I_,g Star and Catholic Messenger. _-=--=- ------ _ _ _ E3WaO3L3res. 4t1NDa? yIZVrU Int. RESIGNATION. O ed whboe thuder sbahs the sky. hos oeo tos. atom ¶0Lo. smrreys Ta Tb.O, mym onl roeek.- rly Thy meroy In Tby JN s. praise. Tbe mysto maes of Thy wll. Tbh shed.., of celeetlal 1134. Aie wttbh lOIets of humn shill; A rw the Nterl setls I right. o teach . sthe trying boar. WT. s ayish s wells whU o dewry teut, To sIlI my omrr owsm thy7ewe rThy gooda* lws, thy Jsee far. IS i this beesn uglt bnut thee, Zn-srosobla mug a booadleee sway, OmniosieO co0l4 1th dasger meI. d eroyl blook the oms away. The why, m sel., dost thou eompl i Why dropnug auk the dark rotese srnae off th lanal own, NOW God oteatrd all to bbl s Bu. sk I my bese Is human stll, The rislig slg, the fallin tear, Mlanggnid vitals' feebOl wl. Tbe scLknes of my soul djoshe. But yet, with fortitude rwesn'd. rlkt~haah the infiolton of the blow, •gb. eIIpoe Imy vIod, lor IN W gush Io II low. Teab I mns of the nIght Wwm!_I my ,aking in hstews, Will .a tb at the most g ligh NWhie God, my sat my ue., revoea. IMO Mosoluog"of the ghed Hart of Jeans.) 8P1i.X OUT. Me aehm.e to bs mums andlet habblers do the talking. Oaoe, in times of old, a certain wise bilosbpher was teaching ib his school, and the world flooked to hear him, his words so wise and true. Bat another man, - t--- alkative and as gay as a but popob a school across the street. wemme a rhetoriean, as they called him hI' he showed how to talk in grand V11. The young mba's ers' were tickled; tbought it a great thing to learn how ps k, with words that sounded so very PooA they left the wise old philoso '. 'oew, certain friends of his stood by FIth folded arms, and smiled saying: Pooh, pooh I give up " But a tear stood a the old man's eye, and his heart was 11. He said: *"Tis a shame to hold ay tongue and let barbarians talk ! Listen -me, my young men! I will give you ilk and truth besides I" Then he opened d- month and began to teach his old tlthW in a new way, with rhetoric anad hat$not. And the young men looked back steaished; and they left *the talker laes the way, to hear the wise old man gan. For he talked very well now and ptU truth besides. lb it not a shame to keep silence and let larblrians talkt The other day, one of hem was invited to come across the ae-, and help us to ivangarate a univer _ here. The distinguished stranger ,-ed himself quite equal to the occasion: ~alew hoar to please his hosts and came h bhis best codipliments on his lips. -G he regaled us with a few lectures; the -ellty of which his hearers applauded vehemence; the rest they took on $s had guaged us well-he had. He had Ian our measures and knew how much he Ibld feel at. home among us. There was already in the country a horde of his kith and kin, who have shown themselves ftLen enough, within the last forty years; whether it was a political agitator, like Lossuth, cr an apostate cleric, like Gavaz. d, or any other sign of the times that came Co stir up in the mob an effervescence anti Catholic or infidel. The stuff of barbarism is here amonet Es-not one school only over against the thareh of Christ; not fifty schools alone that feed our minds and ears with errors. It is not one doctor in each, nor a hundred ur two in all,-lat keep the ball a-rolling. But, you have universities and high schoolse ; you have ohurches and temples, meeting-hoosoa and pantheons; you have speakers and writers, orators and poets; oua have newspapers and pamphlets, sermons and reviews-a huge NBbel round us, not merely here and there, but everywhere against the one truth, sod the one Church and the one Christ, who has said, " I am the Truth." Each man is talking to a knot of his neighbors, and the loudest is convincing most. Now and then, a voice happens to dlstinguish itself, like that of the strsnger mentioned above, and rising above the habbub it commands a momentary lull, which only breaks again into a loader con nerd of unpoar and commotion. Whose was that voicet It was the voice of a scientist, like Huxley, or a statesman, like -ladatone, who had just caught up theex mt key of the prevailing excitement, and had rung it out with a louder ring on the one subject wherein alone they all agree, and