Star of the Cape, 9 June 1875 IIIF issue link — Page 1

STAR0FTHBCAP1

STAR OF THE CAPE.

VOL. VII.

CAPE MAY CITY. N. J., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1875.

BUSINESS CARDS. aUTXKM * ri:TTi»««r, OrTIHWARK, Util DKALMMM IS KTOro, HKATSJU. Boaam-rvMKaiiixu voona. tc. Tln-Roofln** Specially. K.M!™ at. <-»p. x.r ntr.

FLOOR. FEED. FERTILIZERS. GrooarlM. Oysters, Egge, Ac. K<«. 13 and IS rider*! Btiert. rama I NMITII, nr & Dealer In Gents' «7 WMhloetoe Street.

THE CACCCS SISTER.

iEXTu^ixyn AifD am. loom SHOES A O A ITERS. m WeetilOKton etreet.

COMTRACTORS A BUILDERS Fee.« sad «. Eeaelon Blreet. Cape May City. N. J.

HOTELS. WASHINGTON HOTEL!

- DOliTOK’S HOTEL, Harrisburg, Pa.

McMakin’s ATLANTIC IIOli'EL, CAPE Iriraelly on lha ac

PROFESSIONAL CARDS.

POITF.R * MXO>. ATTORNEYS-AT-LA BKIDOrruN, s. j„

ATTORNEY AT LAW AN DM ASTER IN CHANCERY. NoN Ferry Street, Cape May CUy. Kaw

VEYAFCEB, nO^ati^acpre. Ho-t, Rngtua atreat.

COXTICTED BT A BLI50 MAS. About the miJtUe of the sereutrenth oentory Nicholaa Zambelli, a citixeu of Ltuxm, riaited England ua Luameaa, and, pleaae.1 with the country, Battled there, ilia affairs prospered, and bj the tune he was fifty yean of age he had aocomula ted a handsome fortune, and fait a desire to end Ida days at Lnooa, eh ere a brother of hia still resided. He wrote family announcing hia intention, and soon, after sent them another letter, aUng that he bad adhia journey ; that he to attend to at Paris, and might be eipected to reach Lucca in > months. Nearly half a ysar howerer, and nothing waa heard Hia brother, extremely anxious fate, eet out for Paria in search of him. Ha rUted every place where likely tohavoprehimaeH in the couree of hia buaind in hia aeareh seemed, at find, t with success. Many of those be tiered stated that they had seen with the misaing man ; he nd collected the amount securities to a oonaiderable araoont. When, however, the rolled '■ Zambelli" were exhibitbrother exclaimed at once that e forgerire, and it waa plain that there had been foul play of eome aort— ibbery, at leojd, if not mnrder. No clew onuld be obtained, however, to the guilty partiee; none of thoee who paid their money to the false. Zambelli would undertake to deecribe an individual they months before, and but for ■a. Invratigationa at Rouen revealed the fact that Zambelli had arrived there, and had left for Paria aoratpanied by a vnirt The latter, howrrr, had Iwen hut little noticed, and as > long a time hud elapsed since Ida doutnre, no one could undertake to identify this single domestic of the many who in that time had passed throngh this hotel, the moat frequented Cornelius ZembelU thereupon brought to matter before tho lieutenant of police, but even his aenmeu, sharpened egpwioitoe, waa at fault, tln1/ a crime had been aummiMad there between Rouen'and Paria, tre, when, and by whom I Renat fault, but the lieutenant waa ant example of the Darwinian theory of the acquisition of instincts. Long years of contact with crime, in-

MEDICIHES.

KEARNEY'S

FLUID EXTRACT

BUCHU

ichadae

He waa readyhe said, to confcae all, hut when the notary eaeoe to take down his deposition, bo recovered hia eelf -pua- I eeas at -Ibe dot seseion and refused to any anything, pro- I On Christmas testing his entire innocence of the crime excited no surprise, aa it waa lb laid to hia charge. AU efforts to extort ternary to bring all the prisoners mondial to prison. He loudly protested which aometimes. out of re-pec t I against hia incarceration, declared the | day, liberated those who hail been fmbencaa of the bond on which he wan i prisoned for trifling. “ arretted, publicly accused the lien tenant To bring borne ti and sergeant of forgery, and commenced i of tile witacas the damage*. The atatementa he wee tc t the side of the I oath was adminiiRere police, and Martel's proceedings were I took in n truthful, iths; the suit rela-. left no doubt of has ainoarity, and the tire to the murder of Zambelli was ! trial commenced. Eighteen prisoner* brought before the Norman parliament, | were brought up and answered tbs cacid Martel himself transferred to the . lions put to them, conciergenc, while diligent search was j never moved, while ade for the body of the misaing man. | perceiving him in I Eleven mile* northeast of Yersaillc*, ) signs of alarm. At i what U now the department of Seine- j was tntrodooed. It ok-Oiee, stands the little town of Argun- J the sight of Gervois he i teuiL One day in the rammer of 1C80 it | with horror; he the acetic of unwonted exeitemeht. away, ao that the turnkeys inhabitants had with one accord —

