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INSURANCE 0. Nmr, f resident. I D. P. Uadmh. 1 W. U. Moot. I V. Fraaiaout Score utr- BLUI'P CITY Insurance Company, 285 Main St, HZ APHIS. - l I I : TESKISbLE, PUBLIC LEDGER. OinCS-Ko. 13 Midiboh Stbmt. MEMPHIHi Wednesday Evemlng-. Iee. 6,1876. JVie iubicription price oj ihe PUB LIC LEDGER it $3 per annum for the Daily, and $2 per Jar the Weekly Put iagefree. TEE FSESIDEST'a MEsSAOS. President Grant yesterday submitted his eighth and, es be fays, hie last a ( nual messaged Congress, and concludes by saying: " With the present Cengress. my official life terminates; it is not prob able that public affairs will ever again receive attention from me, further than as a citizen of the Republic, always taking deep interest in the honor, integ rity and prosperity of the trhole land." It is mainly devoted to a recapitulation of the events and c ffioial acts cf thepat eight years. It was, he says, his fortune or misfortune to bo called to the office of Chief Executive without any previous po litical training, and admits that he may have committed errors of judgment, but it teems to him oftener in selection! made of assistants on the recommen dation of others chosen directly from the people. He claims to have acted in evary instance irotn a consciousness and desire ta do what was right and con etitutional within the law, and for the very beBt interests of the whole people He alludes to the war a; a revolt against the government which had sympathizer in the North who received the protection of the government. President Lincoln fell a martyr to his patriotism at the hands of an assassin. The next four years was taken op with wrangling ever the best mode of reconstruction that is to say, he remarks, as to whether the gov eminent should pass into the hands of its late open enemies. lie bad sua tamed the plan ol reconstruction finally agrped opon, and urged the Legislatures cf the Slates that had not done bo to ratify the Fifteenth amendment. Taxes, he stys, have b-en reduced within the list stvtn years nearW three hundred million dollars. The national debt has been reduced in the same lime over $135,000,000 by refund' ing the 6 per cent, bonded debt for bonds bearing 5 and 4 per cent, interest, re spectively. The annual interest has been reduced from over f 1:10,000,000 in 1809 to but little over $100,000,000 in J8TG The balance of trade has been changed from over $130,000,000 agaiost the United States in 1869 to more than 120,000,000 in our favor in 1876 It is confidently believed that the balance of trade in favor of the United States will increase, and not diminish, and that the pledgs of Congress to resume specie pay ment ia 1879 will be easily accomplished. A humane policy baa been adopted to ward the Indians and a treaty which will settle the Black Hills difliculy awaits the ratification of Congress. Our re lations with foreign powers continue on a friendly footing. Congress has with held appropriations from some repre sentatives abroad at foreign courts.shich in the end he thinks will be expensive economy. Various matters relating to the various departments are alluded to, bnt the suggestions in reference thereto are of no particular importance. The army has been strengthened under an act of Congress. The navy ij in better condition than it has been at any time since the war. No allusion whatever ia made to the ua-j of troops at Southern elections; only a bare mention is made cf any disturbances in that section, and the only paragraph in the message worth quoting entire is the following: The attention of Congress cannot be too farnustly called to the necesnty of throwing some greater sarrguard over the method of choosing und declaring the election of i President UaJer the present system there seems to be no pre yided remedv for contesting the election in anyone State. The remedy it par tially, no doubt, in the enlightenment of the electors. The compulsory support of the free school system, and the disfran chisement of all who cannot read and write the English language, after a 6xed probation, would meet my hearty ap proval. I would not make this apply, however, to those already voters, but I would to all besoming so after the ex piration of the probation fixed. upon Foreigners coming to this country to become citizns, who are educated in their own language, would acquire the requisite knowledge of ours during the necessary residents to obtain tiomrali zition. If they did not do so, and take enough interest in our laneuai'e to ac quire a snflisient knowledge ol it to en- note them to etndy the institutions and hws of the country intelligently, I would not confer upon tbem the riiilit to nuke and enact laws to act upon those who did. There is nothing sigoificin! in the message from first to 1 tat. With the ex ception of a few lines, it sounds like it had been written by office clerks in the different departments aud pasted to gether. Colonel Jso. M. Fleming, of the Koorville Tribune, will address the State Teachers' Associution at Nashville on the 17ih of Jaauary, on " State and County Superintendents," a subject with which he is familiar, as he formerly held the position of State Superintendent of Public" Instruction, Thi Presidential electors of the State, as required by the constitution, will meet to ky at S'ashville, report to tha Gover nor, take the oath of office, and receive kcir certificates of election. THEATER OUilHED. Terrible Conflagration Los3 of Life. and lOTcr Seventy-five