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DAILY DEMOCRAT. p ' journal If the State of Louliwns oraiil Journal f the city of mew Orlemas. O` ... 10o G'avie*r Stu.._ *50Z03 W. DPRfE £ CO., PROPBIETOBS. GEORGE W. DUPRD, I.5. EUAISU, 08HI1 AUGUETINI, ALDBRT 0. JA1NII. E.T. HBEbRSEY .............. Enrros. RATaE Or 80BSURIPTIOI. TLe Daily Dgmeewat. rP, $»...:........... 350 The Weekly Dmoora.w e........ g N01-we , $ir e jbr k1 or as* a& Eb·Uw k 4lUerted 4n Uhe flMedWm a P4Jd Mb (5) per squire. eaoA 4ae'tea. Inaday, Mar 6. 1877. Ine fIllee of teo Now Orleansl DEMO &YAT has been Removed from 74 Camp asi wes tse erav er street. She Omly Alshetised .olelaetes Ae*ls*ef the limeeret for the (Oity ae Meusrs. II. II. 5A*Rri and P. O. DUVEZIN. The New York Herald intimates that welf-constituted vigilance committees might render to society a lasting benefit by scraping up the street.corner loafers. The Herald says the policemen of New York let the street-corner loafer alone as tenderly as if he were a burglar or a roper-in for a gambling house. We notice that the Governor has ap pointed Dr. James Pinney, of this city, Resident Physician at the Quarantine Station. This, it seems to us, is an ex cellent appointment. Dr. Finney has had an extensive experience in the epi. demic diseases of this climate. He was one of our New Orleans physicians who went to Shreveport during the fearful yellow fever epidemic which scourged that town in 1873, and remained there as an active and able worker until it ended. COItnusATI, O., May 2, 1877. To ths Editor of the Oommercial: Now that tie campaign is over, give us your honest opaliou of the Elia Pitskstou case. Was # sa political outrage or a private quarrel ? ALBEY. We have no doubt that it was a poltioal out. age precisely as represented.- [Wnonat Coiom When we read such paragraphs as the above in the Cincinnati Commercial we cease to be astonished that the En quirer daily dubs the editor of the Cont. amercial a liar, and that the latter swal lows the epithet as though it were his natural food. A very observant sugar planter and statistician exhibited to us yesterday a statistical estimate of a falling off in the crops of the sugar growing countries from which all the importations into the United States are made, exceeding 860,000 hogsheads for the coming season compared with the last. Our sugar planters ought to be inspired by this and other encouraging facts of a like nature, to ply their culture of this year's cane crop with redoubled vigor. A large sugar crop will be an immense help to restore the fortunes of our State and people. Governor Nicholls has made a pledge which we hope will be lepeated by all the other appointing powers of our new State and city governments, namely, to oust precipitately all lax, inefficient and dishonest officials. This rule is especially necessary to be applied to the organization of all the offices connected with the administration of justice and the maintenance of a good police. A rigorous discipline and a higher stand ard of efficiency, promptitude and so briety must be applied to the formation of this force. Under this system there must be a considerable thinning out of the first enlistments or appointments be fore we shall obtain a satisfactory corps. There must be a vigorous enforcement of law and order in this city and through out the State. The first Turkish victory in the bom br,:armieut of Fort St. Nicholas, on the ltlack Seia. is not a very brilliant com nmoncement. of their aggresive opera 1tio)w, 'conl4 det lug that this fort was dis mantled in ls:,t. Tlre only serious loss Intlinted by this terrillc bombardment on the lbi.HLans was the killing of a ser geant, who happened to be in the fort as a spe tator. This exploit of the Turks will rank with the heroic achievement of our Contineutal (luards, at the beginning of our late civil war, in their dashing move ment against Fort Pike, which that cor pulent veteran sergeant of the United States army, familiarly known then and ever since as Uncle Billy Bosworth, de fended with so much gallantry