labor i, quitted their

bouaea, and gmtbaml together about tho door of the Hotel dnHcaome. Byth.

■venation

at of the

they Buhjected all hotel, it was eridec

' wua there going on. In fact, n to scene of an inquest held by M. Laurence Bigot, king's advocate, on tho body of tho long misaing Zambelli. This xeslous officer, in his search fur of the crime, had visited every e and hamlet on the road from a to Paris, and had questioned officer of police he encountered, j,Hailing hia object, he waa about to return to Rouen, when he was informed into mouths before a corpse had boon discovered hid in a vineyard near Argentcnil. Bigot baatonod thither,

ad the atata of preservation of there-! The. mystery uiiua enab!ed ( him, on viewing the body, 1 apafring, ■ perceive that it tallied exactly wi"' ' -*

te description given by his brother

ta misaing Zambelli

The magistrate, having taken dot tho evidence, proceeded, in accordance ' hi

which him to detect the preeenoa of • • against the law where there w able endenoe of hia existent even munthn before a goldsmith nampd Martel had opened a shop at where he waa entirely unknown, ras something strange, awkward, bamsaed in hia appearance and j ha was very reticent as to hia

appearance ■

la that Martel ottered in

n, wbp,

t, had hitherto

ly leaned forward, listening intently; then, shrinking back with horror and fear, ho cried out: "It is he; it is the voice I heard on the height* of ArgrntcuiL" The president then, in a loud roipe, ordered the removal of the prisoner and the introduction of another. The first part of this order was complied with, but in accordance with a prearranged plan, Martel waa again brought

Fresh questions elicited fresh replies, but the blind man, after listening a (gw minutes, exclaimed; " You are deceiving mo; that is the voice of tho man I esnvererd with on the heights of Argen-

olved. De-

mered o

the subject waa followed by a ssion. One gentleman said that party lion ought to secure good results, and it an improved condition at politics could be obtained if the beat men in any party organisation would go to the primary meetings and caucuses. A gentlerejoined. He seems to Have given .nr party machinery aa a failure. No respectable man, he said, after one ex so of a csocni. would be found again. Outvoted, overridden, laughed at, sometime* "bounced out " by the wire-pullers and managers who swapping IiClcea and lookhemaelvM, he wouldn’t put himself in the way of such experience tnd the report added : " Aa this the applause of the majority, who elsp

ped hands loudly.-"

The New York TTin'i. in reviewing resent a fact that cannot be ignored, or ■ueb shorn of its influence, in our polios. In this condition of things, both tietice and common sense would say ; Reform tho caucus." If tho evil has ecu traced to its source, attack it there, he men who are formulating oar social science, and elaborately considering the problems it baa in hand, shonld not forjw it can be corrected ; and this don can be enforced by oonsideruultkelibood of any other relief. some of its evil* may be mitigated; if we cannot abolish the caucus, lo what perhaps is better, couIf the people are fit for free and popular government, they are ahundanb. No one disputes ail this. *No one doubts the power of the people to con-

Martel

ho i the hands of tl

interrupted by a piercing cry, and a !

blind mu, whose presence in the room hod before perceived, presented himself. His name was Gervala, and himself a professional beggar, bom in tho neighborhood, well known andmncli liked. It waa hia custom to wander from place to place, begging hia way.

led such

yet there is

The Western Grasshopper.

Tho Rocky mountain locust should not be confounded with the grasshopper, the ordinary locust, the small migratory locust of New England, nor the so-called •• thirteen-year locust." It breeds - in high and dry plateaus and valleys of

times a year to Arguntenil. There he !

Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado,

taintl leccpuon and was invanstily * l interval* of apparently from seven 10 Uu ’ '” U,L . 1 ridi^S!Si^Sd, d to7«itt^t5^Si

reed that day from a tramp of several j of ^ w ^ de ^ t egg,, and to nUts. he had entered the house and , fli h{ , J.rerted by tho ,.ro

scaled himself unnoticed in a corner. !L_n, . ^

When, however, in listening 1st rote, lie heard that a corpsi discovered among tho vines.

i loud

and

d hia tranpa, and tied the high ground beyond the vil>3 when ho heard the violent laying a dog. lie stopped and listened, and m distinguished a man's voice, feeble " ml, exclaiming: "Monster! r, thy benefactor ; mercy I

ranby, my Then the

i the country, ia in the some

' K ' direction; and even its young, befon “ j they get wings, hop aoutheostward alro.

" , being adapted by tutors to a high , almost rainless region, it* journey of fir* hundred miles ends, first In a feast, but apcedly in sure destruction. Millions perish liefore the eastward limit is reached; millions more, aa they push forward, become exhausted, and the invasion of 1866 rad 1874 terminated in

I die so far

aa Zambelli'a,

' ronons with tin: awakened a suspicion ia it's miyd that '

Ue/were in

3Boe net to work to obtain it his hypothesis. With

dutraew and

police, he sect an individual to Martel' •tore, who, under pretense of purchosmo trinket*, entered into . with the goldsmith mid ii •lly mentioned tho turoe of Zambelli. " i* Martel grew pale and showed i of diaquietude, looking esnmrtly at hia questioner, who, however, giving no aign of any tjlterlor motive in. his remark, finished his purcltase and left tho *hop. The lientenant now felt sure that he waa on the right track. Hia next atop waa an ingenious uno. He counterfeited Martel's signature-to a bond, and sent a sergeant of the police to the aiwpeoted man to demand payment of it Martel, of .coure&, replied that it wa* a forgery, and refnped to pay. hut ,the officer insisted that he must take ■Mm into oustedy until he hod pworn to l j tits falsity before the proper officer. A 1 Martel, at first, acw.mpanied the aergeant wtihafi the Mlmnetsof an#IMrmt man. bnt undd-'nly » mttpioion that right Hashed upon him. iPtt.MtMKrys.’S s

twothe ^ ^

1 man heard a fearful cry,

dying man in hia last agony, and all After a time he distinguished the steps ! one who seemed to stagger under a heavy harden. Uervaia advanced, asking what was the matter—who hail I wen moaning aot "Nothing, nothing," replied on agitated voice, "only a sick i, who ja being carried home and has ted on the way." Then the voice ed in a lower and more menacing >: "You may thank God that you blind, or I would have done tho same to you." He now ptyoeived that a terrible crime had been"committed; trembling aa he realized the fact that he

n life, he hurried on

re of tin

nr occurred or are

For the iuseot of the eeoend gener ID, hatched in an unnatural dimate, im the first an unhealthy, oomparativ ly weak, and very perishable creator ’ " , try regions of. tho higher dev where scarorly twelve inch— - Jail in a year, and the ground is rarely if ever saturated, the eggs, posited in glutinous pods, thirty to hundred in each, sbeut an inch bem tile surf tec, hatch out an loaect capable of flying five hundred miles, devastating eniirmoualy, and producing many eggs. But in our lower regions, where the rainfall is from thirty to forty-fire inches, and where the spring opens even later than in the mountains, millions of eggs are destroyed, and milliono more of the yonng when first hatched, and those which lire long enough ' —1—»-i-«

cannot reproduce them

opeeilily-destroyed by tho dimete and by pamiiteu. Prediction* to this effect, made last year by Prof. Riley, already begin to lie rerifled in many oountriee-

of his advent

haply. It might cor

unknown, and awaken hia When, however, he heard being found in the very place where he board tho voice, he oonld not avoid an expreeeion of _a*rpri*e. and, when in terrogateil, frankly tnhKatl he knew. “ God grant," he exclaimed, in condn 'on, " that no evil comee to miTfor it." | The king's advomte listened attentive-' ly to tbia story; he had now got hold of : what reliance could he place ’

! duoe a third, but.

" aaya: Eventually they vanish: . the face of the earth, nnleaa fi

T*" 1 “"ZTTu enough to be dtrridl Uck by favorable he could- Several month, had »“2*0 the high and dry country '

the murderer a word* always ringing in hia ears; he oonld recognise the as certainly as his mother'* The

R is believed that the

i pro Riley

Early Dajs of California.

