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DAILY DEMOCRAT. WG Journal of the State of Lesglana. elal Journal of the City of New Orleans. (..., 109 ravier street. GEORGE W. DUPRE & CO., PBOPRIETOBS. .___--~ GUOR8E W. DUPBEL I. ARc asr, fONm AVUOaUTI, ALBIRT 0. JANIN. 5 j, HEABSETY.......... .............EDITOR. BATES OF SUBSCRIPTION: The Daily Democrat. r .........................61 s 0 tbs ........................ 6 00 onths .................... 8 e aI th ....... . t! e . one y ar ............... 1 Payable In Advance. The Weekly Demoorat. The Weekly Democrat. a large el ht-page -.,Mlfr wlbe furnished to subscribers at the t.Oliow rates: o the..... ................. S M.. onths .... ..... 1 . 0 Paryable in Advance. . iW ORltEAWe, JUNE 20. 1858. WEEKLY DEMOOEAT. We call the special attention of our busi se ommunity to the excellence of the ,"-Wnants DEMOCRAT as an advertising medi 0m. The circulation of the WEBIKLY Dmro ;or throughout Louisiana, Arkansas, Mis g'uppi, Alabama, Georgia and Texas is Semd to that of no other paper in the So'thwest. It contains the latest news from lpotitcal and commercial centres and the Sselection of reading matter. Send in orders early. A daughter of the late Mayor Havemeyer, New York, was arrested and sent to prison iWidon last week for drunkennees. She . ft home, she said, to support herself, b.d fallen in with a hostler named Ed Friel, whom she had married. Ssdedical papers were all jubilant for a over Burchard's anti-revolution resolu t only for a day. They have all their tune, and don't think him such man as they did at first. They think be sould not have given the Bourbons a ]f"laeing themselves on record as op to revolution just before an adjourn Clecinnati Commercial does not nomin ayes for a second term, but it does say, I e., "that a movement for his renomina .-'ay prove to be the most fit and con answer to the 'third term' folly which its appearance among the sore l the remains of the rings, especially t whisky rhigs." The Potter investlka k made a singular impression on the r years ago Wm. Cullen Bryant and n SL. Stone were the editors, the former II Pbet, a violent Democratic paper, and I of the C.mmercial Advertiser, as a a Whig paper. During a heated cam- p Col. Stone made a personal assault on f: lina.t, the result of which was a rencon- o 4 which Mr. Bryant gave Col. Stone a o thrashing with a cow-hide. The New o hm tells of the incident, and then ob- a "Ill fooling naturally followed the en- h " Well, we should say so. II XMe, Maupin," Washington correspond- ti ~he Chicago 7Tmes, tells of an amusing f, made by quite a number of persons al were Invited to attend the funeral of tt the Peruvian Minister, who died at m n recently. Says she: 0 1ovttations, upon black bordered card, f, ed the funeral services at St. Mat Church. In one corner of the card was P., for requiscrat in pace. Some of the bi who r.colved this card took the i for R. S. V. P., and the mourning fam ved quite a number of acceptances of tion. This is one of the subjects it! which everybody laughs this weuk. a Shrnk, the daughter of Judge Jere whose marriage to a Mr. Hornsby has ap ounced, is thus describexl by an ad correspondent of a Western paper: S3hunk is a lady of about thirty-five, "society gray" hair that Is so much when accompanied by bright eyes I fresh compnllexion. Her eyes are dark, straight, mouth small--but firmly doci Bhe is of mediumu height. She is one of few women to whom the word brilliant he properly apl)lito. A better talker, a r woman, or one who is more au courant ie affairs it would be hard to find. She *bvorite child of Judge Black's. He has isad that it was a great pity that she a man, because she is a better lawyer is. With all her intellectual wealth $hunk is a skilled and fascinating socl It has been