and sonly surrendered to a superior force which bore at its head a barrel of old 3ye. "It is not to you, you bloody rebels, I surrender. I have the power and the disposition to shed your blood; but, if I were to open my batteries I should spill a much more valuable fluid." TheCon tinentals gave Uncle Billy most liberal terms; he capitulated with all the honors of war and then indulged in one of his peculiarly hearty and resonant guffaws as he informed his exultant captors that there was not a weapon of offensive or defensive warfare in the whole fort which had been used, or in condition to be used, for twenty years. The truth is, these old forts are utterly utseless and, in fact, only deceive peo ple into the ideathat they are protected by them, when, in fact, theyare only fit hm traps, oem5 flesamnd bakoe.vens, THu IElkT rENALTY. There are ten men in the Parish Pri son under sentence of death, nine of them convicted of murder and one of the still more atrocious crime of rape. These men have all had fair trials; they had the services of able lawyers and a full, impartial and patient hearing, and their guilt was so clear and their crimes so horrible and revolting that even New Orleans juries, always slow -to send transgressors to the gallows, convicted them unqualifiedly. These men the courts have denounced as enemies of society, and they deserve no indulgence. The sentences passed upon them should be executed. The cause of justice, the good of society and humanity demand that the murderer shall pay with his life the penalty of his wicked, cruel and bloody deeds. The maudlin prejudice which has grown up of late years against capital punishment is one of the symptoms of a diseased public sentiment; it has encouraged crime by emboldening that class of human brutes whose evil instincts and passions can only be, even in a measure, restrained by the terrors of a law which denounces the penalty of death against the murderer and the perpetrators of other horrible and inhuman crimes. How many men have been slain; how many helpless women have been butch ered, by murderous wretches who, through the lax administration of the criminal law, and the maudlin prejudice against qatal punishment, have been incited uiid emboldened to give vent to ,their hellish fury ? The daily papers of all the great cities of the United States are constantly filled with the most revolt. ing tales of murder. Husbands murder their wives; women their paramours; children their parents; an angry word, a dispute over a game of cards provokes a stab or a pistol shot and an assassina ton. In our city men whip out their revolvers upon the slightest provoca tion and begin a promiscuous firing. Two or three times a week we are called upon to relate some disgusting cutting or shooting scrape among the negroes and lower classes of the white inhabi tants of the town. These things are a disgrace to Ameri can civilization; they injure the general interest of the community and debase society. Men whose brutal instincts and wicked passions are so strong that they do not hesitate to shoot and stab to death, often under circumstances of the most heartless cruelty, are enemies of the human race. They themselves are incapable of mercy, and society should not shrink from meteing out the severest1 justice to them. If a few murderers and other atro cious criminals were hung in this city it would have a most beneficial effect upon the roughs and rowdies, whose hands are ever ready to strike with pistol or knife. We are as sensitive to the claims of mercy as any man, but that sentiment is a crime against so ciety, and not genuine mercy, which sympathizes with the murderer and would avert his just doom. It will be an unpleasant duty, we are sure, to Gov. Nicholls to sign the death warrants of the convicts in our prison; but we are also sure that he will take that course which will establish amongst us a healthy and vigorous respect for the law and for human life. THE NEW INQUII nloN. Almost in the closing hours of the late session the Legislature adopted a joint resolution