General Sherman, in hi. new book, bimre or food- YerbaBuena 41a us about California in its eajlv converted into San Franciw-I. day. a* follows: Our nssi 1 arrived at mento City ha.1 been laid out. ' ' r'ca.lsted ol Monterey t»v. after » rept'Uy'sold. and the I ago of one hundred and liilicty-eighl bnai "P «* nl "n* days from New York. " Evervthmg on =>“«- Stockton also had Uahore looked bright and Iteantifnl, the “ » convenient point for tra. hills covered with grass and flowers, the ^ ' "•»“» adidte h.inses. with red-tiled ,on -roofs and wldtened walls, contrasted ^ With the dark pine trees behind, j was ing s decidedly good impreesion | a ns who bad come ao far to sjiy out i the land. Nothing coaid be more peace- i ful in ito lookstban Monterey in Jauaarv, T id tho people of Mon- , “ kon l1 "' 11,111 '’Y lh '’ of Americans, native i iJeclartition that they w Muxienns and Indians, about one thon- dl 7 good* exceeiUng in . ail told. They were kind and ' ' v ’ ,u per yard dming ll pleasant, and seemed to have nothing to ; calemlar year. For so ipt such as owned ranches in the j ‘f** for the resoee of bor— —d States e

for winch It i thorongh di

Of what consequence

the product of his labor is ' up by a corrupt government Why should a merchant vox his days ar nights with the details of a ’rest but to find, in tho end, hia profits co: Burned by taxes I What ay mpathy won the unfortunate merchant find amor hia fellow* who should nay that tho ou of trade were no distasteful -

It is - idle to attempt to o the law of compensation, good administration for

the beet work of the ir any generation. In ivetybody's bnaiuea* all being citizen*, all os

w discharge that

d lead

to right to

order of thing.; ugloct that dnty,

by arf doing be not only puts in peril enjoyment of eitizenahip, but

alone good government real* Let tho men who wont good administration do their duty in tho very beginning of political influenee, and good admlnistro"1 come aa a matter of comae the Detroit Police ('sort, this ia Williar inquired his honor c

it *100,000,000 per at ■es of apparel. Their

body bought beef by the pound, but by 1 ofr - " '' ureas* Game of nil kimls-elk, eott 011 wild gw.se, and dnek.--a» P" 1 for ' lant; but coffee, ougar, and small I “ OI “

ground, stop tl certainly w

g, hpt all the money offered would '

sell. Every Sunday, regularly. . iperoed through the week."

id* It would Stagger the hub ironw. while it would tend to cot ir frugal intentions, if they < iw how many bonds of our* Europe ds altogether, and what proportion tnrial kickshaws and ravish! ry in which they ami their I-

ir the grua-graini is, the bu-es ol ih 'alr..Jy crowd

lot* T.-liir debars a

to blocks sc

3cr, Lieutenant V

Bartlet, its first alodde. In ding being tbat no single 1 purchase of the alcalde m

ihattering d alkof .miledifying ua!-

tho wa* not thua aff-i-ted, placed on ■ork-bcnch near one of the young gi common land-turtle. -The girl turn nd saw it, gnvt". shriek which aound

She fell to the floor in a ha -xhauHted by prolongi.1 m neiit, lending to exhonsti

tind and

they momxl all the foroea of I body, to resist the mynteriotta tern ■ml he, too. yielded and fainted The thing began to look aeriotn. What ailed everybody I was the question with overyltody not immediately affected by or under control of tbia singular

in its long e: nearly forty y tlie failure of t advertised liberally, nor t

the public to have ei look them' np when an The man who refuse* newspaper* is k man of

what hearing is tuMhe the blind. It teachc* on'around him, and pt

wouM come to a ataW-otill. ma-kets lie unsteady, no fixed vine could be found for goods, and 111 in generally would tie fluctuating and uncertain. Advertising is the oil which tradesmen put in their lamp* They that are unit ia printer's ink that makes nineton th. of the fortunes of the world. The Indiana Newspaper Union, a company organized tor tho purpose of supplying publisher* with printed sheets upon the co-operative plan, ha* eua-

pended.

The Geneva Lake (IR) Herald man publishes -real estate "ad." free, ami . take* a commiaxion when the treats are Bold. He has a big patronage. Every man who mails a package subject to the new pontage rule, drops it " wish thot Senator

! 11*1*

lit for

The Ttlton-Ib-eeher Tris In this famous trial the folio tails are given: Thu trial o< .elect a jury.'^r. Merris e good shore of three dev. with 1

tof flf

The Wheat Harvest. ir 1874 iva* estimated at 300.(100.■ hela. This year it is expected will rot. exceed S-'W.OOO.OOO a foiling off iff 70,000,000 Usually wo have exported s likely that the home market In Europe the promise of -the is so good that there will prob-

w York State the . a

»yield of

good many lot* Lientena had bought one of each kind, “ Many naval offleet

and Captain Eohu:

suited that ho should think

• money for pro

especially ridiculing his quart, city, then called Happy Valley.

