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DIPPFIDRNOI7 "'I'm after axln'. Biddy. dear--" And here he paused awhile o fringe his words the merest mite With something of a smile A smile tbht found its image Iu a face of beauteous mold, Whosell uld eyes were deeping From a roidery of gold. "J've come to ax ye, Biddy, dear. If-" then he stopped again. As if his heart hba bubbled o'er And overilowed his brain. His lips were twitthing nervously O'er what they hd to tell. And timed the iluavers with the eyes That gently rose and fell. "I've comn-" and then he took her hlanit And held them in his own. "'To ax-" and then he watched the buds That on her cheeks had blown,. "Me purty dear-" and then he hoard The throbbing of her heart. That told how love had entered in And claimed its every part. *'Ohl don't be tlzin' me," said she. With just the fatlutest sigh. "TVe since enough to see you've come. But what's the rHsonu why ? " "To ax-" and one again the tongue Forbore its sweets to tell, "'Tn ax-if Mrs. Mulligan Has any pigs to stll!" .- e --. . A NEBjRANKA TRAGEI)Y. Who t s Fate of Certain Bables In Hack berry Precinct. IN. Y. Times.] Hackberry Precinct is a town in Ne braska. It is not a very large town, and the inhabitants are rarely visited by the traveling lecturer, the circus, or any other amusement of that sort. They are thrown on their own resources for amusement, and their principal recrea ~ons are social parties and little "diffi silties" at the leading "saloons." Not very long ago Hackberry Precinct de termined to indulge in a ball, to which all the citizens of the place without dis 2 Unction of sex or rank should be invited. i.Ihe largest available house was rented 1D the occasion; a superb band of 1a muio, oonsiting of a colored man with a violin, was employed, and a magnifl sent supper, of which sandwiches and hot whisky were the leading fea TA tree, was provided. Preparations on 0 grand a scale had never before been d e for any Hackberry Precinct ball, land it was expected that the affair would prove a magnificent success. It so happened that sixteen of the youngest and most popular matrons of the town were in the possession of ba hbes under thirteen months of age. These ladies were extremely anxious to etsnd the ball, but inasmuch as bottles --except of the variety adapted exclu [ lfy for the use of mature citizens Sere not to be had in Hackberry at any ', itoe, there was a practical difficulty in ileaviog the babies at home in a hungry nld motherless state during the entire Sght. In this emergency, a man of rare v:Ibentlve genius, who was one of the mianagers of the ball, proposed that the aixteen mothers should take their babies to the ball with :hem and deposit them !a a room where they would be easily acoessible. This plan was adopted with much enthusiasm, and at 8 o'clock the sixteen babies were brought to the Sall and placed on a large bed in the second-story back bedroom. It had been suggested by a careful :mother that the infants should be ,. %hecked, so. that each mother could be s' iure of recovering her own at the end -i'f the festivities. Unfortunately, no ' checks could be procured, and it was, therefore. resolved that each infant ldhotuld be carefully marked with a bow of colored ribbon. Accordingly, this was done, and when the sixteen babies, with their hunger temporarily allayed, iad their dresses decorated with distin gulahed bows, were laid side by side on th bed, sixteen mothers agreed that hespectacle was too beautiful for any thing and the collected infants were one si ll perfectly sweet. SDancing began at 8:310, and absorbed the whole attention of the guests. It i a not until 10 o'clock that it occurred tleone of the mothers that her infant S-might perhaps be in want of a little Shloheon, or might desire to express its views in regard to pins and things in Seeral. Accordingly, this excellent 'atron withdrew from the ball-room, a -nsuring her partner that she would re ~aurn almost immediately. She did not osturn, however, and the next mother who left the ball-room with a like prom SI" also failed to return. Gradually the gmothers, one by one, as they recollected the existence of the babies, retired to g- ttend to their supposed wants, until i 'n months had thus vanished, not one of whom made their re-appearance in .