than one is what it ever has been trying down the Truth and always saying the same thing. Catholics are in the midst of this world, are part and parcel of it. Can we flatter ourselves that they are altogether free from its contagion; that using the world they are as though they used it not; and having so much to do with non-Catholic neighbors they are as though they had no thing to do with man, or his errors or his vicest Can we flatter ourselves, that walking in the sunshine, we are not suna burnt, or, touching pitcb, we are not defiled thereby ? Is it not, for instance, a certain ot that the same news-carrier who sup plies the profligate and the scoffer, the athest and the infidel, knocks at the Ca tholic's door, or walks into his store, and nets the very same newspaper right down there, to feed the children of Christ's householdt And behold! when the hour if evening comes, the boy of fourteen years stiage returns from school, and he takes off his coat, and in his sbirt-sleeves stoops wer- the counter to devour all the news hem police court and ap-town and down town and high life and low-all in one mems of pottage. 8urely we are reminded Sthe prodigal, who "would fais have tied his belly with the husks the swine lid at." No wonder thousands yearly are lost to be Church not only by proselytism and 'seeping" among the children of our poor, long the orphans and the destitute, but -oandes of others are ruining themselves, sglng by inches the faith of their fathers, amd becoming practically infidel by a pro ess of deliberate self-destruction-self _lososing. This is a part of the loss which be school of Truth is made to suffer from he-barbarism which goes about. The loss rdleb the wise old philosopher deplored ds notalg to this. Our youth, our noble ,1*b Catholio and Protestant, are n ta tbe bsrblaaas of whom w'e peerverted by , the common press and the oomelon school, - before the good wheat of their father's faith has had time to groi" green. Protesteat I youth with theb fair promise, their beau tiful instincts toward religion, and their gropleg after truth, are poisoned in the atmosphere, and the common mind is do fraunded of its common sense to sic that e , truth most be somewhere, that an answer to their yearnings must be bad under the suon, and a rest has to be found in this 1 warfare upon earth, or else-everlasting woel "0 Truth, thou has made our heart for thee, and they cannot rest till they repose in thee!' This is the cry of our wandering brethren-this the yearning of their soul, naturally Christian, naturally religious and devout. And to them it is, t and to this beautiful cry, so touching in I the ear of God, that an answer is given, not n Ly preachers whom God has appointed, e not by teachers of the old Gospel, but by c babblers of a new one-by throats and by s tongues and by lips, of which He hath said: ii "Their thloat is an open sepulchre; with a their tongues they have cheated; the C poison of sasps is under their lips. De struction and unhappiness are in their w Sways; and the way of peace they have not b known." b II. Can Truth keep silence and lt the bar- w barians talk I Our readers know what we Ic mean by Truth. Christ hath told us: " I w am the Truth." Can His Heart refrain and p, His tongue keep silence I The eyes of the w wise old philosopher filled with tears and to his breast heaved with emotion, when an C a empty talker robbed him of his disciples. fo I So our Lord has had to weep more than ii a once, and His Heart iore than once has to beaten fast for us out of love and out of a desire : " Oh, how am I straightened," he tb exclaimed. " until my baptism be accom- be plished." He came to cast fire on the earth, b and He yearns only to have it kindled. He chose Apostles and set them to goand bring as forth fruit, and fruit which should remain. is He sanctified Himself that His little ones to might be sanctified in Truth. He offered to Himself up for ns, to redeem us from all to iniquity, and purify for Himself an accent- or I able people, a pursuer of good works. Will es His Heart admit of His keeping silence, of S I His holding His peace, now, in circum m a stances such as beset us, when there is, as di the Wise Man says, not only " a time