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DAILY DEMOCRAT. omeW hurul t th Stis eo% of & .ud omdelet usru3rPt tare CN tsw Orku. 0_x.ft0 W. Swan & 00.. Plln 108 P~Lt IWO 1 Gags"m W. euema, H. J. HEAROEt, 1033 AUSUATIE, AL833 0. UAIZNr. H. J. BRAIWNY ........N1aiyom. RATES OFI BIsaZAFUTrU, The Daur Dmessat. The WeeI y emem t. !te , o .... . . . "... : : . . . . . .. . .. . .. w* gtthfJ$" /e&'i.itlt."" Mb o Treasn jr¶U alissen r . ssedswia .wwNa In 4e flomese me P' NEW OMLIANNe, JN Ig 91811¶. The etlnee of tih New Orleans lme110 CrAT bu meem emevme Ifrom 34 ICatw street to 1e9 r.avler street. the Only Anmherl1ed slellehln Agents of the Demeeret rie the 3ltr are resers. II. H1. BAKNl sad P. 0. 1.bt1t1n71. 0010ERNING THE LATE SUPREME JUDGEB. The Attorney General informs a re porter of the DBmooRAT that he intends, so soon as pressing business will per mit, to direct his attention to the re covery of the amounts drawn from the treasury by the late judges of the Bu preme,Oourt in excess of the constitu tional salary. Regarding this as a matter in which prompt action and de cisive success is of the highest import ance to the moral welfare of society, we cannot refrain from the expression of the fear that the mode of procedure in dicated by him to our representative is defective. He proposes to bring suit against one of the parties, and make that a test case to determine the ques tion of their responsibility. Now it seems to us there can be no question on that subject, and it is this alone which can warrant such a pro ceeding and even imperatively demands it. We venture the assertion that there is not one of these judges who does not know that he has done wrong In per mitting the inordinate desire for gain, which has prevailed as an epidemic throughout the country, to master his conscience. We do not believe that one of them, except perhaps John T. Lude ling, will have the face to make an issue upon such a petition. The man who could apply to Jacob Hawkins for a mandamus to compel the Treasurer to commit a crime may be regarded as ut terly shameless, but we cannot attri bute a like recklessness to any other man who has ever had any honorable or decent associations. Be this as it may, however, the course proposed by the Attorney General is, we fear, legally impracticable; for how can he, by any notion on his part alone, make a test ease? A test ease is one thejudgment in which Is to become also the judgment in others of a like nature. But this presupposes the existence of the other suits, and It cannot be formed without the consent of the parties to them; for, by its nature, a judgment is confined to the particular controversy in which it is rendered and can affect no one who was not a party thereto. Let the Attorney General, in his im agination, carry his test case to judgment, and then inquire by what means he would apply it to the other judges, and he cannot fail to perceive that he would be left utterly without resource. It is, then, essential that suit should be instituted against each and every one of these judges for the amount overdrawn by him, when, if there is any defense, it may be agreed that the trial of one case, covering the whole ground, may serve to determine the judgment in each; and that will become a test case. This must, however, be by con sent of the parties; for no court has the right to consolidate suits against dis tinct parties. A statement can be obtained from the Treasurer of the sums drawn by these judges since January 1, 1871, and suite should be instituted against each and every one of them to recover the sur plus at the earliest day possible. SWomen not infrequently possess a clearer and finer appreciation of a fraud than do the shrewdest men. The whole country has, for a long time, had an impression that W. P. Kellogg could not be believed on oath, and for several days past this whole city has felt that his statement before the investigating committee on Monday last was impreg nated with falsehood from beginning to end. But it required the inspiration of a woman to