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W m m. OPPIOIAL lAS. N. O@SROVI. * EDITOR. sAYIADT, - " 3 1, 1881. XJlot Nil - F rte.-Rwd IM UIIA 3hWr MlrsXWhm % r N~bOre.... ju...t.ffwnmhhdseb tbs.s, mjeui "w~iM1.ed. M am ebsk i .it awagadintbWRinwaf b udw t r MAT r km i4 m's lion. ' r L ý AKW oo . ftinn* The preent population f Lodon, ac adnling to the recent e s, is 3,314,~1l. Ex-Puskidest Dis, of Mexic, has re. tl signed the portolo of public works. To A yndleaete of Eastern and Ohio epi talit have reratly purhased the Ken- t tucky Central railrod. of -of I On the alght of Jne h, there was a tole heavy fent in the vicinity of Watertown, as t N. Y., doing considerable damage to the ter erOps. thm President Gariek, Secretary Wm. H. Hunt and Admiral ). p. Porter visited Fortres Monroe on the 4th, and were welcomed by salutes hom the Fort, school ships Constitution, Saratoga and Port. ii mouth, and the North German steamer Ny)mphe. 0 ofl The Readjuster Convention of Virginia stn have nominated Col. Wm. E. Chandler, ium Mayor of Petersburg, for Governor, and lng John E. Lewis, Ex-Senator, a Republican, nal for Liant-Governor. WaN THoxAs ALZXuxII Scrr, ex-Presi- wa dent of the Pennsylvania andml Texas Pa. eile railroads, died in Philadelphia on 21st May. His wealth is estinmated a seven million dollars. le was one of the Itailroad Kings of Amria. There is to be another competitive drill Ito in Louisville, Ky., on the Imnd instant. imj Will the Chickasw Guards, of Memphis, cl and the New Oreesas Cresceents, cross in Iances again In Kentucky, and settle that d e S-lWdierenaeef It is to be hoped that deo they will, in order to fully satisfy Tenues- int eeans and Louislanians as to their retpee- ho. tive proficiency. ern " A telegram from Keii, Runsia,'ays that the ring-leader of the anti-Jewish riots w has been sentenced to three and a half years penal servitude, and the loss of his l .il rights. Three of his most active seo eempliees have been sentenced to eighteen mouths, and twelve others to short terms ra of imprsonsment. exi Evictions in Ireland are attended with ri epaUItts between the people and soldiers So and policemen. Several pernons have its been killed and wounded, andl the excite- of meat is the nernesae. Afkira in that I1 unnrtnnate country begin to assume a dei serious aspect. w Col. Fred. Orant was elected last Sat anlrday, President of the Texas Western of aerW Ouage Railway Company. Ac pe tlveperatiomn will begin at once in con"' r nestles with the construction of the road th to the eo randes, tom Houston. l The rumos that Secretary Blaine w it impliested in the star route contracts, are denoamned as utterly groundless, by the to 4 oemmittee of investigation, and the ea perior e®eers. Mr. Blaine has oneour~ aged the inestigastion most heartily, and ec huas eontantly taken the ground that it de shouldt be prosecuted to the tmost. That stey must be a "Conklinger." We are proud to se the bright fature of Alexandria, La., realised, but-it as seems good taste would be consulted if a our beandaeesed to "liken themselves to at other men." There is entirely too much of el the Pharibae in it. Alexandria is a live w Stowan, bet it does'at seeeaily fllow that at every other town in Louisans is dead. * Opeloas has the "boss" hotel of Lou. i iluas. Lcoxam knows how to keep house, and it any one doubts what we ssy, a day's sqjourn n that handome town will convinee them. And then the , plesne of being initiated in the "Feni an Brigade," to be one of the mystic ('Rob. inson's, (YO'Perodn's, O'Kavanaugh's andt MeCamphbell's, is enougth to call all | who admire rienadbsp and -ood cheer to lovely constry, and none the less a .1twns o WeeWington and Op.. , 2m e t exercises of that popu lastitut, he Louisaldana State Uni~eamty, ill be beld Au July Ist to 4thk. Onth ltLthse will be aO-tlngtS et t eeardl etsqpervjes Tr s 9Th e wlw a tskeu pby a meetlg ofthe Athsul; t sad aidd.ams by Stdent. and f no . 