jan. s.—Arrived: Adriatic, from Liverpool. Queenstown, Jan. s.—Arrived: Bothnia, from New York. Southampton, Jan. s.—Arrived: General Werder, from Baltimore, TRICE FIVE CENTS. A PLUNDERED TREASURY. Startling; Discovery by a Committee of the Tennessee Legislature. M. T. J*olk, .State Treasurer, a Defaulter to the Amount of Four Hundred Thousand Dollars. The Money .Supposed to Have Been Lost in Graiu Speculation. The Delinquent Officer a Nephew of Preui* dent Polk and a Graduate of West Point—Other Crimes. POLK'S DEFICIT. i The Discovery Made by a Committee of the Tennessee Legislature. Nashville, Tenn., Jan. s.—The legislative committee appointed to investigate the office of the State Treasurer, reported this morning that the Treasurer had been out of the city two days and his clerk was not pre pared to make a statement of the accounts. The commission reports a deficit in the treas ury of $400,000, and, after consultation with the bondsmen of the Treasurer, recom mends a suspension of the* business of his office for the present. The announcement from the State Capitol, this morning, of the deficit in the State Teasury produced a genuine sensation throughout the city. Following is the report of the legislative committee: “The joint select committee to settle with the Comptroller and Treasurer report that they have visited the office of the Treasurer, and, upon inquiry, find the Treasurer away from the capital, and that he has been away lor two days, and they are not advised when he will return. His clerk states that he can not go into a settlement of the Treasurer’s accounts till his return. They also have in formation from the bondsmen, or some of them, that the condition of the treasury is such that they feel justified to recommend that the workings of the treasury be stopped until ad examination can be had.” The Senate adop* " ' joint resolution: "Whereas, The Ben:i. that M. T. Polk, prose;:. -.u, u for about S4OO, OoO; a “Whereas, The bom ► not sufficient in amuu.. • a-.- • < therefore, be it “Resolved, by thoSenato and House of Repre sentatives, That the Attorney-general of the State l*o amt is hereby instructed to attach, instanter, all available assets belonging to said M. T. Folk, provided that sufficient ground* exist, to the end that the same may be held for the satisfaction of said rietioir.'* THE BONDSMEN—A SKETCH OK FOLK. The .State Treasurer’s official boud was for $100,006. His bondsmen are: William M. and A. R. Duncan, of Newell, Duncan & Cos., brokers; Max Sax, cashier of the Nashville Savings Bank; William Morrow, former’Srate Treasurer; Will Polk and J. E. R. Carpenter, all of Nashville; J. K. Polk, F. T. Allison and R. P. (’ole, of West Tennessee, and A, S. Horsley, of Columbia. At the last extra session of the Legislature a bill was introduced to increase the bond of the State Treasurer, but it was stolen troin the desk of the clerk of the Senate the night before it was to come up for final passage, which was the day before the time ‘fixed for final adjournment of the Legislature. The amount of the deficit in the treasury cannot be accurately ascertained until a thor ough investigation is had. One of the bonds men, who has been examining the accounts, says they show, thus far, a deficit of $380,000. The same bondsman says the Treasurer’s books ami his account at one of the banks show a discrepancy of $30,000. Just before Christinas the Treasurer drew out of the bank of Pulaski $5,000. The State funds were distributed in various banks at Nash ville, Knoxville and Memphis. The missing fnnds are supposed to have been lost in spec ulation in bonds and stocks, or loaned to personal friends engaged in speculation in bonds and stocks. Treasurer Polk left Nashville on Wednes day, and was last heard of Jat Milan, Tenn., from which point he wrote back that he wo'uld return on Sunday. His family here do not know of his whereabouts. Treasurer Polk is fifty-one years old, a grad uate of West Point, and served four years on the frontier. He was a captain ol' artillery in the Confederate army, in Cheatham’s di vision, and lost a leg at the battle of Shiloh. He afterward served on the staff of General Leonidas Polk, to whom he was related. Af ter the war he resided on a farm near Boli var, Tenn., until elected Treasurer, six years ago. lie was a nephew of the late President Polk, lie has a large family, and occupied a high social position in this city and State. Colonel Polk left the city on Wednesday afternoon via a Northwestern train, with a trunk checked for Milan, Tenn. A letter dated Milan, Jan. 4. was received from him by his clerk, Mr. Fleming, last night. Governor Hawkins, in reply to an inquiry if steps w’ould be taken for his ap prehension, said no application had been made for his apprehension, and therefore his action will depend upon the character of the application when it rs made. The books in the Treasurer’s office are in good condition, and the only question is as to the amount of the deficit, which can be as certained in to-morrow’s investigation in a comparatively short time. A BRUTAL DEED. A Young Woman Seized and Ravished by a Couple of Tramps. Cleveland, Jan. s.—An Akron special to the Leader reports that Victoria Smith, twenty-four years old, when walking home last evening, about 7 o’clock, was stopped near her house by two ruffians, one of whom said, “You are Polly Hitchcock.” She re plied, “1 am not,” whereat the fellow’ said, “You lie.” The scoundrels, brandish ing a broadax and a butcher-knife, seized her, threw a heavy cloth over her head, twisted the corners so she w r as securely muffled, and threatened to kill her if she made a noise or resisted. They then dragged her past her father s house to an open field beyond, and both ravished her, after which they cut off her hair close to her head and left her senseless. When she recovered she walked home, and again fell in au uucon-