her custom to spend wi ers at Washington, and it was here SeI met Mr. Bornsby. is no surer mark of the cur than the uatIon of women, so habitual with Then, nor is there is any better proof of y manhood than a high and just esti of their usefulness and capabilities. The h gentleman never fails to recognize true worth and great capacities for doing It Is only the mean fellow who sneers and professes to believe that they telther the will nor the ability to be In what striking contrast to the sen of this latter class were those ex in a letter written by a gallant soldier Ijaho to a San Francisco paper, in which states that he wishes to secure a wife St9ime," says he, "is nearly out, and I in-. to settle in this country. I intend start a chicken ranch. I want a wife to take of young chickens. I have got money i;wffe will not have much to do-only milk. cows, feed 600 young chickens, chop her cook three meals every day, and the of the time she can go out among her " Here was a man that had a pro appreciationi of woman; he knew what she do, and he was willing to give her a to refute the stale slanders of the sex world is so fond of repeating. Ah, but it s a soldier, a hero, to appreciate woman ber fullest. B country seat, known as the "Crimes," miles southwest of Baltimore, Mr. put in practice a notion he had long concerning ventilation. He an immense chimney 100 feet high and `feet thick to be built, adjoining the the house. In the bottom of this lace, in which a fire was always S g for the purpose of producing an rush of air up the chimney. In this atmosphere throughout the house kept pure and fresh without re . ordinlary s'stem of pipes and In his study at Baltimore he mes machine for the diffusion of a tof moisture through the THE STATE OAPITAL QUESTION. 1. "We have seen no reasons assigned why our State capital should be removed to Baton ! Rouge," say the Donaldsonville Chief, St. Mary Enterprine, Terrebonne Courier and a number of other country papers, "and cer tainly will not support such a change unless we see that something Is to be gained thereby." There Is considerable truth in this remark. Several journals have hoisted "For State capital, Baton Rouge," at the head I. of their columns, and one of them has even gone to the expense of a wood cut of a building supposed to be the State-House as it used to look before it was burned; but these papers, as a general thing, fail to assign any other reason than this picture for moving the seat of govern ment far from the contaminations of banks, railroads and newspapers. But the Cburier and the other papers friendly to New Or leans are too severe when they assert that no ,e reasons at all have been given why Baton Ikoumge should become the State capital in lieu of New Orleans. Some reasons-not many it is true, but some-have been assigned by the supporters of Baton Rouge, and these reasons we Intend now to give to the people of Louis lana, no matter how much they may preju dice the interests and the prospects of our city. Some months ago there died in Rome at an advanced age a man of note and prominence; the head of the greatest branch of the Chris 0 tian church, honored by 200,000,000 persons who looked to him for spiritual advice and guidance, and respected by the whole Chris tian world; a man whom the Legislature of s Louisiana more than thirty years ago hon S ored by a resolution of thanks for his pa triotism, courage and ability as a ruler. The s great rival and opponent of this man, Vic t1 or Emanuel, had preceded him to the grave but a few weeks, and had been honored by public ceremonies commemorating his worth, abilities and achievements. When Plus IX died 1 these ceremonies were repeated in the form of a funeral procession in which several thousand persons turned out; organizations and asso ciations