directing the President of the Senate, Lieutenant Governor Wiltz, and the Speaker of the House, Hon. Louis Bush, to appoint joint committees of the Senate and the House to sit dur ing the recess, with power to send for persons and papers, for the purpose of investigating the offices of the Auditor, Treasurer, Superintendent of Public Ed ucation, and the affairs of the State Land Office, and the Executive Depart ment of the State. The Lieutenant Governor and Speaker have discharged their duty under this act, and the names of the Senators and Representatives comprising the com mittees will be found officially printed in the DaEMoRAT this morning. The committees are as strong as the composition of the Legislature would aamit of. Some of the committee men will not be apt to press these important investigations to any extent that will endanger the corruptionists who have made the government of this State in years past a by-word and a reproach; but Messrs, Wiltz and Bush have taken care to place on each committee enough thoroughgoing, energetic and deter mined men to insure a rigid and merci less inquisition. The action of the Legislature in providing for these committees was in line with the suggestion of the DxMo CRAT, that the official robbers and cor ruptionists of the last eight years be brought by the law officers of the gov ernment to the bar of justice and made to disgorge all of their spoil and plunder that can be found, At the same time that we made this suggestion, we mentioned the names of a number of the men who had been most conspicuous in the crimes perpe trated in the last eight years against the people of Louisiana. We also called the attention of the Attorney General to the fact that the Judges of the Supreme Court had, contrary to their oaths, and under no other sanc tion than an illegal and iniquitous act of a corrupt Legislature, drawn out of the Treasury upwards of seventy-five thousand dollars over and above the salaries which the constitution al lowed them. The people will ex pect the committees of investigation to search out and expose the mass of rot tenness and corruption of the recon struction era in this State, and they Will expect the Attorney General and his assistant to drag the criminal par ties before the courts. The restoration of legitimate govern ment in this State should not be stained by any act of violence or persecution, but it must be characterized by an earn est, vigorous and relentless pursuit and prosecution of the criminals whose corruption and rascality have cost Louisiana ten years of misery and tur mol and several Jundred millions of dollars. Let the committees do their whole duty and the law officers theirs, and there are quite a number of indivi duals just now playing the sole of party organizers who will disappear from the blaze of political life to serve the State in a different capacity. THE KEMPER COUNTY TIAGEIY. The recent affair at DeKalb, the lead ing facts of which have already been given to our readers, has brought Kemp er county into prominence as the scene of one of the most appalling and dra matic of the many incidents of unre strained pabsion, violence and lawless ness which have stained the annals of our country since the late civil war. We have instituted inquiries into the facts and histories of the actors in this fearful affair, and have thus learned enough to satisfy us that the tragical conclusion at DeKalb was but the clos ing chapter of an old personal feud between two native Mississlppians, who, with some very estknable qual ities, united a strong tendency to resort to personal violence for the settlement of their difficulties. Too fre quently it happens in the excitement of political controversies in which our peo ple have been involved that these feuds are given a political direction and char acter. Men in the bitterness of their hate too often invoke partisan preju dices and employ political pretexts and disguises in order to enlist sympathy and co-operation in th merits of private and personal quarr; s and revenges. Such practices are utterly repugnant