&e ball-room. The remaining six mothers, who were probably exceptionally fond of dancing, eUtirely forgot their babies until the 'approach of dawn, and the fixed deter au rination of the band to go to sleep on floor caused the brilliant assembly .toreak up. The six mothers repaired Sbody to the seond-story back bed .m, whence loud shrieks and wild de narrations immediately arose. Every rushed to ascertain what was the r, and, in response to their inquir were informed by adistracted moth at the best babies had all been ed off, and that the remainder were triably mixed up, owing to the loss tV. ei distinguished bows. t appears that no sooner had the in bets a en left to themselves than the ht-colored ribbons had attracted h attention. The investigations lich they immediately undertook were oseeuted with so much zeal that in a :umabiy brief time every bow was off. The first mother, who arrived i; the scene at 10 o'clock, was a woman f reat coolness and resource. Find timpossible to select her own body m the mass of unmarked and con erated infants, she wisely selected largest and best baby of the lot, and ledit home. Her example was fol Sby the next nine mothers, each me of whom picked out a good, service ,abe infant, and hastened away with it. result was that the last six mothers nothing but refuse infants, and not agree as to any method satisfactorily distributing them. Indignation was naturally very t. Each one insisted that she had aght with her a baby of exceptional , which was alone worth more the entire six that still remained, each insisted that she should be ed to make the first choice. In circumstances, with a view to the further effusion of hairpins curls, Judge Doolittle proposed inasmuch as the ladies were unac with euchre, the matter should by throwing dice. This was :imod each mother in her turn out a baby and went home, that she had been atrociously but that if her husband was Ia man, as he pretended to be, he a tsure for her justice and re at the mouth of his revolver. e a.lr mhappened three weeks ago, s et no redistribution of infants maade.' ~e mothers who, by e early, sered the choicest -while -they clamorously resent the necessity which compelled them to put up with cheap and comparatively worthless babies, confess that they cannot prove to the satisfaction of a jury precisely to whom the half dozen best infants respec tively belong. The husbands, who take the broad, general ground that one infant is about as good as another, are unwilling to inter fere, and it is only too probable that the sixteen Hackberry babies will never know their real mothers, and that their own identity will be a puzzle to them for the remainder of their lives. This tragedy shows the necessity of brand ing or otherwise permanently marking babies, and suggests the question wheth er the managers of the H~ackberry ball are not legally responsible to the dissat isfied mothers, and cannot be compelled to make good the losses which the lat ter have sustained. ....... .O4--- THE END OF THE WORLD. An Entertanlnln Description of the De struction of the Earth by An Eminent French Scientist. IP'aris Figaro.] Fifty thousand years have rolled over the earth. Industry has thrived; the human race increased with wonderful rapidity until the world begins to be over-populated. All the coal-beds have long since been exhausted, the petro leum wells are dry; the forests cut down. We begin to use the oxygen of the air and the hydrogen of the water as fuel. The earth, fully exposed to the rays of the sun, grows hotter and hotter. Flowers wither, leaves grow yellow, parchments shrivel, everything dries and breaks to pieces. Animals grow smaller through the effect of evapora tion. Man in turn becomes meagre and dries up. All temperaments blend in one-the bilious, and the last of the lymphatics offers with tears his daugh ter, and 100,000,000 of dowry, to the last of the scrofulous, who has not a cent of fortune and who refuses through pride. The heat augments and the springs are exhausted. The water-carriers rise by degrees to the rank of capitalists, then to millionaires. Finally the great