of all kinds were represented in this procession; almost our whole militia force, Protestants as well as Catholics, were present. It would hardly be supposed that these honors to a man of as great personal virtue as Plus IX would cause feelings of anger in 1 any man's heart, and yet they seemed to have aroused the fury and passion of some member of the church militant on a visit to New Or leans, who proceeded in a communication to the Claiborne Guardian to abuse New Orleans for this procession. Nowhere else in the world, he declared, could such a sight have been seen save in New Orleans; Protestants compelled to march in a procession in honor of the Pope; the whole population of an American and Protestant (?) city turned out to honor a dead Pope. And this procession, the correspondent continued, was one of the best of reasons why the capital should be re moved from New Orleans-given up, as it was, to parades, intolerance and "papistry." Here, the oburier et al. must see. is an argu ment in favor of Baton Rouge, a strong re ligious argument. A correspondent of the East Feliciana Patriot-Democrat, a Mr. Skip worth, presents in the last number of that paper an able gastronomic argument in favor of Baton Rouge as State capital, coupled with an appeal, not to the soul of the voter, but to his stomach. He objects to our "fish dinners" as utterly subversive of all legislative morality and I honesty. Instead of attending to his duties; I instead of grinding out law for his con stituents and the people of Louisiana at large, - the country legislator, during the session, is frolicking about town or eating "fish dinners" 1 at the lake. These fish dinners are, we admit, true; we regard them, however, as an argu ment in favor of rather than against New Orleans. Fish are notoriously brain food; our fish dinners ought therefore to furnish the country legislators with an extra supply of F brain. 6 If, however, it is not to the fish that Mr. Skipworth objects so much as to the dinner itse I,tho gastronomic excellence of the repast, as apt to lead astray the unwary legislator from some country parish to the great neglect of his duties, we think his objection just as untenable. New Orleans is a little proud of its restau rants; without casting any reflections on the restaurateurs of Baton Rouge, we think New Orleans dinners unequaled in Louisiana, if not in the Union. And good, well cooked dinnerswe - maintain, instead of being injurious to logisla tors, instead of corrupting thelP morals and Sobstructing the wheels of government, are I an aid, benefit and godsend to a statesman. It was Charles Lamb who showed so conclu sively that misgovernment, revolution and tyranny are due wholly to dyspepsia, the fruit of ill-cooked dinners. Bob Ingersoll, in a late lecture, brought this fact nearer home by showing that the present disorders in this country, the bad legislation of Congress, our financial troubles, etc., arise entirely from fried beefsteaks, greasy gravy and bad cook ing. It is to the excellence of London cooking, to whitebait and roast beef of old England, that Great Britain owes the equitable and sensible 3 legislation of its Parliament. The French revolutionists and disturbers are always fre quenters of second-class restaurants, where the cooking Is bad. We could say much more C on this subject but consider it superfluous. Lamb has shown, and the whole world admits the correctness of his argument, that good r dinners mean good natures and good laws. In support of these religious and gastro nomic reasons why the State-House should be rebuilt at Baton Rouge comes Hon. T. T. Allain, ex-State Senator, with strong and e Important political arguments. Last Saturday Allain spoke before a grand capital mass meeting, at Baton Rouge, at r which a large number of colored