to all manliness and true courage'and can not be too severely reprobated. We learn that all of the principals en gaged in the affair at DeKalb were natives of the State and had been promi nent in political affairs, and that the quarrel between Gully and Chisholm was an old sore dating as far back as the war, wherein both were engaged on the Southern side. Both were brave and desperate men. Their private feud was inflamed by political antagonism. Chisholm after the war became a Radical and, being a man of wealth, seems to have acquired a large influ ence in the county and district. In the last Congressional contest he was the Radical candidate against Gen. Money, the Democratic candidate. Chisholm's wife and family were all Mississippians, and so were Gully and his family and Dr. Roseer, and, we be lieve, Gilmer and the.others who were killed or wounded in the affair. The conduct of the mob in assaulting Chisholm was doubtless the prompting of an honest and just sense of horror at the assassination of a man held in high esteem, but, like all such precipitate acts of excited masses of people, it was not controlled or directed by that prudence and reflection which refuses to accept and act upon suspicion and rumor in prejudging, convicting and punishing men who have had no hearing and are frequently innocent of the acts imputed to them. The frequency with which these in sensate and unjustifiable judgments are executed by excited masses ought to impress those charged with the admin istration of the law with the necessity of a vigorous repression of all such law less modes of administering popular justice. Hence, we are gratified to learn that Governor Stone, of Mississippi, has hastened to the scene of the late tragedy to investigate the facts and to bring to punishment all the parties im plicated in this setting aside of the law and trampling upon the authority of the lawful tribunals. We hope his exam ple will be followed by all our Southern Governors In all similar cases. COMPETITION IN THE SUPPLY OF ARTICLES OF FOOD. There is a controversy between the lessees of stalls in the Poydras Market and the vendors of flowers, veget ables, fruits and divers other articles who oc cupy the vacant paved space between the head of the market and Baronne street. The stall lessees object to this forstalling them by vendors who pay no rent, and call upon the city to eject the intruders. These parties, however, pay some tribute to the city in the way of a license; they are engaged in a legitimate and laudable business and, provided the owners of the property do not object to their occupying the ground, we see no justice or equity in the demand of the stall owners. On the contrary, the trade of these small dealers, who bring their own products to the market to sell and find all the stalls occupied on long leases, ought to be encouraged and pro tected. The real monopolists and fore stallers are the lessees of the stalls who seek to exclude competition and fix prices to suit themselves. In all other cities there are long lines of wagons and carts drawn up alongside of the markets and extending a great distance on the streets from the head of the market, from which the citizens ob tain their cheapest and freshest ma terials from the first producer, thereby escaping the additional charge and com mission of the middle men. These wagons bring in vegetables, eggs, poul try, fruit and flowers, direct from the neighboring farms and gardens, and these producers sell for themselves without paying commissions to the truckmen. It is thus that the food supply is cheap ened to the people and small farms and gardens are made profitable and mo nopoly and forestalling circumscribed and restricted. It would be another of the triumphs of ringism, so all-powerful in this city, if this system could be arrested and de stroyed in a city like ours, where it is so important that the largest competition in the production and supply of all of the articles of food demanded by our people should be allowed and encour aged. At the request of many of the officers