sketch Kellogg's moral nature and accurately define the char acter of his testimony, in one brief sentence. Mrs. Field, widow of the late Attorney General, in her letter to the chairman of the investigating commit tee, says: "Were I of your sex I might quote the words of Iago to Emilia, act .. scene 2, of Othello, in referenoe to the testimony given before your honorable committee on Monday, June 4; as it is, I leave the applieatiou to be made whore it is appropriate.' "Fie, thee, thou litet.' said Iago. The lady's pen, keen and glittering, has struck a blow sharp and incissiveas that of the Sultan's when he severed at one stroke the pillow of feathers. Gen. Jubal Early, who has been in New Orleans fora number of weeks, left yesterday evening for his home in Vir ginia, via t akson railroad. IMMIGRATION. Louisiana ought to be the Hesperides of the Western Hemisphere. For a de oade of years she was cursed with the presence of a monstrosity practically more hideous than was reputed to be the hundred-headed serpent whom Her cules slew. This reigning evil was car pet-bag government, Its chief purposes here seemed to hire been to subject the splendid region to the despollation of its hundreds of sinuous political sub-heads, to breathe the breath of en venomed hatred over the land, and not only to prevent white men from enter ing her borders, but to drive out those already dwelling therein. Fortunately a force stronger than the arm of a demigod has struck off these hundred official heads and rid the State of its repulsive governmental curse; thus it is again free to all, who enter ing, come to gather, by honest industry, the golden harvests of its groves and fields. The attractions and vast developed and undeveloped resources of Louisiana have been comparatively unnoticed un til the recent permanent establishment of a constitutional government. Until then these advantages seemed to be considered by those desirous of emi grating from poorer sections more than offset by the evils arising from our po litical condition. Thousands of emi grants actually traversed this State on their way to the far less fertile and at tractive prairies and steppes of Texas. It would seem that figurative pearls were trodden under foot by these trav elers as they went on their heedless way to seek their sustenance in the soil of the Texas plains. Within the past few months public at tention has been directed toward the resources of Louisiana, particularly of the southeastern portion of the State, comprising the sugar, rice and orange regions. Leading journals of the North and West have been filled with accounts of the wonderful climate, fertile soil and extraordinary productiveness of this section, and all that they have pub lished has actually fallen far below a truthful description. We have before us now letters of in quiry, as to the country, addressed to the Secretary of State, to Gen. Beaure gard and to others, from Europe and the North, written by parties bent on emigrating and settling in some pro ductive section such as ours. We have the inclination, but neither time nor space in one article, to answer all the interrogatories therein propounded, but will treat of the main questions at present. It is safe to say that, our political affairs are definitely settled, and that Louisiana, to-day, has a government as efficient and thorough in all its depart men ts as thatof any State in the Union. The climate here, particularly in the Sou thern part of the State, is cooler in summer than that of interior States several degrees north of this. The an nual average temperature of New Or leans is seventy degrees Fahrenheit. For the three summer months the av erage is about eighty-four degrees, and for the three winter months fifty-six degrees. Nearer the gulf the summer ave rage is lower and the winter higher. We have never known the temperature, when fairly tested, higher than ninety six degrees. The Southern portion of the State is intersected by hundreds of broad rivers and streams; and these, with the constant gulf breezes, mode rate