people were e present. The worthy Senator related, in r glowing words, the history of our State capi tal. Uoming down to the present day and the e building now occupied as a State-House, Sena tor Allain objected to it on the ground that the rotunda in its basement was once a slave t mart, and "I am informed," he proceeded, "that there are now men living who have served the State as members of the General Assembly who were sold at the block like cattle at the self same place." Some might suppose this objection a mere sentimental one, might have pointed to the fact that the pagan Pantheon of Rome is now a Christian church, that the people of Prance now make laws for that nation in one of the palaces of that arch autocrat and tyrant, Louis XIV. We do not think, however, that Senator Allain used this argument senti mentally, but that he meant to say, and would have said had he not feared to wopnd the feelings of some of his fellow Bepublicane, that those members of the Geeral Asaembly that had been sold at public auction In the St. Louis Hotel rotunda must inevitably have recalled that event when they returned there as legislators, and felt Irresistibly inclined to sell themselves again-this time for their own benefit. We call the attention of the Donaldsonville Chief, Terrebonne Cburier et al. to these rea sons why the State capital should be re moved from New Orleans. They will see that they were slightly mistaken when they stated that no reasons had been assigned for this change; there are reasons, as we have shown religious, gastronomic and political, why the State capital should be removed to the rail roadless city of Baton Rouge. If you wish to protect your legislators, their religion, their stomachs, their souls, "vote for Baton Rouge for State capital." Di 8, The great Jackson route is the shortest, er quickest and best Northern line to New York r- and the Eastern cities. During the heat of summer the greatest comfort in traveling is 1o found on the route by Chicago or Louisville Sand along the shores of the great lakes, or a through the grand scenery of the Alleghany mountains. To pass through these regions there is no route so direct, so quick or so good 5e as the Jackson, with its through cars, steel is track and short line, enabling its trains to leave New Orleans one hour later than any other and make the same time. ' Excursion tickets are now on sale by this ir route, good till October 31, to all the attrac tive and famous summer resortsof the North west, best known among which are Wauke sha, with its celebrated springs; Oconomowoc, t; the centre of the delightful lake district of Wis s- consin;. Green Lake, Grand Haven, St. Paul, Niagara Falls, Montreal, Quebec, etc. The rates are as low or lower than to watering d places in other parts of the country, and liv - ing both at hotels and boarding-houses cheap f and of the best kind, the country around be in highly cultivated and furnishing every thing desirable for the table. I- All are invited to call at the ticket office, 20 e Camp street, under City Hotel, where guide books, descriptions, routes, rates, etc., will be furnished, and the fullest information given. DIED. d FLAHERTY-On Wednesday morning, June 19 1878. at 8:45 p. m. Mrs. Mary Ann Morrissey, f wife of Bernard Flaherty. aged . thirty-eight d years, a native of the county Tipperary. Ire land, and a resident of this city for the last twenty-five years. s The friends and acqualntances of the family 3, are respectfully invited to attend her funeral, which will take place from her late residence e corner of St. Mary and St. Thomas streets, at 4 e o'clock Thursday Afternoon, June 20. * n SHELLY--On Wednesday June 19, 1878. at 9 e n'clock p m., Mrs. Mary Lonergin, wife of Michael Shelly. aged 49 years, a native of the r parish of Caher. county Tipperary. Ireland. and a resident of this city for the last twenty nine years. The friends and acquaintances of the family are respectfully invited to attend her funeral e from her residence. No. 367 Annunciation street. 