to of I keep silence, but also a time to speak ;not A I only a time of peace, but also a time of sa I war " as We do not indeed mistake the character ri of Our Lord, who is the Truth, if we say bl that He loved silence and sought retire- se I ment. He lived during thirty years in the a little house at Nazareth, and then when His w time was come to shine forth during three i years, it was only to the house of Israel. "I at am not sent except to the lost sheep of the gi house of Israel." And in that house He am spoke chiefly by actions : " He began to do of and to teach." "He will not cry," said b Isaias describing Him, "nor will His voice b; be heard in the streets: He shall not be sad Is nor troublesome." He is sweet and mild, it I reaching from end to end mightly, dispos- ol ing all things sweetly. His spirit "one is and manifold" is "subtle, agile, active, T I sweet." Though in Him all things are P made and subsist, yet nothing comes into h collision with Him. He is irresistibly sweet. m "While one in Himself He can do all things; as while remaining in Himself the same, He tl maketh all things new; And through nations a conveyeth Himself into holy souls, making d them friends of God." This is His personal it character. Without doubt He is a silent d Truth, a " hidden God." e But since a voice must be heard on the m t housetops and in the streets, and Heo resides n: silently in the Tabernacle all the while, t does it not seem that He is making ioom for us. and inviting us to speak in His be I half, and It nd Him our voicet St. John the Baptist 'was the first to do so: " I am the voice," lie said "of one crying in the desert." And we know what Oar Lord thought of him. "Amen, I say to you, T among those born of women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist." p I 'I hen the Apostles were the next to lend A their voices : "Their sound hath gone d forth into all the earth; and their words c, unto to the end of the world." And what ti did Our Lord say to them T "You shall sit on twelve thrones judging the twelve ' i tribes of Israel." Lastly, His preachers ti and HIis teachers will be His voice unto fi r the end of time-and ' they who guide el e others to justice shall shine like stars for ail ri eternity." tl The question which interests us at pres t, a ent is, shall we lend this voice of ours T u Will we epeak out t judging it a shame to a e keep silence, when so many are ranged y against' Christ and His Church, when the r i Gentiles rage, and barbarians devise vain o e and evil things. g , First of all, there is the voice of our actions, which speaks most eloquently of ft g Him. He covets them, saying: "So let p your light shine before men, that they may a I, see your good works, and glorify your a r Father." " In this shall all men know that c e you are my disciples, if you have live for t d one another." a d In the second place, there is the voice of fi our prayer. " Pray for one another, that c you may be saved.,' says St. James. Our ti Lord bids us to pray al-ways. He points a t to the harvest which is always ripe; and ti He asks us can we not pray one hour with p SHim. Less than this required by theApoe- r tleship of Prayer. Let only the works you c do, and the words you say, and the thoughts Syou think, be offered up with an intention. r It is enough. S In the third place, there is the voice of c the tongue and of the pen. To the faithful b s who can use either, whether by speaking r or writing, Pineus IX, the Vicar of Christ, addresses exhortations, and adds encour- C Sagement. " By the pen," he says, " we amust destroy the work of the pen." He b Shas oftentimes commended the great Catho lic champions of the press; for editors and r writers are the voices of Christ, each in his , Sown degree. e-- I If a man gets a reputation in Persia for ex cellence of skill in a bandioraft, the Shab, it is 0 o said, sends for him to work for the oonrt at starvation wages. Some time ago a potter in Khorassan succoeeded in manufacturing a sort of porcelain resembling china, and his fame a soon reached the court. When the Shah sent t I for him, the poor fellow, knowing his fate, sold h I, all he had, scraped all the money together he t could get, to raise