the summer heats to a great ex tent. These streams serve another far more useful purpose, that is, they keep up a water circulation, and render the region exceptionally healthy. i The most interesting questions to would be immigrants are concern ing the price, rent charges, quality and productiveness of lands. The delta soil of lower Louisiana is noted for being as fertile as any on the face of the earth. It bears the fruits and products of the torrid and I temperate sones, and is green with different kinds of vegetation the entire year. It grows finer garden products and fruits in the fall and winter than in the summer. The three staple products of this sec tion are sugar, rice and oranges; of these the former is, for the first twelve years, by far the most profitable crop for either small farmers or large plant ers. There are thousands of acres of lands available for sugar production which could be purchased at fifty dollars per acre on long time; lands already cleared, ditched and improved, and in some instances, though rarely, stocked with cane. Such a price may seem high to a Northern farmer, but to responsible and industrious men the payment would be extended for such a long term of years that each annual payment would hardly amount to a moderate lease. Unimproved lands may be obtained at much less than half these figures. Within the past few years many of our old sugar plantations havq been sold in farms of from 40 to 200 acres. Three energetic and skilled farmers could cultivate, together, thirty acres of cane and ten acres of corn-this with two teams. The corn is usually raised for hqoie purposes, and, with peas plante4 in it, affords feed and forage for teams all the year, while the land thus rotated is prepared for the next year's plant cane. It is considered that the increase in the yield of cane from land previously renewed with corn and peas pays for the cultivation of these two last products, thus rendering them, in total, a net return to the farmer. If all these crops be properly planted and cultivated, no work upon them is re quired in July and August, our two warmest months. The work of harvest ing the cane does not commence till November 1, and the crop should be gathered before the middle of De oetmber. Under the present system of manu 9 facturlng sugar, inaugurated by John r Dymond, Esq., and generally adopted, small farmers have comparatively as good chances as large planters. This involves the purchase of cane from farmers by large planters at five dollars per ton, delivered at the mill. Exten sive fields of cane have yielded thirty 1 five tone to the acre, and an average yield of twenty-five tons may always be depended upon. The three men who have raised thirty acres of cane must save about four of the poorest for the next season's planting. They should thus have a marketable crop of twenty-six acres or 650 tons of cane, which, at five dollars per ton, would give a gross re turn of $3250. At the same time they have produced the main part of their daily supplies, and feed and forage for their teams for a year. We say these results can be accomplished by steady, competent and industrious farmers, who can make nearly all of the above gross return a net saving. It is thought by many that white men are unable to work in the sugar fields of Louisiana. To prove that this impres sion is entirely erroneous, we need only mention the fact that thousands of white men aided, from the planting to the harvest, in raising Louisiana's last sugar crop; and that the large increase of that crop over the crop of the pre vious year was due to the large increase in the number of white laborers in the sugar fields. There has been a notable increase of this class of laborers during the present year. In carrying on a sugar plantation of 5~9 or more acres the gross average cost of cultivation and manufacture is esti mated to be $100 per acre, while under proper managem jt, every acre can be made to return $100. Some of the most successful planters in the State culti vate and manufacture their crops at a