water bearer of the prince ends by becoming one of the first dignitaries of the State. All crimes and infamies which are now done for gold one does then for a glass of water, and love himself aban doning his arrows and quiver, replaces them by a flask of ice water. In this torrid atmosphere one pays for a piece of ice thirty times its weight in diamonds. The Emperor of Australia, in a fit of mental aberration, has a tutti frutti made which cost him a year of his in come. A savant makes a colossal for tune by obtaining a hectolitre of cool water in forty-five degrees. The rivers dry up. Lobsters hustle tumultuously, running after threads of warm water which leave them upon the beach changing color and turning to scarlet. Fishes with bursting heart and dis tended fins are left by the stream ex tended stomach upward. Humankind begins to weaken visibly. Strange pas sions, unheard of rage, violent loves, Insensate pleasures, make life a series of furious detonations, or rather a con tinuous explosion, which commences at birth and finishes by death. In this world, torrified by an implacable com bustion, all is red, cracking, broiled, roasted, and after the water evaporates, one feels the air diminish as it rarifies. Frightful calamity I The streams and rivers have disappeared. The seas begin to grow warm ; then become heated. Be hold them already simmering as under a gentle fire. At first the little fishes, asphyxiated, turn over upon the sur face. Afterward come the seaweed that the heat has detached. From the depths finally arise, cooked blue and giving out their fat in large drops the whales, the enormous pieuvre, the shark and the kraken, believed to be fabulous ; and the sea serpent, so much contested. With these fat things, herbs and fishes cooked together, the smoking ocean becomes an immense bowl of soup. A penetrating kitchen odor spreads over all the inhabitable earth. A century of this reigns. The ocean is evaporated; no traces of its existence remain save some heaps of fishes scattered over the desert plains. The end commences. Under the triple influence of heat, of asphyxia and of dessication humankind is annihilated little by little. Man is exhausted, scaly, and at the last shock falls to pieces. In the place of vegetables nothing remains to him but some me tallic plants which are made to grow by dint of watering them with vitriol. To quench the thirst which devours him, to reanimate his calcined nervous sys tem, to liquefy his albumen which coagulates, he has no other liquids than sulphuric acid or aquafortis. Vain ef forts ! At each breath of wind which agitates this anhydrous atmosphere thousands of human creatures are in stantly dried up; the cavalier upon his horse, the advocate at the bar, the judge upon the bench, the acrobat upon his rope, the workman at his window the king upon his throne, are suddenly mummified. And then comes the last day. There are now but thirty-seven left wandering like spectres of touchwood in the midst of a frightful population of mummies, who regard them with eyes similar to Zante currants. And they take hands and commence a furious round. At each turn one of the dancers stumbles and falls dead, with a dry noise. The thirty six turns finished, the survivor remains alone in presence of this miserable heap, in which are gathered the last debris of the human race. He throws a last glance over the earth. He says adieu to the name of all, and from his poor burnt eyes falls a tear-the last tear of hu manity. He gathers it in his hand; he drinks it and dies looaing at the skies. Pouff! A little bluish flame rises tremblingly; then two, then three, then a thousand. The entire globe is em braced, burns an instant, is extinguish ed. All is ended. The earth i dead. Mournful and frozen, it rolls sadly through the silent deserts of the infinite, and of so much beauty, so much glory, so many joys, so many tears, so many loves, no more remains than a little cal cined stone-miserable wanderer across the luminous spheres of the new worlds. Adieu, earth! Adieu, touching sou venirs of our history of our genius, of our sorrows, of our loves! Adieu, na ture! Thou whose sweet and serene majesty consoled so well our sufferings ! Adieu, cool and shady woods, where during the beautiful summer nights by the silvery light of the moon we heard the nightingale sing! Adieu, terrible and charming creatures who lead the world with a tearlor a smile, and whom we call by names so sweet! Ah! sina, you are no more! truly all is finished. The earth is dead. New American Sewing Machine, 185 Canal street. For useful and ornamental Christmas pres eats, go to Navra's China Palace. Call at Miller & Dielmann's and get your Cali fornia wines, candies and fireworks. Prices are very low. BARGAINS FOR THE HOLIDAYS PEIRCE, 185 Canal Street. 