and soldiers of the Louisiana troops. Col. James Lingan calls a meeting of the Louisiana survivors of the Army of Tennessee to assemble Tuesday even ing, at half-past 7 o'clock, over Haw kins' Saloon, on Common street. The bbject of the meeting, which is to form an historical and charitable associa tion, should enlist the warmest support and co-operation of all interested. A contemporary ears that as Bob Ingerso'i wants a foreign appointment, Hayes could use him s. an envoy to Satan's Kingdom. Bob sle nminently fitted both by training and education for the place and climate. If there ate any carpet-baggers in his Satanic Majesty's realm, we of Louisi ana hope that Hayes will not establish any reciprocity treaties, extradition laws, or other friendly relations with that power. Especially do we protest against any treaty that will encourage emigration in this direction. The Chicago Times says : A decision just rendered by the Su preme Court of the United States shows up a curious and not very creditable transaction on the part of Mr. Jewell, recently Postmaster General of the United States. The decision represents Jewell as acquiring the title to a half demented old woman's homestead, a valuable piece of property, under a con tract for her support for the remainder of her life, the contract being obtained from her within a few weeks before her death. It is curious that a man of Mr. Jewell's wealth should have been con cerned in - such a transaction, and stranger still that he permitted his claim under it to become a matter of liti gation and consequently of public no toriety. The court decreed the restora tion of the property to the old woman's heirs. Twenty or thirty years ago Mrs. Gaines traveled through the country with her veteran husband, the distin guished Gen. Edmund P. Gaines, and delivered lectures-the General on the importance of floating batteries for coast defences, and Mrs. Gaines follow ing him in a discourse on the " Horrors of War." It was a very amusing and instructing antithesis, and large crowds attended these lectures. We.venture to suggest that the ener getic and eloquent plaintiff in the Gaines suit, lately concluded in this city, reproduce her lecture, changed in its title, but only slightly altered in its tenor and spirit, and depict to her fel low-citizens the "Horrors of Litiga tion." MDARRIEID. WO(DS--I'UGH-On Monday. April 30. 1877, at the resildence of the brido's father, St. Vincent's Plantation, Assumption prish. Maggle W Pugh to tRodney S. Woods, of Terrebonne parish No cards. Rtlhmond papers pliase copy. DIED: BLANCHIARD-On Saturday, May 5. 177. at 2 o'clock a. m., Theodore Blanhbard. aged 49 years, a native of Iberville. La. His funeral will take place This (Sunday) Evening, at 5 o'clock. from his late residence on Broad street, between Hospital and Barracks. ills friends and acquaintances and those of the Blanchard. Marionneaux and L. E. Lemarie famillies are respectfully invited to attend. Iberville papers please copy. W: If. Barnett. Broker, OFFICE as NT. CHARLES STiEET. Opposite St. Charles Hotel. Dealer in Gold, Coin. Stocks, Bonds and Secunrt ties. State. City and Police Warrants bought and sold. Mortgage and Commercial Paver negotiated. Cash loaned on Securities. Taxes and lirenses settled at most liberal rate of dis count. nmy6 It REDUCTIOA IN WR3mrJoZ C1RiE'LTia. Jrst received five cases French Corsets di rect from France. Hand-made double busk Corset, formerly $2 50, now at $1 50; hand made, with side steels, formerly i3 50, now at $2; hand-made spoon busk, extra long, formerly S5. now at $a 50: Worly's Corsets, double bone extra long, cost $5. now at $2 560 A, dominal Corsets laced on the side, cost 65, now at $2 75; Nursing Corsets, formerly $2 so. now at $1 25; Thomsons a glove-fitting and all o'her makes of French Corsets 50 per cent less than former prices. Ladles will find these to be the cheapwst and beht fitting goods ever broughtto this city. Country orders faithfully executed. Re-member the number. 