cost of only $80 per acre, and of course are rapidly growing rich and extending their possessions. By March 1, 1878, it is likely that two-thirds of the ante-bellum sugar region will be restocked in cane. In the course of the next ten years the ex tent of the old sugar region will proba ble be doubled, on the condition that sufficient labor be introduced to work the lands. Than the purchase, rental and cultivation of these lands, there could be no better Investment for the rich or more remunerative employment for the poor. The labor that ekes out a bare sub slstence among the sterile rocks of New England, the toil expended by the sturdy yeomen on the grain fields of the West, or the work wasted in war ring with the grasshoppers of the North western plains, if turned to the sugar fields of Southeastern Louisiana, would be rewa'ded with such a generous tri bute as to bewilder with a sense of sud denly acquired prosperity the stalwart sons of toil who, in other regions, remain poor all their lives, digging and delving in the ground till a hole is dug there for the mselves. MR. DIBBLE. Henry C. Dibble who was yesterday arrested on the charge, filed by Mr. Fin ney, the District Attorney, of embez zling State funds, has played quite a conspicuous role in Louisiana politics during the past eight years. He is one of the smartest and most unscrupulous of the band of carpet-bag politicians and plunderers who came into the State after the war, and by his superior impudence and shrewdness soon be. come eminent and influential in an era when rscality and audacity con stituted politics, and plunder the end of politics. He was one of Warmoth's ablest lieuten ants, and he has been a tower of strength to Kellogg, both in sustaining his usurpation and in thwarting the vigorous efforts of the late Attorney General Field to expose the corrupt and criminal practices of Kellogg and Clinton. Dibble was at one time made Judge of the Eighth District Court. Kellogg appointed him Assistant Attor ney General, that the State might be quietly robbed with impunity, and in the last election he was the Radical candidate for Congress in the Second District against Hon. E. J. Ellis. That Dibble will be landed in the Penitentiary, if justice be done, no man in Louisiana has the least doubt. -He was a Chief among the rascals who, for so many years, despoiled this State, but who having all the archives, records, offices and courts under their control and in charge of their creatures and tools, have so skillfully covered up their tracks that it is difficult to obtain the clear evidence of their notorious crimi nality. And yet Mr. Dibble is not the worst of the gang. Certainly he ought to be vigorously prosecuted and sent to the Penitentiary; but when the facts are all discovered there is no doubt that, if the law prevails,W. Pitt Kellogg, instead of representing Louisiana in the United States Senate, will join Mr. Dibble in Baton Rouge. Nor will the list of con victed criminals end with these two. There are a host of distinguished politi cal robbers among us, and the energy of the law should not be relaxed, nor should the vigilance of its ministers cease until its hand is upon the whole gang of rascals who have for years held a saturnalia of robbery and every species of crime in this State, in de fiance of decency and in the face of the whole country, fancying that justice had perished under the shadow of the sword, and that the gleam of the bayonet heralded the aawn of the millennium of fraud, forgery and un licensed pluwdder, TO THE SUMMER TOURIITF . Those of our citizens who are for tunate enough to be able to seek respite from the labors of the business season just closed, andtorecuperate their ener gles at some of the many delightful summer resortis to be found in the Northern Stater and Canada, will be glad to learn that, the old favorite Jacek son route, under a vigorous and efficient management, has become one of the very best traveling thoroughfares in the country, Hundreds of thcqsands of dollars have been expended,. as we are credf bly informed, duringg bhe past twelve months for new iron and steel rails, new cross-ties and newrbridges, and to day it may be safely said that no road south of the Ohio river surpasses the great Jackson route in smoothness and perfect safety. We have had oooasion, during the past few week*, to travel quite exteneively over that road, and we can thus, from actual experience, bear witness to its excellence in every par ticular which goes to constitute a good road. DIED. IlROWN-At 4 o'lHook. Friday morndin.g, Jn, 8, 1877, itobert. Ilrow . 