a bribe for the Prime Minis- a ter, and entreated him totell the king that the t h right man had run away and he had been put f under restraint by mistake. The Minister pocketed the bribe, and hkd the potter re Sleased, who vowed he would never make an- t other bit of china, or attempt any kind of im- I Sprovement. SAll kinds of fanocy and steple dry goods at Slewst eamsh prices Ba. W. roseras, 14T Omal st. a .A DroDEL MINoAcPrarEZ3 I THE ROMANCE OF 00MMI*CE AS SHOWN IN THB CAREER OF SIU TITUS SALT. (Loedon Telersapi Dee. 3T.) With the death of Bir Titus Balt, baron ends a career which may not inaptly besaid to belong to the romance of commerce, for a the story of how the owner 8altaire made t his fortune is indeed singular. Many years v ago there were consigned to a firm of mer- t: chants in Liverpool several bales of some b strange hairy wool from Australia. No- r body had ever seen the like of It before; no- a body thought much of it; and thus it lay n stowed away in a shed at the docks as v though it were so much lumber. It hap- e pened one day that Mr. Titus Salt, a small a manufacturer of Yorkshire, was in in Liv- a erpool, and, wandering about the docks, he a chanced to come across this neglected con it signment of seeming rubbish. He exam- t ined it, ho ever, and asked if he might be a allowed to take some of it away with him. p Of course he obtained permission to carry w off as much as he pleased. What he did a4 with the samples thus procured need not tl be told. Suffice it to say that he came tl back again, offered to purchase the whole m of the " rubbish," and became its possessor at for a merely nominal sum. This hairy ill wool, this trash which no one would even tt look at as marketable commodity, and of di which Mr. Titus Salt secured the mono- in poly, was alpaca. Such was the way in w which the fortunes of the great manufao- fe turer and millionaire, who died at his seat, ki Crowanest near Halifax, yesterday, were he founded. For years Mr. Salt and his fam- el ily were the sole makers of that useful ma- ni terial which has grown to be something like 114 a rival for cotton ; ao on the strength of ni the valuable patent they thus acquired they cc built a factory which, with extensions, has at become one of the largest in En and. This huge hive of industry, conspicuous as It is to the eye of, the passing traveller, Pe is not, however, the most remarkable fea- O0 tore of Saltaire. Surrounding the vast fac- en tory is a large village or small town, con taiing many thousand inhabitants, every one of whom of working age is s)mehow . employed at the big alapaca mill. Sir Titus Salt was the sole landlord of this busy com munity, and the manner in which he discharged his responsibilities as such is one of the most notable facts of his times. At his own expense and under his personal supervision he provided everything that seemed necessary for the moral and mate rial well-being of this little kingdom. He built for his people baths and wash-houses, 1 schools and places of recreation ; he erected a mechanics' institute, the appointments of which will compare with those of a fash ionable club; and he also caused to be con strucnated a chapel attached to the Congre gationlist body, of which all that can be said in the way' of objection is that it is c. only too splendid. Saltaire, in short, has been established on what may be called a C basis o' practical philanthropy, while a laudable attempt to guard the morals of its B inhabitants has been made in the rigid ex elusion from the place of all public traffic ( in intozcating liquor. In these things Sir Titus Salt both meant well and did well. Personally he was an intelligent, kind- 1 hearted man, a progressive politician, a munificent contributor to public charties, and a zealous promoter of popular educea a tion. His life has been usetul in many Ways. He made his fortune by the intro duction of a useful and valuable commod- 1 ity, and be spent a large portion of it in c doing substantial good to those he at once E employed and served. In the history of the " manufacturing industry of England few i names will have so high a place of honor as that of Titus Salt. An English Editor on American Railways. 