1 F. Nashea . The Right RevemedlP .'N. Genm er, P.IE., E adhoeC s IPI wll prasih te iMtbulsumamo as 3lat the Mehodist Chkleb. Onth wflc oaer the 1f DiePi bwMger W '.P. almn, eo w Or- m imd aisya t hs lrtslght. arieklbted tbe Ps Prsident, Boi. Pn*rloahuams, k a pognaspue at Exerelees, and an duar aties warant s l sn tl -1 beam elgml .n th Shacur oeaslo. It ue pw e t thi. m. sy ofrtheathI-PUlaOJu wwati male of the Nrth sad blth, have sau elp. t mud kindly cheered our humble dart l have all advocating the inculcation of liberal and teo views andwl prgeive tenets into the discnus Democratic party of the country, and particularly of our own State. The Cin- not pnl cinnatti Sagqeter was particularly eulo- villiica gistie and patrealued u far beyond merit. which We donot wonder that these efforts nt. should attraet attentia, when, with en- ecnonih lightened people, the hide-bound Bour- iie anti boasni exercised in political feelings adl estailis actions of the Southk a subject of adl- whme - verse comnent. They cannot understand North, why we should cling to thew dless which ean only tend to prevent those very things tersnts we must clamoromrly desre; immigra tios and the Mina of Northern capital. Poes To them, that we should famish brains d and votes for that wing of Northern men whose political theories are an antiquated W as the courters of Louis XVI, n a matter defined of special wonder. And yet we cannot Senate, tolerate the person who would dare tell anl hi as them things. Nay, as a Northern wri- l . ter as very Justly observed, we regard all tittuW. thme criticiams, however proper, as per. rioui 8 onal insults. Deep in as lies the fiction of ll that we are losers by a cause in the late rontes. That it is a fiction, we have on- ously, ly to enquire of ourelves to determine. It is true, reconstrution was an evil whi I't no one can mneasure save thotse here who expericucwl it, antl from this sprung haml offielals and ignorant rulers, liut neon structiou was an effet in itself. It is ve r equally true the war war an evil-bring. ung to our firesides all the horrors to which mankini can el subljectetl. But the war was an effect. The cause for all these ills ready a was surmmed in slavery, an instltutionm mtne s without adefence and scarcely an apology. wouldl The war and reconstruction have panet tould and gone forever, but the blight of slavery still remains. It remains to meet us in chorge the false civilizatimn horn of and nurtur-. ed under it. A civilisation that judged that tl itelf perfect, and struck down with an er, imperious hand every opposition. It the ie cloaked itself in the simple toga of Liberty ever ci lin 181, and proclaimed that the North Who e desired to wrest fron us "rights we held dear" and plugel the people of th Sou very th Into a contest which was hopeless from the nortn b hour that Sumpter's gnll awoke the slumrb. ering nation. Defeated in the field, it shadowed itself under Axur JoIISMUN's T wing and augmented the ills of a suffering shell. and ruined people by the enactment of a mnade I system of peonage Statutes, and by that tit o sin made that wore than hell, reconstrue tion possible. And yet this "civilization," ImIa rank with feudalism, from its strong hold erty is of Bourbonism, terrorizes those who dare Eve expose its sins, and reeking with the suneer erimes it has committed against the * South and her people, brazenly proclaims that I e Itself the party which has relieved them ual l . of ill. heat o ti f fthepeoplewerecontented alandlhappy nn. lief der the iron-handed rule of a Bourbonism, Sol which Is intolerant in all its seacts; which ty at villiefl, abuses and terrorizes every eiti" And sea who dares stand up in the broad light be ho of our American eivilizatlon and ind- weta Ipedenlt goverament, and proclaim the Yet right to speak, think and aet, freeon h m Sthe shackle whleh it hasam olong h&saten etl upon the people of the South; which of on pins it* faith to dead iaes, and build. itb hopes of futurae usefulness, glory and nam Igreatne upon abstract Itc belonging helpi * to the "dead past" and which need a bu- liev rial no esmnreetion trumpetc ea ever call dty N tolight sgain, would they clamor for a their tchage and ill the land with continuous ibly dt emands for something hbtter, purer, Pro more ia consonance with the restless spirit o and inreasing aetivity of the timtes? and i SThis same party of "abstract ideas" tedet it and issues seattled beneath the sulphurous it, if noke of hundred, of battle eldu, are a I eternally vleifereu about the "bloody e fI shirt" mania of the Northern Republican., t re while they fail to disclern the crimson t srtain on their own garments, while they shout an ufaltering fealty to a "Solid faly South," and appeal with frantic eager- not e- aesto the spirit of 1861. P To-day there is a new generation of vo- in on Sters in the land frot what there was over consi a secoe of year, ago. Men who have en- esty largt ideas, an exalted conception of the Th n need. of the plment tines, whose minds of th grasp with tenacious power the require- flte te menta of progressiveness in polities, as the d well as In selence