0 hills sixty-lnith year, a native of MaysvllP, i{entucky. and a resident of this city fur thirty years. His friends and those of his sons, Henry U. and RIobert L. Brown, and of C. W. Deacon, are respeetfully invited to attend his funeral from his late residence, 'orker Chestnut and Allle street', on Saturday Morning. June a. at Io o'Olock. MOUNT MOILIAlI LOD4.E No.59, F. & A. M. The officers and members of ltlh above Lodge are hereby not:fled to assemble at the Lodge Room. No. 163 (Camp strept. at 9 o'elck a. m., on Saturday,. June 9, for the purpose of paying the last sad ti ibute of respeit to the r mains of our late brother. Robert Brown. Master Masons in good standing are, frater nally Invited to atttnd. " liv ur.ier of the W. M. JAMES FUIIlNEAUN, _Beerktary. NOTICE TO TAX C'OLLECTOR". HTAT'EOF I,(OUIHIANA--A IDI'rTOi'i OFFIC E. At a mr.otinlng f the Board of li'tullattin, heidl In this kity on the seventeenth day of May. 1877, an laction was held for the Fisnil Agency of the ate, and the sae r. same resulted in the elk' tion of the H''ATE NATIONAL BANK as FPil Is Agent. I now iall your attention to s.kctiol nilnety of act, No. 42 of 1871, which requires that all tax coll.,tors throughout the Htato shall de ,posit their funds with the Fiscal Agent of the State. You can mtakntyour devosits at elther the State National Bank, or at the Itranc'll Diepos tory of the Htalte Natlional Iianki., -,crner of Itiynl and Conti streets, New Orh'iakas. Yours, re pelitfuliv. ALLEN JUMEL, Auditor. f IRON COTTON TIE IMPORTANT SPECIA L NOTICE. In view of the constantly increasing popularity aniddemand for the CELEBRATEI) ARROW TIF, The universally recog, nizd favor .,M P 1- 4. I t Th of Plant- . _ men and Hhip nmarl,'an Cotton Tie Cmu ny. IiAmlted.sole pro. prietors and manuf c' lier s of , ald Tie. com imanding onrqualed faelltlies, hav, in a'titn to their lare stork now on hand, eontrattnd for increasel quantities, suffl eient, to mn at the lartes.t remand for Cotton Ti+s, to cover the enti re crop of the coming serason, and now, through their angents genorally, offer the I'OI'ULAIt and IIRErItER ItLE" ARROW TIE At 0U2 5O Per Bundle Less 2i p. r c'l' ''t. dii otllnt for cash. in hbuln+ie, omulte,. LENS TH AN 'I HiE MARKET VALUE OF PLAIN HOOP IRON: and it Ieinfg the pur pose of the (Company It mIort the cnitinu.ud patronage of the P tanting corlnmul'ity antd to defya I cImpletiti, n that may atrise, their Agents are indtruted to ,ont int with Dealers. Fact 'tr arnd (Country Mo'reha'Intt at the at hovii n'um-d price and t'rms for future d(elivnry up l t' the first of Auguist in quantititias sltay cnh requlliltd from time to tiil.e, settlements ,'illn~ madit on delivery. No competition arrests tihe Progresm of the AIROW TIE. It is ever onwanr In Its colrse as Streams flow to the Ocean. SEE ' THE FOLLOWINiG (IEIRTIFICATEH AD)I)lIHc&E) TO COMPANY'S AGENTH. Gientlnmien-It affords me groat pleasure to present you with I his statement, as evidence of our high apvrecialion of the value of the AR ItOW 'TI ,:. as a fastening for Cotton Bales. We have used it constantly in our Presses slnce its intro luction, having found no of her Tie that can compare with it in utility, dranhil ty and strength, and from our own experience we can safely recommend it to planters as the BEST TIE we have seen. Pressing from five to seven hundred bales per (lay, when running full time, we fin I it to our intert at to purchase the ARRtOW BUCKLE from you for the purpose of replacing any other bucklo that may