'about one-half. The Philadelphia ., which has been giving details many of tbo State*, -puhli.bed dis-

lo such a t"banco for

dayM

i- the intereeotion

stand*, v

f Son some i

Montgbm

Oalifon

atreut weto the ator Melius. Frank Wanl, Sherman A Rnokel. Rose A Co., and it may be one or two other* Around the plaza were a few houses, among them the CityHotel and tho custom-house, single-story sdobos with tiled roofg, and they were by far 1 substantial and, best houses in

idred, of whom

" oidwkih

te instance, it is not difficult far *: : most indifferent business ms 1,1 j factorily answer the query—»

» ex|*er

•mail the bulk."

a time paaned rapidly ■pring of 1818. whenth

lothor Hhe'sS good oldlady, and ahoTI fod badly about thi* " “ And you have to support two or brea young listen I" ■"Yes, three of them—poor little girl*-" Hia honor removed his spectacle*, ipod the apple on his ooat-alocvc, smiled blandly, and remarked: Wbat ah awful liar 1 Why, man, 1 s all about yotr! You are one ol greatest loafers in Detroit, and 1 t believe yon have a relation on

The prisoner

ould make no reply. TU mark you do

bis <r

A Parti enter Ren.

Captain Jacob W. Dubois. S«y» the ingston (N. Y.) Freeman, has a hen aural brood, which is

to her place of laying.

te the bonne, quietly

faded te detect the indontity of j*, egg, 'and goes off with a

*, the other, had incrvaeatl in hia knowledge of the human i (

as wonderful; tliey often tried te . aka on him by addreamng him te verr particqjwr'as Ml voices, hut the blind man

for sixty days,' bat’s thirty daya

in which to get yon washed upend thirty ...c . . yourself."

Th* Chiaago Time, publishes i

butli

to convince any tradesman fain induce an extensive rale for were*, that tho bent time to mlvertiis that the Let time to advertise is all the lime. In other words, the aoeret of auecewffol advertising is the same as the standard price of liberty—"eternal vigilance." A truly gifted advertiser was located at Cleveland.* few yean ago, fallowing the dry goods business. One morning he noticed In each of tho local papers a column containing nothing but tho word "Xenophon!" oft repeated. Punning hia inquiriox cautiously, he discovered

in all respects as a children,- dined slot mpany in the ho

'itheto

re| l »

d forth on tho-on

naked tlfrir [

that they

3 from Captain Sutter j : and they wanted to i

o Governor Mason in person- I took em in to the colonel and left them get her. After'some time tho oolonol me to hia door and sailed to me. I mt in, and my attention was directed a aerie* of paper* unfolded on hia tablejftn which lay about half an ounce if plaoar-gold. Mason said to mo : What is that!' I touched it and «xtmined one or two of the larger pieces, md asked ; ' la it gold P Mason asked ne If I had ever aeon native gold. I inswi-red that, in 1844, I srta in Upper Georgia, and there naw some native gold, ia mach finer than Uil%and that phials, or in transparent qnills; but I aaid that, if thi* were gold, it be redly tested, first, by its mal-

leability, and n«x piece, in my teeth,

■a pCTfeot

j Xenophon wi

"curiad'ty 1

id tbat

the great plained in ■d impera.

whetted. by

Greok'a name .landing unc.' Urn columns' of the Clevel. and then the debut of the flo made with a great flourish,

this information, our advertising genius saw ala glance how ho could and how he would utilize it. He took down from tho dual of hia top shelves an auction lot of hoop akirta, long out nf style, brush ed them clean, put fresh tags on eoch. and after Xenophon hod blazed upon the public eye for thirteen days, out with a column advertisement In of the daily papers, reading: " Xenophon ! Xenophon! Now ready,

_ ' - ‘ ti by

and, the metallic lua- I

_ , to bring an ai and hatchet n the lock-yard. When-three w ugbt, I took the largest piece i at it ont flat, and beyond donbt It -

till, was something fearful t*

late- ' A Sulphur Mine.