500 Ladies Hair Bralds, all Shades, at from 50c lp: 1000 Curls, all Hinds Jg and Colors; Combs in Great Variety from 10c up. Celluloid, Coral, Jet, Garnet and all kinds of .Jewelry at lowest prices. Halir .ewelry made to order. Watch C(hains. Piuns. Ear D)rops. Flow ors (alny design) mounted in fine gold, suitable for presents and to remember absent friends. Just received, a large lot, of Jewelry IBoxes, Pandkrclhiefs, Glove and Fan Boxes. Lockets Chains. 't'. A large assortment of Notions llnd Fancy Goods, to be sold during the next thirty days regardless of cost. We hblve a largo as sortment of Vases, Toilet Sets. Fans. Head and Hair Ornaments, Hair Dye and Washes. Ro barn's Aureolino for blonding the hair. Also, Agency of the NEW AMERICAN SEW ING MAUIHINE, the best in the world; a largo stock on hand. Needles. oils etc. A few second hand American, Wheeler & Wilson and Empire Machines. in good order, at Is, 1i and $12 cact. Our new hand machine at $10. Any one buying one of our New American machines during the holidays will receive as a prosent, the extra Tucker. Corder. Ilinder and Patent Rufflor. Ladies will do well to call and examine our goods and prices before spending their money elsewhere, as we will sell our goods for the next. thirty days at very low prices for ready money. Remomts'r the number, ISn CANAL STREET. Third door below Varioties Theatre. deofl eod 2w O. A. PEIRCE. STEPHEN F. WHITMAN & SON, Manufacturers of the IN TIHE UNITED STATEM. - Also INVENTORS AND SOLE MANUFA('TUlHEIlS Of the Famous Instantaneous Choc olate, For making a cup of Chocolate instantly. Put up in tin cans of I lb and t lb each. HTEPHEN F. WHITMAN & SON. Southwest corner of Twelfth and Market st roots. Philadelphia. de19 l:m cod FOR CASH ONLY! FOR CASH ONLY! Great Reduction in Prices of CHILDREN'S BOOKS, GIFT BOOKS. NOVELS, STATIONERY AND FANCY ARTICLES. During the next thirty days I will sell goods at these low tlr'ures: MAGIC INKSTANDS, reduced from 25 to 15 cents. MAGIC WATER PENS. reduced from 75 to 25 cents per dozen. PERFORATED CARD BOARD, from 20 to to cents per shoot. GOLD AND SILVER CARD BOARD. from 75 to 4o cents. A largo stock of CATHOLIC PRAYER BOOKS at half price. My own LEAD PENCILS. now in great de mand, reduced to 10 cents per dozen. The same with Rubber Tips 20 cents per doz. The Harrington COPY BIOOk, usually sold at 10 cents each. now only 5o, cents per dlozen. PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS. worth $1 so, for 75 cents. CHROMOS and REWARD CARDS at cost. One thousand PAPER NOVELS at half price, containing all the writers of note in fic tion. A. P. HARRING(TON, BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER. No. 149 Canal Street, Between Kreeger's Kid Glove Store and Holmes Dry Goods Store. oc25 Su Tu Fr 2m BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS FOR ALL AT HOLIDAY HEADQUARTERS, 110 and 112 Camp street, BOOK DEPOT, R. J. HARP, AGENT. You can buy just what you want if you call at once. The cheapest place in the city. SOO LATEST STYLES, IN NEW BOXES, OF PAPETRIES, AT Holiday Headquarters, FINEST LINE IN THE CITY AT LOWEST PRIE:ES FOR CASH. Call early (and avoid the rush) to select your HOLIDAY PRESENTS for the Children. The Largest STOCK OF BOOKS to be found in the city at Holiday Headquarters. The best assortment of standard Games and Toys. JUVENILE BOOKS. STEREOSCOPES and VIEWS SCRAP BOOKS BIBLES. HYMNS. PRAYER BOOKS, GOIb PENS, PENCILS, ALBUMS. WRITING DESKS, etc.. at 110 and 111 Camp street. del6 im ROBT. J. HARP. Agent. WOOD! WOOD! WOOD! CONSTANTLY RECEIVING PER HONEY Island line of steamers. J. F. Frazar. Jose phine and barges. At wholesale and retail. Honey Island Wood and Coal Yards, No. 375 Julia, near Magnolia Bridge. New Basin, also at corner Carondelet Walk and Marais street, Old Basin. Main office, No. 158 Common street. P. O. address, Lock box 1080. Wood delivered to any part of the city. Oak Wood, per cord (best) ......