and art, These men oflo t will not be hampesed and shaeckled by that S"aLstrct qustion." or "dead l sues.n out They prope to ~ attle right royally-not Th Ifor a "Soli South," nor a "ssetional oeii *t North"-b-t for one country, with a siai- galn tlarity of ideas in all its limit., whose polt t progam, greatuness and grandeur shall be perp their chief al, and fmr removedt om the and w spirit which has made the late sesaon ofthes ; te Natiuual Congrems a brlesque on de- real SHlberatle asembles, the rideule and re- at I r pmah of all elases of well thinking le em 'ai muh · Tir b ntl tho t hetheiga e ofto Ml h timos, meaf e Ulbertym of tluatah psso whichb has hitherto been f ra4 l . down, bow-bmatesr n and abusmed wiut of Ianat or meaue. If prgressive Ideas which meet the fill mewurs of the pr tho o. tut, are not to be eountenanceed or tolera- the s ted(l, beeause they aeeonrlered an inno- r Svation on prineiples of a oseatmry ago; If A m aconsiderd nlmseal to whart lan 5 mO thinkththe tree status of D oe -- o a a democracyM which tenaolously sies to a. the Isues of 151, bellevea in sl~rery, aste moaeeigty mlta e t ihght of Sees-r alm, the s oaer it isdiskbanded the better clti ad fir the eantry,. an e. If Republicaalem aeans a coantied - l r. treda seeec tlc by theaoas, of kcp. Bee giug up theIsease sad heart-burnings and in ea m atias the ether esetloa, te Mi-essse ldshe better~h radr 5 WeC Sr maw. alwaga savq he ilet inald e lketeal eagletB d tlsmt agr hbet of t.s peopm , the weeder sal ad miration the natios of the earth. We ase aware that them are broad prin Jo elpkl to sesle sad promalgate. We a Cc have already adopted a platform clearly by and tersely enunciated. We propose to hold discuna it logically, intellectually, with smlic reason, judgment and callmness. We do Fire not prnqus to deal in ilendoies, alusen or lanlr villilcation. Such are iloor weapons with port which to fight facts, a rend not argu-. ecr eswnt. Our ideas are fast taking lhoi and For becaming a imotive iower aliong the peo. a St pl& and tihe flture looks Iright for the the I etablishiilnent of.a lJlrnowratie party on if pi wwl.aw standard will Ih enlihlasoned : No mnel North, ;tlo Mouth, no East, no Wet,. Our call a country, our plople-a NATlSI whose in. tion teneslt are identical. II the Persomal Ahmesmm A Prall nL l to a dialem of Mlga lo mhe tale. thel SWhLen Hof . W. Mahole, of Virginia, t r defined his ismitiou in the United States t Senate, there broko forth over the length Mx, and breadth of the country, one of the mest exciting plditical discussions of the nix Itilncs. It evenituated in arraigmnent of va- ' rion State goverullnents, on the question lse of Repudiation of public obligations, inlar which Loulsiania figural rather conspiri- Ipir onsly, as well as Tennessee, Virginia and ua Misimippi. The august Senators of these 'ultedi States in extra sesrionl cionvenedl, wliiledl away the precious hours whllich i shouldl have bewen devoted to the transac- eve tion of pullic business, indulging ill in- dia inenders', lersonal alue', invectives anllc d n epithets, against what they coneeived af- sni s f'cte'l the holnor and honesty of their n various State governments. They were ready at all times to hurl Iack with in Iilnite nOrni, and deny in words of burning l n elllquence any ulch foul ilputation as the would tarnish the fair Iamioe and blackenl d the pulrity of State eseulltcliehO, whencl ;hiharged with dis'laiaming any part or Snoiety of pilllic indeltedines. sl. r- ) Did it ever strike the average reader nt that there is a s'n'.ie ofrepudliationi black- en. ier, deeper and darker than such as aroused w the ire of Honorable l anatorsf I)id it ever enter into the nllinlds of iindividulals, g who eonlisose the "'dear lpeople" of these States, that they are tile ince'ltors of the vvery 'clldelull atory nlieasllre which they are no ntnrenllously inlveigh against in theirlia Sservants-Legislators ? And yet it isto verily the truth. stn The whole imiatter is contined in a int we ig shell. We refer to the yearly ass.essments l is amade in this State under the provisions of lii it p new C'ointitution. The Colfax l bnox- .th ICLK has been expowsilng the matter in a manner which reflects no credit oil propl- tl erty holders. That journal aysv: S Every man who gives in his property the he subnleriles to the following oath: *tl he " * I do further swear or affirm Mi that the valuation atlixed opposite each til item of said property il said lst is the ac- il tual eash value thereof, aeording to the heaWt of nay