Codies Recov ored and as Many More i upposed to bo in the Kuius. Tha Audiance Becams Panic-Stricken and Closed ths Pass ages of Exit. rEw Iork, Decembers The Brook iyn theater burned to the ground to night. The fire originated on the stage nt nalt-past eleven o clock when the com pany was about half through the last act ot the Two Orphans. The fire spread with lightning rapidity and burst out through the door on Wash ington street. The panic and eonfasicm among the aodienca was terrible. A number of persons must be badly injured and some probably killed. Dieter s restaurant adjoining, and the post-rffice slightly damaged. The theater was owned by Kingsley Keeney aad others, and was rented to Shook 4; Palmer, of tbB Ucion Square theater, New York. The loss on the theater is about $250,000. At 1 o'clock the Cre was still bumins, but under per fect control. The ore was caused by the gas setting fire to the woodwork in one ot tb wings. The lire originated in the flies, which, while bLzing, foil on top of the scenery. One of the actresses came to the front of the btage, and said: "A small accident hai occurred, but don't be alarmed; only a piece of fly is on fire." At the men lion of " fire " thu audience rose to their fjet and male a rush for the doors. The smote soon became suffocating, and women fell faintiug in the aialeg and were trim pled over. Numbers jumped out of the windows and were severely injured. Three were picked up and sent to the Long Island College Hospital, and are not expected to live. A youog man who jumped out cf the w odow says that another man was with him when he wont :o the window, and while holding on with bis hands, and en deavoring to get out, became overpowered with smoke and fell back, and must have beenconsumid in the flimss. Dresses were tern from ladies wh la lying in the aisles and on the sidewalk outside. A large pile of dresses so torn from the buk and picVed up by the police, were in the police station, wext door to the theater. The theater company got out safely, except a fly mail named Chamber son who was bidly burned, and threw himself out of the window, ne will die DieW r's restaurant is badly damaged by water, bat not, as first reported, de stroyed The loss is mosily covered by insurance. Fnrllier 1'nrlleolitrn. New Yokk, December 6 Harry Mar dock, one of the leading actors in the Brooklyn Theater Company, is missing, aud is thought to have perished by the burniug of the theater last night. Sev eral residents of Brooklyn who are sup posed to have attended the performance last niuht have not returned to their homes, and it is feared that an examina tion of the ruins to-day will result in finding the charred remains of these missir.( persons. LATER. The fire in Brooklyn theater last nicbt wis attended by appalling loss ot life. I', is thought that not less than 100 per sons were killed in the msh to the exit or burned lo death, being unable to es cape. The fire broke out during the per formance of the last scene of the Two Orphass, in which Mies Claxton was playing ihe heroine. Ia five minntes mote the audience would have been dis- missd, and there would have been noth ing more sejious to record than the de struction of property. The bouse was about two thirds filled. those bfliw sitting well forward toward the stage. For those in the family cir cle, dres3 circle and galleries, there was no possible way of escape except by Washington street. The panic-stricken people rushel pell mell toward and down the tUirways. The main exit became immediately choked up and a scene of terror, confusion and distress ensued which begcars description. Just' above thi landine nlace nf th .,: woman in the crush had her font rn.t,. between the banisters and fell. The erod behind, forced forward by the tcr- ItGed peODlo Still fllrth,., kt,:.i t over her and piled on top of each other four ar.d five deep. The polics from the station house, nex t door, were promptly at the scene, but owing to the manner in which the peo ple were piled up on top of each other and massed together, they could extri oate comparatively few, and these were all bruised, bleeding and maimed. The firemen got to work on the ruin shortly .Iter delight this morning They succeaded in getting as far as le fall of the dress circle, where they found great number of bodies, and immedi ately began the work of removal, aud up tiil 11 o'clock sixty-five bodies had been recovered, and what appeared to be twenty or thirty more were seen ia the bisomeot, into which they had been pre eipitatcd by tho falling of the burning uoors. Adjoining the burned tbeator the names of eighty-six persons ml.n. from their homes h Kate Claxton, at the preliminary ex amination of the fire mhnhal, said; "At the begioning of the last act, just as tha cartam want up, I ,erd a rumbling noise on Ihe stage, and two minutes ifu. I saw the flamej and fire; the; teemed t I be all on thestaze. Mrs. Farren, myself, Mr. Studlry aad Mr. Murdoch were on the stage at this time. We four remained there and endeavored as best we could to quiet the audience and prevent a panic. I said to the people: 'Be quiet. We ere between you and the fire. The front door is open and the passages are clear.' Not one cf the audiecce jurcped on the stag?. The flames were then com ing down on us. I ran out and jumped over several people. Mr. II. S Mur doch, after endeavoring to calm the fears ' of the panie stricken psople, went to his dressing room to get bis clothing and must have bcea suffocated." Erooklys, December 