9 near St. Andrew. This (Thursday) Evening at 35 :30 o'clock. LE BRETON DFSCHAPELLES-On Wednes I day, at 9 o'oclock p. m., Henriette Victolre, aged ta years and 4 months, daughter of Emmanuel LeBriton Deschapelles and Henriette Victoire Innerarity. The funeral will take place This Day, at to o'clock a. m.. from the residence of her parents. corner of St. Charles and Pleasant streets. The relatives and friends of the family are invited to attend. WAGONS I CANE CARTS SPOKES I H. N. SORIA, 18 and 20 Union and 15 and 17 Perdido streets, sble Aent for the celebrated "STUDEBA KER" WAGONS. CARTS and SPRING WORE of all kinds and sizes. Dealer in Philadelphia and Western Cane Wagons, Carts and Dray; Timber Wheels; Wheelbarrows of all descriptions; Spokes, Fel loee. Hube, Shafts, etc. Wheelwright material. Orders promptly filled. All work warranted. BODLEY BROTHERS, 127 and 12O..aiommon street..127 and 129 Between St. Charles and City Hotels. FARM AND PLANTATION WAGONS. Cane Carts. Bagasse Carts. Small Carts of all sizes, Timber Wheels. Wheelbarrows. Spokes. Felloes, Shafts. Wagon Material, Axle Grease, etc. This ls the oldest and largest wagon establish ment in the South, manufacturing their own work and guaranteeing everything they sell fea ly adD FURNITURE. I am now filling up my new store, built on the site of the one lately destroyed by fire. with a splendid stock of New Style Furniture, which in consequence of the great depression in the Furniture trade in the North. East and West, I have purchased at ruinously low prices, which will enable me to sell at lower figures than I have ever done before. Handsome VICTORIA BED-ROOM SUITES, with Glass Door Armoirs and Dressers. Fine PARLOR SUITES and LOUNGES, cov ered with Hair Cloth. Reps, Terrys, etc. DINING- OOM SUITES. In Walnut and Oak. MARBLE-TOP TABLES. BOOK-CASES, SECRETARIES. BED-ROOM SUITES of eleven pieces at sto and upwards. HAIR. SPitING AND MOSS MATTRESSES made to order. LIVE GEESE FEATHERS AND NEW CURLED HAIR at low prices. HUGH FLYNN, Nos. 167 and 169 Poydras street, Between St. Charles and Carondelet. jel6 lmeod SOUTHERN MANUFACTURE. ATKINSON'S HIGHLY CONCENTRATED Flavoring Extracts For Cooking Purposes. Vanilla. Lemon, Strawberry, Orange, Almond, Peach, Celery, Ginger. Raspoberry, Rose, Pineapple, Banana. Why buy such goods from distant Northern shaorean When JUST AS GOOD are made at our own doors? These extracts possess in the most highly con centrated form the delicious taste and fragrant aroma of tie fresh fruit, and for all culinary purroses will be fouud the most convenient. et and economical manner of imparting their dellgbtful flavor to choice c ,okery. The suoeriority of thes Extracts consists in their high concentration ant p-rfect purity. Manufacturers and proprietors. M. T. CREAMER & CO., MANUFA CTURIING CHEMISTS, No. 94 Tchoupitoulas street, NEW ORLEANS., LA. Also, for sale at Wholesale by Messrs. W. G. LYO a & CO.. Whole-ale Grocers New Orleans. Ask your grocer for ATKINBOSN'S FLAVORS. They are the best. j-16 "od3m THE WIDOW SIMON Wishes to inform the public that she will con tinue the LITHOG[RAPHING BUSINESS of her late husband (B. SIMON) at the old stand, corner of Contl street and Exchange Alley. jets lradp* WIDOW B. sIMOL JOS. SCHLITZ BREWING CO.'S B MILWAUKEE LAGER BEER. Dunbar's Bethesda Water. t wM. MASSEY & CO.'S PHILADELPHIA ALE AND PORTER. Genuine Northern Cider. Ginger Ale and Mineral Water (Pop.) In bottles and barrels. in any desired quanti ty, delivered at stores and dwellings on receipt of order. L. C. AILNY, 26, 2 and 80...Blenville st...26, 28 and 80 mh22 F Ru Tn sm 2dv ENGINEERS TAKE NOTICE. THE GREATEST DISCOVERY OF THE AGE. COASEY'S BELT - AND - OIL COMPOUND, TO PREVENT BELTS FROM SLIPPING. No Friction. No Tearing. 