judgmient, knlowledge and beo- e . lief. fat S o help me God. lsi ' No man can honestly give in his proper oh ty at one-fourth or oue-half Its value. ti- And hor the reason that all nin will not bt he honest h giving in their aswmsnenlts, we advocate a State lnird for the equali - rzation of aanessments." e Yet, in view of thin solemn loath, some o m en who own property have no hesitancy ty in giinging in s valuation, to the Assessor ee oh of one-fourth and oneu-half its real worth, OI and then deliberately suberlbhe their sh nd names to this enth with its affx of "So b ug help me Godal." They must assuredly e- P. n- lieve'ooncientiously, that it is their oneet om all duty to defraud the State of am muchl of r a their equitable indebtedness asn tlhey pon- p~ a sibly can. r Proffer to one of these Ecitizens a paltry Ib 0 or lO$100 to go into a court of justlee and deliberately commit perjuryt, aud the to tenlder would he considered a deadly in- d. mel sult, which would result in anl attack uP Soq and perhaps serious bodily injury of ti Sthe person who made the proffter. But for r n, k~n than the amount speciaed, these sname u l persons do not henitate to subhcribe to an ey oath, the requirements of whieh they are gc li fully aware are far from eorret. We can is pr- not understand the elasticity ofconscience, l or personal motive whieh aetnates people t ro- in one eame, which in the other they would l ver consider a direct attack lupon their hion en- enty, truth and high standiug in society. the These are plain wonrdsn, yet the gravity ads of the situation, the palpable wrong in. ire- lcted upoln the eonseientions tax-payer, * s the depletion of State revenules on account k men of low and simulated ansensments, require ,J by that the subject shonuld lie handlled with- , 14. out gloves. tl not The dar peopkle, who complain of rings, A al olfiial rottenness anud eorruption, the bar. ii- gaining, trading mand trafllleking among g Ia politlelans, of the sale of olfces, and the Is be perpetration of bhuge "Star rouate traudes the and other gigantic pluanders, may rail at a of their selected offelals, while they fall to de. realise the atter demoralization whieh er, s r its la their ownrnska, andthe moacience. glss dimegard of truth as typiled meid pro maalptd by the Aemneanset rolls of Le- L 'Twu but teeatly that some of there-' ra jr ournals exiitesI regret at the dearth ~ bet of nesots for editorial thoughst and di. euaisson, Oreat God! whe are their SthoIght sad brains ? Hema is one (and 'there are many others) whleh they can e ' "ring the ehangee" upon for months to Icome. The press owe it to their mighty int ianaence, to their otspoken denuneloation " of a 1eafr1nhlad appallng wrong, to the st honor of1ein to the protection of 7i, h laboring clases, to hebr fature psra Sperity, grraneur sd grestnesm, to the er altivatlo of the Washnl gtonian spirit of unwillingnes to prevareate, to attaeek Sthis 1 ndeo leprosy whicth is deplpting the '5P- bee trasry, le the machinery of d goieramenzt and a-eous prepcy pss meet s- a re, ad taxpaying Alrleique. We need a elamle, ad thesoonerit L b segaated the better fat the people BIoatman; f harvport, dI pe to $lthe poqitinon e f - aaid Thy Just after the disastrous coiagqration, uild . a Committee of the City Coeadil, headed aret y by Mayor Holmes, visited thepromprty ofe o holders and business men of this city, to spirit h solicit sunscriptions to purehase a Steam an. o Fire Engine. In face of the fearful ea- clal i ar lallily which had devastate the central wife, h portion of thA town, they nsuereded in the p -. securing the pomsie of 4Fo, all told! ofa i For want of means, the idea of lprecriuK thrift I. a Steam Elgine had to be abandoned for Ma "e the prenit. The next step was to utilize, once n if possible, the material on hand, with suli o such nuwns as they could command. They ing I ir called again on the people for eoutribu- liil I. tions, and succeeded in raising 270! thora In the mean time the ladiek had eaught hare the popular contagion of raising means gas to aid the Fire: Department. They aunt neat their Committees abroad to solicit contri- room. butions for an entertainment, confining tires their calls almost exelusively to their own and It ex. They were eminently sueeessful. whit Mr. (feo. W. Kile, who keeps the Phe- ougl e nix Saloon in the splendid Lacoste Hall, and .