5to Magazine street, one door from the coiner of St. Mary. White Build ing. my6 2p 8u4t M. HEIMAN. J.WELRY AUCTION. I. C. LEVI, Auetioneer, 108 Canal street, Calls the attention of his customers, friends and public generally to his fine and elegant stock of Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry of every description. Compare prices with other houses and satisfy yourselves. There is no need now of paying fabulous prices and profits. My prices are 20 to ZS per cent below those of any establishment in the city. Mr. Levi will sell any and every artiole in his house at from 5to 10 per cent advance on origi nal cost. He has already proved that his prices defy competition. my6 2plt CASSIDY'S HOTEL. SUMMER ARRANGEMENTS. In consequence of the DULL TIMES and the usual derression of business during the summer months, this establishment has re duced its prices. both in the hotel and restau rant departments. Parties remaining in the city for the summer, as well as transient visi tors, will find it t > their advantage to patronize this house.' CARSIDY'S HOTEL. Corner Gravier and Carondelet street. my4 10t2dp JEWELRY AT AUCTION! HTTERY WTT7maInIDA. aTNFD WREDWAY I. C. LEVI, Auctioneer, 108 ............................Canal Street .................. .... J B.I WILL OFFER, TWICE A WEEK, HIS LARGE AND ELEGANT STOCK OF JEWELRY AT AUCTION, And remainder of days will sell at Private Bale as usual, from FIVE to TWENTYT-fITy Pf CENT LE~aB than any other establishment which advertises dally. Watches Repaired and Diamonds Reset Onlfty yskkfiflful workmon, at ti towest rat . nap2n im I. C. LEVI, lob Canal street. UPRIGHT CIIICKERING PIANOS, Which are presented to thn public as the most perfooct Pianos of their class In the worl d. TJhe Manufacturers, ht utilizing all the inprovemrnts developedi during the last flfty soars. h ave sue coeded in makinl a piano, which In tone, tlmeh and durability. stlrnasses all pianos mad e elther in Europe or this country, and offering it to the public as Iw as any good UprI.ht Plan o mada I have a full assort mett of the same on hand, and invite the public to examine thew I have a low-priced Upright PIANO, made by " IIA TI)NIfAN &%c 1C-1(., In New zork.who rat the bh"t F ,nch .ctli'n.with thne American iron t,,nlln fr.ams sy.tm. givilt them the toneu' of the nrat Fr'lrrrh. arid thre ful (i ne i thett AirmitI .llll PinmanoP. Thlir price rap"e about *1IS I-ra thnn thu i'ltrv I Pi or,,. on mro,,unt ,f h-i,' l,,, trr, . atr apayling no dUlr Bold on monthly payments, or rented with the privilege to purchasm. Fifty second-hand Pians on iwnnl. and for sale, at a bargain. Pianos tuned and repaired. Mason & Hamlin's Organs, nine stops, only $114. PHIILIP WE I: LEIN. The Leac9ing Pial.no Dealer, avD9 lm 78 and 90 BARONNE STREET. N. o. Diseases of the Eye and Far. DR. C. BEARD, OCULIST AND AURIST, 142 ouscat Street, Look Box 1817. New Orleans, La. ftelo 1 dl&w CARPET WAREHOUSE. 17......... Chartlre Street..........17 We offer at Reduced Prices our Large Stock of TIOOB OIL oWTHS, of all widths and unal (ties. MATTING, Table and Piano COVERB. WINDOW SHADES. Corniees. Bands etc. CURITAIN AND FURNITURE MATERIALS. of all kinds and qualitles. etc. Also, BURLAPS bythehale or vlece. myC 2vBuWo A. BROUHRRAU & RON. TO MOOD 'SN. WITH ORDERS FOR Shirts, UN EQUALED IN ST.YLE AND WORK MA NSHI P. myr It 2dp Notice. I beg leave to announce to my friends and forme~r patrons, that. I have amsoieated myself with MB. JOHN W. MADDEN in the MERCANIILE STATIONERY BUSINESS, At the old stand. No. a73 Camp Street, and solicit a share of their business, which I hope to merit by close and prompt attention to their orders. With a full stock of STAPLE AND FANCY UOOD., and the most Complete and Efficient Printing Office in the nouth, Competlitlo in QUALITY and PRICE of work is the basis on which your patronage is solicited. ap4 2dp PAUL .1. CHRISTIAN. I-IE BED STAR 8SHOE STORE, Corner Customhouse and Bourbon. ALL FINE SHOES RECEIVED DIRECT FROM FACTORIES. H. B. STANLEY, Purchasing Agent, New York. . MILLER Purchasing Agent, Boston. M. BOWLLdUG.Special Agent for Ladles' Snrge Goods. Office 473 Main