25 Per Cent Gained in Power. 60 Per Cent Saved in Wear, No establishment where Belting is used Can Afford to be Without It. IS NOW BEING U.SED BY I 1m. .GAYAO.. O.H. ALLEN 3. ERSTER. HARGARET's Bakery - J.J. WICoERLING. HENRY & DUNN. A. MARTIN. ENRY OTISB. P.J. FLANAGHAN, L'HOTE & 0. LA. BIE MLLLS STAR 0INNEtY.P A. A. MAGINNIS'S SONS. Liberal discount to the trade. For sale by I. L LYONS. CORNER OF CAMP AND GRAVIER, Wholesale Druggist and Importer. nels ly BOVINE VACCINE VIRUS, Beoeived daily by L L. LYONS, Oorner Camp and Gravier streets. , nloly NEW CHINA MATTINGS. ELKIN & CO., S168 ..............Canal Street..............168 Are receiving NEW CANTON MATTING in White. Check and Fancy Patterns, in various qiCaltis and at very low prices. OIL CLOTHQ, je2 lmeod 2do WINDOW MWADES. J. L. BALTZ, No. 81 Customhouse Street, New Orleans, OWNER OF. THE RAILROAD PAVILION, At the end of the City and Lake Railroad. Refreshments at city prices., and Concerts twice a week. my28 2dp3m DR. CHARLES LANAUX, DENTIST, Office-No. 82 Royal Street, Between Conti and St. Louis streets. myls sm 2dD SHIRTS! SHIRTSI [MADE TO ORDER. Victor Nippert, 131........CANAL STREET........131 If You. Want Shirts Made CHEAP and WELL-FITTING, Leave Your Measure at VICTOR NIPPERT'S. SPECIALTY OF UNDERWEAR: NAINSOOK SHIRTS. DRAWERS. MERINO SHIRTS., al14 3m HALF HOSE. ETC. MONEY TO LOAN -ON DIAMONDS. JEWELRY, WATCHES. SIL'`EB WARE, PIANOS. LOOKING-GLASSES AND FURNITURE OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS, And all other personal property. Guns. !Pstols etc. Also on Stocks. Bonds and other collat. erals, in large and small sums, at as low rates of interest as any chartered institution in this city. PLEDGES KEPT ONE YEAR. i Hart's Loan Office, S48............ Baronne Street.............48 (Opposite the N. O. Gas Co.) MAURICE J. HART, Agent. N. B.-Parties not being able to call in person will receive prompt attention by communica. ting with the above. ALL BUSINESS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL The business at No. 48 St. Charlse street, known as "Hart's Broker's Office." will be con tinned as harntnfore. iaan lv'iri MALAKOFF BITTERS, The best stomachic and tonic sovereign remedy for Dyspepsia. Excellent for an anti-malarial morning beverage. Low Pries-Pare and lellable. For sale in all quantities by ALPH. WAIL, Sole Manaufaeture. lssltrip ea Conat street. Now Odles.a A-.GN-El(.Y OF IAiiTil! INH EtI ul IflT IS. (A M 'Erra A2. r., I. C. LEVI, Jeweler, .10S.. ............ ...C...l .....oantl 8te .................. ...... Offers the above Watches at the latest reduced price list of November st The Watees are all Patent Levers and Guaranteebd Pr T re ea'sre Solid Silver Watch, Waltham or Elgn movement........- sIolid Silver Watch wth open face and at glass.... L - Solid Silver Stem Winder and Setter .............».. N I Solid Gold Watch, 2 oz, 14 karat case............ ... - Solid Gold Watch. 2 o, 18 karat case.................. U I Solid aod S tem-winder, ) oz. 14 karat case....... LADIES' WATOHES. -Golod Gold Watch, l4 karat case......... _...».. M s solid Gold Watch. 