-. gracefully yielded to their request for the railn us use of the rnmo. The ladies captured one ing a ln lar room in this city, for this laudable in f uInrpose, and it closed up at their de- seldl S nmand. Cle m The lee Cream festival took place on the vate night of WPslensday, the 18th. The a-. bran loms Hall was crowded w citizh ens, and to I every thing etaktle tand driakatle, rapidly lighi disappeared with innumwrable demanads cup ad unsatisliel. They realized the handsome adl Ifn11um of $1:i: 70, and then celebrated their new ir success by a sdance after the entertain- excl reaent. Al Thus by their unlidedl efforts in a single so t tnight, the ladies of this city rained half to a the amount, which all the merchants and well nonelvyedl men and property owners in the Poll city conltributed to the Fire Department. citia Wr e cannot commanl languauge sum or ciently expressive to do justice to the A Icr untiring zeal of our matrons and fair lass- sho es. They have never yet been found aulta ed wanting in the hour of need. Their zeal slim( it only equalled by their loveliness and CHI generous self-denial. In view of the facts, U we refrain from further contmnents. e When the "boys" in read and blue shirts en eav re battling the lurid anmes andl climbing et r dizy heights, amid its mnoke and forked tric totlgues, their anusn and hearts will be star strengthened by the thought that ear fair they st women ; oar wives, mothers, daughters, the sisters and sweethearts contributed most ales of liberally out of their means, backed by stre IN: their love and devotiaon, to furnish nmnteri- N al and iniplemaints to combat the demon, which visits their houmes in the silence of M( the midnight hour, all unheraldle, when A the world is in sleep and in dreaIms, while you others have withield of their bouaty, and with nm Micawber-like wait for something to If h turn up, to relieve them of all remponsi- . bility, part or parcel in the work whichb ria he. corcerns the interest, prosperity and wel fare of every citizen, and more partien. eve pr-larly those who have the most at stake. the ue. to t an L1T WEBMUS PE U1, M. ehi li Ota . Our fir siuue after the ftie wase all we . ne could wish in clearness of print and beau- l t cy ty of impeaaio, however, there were eu r several short eominp worthy of criticim. ~ h, Owing to the lossa of time in repairing the rc shaft of our CArnPaIj. Pes, which So broke shovt of behind the cogs, at 1:410 be- P.M. Satunrday evening, when ler than at one-fourth of the edition had been printes, of several galleys went to form without proof, and the head lines were not uas well arranged as we lshould wih. After we A r broke down, as ementioned, CHARnLCY lie lWAn, the live young blacksmith, went el he to work and put the shaft in spleadid or n- der ill abont three hours, and WARs na BouL.LLT mnufntatured cog pins in less of time, and by rseven o'elock P. M., we were for dy to work of. Our presman, MasterCm ute U. P. BERAZEALK, mounted the box at 9: an al Mr. NARNIN, the engineer, "let her Co r go" at onee. At 10:l15 the fly piled the a- lasti paper, and the "Camphell" elhae her d se, first day's labor, having printed the edi- .' ple tion at the rate of ifteen hundred an Mld hour. Fe n- Our regular Prss days will be Fridays ty. for News waork, and all the week, Sundays (I ity excepted, for job buainess.a SWe acknowledge ournnself indebted, for H yer, moe than kind assistance to the mechan- H mist lea, Hears CHAnrLEY and HARDY WARE, si Jos. KIL, ao. HLt'iY, CIhARL LE VY, H th and NAlusnx, as well as our own force in the dlee, under the management ofona i4 foaeman, Mr. Annmrx. ar Hereafiter all mall lines going out on . d Saturday amorning, will bear to the wait- e t lg public the best, newest and cheapest " weekly journal in the South. a I t Henry Ward Baeeher disapproves of the ak substitution in the reviasd edition of the e. New Testament, of the term "sersant" for "slave," umed Ia the ing James remion asma traaatdi oa the worddouls~ He Mdeelasthat he was not me. of those Abslt.m i Wte believed elavery was omt sla the ssl$ures-8)reve Wesere tr y ry tobhearthat the rgreat naudgood H. W. I., is not one of those Abolhtlioniste who believsd slaveroy canw not re(ognizd in the "Siiptrae;" to for we 'wenr preprad to helleve the "eoriptures muh better morally, than BItucacn . It we thought God Almighty th reognlsed, fsault or santined human S slaveryl any form, or at any time, it would make as a Atheist in the twink the ling of an eye; and farthermore, if we it of ld say idea the Bhu alK utained any Pa he suh aInmose dectrine, we would favor p Ithe at one. Blavery may of i Le in the pet, seme . f e ao itor intebret , but of qs. Itiw niri be on any Igmundes Uk kq' tomualiter olvilisatien. On Apo -I , at t e of ie. e t. muuai , imu P. JUN KINr,Smst vd " 1urtý iUtss Bhiti. pm;. agm " ~ the sat( ..