- -............s so Ash .. - -.. .. .................. 6 50 Oak and Ash mixed, per cord .......... 6 oo Liberal discount made to dealers. Full meas ure and satisfaction guaranteed. dec2 tf OFFICE "CONWEYANCE RECORD," No. 16 St. Charles Street, NEW ORLEANS. LA. The undersigned respectfully announce to the public that they are prepared to furnish a complete Chain of Title or list of Transfers of Real Estate in New Orleans. back to original grant or purchase, when required; also full Abstract of each transfer in the chain; thus se curing to parties purchasing Real Estate or investing in Mortgages perfect security from fraudulent or defective titles. The method of indexing our "Conveyance Record," peculiar to our system, enables us to give information im mediately. Attorneys, Notaries. Auctioneers, Land Agents, Surveyors, and all parties interested in Titles to Real Estate, are invited to call and ex amine our "Record." del 3m L. J. DODGE & CO. HENRY B. KELLY. HENRY L. LAZARUS. Master in Chancery, KELLY & LAZARUS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW Solicitors in Chancery, ss Commereal Plaae, deglnm NEW OBLEAN8. SOIL LION & C0., 112 Baronne Street. Friends, Ladies, Gentlemen and Children, We respectfully invite you to the opening of our beautiful and well-selected stock of Boots and Shoes! Consisting of the Finest Ladies' and Children's Button Boots, Bals, Ties, Slippers, etc. Gentlemen's Fine Congress, Prince Alberts, Wire Screwed, Etc. The Latest Style of BOOTS, SHOES, BROGANS. RUSSETS, PLOW SHOES. MALAKOFFS. Etc. We guarantee satisfaction or no saleo. All we ask is to give us a call. Burt's Button Boots and Laced Shoes A SPECIALTY. In the hope of giving you thorough satisfac tion, we remain, yours, truly, SOL LION & CO., 112 Baronne Street. P. 8.-We guarantee all orders filled to your satisfaction. Boots and Shoes made to order. Country orders rmnnotfullyv aolltiid. n014 Am PARIS FASHIONS. Ime. JULIE LaB. FISHER, rela}gl Id Fresh Miliye Parlors at the Turner Mansion, 188...........CANAL STREET...........188 Begs to inform her lady friends and the public generally that she has on hand one of the most beautiful and complete selections of Parisian styles and fashions in BONNETS, HATS, FEATHERS, FLOWERS, SHAWLS, Etc. In her DRESSMAKING DEPARTMENT she has employed the best Parisian Artiste, and she will be pleased If the ladies will call at her Farlors. 188 CANAL STREET. Mme. Julie LaB. Fisher. 0019 tf WHEELER & PIERSON, 13 and 15 Camp Street. Buyers are invited to examine our elegant ITOit OF ILWTi OTBi, all of our own manufacture, all stylish cut and fit equal to custom make. ELEGANT CASSIMERE BUSINESS SUITS all styles from $14 to $28. BLACK DIA(ONAL DRESS FROCKS AND VESTS, si, to $so. BLACK CLOTH DRESS SUITS, for Balls and Parties, 520 to $40. YOUTHS' BUSINESS AND DRESS SUITS. stylish and ni.e, very low. NEW STYLE OVERCOATS, long and nobby, $9 to $25. BOYu' OVERCOATS. $s and up. BOYS' SUITS. for school and dross. VERY LOW. Shaker Underwear, Dress Shirts, Bows, Cravats, Half-Hose, New Scarfs, stylish. 50 cents to $1. ALL FRESH GOODS. ONE PRICE AND POLITE ATTENTION. AT WHEELER & PIERSON'S, 18 and 15 Camp Street. WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT UP STAIRS. Complete Stock of LOW PRICED GOODS for Country Merchants. de9 lm GRAND OPENING OF TtHE LARGEST STOCK EVER EXHIB ITED IN NEW ORLEANS. -OF MmP', YCu1 h Ciiil#r' Clthin -AT Nos. 81 alld 83 CANAL STREET. From this day I will close out my entire stock of Ready-Made ('lothing, Furnishing Goods AND HATS, At lowest prices ever sold in Now Orleans. LEON GODCHAUX, (1015 30t THE NEW AMERICAN SEWING MACHINE COMPANY. Having just opened a salesroom with a large stock of the latest improved machines at 185 Canal street, we cordially invite the ladies and the public generally to call and examine the assortment. This machine has all the LATEST IMPROVE MENTS and is a marvel