be on the balu. taking the others off and throwing them in the scrap pile to be sold as old iron. Yours truly (Signed) A. P. LUFKIN. Superintendent. Southern Cotton Preo (t )mpany Presses. YA( TOttS' ( OMI'RESS, MERTCHANTS' G' alveston. NtW WHARF ) I take pleasure in stating that sine, my superintendency of the Planters' Press, we have been constantly using the ARROW TIE. It gives entire satislaction. and our pressmen 1 prefer the Band and Buckle to any that they I have ever used. I amn yours very truly. (Signed) F. It. LUBBOCK. Superintendent. The above is Indorsed by Cotton Press 'en of New Orleans, M)bili. S.tvaniah. Charleston, Norfolk, Wilmington and Petersburg. Thanks to planters throughout all the Citton States for the liberal support and patronage of the ARliOW TIE. ItI V.' RAYNE & CO., General AgentW , ies 2p d&w NEW ORLEN~3. OCTAVE FORSTALL, DEALER IN BUILDING M lTETRIALS, NAVAL STORES, PAINTS, OIL3 AND IRUSHES, 3 Natbchez street, New OrleaDs, je3 lm2p JEWELRY AT AUCTION! I. C. LEVI, Auctioneer, 108. ....... ........... anal Street ...........................1. WILL OFFER, TWICE A WEEK, HIJ LAbGOE AND ELEGIANT STOC OF JEWELRY AT AUOTION, And rematndetqf ýdare will sell at Private sale, as uual, from FIVE to TWENTY-FITS Ptý uEnl T LFl than any other establishment which advertlses daily. Watehes Repaired and Diamonds Reset Only by skillful workmen, at the lowest rates, aveo im I.0. LEVI, 1oe Canal street. UPRIGHT CIIICKERING PIANOS. hioh are presented to the bublie as the most perfect Planos of their class in the ;orld. The afacurers, by tiliing hll the improvements develoted daring the last fift years, ha.e'suo sede nm aking a piano, which in tone tuch and durabifty, surpasses ll asnos qads etel~ An Europe or this country, and ohrtng It tohe ublo as Iw as any good Upright Pano made. I have a full assatment of the same tn arln, and Invite the puble to examine tlemu I have a low-priced Upright PIANO, made by In New r.rk, whe ass the best French actlon, with thie American ron an h'o frame syJg'e t, galrllg them the touch of the best Frneoh, anod the fullness of the American Pianos. Their or Ir ra es abiUt less then the PleyNI Pianos, on aitrountf rein in mlde hero, and paylLtg '..Odii. Boli 1rt meetlty payments, or rented with the privilnege to purchase. Fifty second-hand Plamos on hand, and for sale, at artiargain. Planos tuned and repaired. Mason & Hamlin's Organs, nine stops, only $114. I-1iIlLIP WERLEIN. Th12e L-eacnling Pliazio Dealezr, my20o m 79 and 90 B &RONNE STREETT. . 0. • . I I I 1. .. I -. I _ _ - . .. . . . . . . . . . . ! 11 1 . . .. I I . 1 I I I 1 1 . 1 I I I I I I I I . DISIEASEB OF THE EYE AND EAR. DR. C'. BEARD, O)(,ULIST AND) AUIRIST, 1 -I (:ANAL MTRIUET, Irn"*k Dox 1n17. New Orleans, La. felt0 ly c&w 8llr ), T. WA LSI.IE , . IgfIT 8HHItTS HIRIT 8 HHIIITH 110 C'anal tatreet, SHIRTS SHIRTSH SHIRI HIIIITH IStlIBIITs HI TL dhIPORtTER anwl IEALERHIRTS tHIRTS HIllR'TH SHIRT -- IN 8HHIRTH 8HIRTH MHIRtTS SHIRTH SHIRTH SHIIIRTH --N - SHItT SHIRET HSHIRTH 8HIR1TH 811111HT SHIRTHS USHIR$TH SHIRHTS --AI,- ISHRH'I' HHI HTH SHlitTS HHIRTH [8HIRTS SHIRTH 81111118 " OER8 PRIIS 4111TH SHIRTS SN HIRTS SHIRTH L AND SIHIRTS SHIRI, "HHIRITH •llIL I o Furnishing (ioods. HJJ{~ S POLITE ATTENTION SHIRTS MHIRT.. SiHIRTT HIT-1H Hi llRTH -I'IrTS Now aT.d Full Stook. WlltiET, 8HIW.T'i sHItTH4 SHIRTH SHIRTS HHIRT r . HIRT8 81T m2p MTHE 8H111T8/ --AND- 8HI11T8 EHIRT. H HIR'. 8 DHIIIT/ POLITE ATTENTION SHIIRT, LPPFor th Are som e of the attraction Hf FINEl ' JEWELRY, my customers and the public gen rally, I will ontinue the sae of my arge and well selected10 Calk of Jew . during the col jp3 tm2p ME. .... of the LEVI OEN TILAT 7 1'. M. For tho accommodation -f BUIYY LIN of FINE JEWELRY, my customers and the public gen orally, I will continue the eale ol my large and well selected stock of Jew,,lry during the cool of tihe evening, (LOHIN(l AT 7 1'. M. I also inform my customers and the public in general that I am prepared to execute the flnes work In MOUNTING DIAMONDS, REPAIRING JEWELRY and WATCHES, at very low prices, enid will pay my personal attention to the I. C. LEVI. 0o3 ttt l1o Canal street. LILIENT H AL'AN PII0TOURAP[H ART GALLERY. I4 ............ CANAL STREET ............171 TOUItO BUILDIN-H":. This well known establishmaent is the la.,est and most complete in the city of New Orleans. The style of pictures manoe by LAMBERT'S PERMANENT PROESS surpassoes anything that can be. made at other -alleries. No one who is fully aware of the saperiority -f this process, will go to the expense and trou ble to have a picture taken that in a very short time will fade. I guarantee tho-LAMBERT to be the only pie nure that WILL NOT JADE. my26 3m Wood-Wood-Wood. AT WROLESALE AND RETAIL. BONEY ISLAND WOOD and COAL YARD, No. 3735 Jilla street, New Basln, near Magl nolla Bridge. P',stoflece address, Lock Box No. 10co. IJelivered to all parts of the city. PR1CES FOR THIS WEEK. Ash wood, per cord ............................1 Oo Oak wood. per cord......................... 5 o Ash and oak mixed, per cord ................ 5 5 Liberal dlsoount made to dealers. Satisfaction guaranteed. mhl7 2dptt ipke P. BADELAT. Agent. SHERWOOD FOREST. A NEW RWEORT PFO HUMMER IDLING. (GREEN LAKE, WISCONSIN. This chlarming Lodge, to be opened on the 20th of May, is embowered by a hundred acres of grand old Oaks, lying with Qentlegrade along the north shore of Green Lake. It is within two miles of Grenn Lake Station, ontlheSheboygan and Fond du Lao Railroad. It-4s reac.ed from Chicago via Chicago and N. W. Rallway wit'hput thie least delay. Omnibhuses and carriages dl ways awaltfng arrival of trains,, THE LODGE In a large rnvltlng structure, with broad veran das, large, airy rooms and halls, and supplied with all the appointments of first-lass summer resorts. Itwas e )mmoneed in the spring of 1874, partially completed, and partially opened for a few weeks, and In 1875 made its formal bow to a crowdad house. GAMER. A blliard house and bowling alleys, together with popular lawn games. are provided. TERMS. Board, per week ............ .......$12 00 Board, per day .................. . 2 00 Children under 10 years, and servants, halt price. Special terms for those whoceme early or stay late. J. C. SHERWOOD, Proprietor. J. F. JOHNSTON, Manager. Postoffleoo, Dartford, Wisconsin. 1nv22 tjois TILE BEST P.LNOS. AT GRUNEWALD HALL.. AT LOW PRICES EASY MONTY MONTLY STALLMENT. Steinway & Sons Achgeved a double victory at the Centealal., W. Knabe & Co., Pleyel. Wolf & co., Tbie Leading Pianos rf the World and Uueur-. passed for the Southern Climatee PARLOR AND CHURCH ORGOAS,. Of the Mlost Popular Makers. Direct importation of all kinds of M US IAL INSTRUMENTS anC1 PUBLISHERS OF SHEET MUSI ' WHOLESALE AND RETAIL orders solicited and satisfaction glaranteed. Sped lmoon of Hecond Class Planos, which cam be sold from $100 to SL'D lower than a PLEZJEL are al wa) s on hand for .fspection ar d comaart son. LOUIS GRUNEWALD, 14, 16. 18, %0 and 22 BaDamm. Stveeg. fgR 9dply New Orleans Savings Inutitution, No. .s. Canal Street. TmI5TEra: A. MOULTON. E. A. PALER1y, CARL KOIIN, T. L. BA'RE, DAVLD URQURAET, GEORG,.JON.Ba JOHN G. GALBSt, THU8.4~ ADA) THOS. A. CLARKg, CHRIST'N SBENZIDES CHA8. J. LEEDS, SAMU2L JAMI.ON. Interest Alowed or Depsi..a. D. UBQUHART. PreeMdent Caas. Kr.sKHAw. Treasure,. apis ly3 Awr. CAa.BBRa O. CAnIma1 E L. CAnaaurz. CraS. J. CAmum. A. CARRIERYE & SONS, COMMISSION MERCIHANTS Corner Royal and Custembhoue. Ulberal Advanoes made on Consignments to our friends in LOSNDON. LIVERPOOL, apit6 9m2dp HAVRE and BOEDY AUXZ W. W. W ASHBURN, ARTIST PHOTOGRAPHEg, 113 Canal street. Opposite Clay Statue. New Orleans. Mr. WASHBUBN is himself an artist twenty-five year- experience, and is aup in each department by a corps of ass who have no su peror i n thi ors n th Odis o W He is the master of his business, Besides employing the best artists be seo the beat ratertaLs and macro the beet work on the oa. tinent You may call this "BLOWING HIS OWN HORN." but for proof le refers you to by.t .. and patrons and to his workh m y 1 eeeeted at htArt ~Gallery, tesop 1)