~..T:hu tel DRY GOOL Gir~wrm semi. hm ý (liras s*a;' 014 uiWm hU0 . 4011 . !4 NJNOLU Oar CouS i s e. The aspect and condition of the public i blildiage of a .i:yV, town, parish and State lare the true standard by which to judge ti ] of the prosperity, energy and enterprising a m spirit of their twople. A general aplwar- i I anee of neatness, cleanliness and care pro- a claims ti the idiness of the thrifty hosu.' ºl wife, while disorder, uncleanliness amnd u the portrayal of carelelaness are indicative Sof a want of managemenw t and uindonbted K thriftlessness. 1 a Most assuredly NatchituCihes parish is m , once again marching osut into the golden b sunlight of a renewed rslmerity, judg- q Sling from the appearance of her public I - bumildings. The court-house has Iwen thoroughly repaired, the halls and rooms - It have been ecrubbed and scoured to a de l gee of cleanlinesl which would umake a it teat housekeper jealous. TIe court i- roum has blosnomed into pleasing attrac K tiveuness. The ceiling is painted white, a and the walls resplendent with a coat of whitewash. The benches have been tho.r * oughly repaired, painted a walnut color I1, and duly vanaished, while the outside i railing ilan sbeen altered, tinhe openillng Ie me iing onl the western endl instead Of directly he In front of the Judge's bench, a imost ex e- ellent alteration. The lawyers' fable, t Clerk's railing and desks an' alro rejune 10elated and beautilied by the luminter's i 5- brush ; a new chandelier has wlceni added ui to the room to inlcreamse tihe vollume of 13 light, while comufortahle armin chairs m, 1id cnpy the raised seatsa ier the jury. To t add to the attractiveness of the roomm, +ir new shades ornament the windows and u- exclude the snumner's ardent sun. Altogether our hall of Justice lhas beed le so thoroughly improved and I,'autilied as if to make it an ornament to the place as wl well s an honor to the lilberality of the Police Jury, and hence the pride of our it. citizens. he A COUGIH, COLD or SORE THROAT y. should be stopped. Neglect frequently re [M suats in an Incurable Lung Disease or Con al amnaption. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TRO ad CHES are certain to give relief in ATHIIMA. BRONCHITIS, COUGHS, CATARRIH, CON. SUMPTIVE and THROAT DISEASES. For thirty years the Troches have been recem mended by plhysicians, and always give lwr ig pet satisfactiun. They are not new or Un ed tried buit having been tested by wide and eon he stant use for nearly an entire generlation, sir they have attained well-merit,,d rank among S the few staple reniedies of the age. Public t speakers and Singers use theln to clear and by strengthen the Voice. Sold at twenty-five cents a box everywherre. rn Nov. '0.-ly. of MOTHERS! MOTHERS!! MOTHERS!!! an Are you disturbed at night aul broken of ile your rest by a sick child sufering and crying ad with the exeruciating pain of e4ting teeth f to ff no goat once and get a bottle of MRR. I,. WINSIaOW'S SOOTHINO SYIRUP. It will ieb relieve the poor little suferer immediately el- -depend upon it; there is no mistake about it. There il not a mother on earth who has m* ever nsed it, who will not tell you at once ke. that it will regulate the bowels, and give rest to the mother, and relidf and health to the ehild, operating like magie, It is perfectly safe to use in all eases, and pleasant to the taste, and is the prescription of one of the * oldest and bhest family physicians and nurses Ju In the United Sttaes. Sold everywhere. 5 eae cents a Imottle. Now. -'l w NEW ADVERTISENENTS. 0 -- tl LIST OF LETTERS i REMAINING in the Pont Ore at Natchi toebhe, La., June 7th, If81. Alnman, Rafael Lee, R E len. Allen, Lavaina Mrs. Lynch, B P Aletless, Miss Loreel, Framnk BIoaler, 8 Mopes, NancNy Barn N E Mrs. Marrey, A J Iellsi, Mis Norris, A as Baylor, Jas. Noland, J W Daitt, Peter Nolen, Jan. Boyd, Ellabeth Nolen, R B eisy Mary Mrs. Nory, Late-e e . B Dr. No r. , John Camper i C Neal, Lewis Crswell O W Owing, Emma Cook, Ale Mrs Payton, Benj. Cammeumon, .A Powell Corey, Ike Patterson, Tho. Chelet, Emily Mil MeLeland, J T Dearman, 3 Parker, D Ede, lvis Proctor, L Elam, Jae P Pate, John Bailer, Jas-2 Raonnarg, Albert Frantam, J P Richardson. Sip Porest, Rossa NMi Robloin, John Pals, Mam Rice, Eugene lrisuwoed, N J Roberron Albert Garner Lushes Seulet, Nofee Goodwin RelAecc Lovett, Mar Hamilton, W H Stewart W is Hanlenman. Thos. Stout, W Holden, J T. S rl ,81411 Hennign, Mary Swann, liehrd Henemron, 8 Stuart, J W Hase, Fsancis Sullivan, R E Heano, J Thibeleaux, Jack Johnson, Jane Teagle, I H Jehbuet, Miss Antnil, France Jackson, Wm. D. Hynomn Max Jackson, Lena Warre, A J Johanson, J Williams, Susan Robert, Low Weir, A 8 Lacey Comodore Wiley, Luainda Lawry, J Wdkk, Jam. Lawadiak, Joseph William, Adelaide Little John N Ward, R Gaut. For the Season. R. .lEQROG PICKEIT, will stand the reanoped imported JACK, for the Season, at the Baxter Place, on Red river, above Grand Ecore. TERMS, $10. I in advance. 