14 Mr. Walter, of the London Times, has been interviewed by a New York paper The report sayS: " Mr. Walter di not feel himself com-, petent to judge of the cxomfort of ordinary ti American railway travelling. lie had rid- p den so luxuriously in the special Pullman car which had been placed at his disposal that he was unable to form an idea of the way in which other people travelled. 'The palace car,' he exclaimed enthusias tically, 'is fit for the Queen to ride in ! In fact, it is much handsomer than the one she uses.' The liberality with which rail road directors carried him to and fro over E the land was a cause of great astonishment to Mr. Walter. It was a courtesy entirely unknown in England. The Queen herself E was obliged to pay immense sums every year for railway conveyance, and no rail road company in all England would think - of offering a coach for the free u-e of any I gentleman, public or private. The Ameri can car, in Mr. Walter's estimation, was far superior to the English carriage. The possibility of being shut in with thieves or madmen (it had fallen to his own lot to be 1 shut in with a madman); the close, cramped quarters which, in their very na ture, stifled all the cdmfort out of the r unhappy traveller; the partitioning a man n from the sight and society of his fellow creaturs ; and above all, the shortness of the carriages, which caused them to sway and jerk about so violently that conversa tion became a torture and reading an im possibility-all these things combine to render a journey in an English railway carriage a matter of something worse than nopleasantoness. The 'permanent way,' or road bed, of the English;ailroad was much p more substantial than that of the Ameri cans; but the English carriages could not be compared with the American cars." 2 WATER VERSUS RAIL.--The New York Ocal Trade Journal says : "The actual cost of transporting coal by rate between Pitts burg and Louisville is as low as one and three- quarter cents per bushel, including the return of the empty craft, equal to forty seven cents per too, a distance of 600 miles, I while the cost of transporting coal from C Louisville to New Orleans, a distance of 1,400 miles, is two cents per bushel-fifty five cents per ton. At the lowest rate of railroad transportation fifty-five cents would not transport a ton of coal sixty miles. There is no such cheap and speedy transporation elsewhere in the world for bulky freight, the passage from Pittsburg ' to Louisville requiring less than five days, and from Louisville to New Orleans less than ten days, under circumstances at all favorable. Bridge obstructions between 1 Pitteburg and Louisville increasing the trip one day. and the same at the falls de laying tows more o- less at that point." L SAvaD--20 Pza Car,--By calling on Dr. L. A. Thurbsr, neare Commoenad Derbiay strets, Sr anl de. oepesenoes. MAE'S ALLOM2WT D 2?MZA From the elaborate tables drawn up b Dr. Farr. it would seem, as it as can b made out, there are certain very criticl eriods in our career. A baby for instanto as a very small chance indeed growin up. But on the other hand, the perlo between the teeth and fifteenth years excl rely is that in which the death average I the smallest. At about thirty five we mue begin to take care of ourselves. At this p. riod oonstitutional changes set in; our hal and teeth begin to fail uas our digestion ii no longer what it used to be ; welose the vigor of youth and neglect out-door exer cise; above all the cares of life begin t: nake themselves perceptibly felt. It is at this time that death from suicide takei a marked place in the returns of mortal ity, and there is also considerable reoas to believe that babits of intemperance an apt to suddenly develop themselves. The picture, however, has its sunshiny side. I1 would take, of course, a professional actuary to deduce from Dr. Farr's table their exact result. It appears, however, that if a man tides over his fiftieth year he may make tolerable certain of living t seventy, while if he reaches his seventy. fifth year there is very asong presumption that he will either turn his ninetieth birth day or very near it. A still more interest ing question is opened by a series of tables whicn show