A mine of liquid sulphur i* now being worked near Palermo. Bieily—that is, the sulphur is, being removed a* it from th* floanrre in the rock', at the

l disti

mttal; 11.

welve daya on hiafirot ■early another day in reand Moulton wore each

■ourtocnof tho rdnety-fire witneree. e womon—siz for tWT proaoentiop l eight for the defetme. ' Q

I'ecullar. I’rispte-

i Boston paper relates that-upon one

if that State, to r whose accuracy it vouchee. From these data it appears that white tho early sowing of last fall nttkined sn unusual killed both top and root in many seotioluL Pennsylvania has snffered as mnch os New York. In the West late frosts and tho grasshoppers ravages have worked additional injury. In MiunMiota ami Wisconsin the prospect is more enomraging thou in other Western States, hut it ia only in California and Oregon that an- abundant harvest can bo expected- It ia possible that the farmer* may make np their tease* by an improvement in prion*, owing to the aoareity of grain. Them is «Rery probability that the wheat harvest of 1875 will be smaller

- when there v ■sn, they neve

Preserving the Mind.

Fresh air and relaxation of mind are . of more importance than exorcise, which lost is indeed mainly valuable re securing not ho transgressed. Tho attempt to compensate for excessive literary toil by i-ioessivetiodily toil is based on a false conception of tho relation of matter and spirit, worthier of an ancient Gnostic than a modern philosopher, which has

' had for

nutted the sister

■ly this, but the sister-servant wi

work from early till late, and

as no such thing as leisure fc • a jiarticle o” the eonaiderstii

cm oue so nearly related to her. | 8he . won |,i go straight "■ally the woman moved ° «>• from her study lo her ganlen and glebe, ■d the sister determraed to find an ta riomdy and mow with a-scythe, uner place. Accorffiugly she engaged j„ Wn g 0rn , tlier iuxnri.tingin fatigue.

pastry cook j 0aullud | y pandysi. came ou. shewing ‘ , itself first ns " writor'n cramp," and then

the whole body. Tim

the *

transpired that her ot mistress bre sngaged board for min ^ H

m "esson not only at tittz very ^ . but tdw id tbo ve^r house where ^ dirtalfld ij T0 |y monthly tor ts to furnish the daily pies . t huit died spparently of

being tu " ' ' '

her thoughts. Tohnooo should not ba indulged in during working boura. 1 Wbntevrr physiological effect* it has " ore sedative, and so obstruct mental

2. If you g

it Boots and Shore. nge boa tho following n " boots and shore. It

" break in " boots or shore. j t j,

i not cosy when new, don't „ njmntive helore retiring to rest it bas lor the hoots will break your . t ] u , auction of a vigorous brain laborer, than your feet will break l&* v j 0 h n Milton, whose supper, wo are told,

*1 of bread, water, (dtvre, and * r ., tobacco. There is a flavor about

**"*• die fare of the happy daya be had paaaad ore- _ eiyguut Uterary eirolo in Italy.

breaking in

will need a aped* _

made with aU aorta of knobs and pro- Vith;

ibarenoa*, to cotnwpond with your dts irted joints. Then yon ^ be sorry. ; g. If you have Urge fret, admit it in :

•• • ■ ' -ve your br-* - 1 - 1 Tb

la lied State* Statistic*.

re tho •alarica ot which have boon Simple liaromet r. itmreoaod, with the amount ot nuch ina common wide montlmd Imttle cr.-ore during the name period. Tbo L* used for piektea; fill it to with- Mai amount of appropriations, aa offlt the top with wst-r. dally announced, is glT9.16fl.209.l». » Then take aoommou.'teng-neekixl fias'r. Of thio amount the laxgret irara, *87,- » and plunge the neck oiit into the |nokte CKIO.OOO is for the Poat-offioe, W7.000,- - bottle as far as it will go, and the Uaromo- OflO for tlm army, »17.(«0,000 f. m of tlw fissures, no sulphur waa l ter is made. In fine weather the water navy, tW.OOROOO tor sm . found, ami flse idea entered the head* id will rire into the nook of the flask even iieosas, $18,802,286.99 f ; tbs workmen to reopen tho hole by higher than in the piekfe botB-n ] J, in the I bbating. They naeoecdod ia re-retab- and windy weather it will fall te • ho thoasaoda who j 1 idling a comrauziration with tbs into-! an inch of the month of tho (tea id land. Tho news | nor. bat tho praam* bad baoomo an fore a haatty gal* ol wind tl