18 karat case ....................... S olid Gold Stem winder, 14 karat case .................... r an . Solid Gold Stem-winder, 18 kart ase................... In addition to the above I have a large assortment of I-wls. French and German Watches, prices rangina from 0 toM.s. For mechanics or laborers the 812 wat.c or Urn stem-Win.ad will give all satisfaction necessary. I will sond watches, diamonds and Jewelry by esess, 0.0. D.. allowing the purchaser to open package and sam. Ine same. I have a complete assortment of Diamonds, Operas, Guard, Vest and Neck Chains at Dria to corresnd with the above I have constantly on hand a large stock of Silverware of all detS, tions. Clocks. Bronzes and Statuary. I Make a Specialty of Repairing Fine Watches and Setting Diamonds. For further particulars. address for Illustrated catalogue, now 1.0. LEVI. toe Osanal s A RARE CHANCE AT HILL'S. I Must IIave $15,000 in Sixty Days. To raise that amount I offer for cash the largest stock of GOLD WATCHES, JEWELRY AND SOLID GOLD CHAINS IN NEW ORLEANS, A'T PY):ITIVELY FIIRST CO"T. By nctnal count my stock includes the following goods. ALL SOLID GOLD. of the best anualit and finish: 120 GOLD WATCHES, MY ENTIRE STOCK OF DIAMONDS, 80 SOLID GOLD VEST CHAINS, 200 LADIES' SOLID GOLD SETTS, 65 SOLID GOLD OPERA CHAINS, 300 PAIRS EAR DROPS, 45 SOLID G01 D GUARD CHAINS, 350 SETS SOLID GOLD STUDS, 85 SOLID, GOLD NECK CHAINS, 220 PAIRS SOLID GOLD CUFF BUT 155 LADIEt AND GENTLEMENS' SOLID TONS, GOLD LOCKETS, 225 CAMEO SEAL RINGS, 75 SOLID GOLD PENCIL CASES, 200 AMETHYST SEAL RINGS, A FULL LINE OF INITIAL CUFF BUTTONS AND STUDS. Buyers in thn country wishing to avail th'mselves of this opportunity can have articles sent C. 0. D., with privilege of examination, and if not suited return at my expense. LADIES ESPECIALLY INVITED TO EXAMINE STOCK. A. 1%I. IIILL, 86 ............ ST. CHARLES STREET ...................86 NEW ORLEANS. P1EILIP WEIRLEIN. S - This Cut Represents SIMASON & H ,I11'S $190 ORGAN, REDUCED TO $135, On easiest payments - $13 cash, and st3 soin 3.6.9.12 15, la 21 24 and 27 months. Ereight from Boston to be added. $90 Organ Reduced to $7l. $7 Ze QUARTERLY. Very hlhly improved Piano of J. P. HAI .E & CO.. with stoot and cover-t4oo style reduced to 2s50. on eastest payments known - sno cash, and $10 a month nntl Daid. PHILIP WERLEIN, 135 CANAL STREET, Wholesale and R-tail Dealer if CHICKERING & HON'S PIANOS A3'l'rHUSHEK PIANOS, I-ALE'S PIANOS. HAIDJMAN'S Pi ,NOS. ORGANS. MASON & H t MLIN'8, SETEY & CO.'S8 NEW A.' GLA .L ORGAN OO.'B Slibral discount for cash. P.raons at a distance may or dir witI the assurance of re Fe vi n injst as good instruments Sthough praAent to select for 9-A ,mselves. If not found satis S .rv thpv may be returned at ye.pense. YLuiLP WERLEIN. -I.35 Canal street, N. O. PIANOS AND ORGANS Of the Most Renowned Makes, at Greatly Reduce& Prices, and on Easy Terms, at GRUNEWALD HALL A Magnificent Selection of the Celebrated Pianos of STEIIWAY, KNABE, PIEYEL, HIINES AND FISCHER Always on hand. Above Pianos are respectfully recomended for their unsurpassed names. ous Musical Qualities, Durability in this climate, which has made them justly so popular wIt our people and which are Unapproached by any other in this country. Just received a Fine Selection of the CELEBRATED ORnIG-ANS -OF- CLOUGH & WARREN, PRINCE, BURDETT. The Best in the Market, at reasonable prices. Get my Estimates before you purchase elsewhet Old Pianos taken in Exchange for New Ones. or repaired at short notice at moderate fInu i SHEET MUSIC, BRASS INSTRUMENTS In Endless Variety and at Lower Figures than at any other House in the Oountry. Yo0u patronage is revpectfully solicited. LOUIS GwRUNEWALD. j1i 14 to l .wmonu .tru..t. W~w OrleswS MOUSSELINE BE PARIS - AND - WHITE GOODS. OUR STOCK OF WIIITE GOODS BEING NOW COMPLETE. WE INVITE PUR CHASERS TO CALL AND EX AMINE SAME. D. H. HOLIMIES, 155 Canal, and 15 Bourbon St&. o(.8 ly IISSISSIPPI, MEXICAN~ GULF SHIP ISLAND CANAL LUIBER AND SHELL DEPOT. For sale cheap, and in quantities to suit: LUMBER, SHELLS, WOOD, BRICKS. Special rateM for lumber sawed to order. OfM;e No. 9 Union street, near St. Charlee6 rnv4 2rntf WANTED. TO BUY CITY SCRIP. POLICE SCRIP, - AND - ALL KINDS OF CITY INDEBTeDNESS. W. H. BARNETT. Broker. IS 8t. Charles street opposte St. Charle Hotel mrm r17