the average mortality in dif ferent professions and pursuits. Game keepers are, for obvious reasons, the healthiest class of our whole population clergymen and agricultural laborers come next, and are followed by barristers; so. licitors and business men are less fortu. nate,'while at the extreme end of the scale come unhealthy pursuits, such as printin and file-griading. If a man would keep both integrity and inde. pendence free from temptation, let him keel out of debt. Franklin says, " It is hard for an empty bag to stand upright." HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS. '/" BIRI, Importer. Man afacturer and Dealer In WILLOW WARE. WAGONS. CRADLES, MARKETi BASKETS, Work Baskets. Cbatrs. Clothes Baskets, German an( French Fancy Baskets, etc. 120, 288 and 253 Chartres Streets, deIo7 76 ly NEW ORLIANe. A. BROUSSEAU & SON, 17............. Chartree Street............. 1, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN Carpetings, FLOOR OIL-CLOTHS. CHINA AND COCOA MATTING. TABLE AND PIANO COVERS, WINDOW SHADES. CRUMB OLOTHS. RUGS. MATS CARRIAGE. TABLE AND ENAMEL OIL-CLOTH. WHOLESALE AND RETAI(. CURTAIN MATERIALS-Ioe. Reps, Damask Cornices, Bands, Pins, Claps, Loops and Tassels, Hair Cloth, Plush, Bed Ticking and Springs, BURLAPS. by the Bale and Piece. oel5 76 ly CARPETS. CARPETS ELKIN & CO. 168.............. Canal Street...-.........161 - Are offering - NRW AND CHOICE PATTERNS IN MIOQUETTE; VELVET, BRUSSELS, THREE-PLY and INGRA IN (` tRPETS AT GREATLY REDU'OD PRICES. FLOOR OIL-LOWTHS. COCOA AND CANE MATTINGS. CURTAIN GOODS IN REPn. TERRYS, ETO, EMBROIDERItD PIANO AND TABLE COVE^S, WINDOW SHADES. NEW StYLES. oel0.1m FURNITURE ................ FURNITUR HUGH FLYNN, 167 a.. 1609..... Poydra Street. ....1;7 and if Is now receiving a LARGE STOCK OF NEM' FURNITURIE. of all descriptions and qualities, sult able for housekeeping. and will sell it at prices as to. as any other housane it the city. Parties about purchasing Furniture will find it te their advantago to call and see for themselves ibfor, purchasing-elsewhere. ocde6 ly Respectfully Informs his friends and the public that a' his new store, 144............ Camp Street........... 14.. j He has a fresh and well-selected assortment of BUILDERS' and GENERAL HARDWARE Carpenters' Tools, Grates. Stoves and House Furnishl leg Goods ef all kinds. He Is better prepared than ever before to do Copper Tin ant Sheet Iron Work, and will furnish estimate to Builders and others, and guarantees satisfactio. toall. jelll 76 ly FURNITURE. H; UTHOFF, DEALER IN FURNITURE AND MATTRESSEB, 1itS...............Camp Street.... .... ......1 The underasigned bhas a large stock of Furniture which he will dispose of at prices that will defyFompeti tion. Givle me a call and oee for yourselves. Furniture taken on Storage. Repairs made at lowes rates. All Furniture and Bedding put In perfect re pair and delivered to order. Moving. Packing. etC., I lull done at the LOWEST POSSIBLE PRIUES. o application to HENRY UTHOFF. my776 ly 155 Camp etreet. E STABLI SHED 1557. G. PITARD, MPORTER AND DEL ER IN HABRD WARE, GRATES, PAINTS, OILS. VARNISHII, WINDOW GLASS WALL PAPER, ETO., 221 and 223...... Canal Street......221 and 22 Between Rampart and Basin streets, apI6 ly EW ORLalNS.. WM. B. RLNGROSE, PURNITUREB DEALER, 172............ ..Camp Street..............17! Now occupies the large and spolous store I71 Camj street. between Girod and Julia, jusC abohe St. Patrick Church. for the purpose of TAILNG F]BUNITUB ON STORAt at the lOwest rates. FURNITURE REMOVED. BOUGHT, SOLD ANI ECHARRED. A11 kinds of Upholstering and Varnlhing done wtrl dlspatch, and Mattresses of ail kmnda made to order. EverJ thing at lowest ratml, and all work guaranted Country orders solicited and promptly attended to. (Jall and examine before purchsing elewhere. ap97e ly T° TIlE PUBLIC. JOHN BOIS, FURNITURE DEALER, 152.............Camp Street..... ... t1 Now rccpies the stores IIIJ and 154 Camp street, f, the purpose of taking FUR.NITURE ON STORAGI at the chapest rates. LOANLS MADE AND SECURED ON FUBRIITUhE STORED. Re will also oentlous to BUY. SELL. REPAIR, RI MOVE, PAOK and SHIP FURNITURE, with gus .135W iy Bm. 1 usad 154 Osmp Sre ILLUMINATING OILS. I TPUROLINE c Cal