street St. Louis. F. DARING'ION,Principal 'Purchasing Agent, Baltimore and New York auctions. HENRY BERRY, Special Agent for Philadel phis Shoes. All purchasers representing themselves as shoe de alers will benefit reductions on every bill. my lm2p ARTHUR DURIEU. M'ME. OLIYMPE, 144 ..............anal treet ..............144 Receives to-day per steamer Labrador a fine selection of the latest Parisian HATS and BON NETS. ordered by telegram on the loth of April. MARIE STUART. MARIE ANTOINETTE,. CINQ MARS, MANDARIN, SERVIA. SEASIDE and COUNTRY HATS. Etc.. Etc., Etc. my4 FrSuMo&T1u GREAT INDUGEMENT, -To buyers of WALL PAPER AND WINDOW SHADES. Prices that defy competition. F. NEWHALL, ap15 im 2dp 4o Camp street. Wood-Wood-Wood. AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HONEY ISLAND WOOD and COAL YARD, No. 375 Jalia street, New Basra, near Ma-S sella Bridge. Postoffiee address. Lock Box No. 10oo. Delivered to all parts of the city. ' PRICEB FOR THIS WEEK. Ash wood, per cord.......... .......... oo00 Oak wood. per cord.... ... ........... 5 00 Ash and oak mixed, per cord.............5 so Liberal disceunt made to dealers. atisfaction ADaranT, eeed. mh17 2dptf m&e P. RADELAT. Agent. BUY YOUIR IIAT, -FROM J4C)TOET VT. A AD A'rEW C. O. D. HAT STORE, Ne; 2O1st. Charles St., sear timmea. All the lntest styles In Men's Boys' and ((7il. dren's HAl'r and (APH, I'c'UNKH, TRAVEL. ING BAGS and UMBRELLAS. ap29 Hmnu2p THE BEST PIANOS. AT GiUNEWALD HALL.. AT LOW PRICES AND EABY MONTHLY INdTALLMENT6. Steinway & Sons Ac'heved a double victory at the Centennial. W. Knabe & Co., Pleyel. Wolf & Co., The Ilading Pianos of the World and Uasur. passed for the Southern Climate. PARLOR AND CHURCH ORGANS. Of the Most Popular Makers. Direot importation of all kinds of MUSICAL INSTRUIMENTB and PUBLISHERS OF SHEET MUSIC. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL orders solicited and satisfaction guaranteed. Spl,eimens of Hecond Class Pianos, which .an be sold from $100 to 1160 lower than a PLEYNsI are always on hand for inspection and comper$ son. LOUIS GRUNEWALD, 14, 16, 18. 90 and rI Baresoe lt,,e. f e2dply y New Orleans Savings Institutlim,. No. 154 Canal street. TRURTEEs : A. MOULTON, E. A. PALFREY, CARL KOIIN, T. L. IAYNE, DAVID URQUHART, GEORGE JONAS, JOHN O. GAINERP. TiH R.A. ADAMS, THOS. A. CLARKE. CHRIST'N SCHNEIDRL CHAS. J. LEEDS, SAMUEL JAMIWON. Interest Allowed on Deposits. D. UBQUHABT. Presideat. CHAR. KILHAW., Treasurer. apD151O y Mattenfls, OiL tlothts, (arpete. ELKIN & CO., 168 ..............'anal street........... 1I Are receiving new styles of FANCY CANTON MATTINGS, BRRUli*BI and INGRAIN CARPETS and FLOOR OIL CLOTHS, All at the Lowest Prices. apE8 midm COURT SALOON, 122..........Caronnelet Street.......... 122 Between Poydras and Lafayette streete. Having purchased from Mr. Patrick Barron the stock and good will of this well-known and popular saloon, I beg to inform my many friends and the public that I will keep in my Saloon everything of the best in WINE8 and LIQUOB.. with fine LUNCH daily, from 9 a. m. to 1 p. Ir., to which they are cordially Invited. JOHN KUNTZMANN. ap22 2dpt f Proprietor. AxT. OARBrTEB O. CARnt.rs E. L. CABBIE. . COas. J. Oaniman, A. CARRIEBE & SONS, COMMISSION MERCHANTIS 6 Corner Royal and Customheae. Liberal Advances made on ConsIgnments tD our friends in LONDON. LIVERPOOL. aTile om2rlP HAVRE and BORDEAUH I W. W. WASHBURN, ARTIST PHOTOGRAPHER, 113 Canal street. Opposite Clay Statue. New Orleans. Mr. WASHBUBN is himself an artist twenty-five years experience, and is sup in each department by a corps of assists who have no superiors in this or the Old W He is the master of his business, Beeida. employini the best artists he uses the bt materials and manes the best work on the Gom. tinent. You ma1 call this "BLOWING HIS OWN HORN." but for proof he refers you to his thirty thouw. and patrons and to his work, which may be hr enseted at hns Art.a lll.rv. fes $]ldp DB. JOHN 0. ANGELL, DENTAL SURGEON, Has returned and resumed rae nDraties dhi profession. Offie-SR OANAL STREET. oio BuWeIr 7mCs