of MECHANIM, SIM PLICIT' and DURABILITY. It runs lightly, makes very little noise, has more space under the arm and is the EASIEST LEARNED of any machine in the world. Its Needles are SELF-SETTING and the only SELF-THREADING SHUTTLE in use. We guarantee it the Best and Cheapest Machine in the market. Office and salesroom 1s5 Canal street. D. A. KENYON, Manager. Agents Wanted. O. A. PEIRCE, no23 m . Agent for New Orleans. CHAS. LACOUME, Wholesale and Retail Liquor Dealer, 53 ST. CHARLES STREET, Near Gravier street, New Orleans, La. Sole Agent For Goldsborough, Forster & Co.'s celebrated BAKER RYE, and W. W. Johnson & Co.'s OLD KELLAR BOURBON. Both of above Whiskies are distilled expressly for C. LACOUME; also, have on hand numerous other brands of fine goods. Bar, grocery and family trade supplied. Also, proprietor of St. Charles Bar and BIlliard Rooms, Under St. Charles Hotel. BRANCH BARS, 13 Carondelet street-1-' Bourbon street, And dealer in all sorts of BILLIARD GOODS and TBIMMINGS. oelo8m J. R. WALKER, D. D. S., Is ....... ......Deleri street ...... ......Is CAREFULLY PERFORMS ALL OPERATIONS IN DENTISTRY. ee9tf: JNO. JEWETT & & OW, CORRODERS -op -ADm- -N-- INSE 43fE CRUSHERS 01Iris LINSEED, NE V YOR It The above LEAD Is strictly PURE. They have manufactured only this qualRy for ths1l n twenty years. Guaranteed as good as any made in this country, and the above OILIsWA&s RANTED to be PERFECTLY PURE. For sale by W. M. M. ABBATT, No. 32 Peters Street, 0024 3m SOLE AGENT FOR NEW ORLEAm . WER.LEIN'S UPRIGHT PIANOS, 135 ........................ CANAL STREET. ........................ PIANO BAR GAINS ! Chickering, Hardinannn, Kranish & Bach, Arlon, Pbj O[. ( AN. , I I IC, Ite. IMMENSE STOCK. PRICES REDUiOE, LEADING HOUSE. PIANOS REPAIRED, T'UNED. MOVED. STORED, EXCHANGEI)i PHII LIP WERLEIN, d(117 Im 135 CANAL STr.E.I READY FOR THE HOLIDAYS -AT GRUNEWALD HALL MOST DESIRABLE PRESENTS IN Musical Instrumentz. MUSIC BOXE~, Immense variety Just received per Steamer "NuItreg," offered to the public at astonishingly low prices. A PRESENT worth while giving is certainly a fine I' IAN .T C) O I T 0 I A W. BUY NO BOGUS INSTRUMENT, but Invest your money in a Durable First-class Piano,r e will last you a lifetime; an'd if you want a Piano. buy no other but a Steinitway, Khnaal or . leyelk Or. if you want a moderate priced and reliable Piano. come and get a Hsaynles or WFsiaolhor C'~pirilt. I can sell you better Instruments, at LOWER PRICES andl EASIER TERMS than auy g MUSIC HOUSE IN THIS COUNTRY. CALL ON ME AND CONVINCE YOURSELF. LOUIS GRUNEWALD, jyl 14 to 2S Baronne street, (Grunewald Hall), Wholesale and Retail sMaBde ge M R. M. & B. J. MONTGOMERY, Furniture Emporium, Corner Camp and Poydras streets, NI TV ()RLEANS. FINE PARLOR SUITS, IN BILK. SATIN. COTOLINE, REPS AND HAIR CLOTH.3 FINE BEDROOM1 SUITI'S, IN WALNUT, MAHOGANY AND ROSEWOOD. WITH FRENCH PLATE IN AErXO AND DRESSING CASEL. Fine Diningroom, Hall and Library Suits, Fancy Cabinets, ~al, Desks, Tables and Chairs. A Large Assortment of French Plate MJiroArs. A FULL LINE OF OFFICE FURNITURE. A Large Stock of Medium and Common Furniture, suitable for the oouu~a y trml Goods delivered free of charge. h8a FURNITURE! FURNITURE! ALL KINDS OF NEW FURNITURE, SUCH AS BEDROOM SETS, PARLOR SETS, PATENT LOUNGES AND CHAIRS. ETC. For sale at the lowest prices by JOHN BOIS, 15 ..............Camp Street...... .......252 FURNITURE TAKEN ON STORAGE. SPECIAL NOTICE-Second-hand Furniture bought also and liberal cash prices Laid. se23 3m SOAPINA Is acknowledged to be the BEST AND CHEAPEST OF ALL m a. ar. It is manufactured with BCRAX, free of any ADULTERATIONS. Patented and manufactured by J. H. KELLER. destr o 319Grapier Steet, EQUAL TO THE BEST. Marais Street Steam Bre.wery 86........... m.eala stees....... Between Conti and St. Lou. H. F. STURCKEN, Proeptler, iyio em NEW OBLEAUMB HENRY KLUNG, LITHOGRAPHER, ENGRAVER -AND- P = I TJ L " .L 5iI........mazazne 8treet .... Sg NEW ORLEANSB LA. All work exenuted at New York yDrteen. 5 W. A. ROBERTSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW., Parish of tL ZamIgro During my temporary atsenoe efrean I sa all business direeted to me..ePre JUDGE A. BaWIM wl11be Womuh tano edk ba ft