Portable Gas Light Co. OPFFER TO THE TRADE 13 TN FOLOWING LISBT OF THEIRB ExI BUPERIOR AND POPULAR BRANDS C0 Insurance Oil. J. The Insurance On is the best Family Safety Oil, and 68 a is urgently recommended by all our Insurance Com panies as a substitute for common Coal Oil or Kerosene. Rem It may be used in ordinary lamps Without Change of Burner. the1 orre, THE NEW ORLEANS BOARD OF UNDERB WRITERS SAY: "It is our opinion that the general use of the Insurance Oil would greatly reduce the number of lamp firet and explosions, and less en the risk of destruction of life and property." Gen It will not explode or ignite in a lamp ; and the price has been so reduced as to place it within the reach of all classes of consumers, and make it the great FAMILY SAFETY OIL. As an illuminating oil for family use, or for general use in ordinary Kerosine or Coal Oil lamps, the Inan. rance Oil has the indorsement of the New Orleans Board of Health, the Fire Commissioners, and all the Ameri. can and European Insurance Agencies as PERFECTLY SAFE. Refined Carbon or Coal Oil. THE WELL -KNO WN CRO WN BRAND Ach This is a pure, high fire-test Kerosene or Coal Oil, generally known as the Crown Oil, and recommended Sole to the trade and to consumers who buy CHEAP OIL as the beeat and safest of all the LOW-PRIOCED m ILLUMINATING OILS in market. In five years' ex perience no accident from its usee has ever ooorred. The Pnrollne and Portable Gas Light Company have oc the exclusive agency of the Crown Oil for the Btates of Louisiana, Alabama, M i.isaippi and Texaa. PUROLINE FLUID. FOR METALLrC GAS LAMPS AND POBT ABLE GAS BURNERS. Manufactured and Sold only by the Puroline end Port able Gas Light Company and their Agents. This celebrated Fluid, prepared by a process known The only to the proprietors, is the beet and most reliable of I all the products of Petroleum for use in Metallic Port- MtJ able Gas Lamps and Lanterns. It burns cleir and MU bright is free from smokeor unpleasant odor, and does gun, not char the wick or gum the burner. No other flutd equt or oil should be used in Portable Gas Lamps or Lan- pt terns. l'uroline is especially recommended for use in and Portable Gas Lamps and Chandeliers, in Street Lan- Al terns, Slgar-Honse Lamps, Cane-Shed Lanterns, and in Torches and Gas Burners for Steamboat Landings, Moonlight Picnics and Street Processions. Giving mat light equal to the best city Coal Gas, it enables the people of the remotest villages to illuminate their Stores, Warehouses, Saloons, Hotels, Churches, Streets and Gardens as brilliantly as the favored residents of a great metropolis. GASOLINE FOR GAS AaOHINES.B o chia Distilled expressly for the Pnroline and Portable Gov Gas Light Company, and with peculiar regard for the woe changes of temperature so common in this climate. BSg Unequalled for generating gas or for carbureting coal the gas. Proprietors, patentees and owners of las Ms- n, chines cannot overestimate the importance of having sa their Gasoline of reliable gravity and quality, as snc cues depends so much on these conditions. se The P. and P. Q. L. Co. distill and refine a complete K line of ILLUMINATING OILS and FLUIDS, and also sell, at Agent's prices, all the popular brands manufactured by other refners. Their BARREL4, CANS and CASES are all of the best material and workmanship, and when empty M command the highest prices In the market. Mac and Stor Dry COAL OIL LAMPS, PUTROLINE GAS LAMPS, M BTREET LANTERNS, 12., SUGAIR-HOUSE LAMPS, Is sodl CANE-SHED LANTERNS, Gr METALLIC SAFETY LAMPS. - And all kinds of - SA LAMPS, LANTERNS, CHANDELIERS, Lamp Burners, Chimneys, SHADES, FIXTURES AND TRIMMINGS, c Received direct from the Manufacturers, and 170 Sold at the Lowest Wholesale Prices J PUROLINE AND PORTABLE GAS LIGHT Ro COMPANY, 95 and 97 Gravler Street 95 and 97 - aatnse nEw O3Lnana, r CARRIAGEA A145.