0 when the more b with foal. Good muitursae for mares on the place. W. H. BARBEE, Agent., S N.O.& T. P.R. R. HfAVING located at the new town of LE LI OLIA, on the New Orleans & Texas PacMe Railroad, has opened a full and com r plet stieek ef FAMILY GROOEBIE8, of every deeriptie, and to supply the needs I of all e of astomers. W. W. Hdki o wll always be in attendance to odet the bainesa and All all ordnlers. Junellm. T. B. Clatler Platatir. 'A ýI to I MARCO IVAOVIC JunellSt. A LL knwa, that to auks a oEnio the seed well and seath hst be keptiad C otenton Gins, sa "a a:af do a ,work M aew. New teethr hen a e. anrm rwek dtne J'tisme. jAddeas, .. W. I UlPAID, Jmdnbe . N]atohteeheo , 1~ JUDICIAL ADVERTISEMENTS. NEV IC Judield advertlaemments luerted at legal ratesn: tviz-One Dollar per square for first inaertn. and e Fity Crate per square for each subsequent inser e tion. A square is the sicR ef one hlldrel words slid matter, and measures eleven lines of Mrxsoex gn type in these columns, or e inch. r_ All advertie flment5 of a Judicial nature iallrter in this pawlr are subject to the almeve aanmalrnwnt. Sand mlut paid for aerrordingly. re H OMER FIoNTENEA'. aldministrator of I h11 ilw Seeessiion of Mine,. Ilypjlite lnrdle loes. having tiled in this olti his filnal ac4 countei ofl amliiniitration of said ltrc*ssioi. Ol 3 in with his i vouhers ccollpaunyiing twe anel., Slnotice is helelhy given that siales eollsNmition Wl] to said a'eollit tIs filed within the legal re K' quirulment. thlle ame will INe h.lonlolgathdl nulld il mnade the judglient of the Court. A. E. LEMEE, Ii Jnell I-2t. D'y. Clerk. Sherls Sale. C-n I1 m D. R. Carroll vs. Heirs of James E. Piro. rt thro et al. ". State of Louisiana. District Court. Parish of Nate.hiteh,.ws. No. Iti". ' )Y virtue of a writ of sewizure and sale, is nued in tlhe above entitled and num1lrnt1 I 111 jr. Iit anll to lle diretrl, I have seized and will otier ,for ale to thel llast anld hight hid- The or ler at lpllic ancttion, at lhe front ltour of the iI( Court house, in thel city land Purish of NatcLh Ne- iteles, at 12 I cleyWk M., o, LAR ly Satllday, the 160 da dof July, 1881. the follewing dewscrileel Irolwert.y to-wit: A certain tract of head togetlher with all lI, the builinge s and inlprove¥lewents tlm treluul. anl i- aplpurtenlUlaces thereot. mitntutetl in the lparishl of Natchitewl ,s, len the right ballk oelf Iigolet rI lion Di)iu, eilswelilling., rotliaileing three hlu- l I dl dled and niniuety aurs. imore or less. andll IsN lig all that portion of ti' lit. Mauricle 'ls of tatin, situated oln t1e right bauk of liltglet RNh N". lion I)iea, as aforesaid. i maeid purish iof Natchitolmrws, anld which was zaluired by I). h Ct i Rt. 'Carroll, at Sheritl' sale lmadel hv iilu'l. i, Parsonll, Shwriff of the Purill of NatfP ihtcitlres, anli onu ll :k1 day of Aj ril, lib9. in the suit en titled, I). R. Carrol I & Co., vs.. . II. lio.llt et al. eTl Terms ol: Bo: as Cash-sulijeet to aplplraimnint. SANM',. P. RAINS. Jn .lune-tdl. Sheriff. lie sir Ndee. 1 HIARILEM F. L'HERIAION. ndllinistll - IS o 1 etor of the joint Suressions oef Alphbotns T and Christine- 1lleriswon. having tiled itn this re- oif le his final aueount of Adelinistratllion ieol n.- said SeieSuaesieons. with his -ouchlers aer-enelja n Dying thie sanswi; notice is heLrcey givenl' that unleslh oplsgition to said leslunt I. tiled IA. within the tinw pnrc rihed hv law. thee, nalls' IN will Iw. hieloulogats-l and naiele-: the judglment l of the Court. R itnea-s the Hon. D. Piers1n. .Judge of tlhe N ln- 11th D)istrict Coulrt, at Natlehitelhie, tils 23e1 Ir- May, 1881. un A. E. L.EMEE, Jni, li-:t. ',v. C'lerk. on SlNedee. , April dOHIN N. RIItKETT. adllilnistrator of the and J S rcession of (leorge W. lurkett., dserl., live having filed inl this ,olhte. his Provisuenal Ac count of Admlinistration of vaid Seur-esion, with tile prayer that hee nl authoriedl to pay PU the debts as elaswed there-in; notice is hereby given, that unless opijosition