[ JosEPH SO WA 3T-S,-. ml0rome a ats DaULae 1 Carriage, Wagon and Cart'laterhM Springs., AxL., Bolts, ea.arde a sas Bodes, Wood Work. Tam.attap PAINTS AND VARIPIU N Cr a ARV PA2TNT "BZ Carriage and Wagon Maker and fl - Salearooms and hTatory Nos. 43, 45 and 7 Perdido Stee Opposite treet de17 76 Iv w81W On3za W F. CLARK, 134 and 136..... Rampart Street-...134 sa4e Between Toleouse and 8t. Peter, NNW o3L3Ass. - Manufacturer ot l kinds of Carriages, Barouches, Buggies, Expresa Wagons, Platfo.m and Elliptio 8aply Wagons, 8ZWING MACHRLN WAGONS, z2T. Agent for Jas. t.ununatbam ado Son's oeletred o rlagee and Hearsee. Country orders promptly attended to. M10 .._ J THOMSON & BROS., Carriage and Spring WagolWakers, Ssand 70...... Rampart 8treet ......68 and Between Common and Graier, Received Highest Premiums at 8tat latira of u1; m t873 and 18e for beoss aml Phteo. Vietr4,0g and Top Bugies Beer Wagon. rooe's Wagon. xpre Wagon. ote. Beian practical workmen, 3and Salpl aam- he bet meobaniee, we are p p _pIe ie te ir repair Corriage., Bugsir . Spring WeLae, ele refer to many Boe e mua ne in the oty UladgL vir marutaltra All wob rara,tad. fei7le I, MUSICAL. BUY YOUR ORGANS AND PIANOS At the Popular Music Hooes of LOUIS GRUNEWALD, ORIUNEWALD HALL, NEW ORLREAR8. General Agency of the celobramed "GO. A. PI33" & CO'I OROANt." of which over 55 0100 are now in use Acknowleed to be the R ST. Will klsp iasass.a not able to set otof orderesy. Sold eeq monthl praymnta. Send for cato . Sole Agenoo o the hvorite PIANOB _of.kye Wd a Co. Parts Stelway, Ness, Blalue W.eim mayer and other. Irst-,ol Plans.; Mudeilltu. menote., String.. Aeodeeno, oeta. eon row laqps. tation. Cheapest Roose in the South. weiillhud terms. Call or send for estimates LOUIS OBUUIWALD. ol05 6 ly 14. 16. 18. S0 and S BatresaseatmI pHILIP WERLEIN, Nos. 78, 80, 82, 90 Baronne Street, The Leading Piano and Organ Dealer South, invites the pubilic to exrmlie hil immtose toCk of MUSIIA. i$ur dRLPUkN2S.. PIam)OS, ORGANS IMUSIC etc. Fe kceps ,ono but the bet., and @ie prices belou tt,, ., a.kod oy other bouseso rIn-- goods. lit a .ek cotprieo the elebrated and n. equalled (, lKktIYItt Pioco. the eleoant endd- tonod Dnnham Fian s. the reliabiesad low.priced Hal Planoe. the u ortht Zte.ler. Hardmau and PleyelPtlbl and J. Estey & 0o uun Mamo n l-a mlin'e Or5 ts._ Aleo oum. hundred emeomd.ansd PIANOS and O . OA€, from In5 upward.. Pc, oft PooTa5 tltttsgblt repaired and warrantedl at ll1,. Pianorreplrrig d,-ne at hatf the usnualatea 4 1..1 i"ates trrlbm trme. ami14 he lyf MACHI lN EtY-FOU I uOE S-EA.. LEEDS' FOUNDRY, (Eotaollaued in 187",) Corner of Delord and Foucher Streets, neW OULgtS. We are prepared to manufartur Stea. m ..ps Boilers. Sugar Mll.. Sugar HKetse., 1raninag chines, Saw Mills, Cotton Prses ll awOdllM, Gin Gearilng. i ,snsoe aMouths, Grafs Bare, Judi's Governors and all kinds of Plantadrn and Streambn work, and ever desc rptio of Machinery for thei We be g to sail ppetool attention to our large Iekd. Sugar K1ettlee. HSPvig purctaleed th e entire atekt the Stalker Iron Works of Ten, eeese for whlachYl _. F. Lavillebeuvre was fouretly agent, and theb genuine Tennesaee Kettle n the , market,) welt - same for sale, as well as those of our own masuoin at rednced rates, pice lists of which we will bepiS-sI. to furnioh on application. set 76 ly LEEDS & 00 KILLEEN & ALLEN, IRON FOUDERS, Corner Magnolia and Erato StreetS, THIW OltLy U. LManufacturers of every varlety of Ornmental a. Machinery Castinags Sugar Kettles, Furnace MleOtS end Grate Bars, Curves, Frogs, etc.. for Bai11 Store Fronts, Columns, Sash Weights end VeotllS' Dry Sand and Loam Castings a spelalty. All work 'ne at Northern prices. J4 11 M. MALONE, Gun and Lock Smith, AT il15 OL. TrAlo, - 12......-- .... Commercial Plaoe............ Is now prepared to do all kinds of work n hi such as  .enerl hioueem.ltbhig. Door and W°d Grating, Iron Safes, Store and Vault Looks, I- - lnugs, Office and House Keys eta. le18s Personal attention to all orders. MARTIN WEYDIG, Manulacturer of SADDLES, O HAsESS A.ND HOST, Firemen's and Military Equipments MADE TO OBDEB. Dealer In all kinds of Leather and lubbr B> . Leather and iubber Plpes Suetlonoulnd nd eta, Horse Shbeets and Blankets, LPP . Buggy Robes, Ply Bate and ani all kinds of Sddlery Ha-rd Country orders promptly attended 10 ." .i 170............Poydras Street ....---. au13 76 ly 5ltW OSLiAfO. J, LINCOLN m REMOVES ALL KIDS OF All oommnniatloue should be a r, o .i Mechaneos' end Traders' LExroksa , _.d Hotel, elw Crlsan s. -,In Oo Ctitt orders ADwetuitlaa d tdr. GLASS STAINER`