thereto he 1llI1l !!I witiu ten days from this elate-, the same will a of he homeleegated as prayed for. A. E. LEIEE, Jun e4-2t. D'y. Clerk. Vo) th f RSh.r. Sale, 1 tely J. W. Coekleld, Administrator vs. mLoui A. tat fSers and Chas. Dertrandl, Jr. &has tate of Luisians, District Court, Parish of Natchiteohes. No. 84 At the utee BY virtue of a writ of FL Fa., imsneel in PANI tt the alove entitled and nmashrrbN suit, I the have seized and will offer for sale to the last tl and highest hidder at Imblic auction at the the Court House door, in the city anM parish of t Natehbitoehes, at 12 o'clck, M., on the i di m, I S the following liacribed property, to-wit: det A eertain tract or parcel of land on the left hank of Old river, desendling, containing eighty ares, more or less, IoundueI above hyv latel of Mrs. eu. Meteyer, elrow by landls of A nugut MI. Metoyer.aiu the rear by Publie Iands, anM in front y Old river, with all Sthe lnildingls and imprvements thebown, he- I lug the same lamnd. aiJudfatel to L. A. Sers at the Snteesion sale of Vietor Raehal, dee'd.l chi- rnsa of Sal: On a credit of twelve months, the purcha swr to give his note with goodl and dovent soe eurity, in solilo, and slecial nortlgage on the pnroperty, hearing interest at 8 per cent per sanmnu fromn day of sale. The sale to be mrale with the dlae of non alienation. SAM'L. P. RAINEI, June4-3t. Sheril . EII31N LICITENSTEIN. (Bullard & Campbell's Old Stand.) FRONT STREET, latebhbeee, La. A heavy stock of DRY GOODS, HARDWARE, BOOTS and 8HIOES, HATS, &C. Will be sold at and below cost. Citizans are Invited to eall and examine these goods before prehainlg elsewhere. June4'81..3a. J. H. Stephens, SAW MILL AGENT. wILL transaet all business moneeted with the Saw Mills of W. N. Trammell, J. S. Miller, NIlakias & Smith, and Stephens & Brown. Orders for Lumber at any of the above Mills will be romptly attende to. Lumber farnisbe at followinlg rates. Delivered In Natebitoeles, $15 per M. I " at the Mill, 0IO per M. Oflce at Nelkin's Store, corner Jefferson & De Meuiere Streets Natehitoebes, Ls., TERMS.-Cash on delivery. J4.81,-ly. Mrs. C. McKenna, -DIALER IN GROCERIES, &C. CORNER SEOOND & ANILW ST IE, NATCHITOCHES, LA. s K EEPS constantly on band a fresh supply of Family Groceries. Will keep at all bours of the day, hot Cof fee, Pies, Cakes and Refreshments. Call at this desirable stand. June4,'81.3m. A. K. Clingman, NURISERYMAN, HOMER. -* * * LA. r L ARO Stock, Vigeras Growth, and Best k V Varetie of Aenlmated Fruit Trees and t Vins. AUn eders addressed to this Nursery pre vious to Decemwlr Jet, will receive prompt attention. June4-2m. NEW ORLEAS- AD I Spr'ing Openl -AT GODOHAUX - sI sad 83 (81L TlA , L It New Orlea&s, tLw, On Mi.iday, AMar.l, 28th, I will (le incr'e than,, new styles il _ IIE'S IMlI fIlTH'S cuIII collprising the latest Mno ties and uiost FASilONABLE GS L ,i ill maediulm anid light weightI d The entire line will hethe LARGEST AND HANDSOMEIt I. we have (kljrdi.dllls.yd. S lDiagoal WoPrteds, Simle Iterge Tw, eeds and (lt l. clt in varioulls stles, iNs ,1 and well :I.ssrted. our 4 Wit lnelll of _ Boy's and1( Clhiltlre',W Clothing, i5 complete and willbek o- IsoI tiough the seasomn. SM'. 1N NEI.'IES INX [; Iwn. F-rSnIalirs e"ms AIl -TU left 't LEON GOI)CIIAUX, I|; 14h Xo. 81 and 83' Omial Streeet, NEW ORLEANS, LA, N. II.--~aml4e adi. ils-tllltclhek, for km I uriug wlli glmv w. at In .alIlie'-.ltia . the Ii., PNIANOS! as 3 will PIANOS"1 PIAXOS for the Holidays, PIAXO at all Prices, A. P to, Pianos for a Life Time, " 47 At the GreaNt Southern E apodai. atlAmna in PIANOS. NO. 135 CANAL STREET, the NEW ORLEANS, LA. .. Philip WwUlr. deeI5.Iv. ii E. J. HART &CO., bie WHOLERALE DEIII _ GROOERIES AND DRIIUU. l 71, 75 1, 77 Tehspkh L . NEW ORLEANS, LA. Garden Seedi EVEIRYTIINC FORl A 801I.IIII1 SEEDMAN AND FLOIIIIT, 602 & 979 baledga Iut, NEW ORLEANS, LA. Coauntry onters pmemply atteled to. Price List ad Garulden Almanac Se . NIptlIl.y. MISCELLANEOUS. V: M. H. Wilkinson, IIEALE.R IN PURE DRUGS, CIIEIICALS, steel FINE TIL0ET1 SOAPS, BeRP UEI'8HES, C0OIB, ETC., S IIET A PFANC~ I ARTICLS. Peiluy in great rrarity; TIUUIs Sup' Pure Wle.r and liquera fr andlidPl ulp r, PNa.hla. (Mi VMntlIU1N tilam and Pmdty. Phmrlan' mePwawriptinas e fuIi ffrlly on ill haurn. Jlan " Nathan Myer, --WITII DISTILLERS AND JOBBERS OF LIQUORS, 2I5 NORTH MAIN STREET. .ppi ST. IOUIS, II SEMILY BATIH, (Sucreswr to HJussao Bath.) WILL keeL hal a fekul 'l oc o kiNds DRYGOODS. moTo, IIHOES, L. HAT., HAiti)WA RiE, ; iOC ERIE-. FUINT STREET, NATCNHITOCHES, LA. pri- ..