6, 12 m. The number of bodies thas far recovered from the ruins is about seventy-five, and it is believed that as many more are still in the ruins. They are mostly those of the occupants of the family circle. The Brooklyn Eagle famishes the fol lowing in advance of publication: "The work ol identifying the dead will be diffi cult for most of them are burned beyond recognition. The only mode of identify ing will be by personal property found attached to the bodies. Thus far it is only evideat that tbeflunes made com mon havoc with men, women and chil dren." Shortly bafore 9 o'clock llev. Father Hanley visited the theater and amone tne bodies recognized the brother of Rv. Father Kylie. Father Kylie was present and recognized the body of his brother. The body was taken from ihs rains charred and blackened almost be yond recognition. In the breast pocket of his coat were a number cf cards hear ing the name "Abraham Barnett in German text. The bodies are constantly being re moved from the ruins and ari taken to the morgue as fast as possible. It is rumored that a nnmbar of at taches of the theater are burned.- It seems certain that Charles Lott and his son, who were stationed in the upper gallery, are among the lost. The actors aod actresses esciped from the stage iu'o Johnson street. J. W. Thorp, the stage manager, savs the fire occurred, in this wise: A drop was ignited from a border licht by some means inexplicable, as one was guarded from ihe other. He immedi ately directod stage carpenter Weaver and two supernumeraries to endeavor to extinguish the flme, bht the difficulty wis to reach the part on fire. The stage carpenter, with the supernumeraries, essayed to effect the object by lowering a drop and in so doing added fuel to the fl iraes. The scene, the last in the play, embraced a ceiled apartment, and the instant the burning drop came in ou tlet with the inflammable ceiling reivrd Uepreidthe existing flames in a flash as thoueb powder hai previously been scattered about. The scenery and the entire properties were iu a blazi. The usual avenues of escape were thus sum marily closed at the rear, and an exit, if at all possible, had to be raide by way ef the box entrance. All, except Der- Lhapjotie or two, thus escaped. It is now believed that ths number of dead will be about one hundred and tweotv- fiTB. The courts adjoumel this morning without transacting any business. There is intense excitement in the city, and business is partially suspended. The Pe.rk Theater has besn closed for the week. A meeting of the theatrical pro fessioo has been called for Thursday to concert measures for relief. Hon. Henry C. Murphy, a distinguished citizen of Brooklyn and well-known throughout the country, is among the missing. Wagon-loads of rouyh boxes are ar riving iu front of the theater and corpses are placed in them and covered with tarpaulin and carried to the morgue. The tcece grows more terrible every minute. Men and women are crowding the station-house and theater entrance making inquiry fjr missing friends. Iu some instaucos whuls families have perished. The bodies present every form of contortion, just as they stiffened in the last agony, when the floor gave way and they plunged down in the blind ing smoke and flames; arms and legs are bent and twisted ia every way, hands are clenched aud reach out as if grasping for help. The Post says that about 11 o'clock a horrible discovery was made. In the middle of what was the lobby of the thet'er lay an immense pile of rubbish, smoldering beams, fragments of gridtrs and other things. This heap was nearly opposite the principal entrance to the audjlory of the theater. Beyond it was another heap, marking the place where the stairs which led to the gallery fell uuuer me neap brtt mentioned a dead body was found; and the Grtrnen diligently prosecuted their search in this direction. With much labor some of the heaviest lumber was removed and a horrible Bight was re veiiled beneath. Corpses lay in rows heaped one upon the other packed to gether with fearful solidity, which told of the great pressure to which they hnd bsen subjected. How many lay there, what their sex or age, no man could tell, and at noon only guesses conld be made. Another actor, Claude Burroughs, is now reported missing. Thus far but three corpses have been identified-thoie of .Hugh Dover and Nicholas Keilcy, 117 Library street, and John Woods, 11 Fleet Plaoe. The Brooklyn Argus states that up to one o'clock ninety-four bodies had been taken from the ruins and others were Still visible, lying in l0Jl!r, four dcep The morgue Is completely flllod aud bodies ere now being carried to the old market building in Adams street They Cannot be recognised., Probabilities Washington, December, 6 -For Ten nessee and Ihe Qnio vallev olear pr fair weather durirnr the J Wednesday, with south to ..;',. falling barometer, possibly followed ihr the qight hy rising barometer. SOUTH CAROLINA. Wads Hampton will be Governor, By the Eternal 6cd, Or tlsej SliJl Have a Military Got eminent. Ths Sapremo Court Decides in Faror of Hampton's Legislature. mckoy tiril ert d lo Give C the Be- iai-K-Tt)l Gives Hie Driua erMi Legal Majority. Nw or.K, December S Gen. Wade Hamptoti in his speech in Columbia last night said to'the people: "I am sup ported by the property owners of the State and by the good men of all classes Two months fio I said I would submit my claims before the people of South Carolina, and if elected Governor that. j me eternal uoa, 1 would nave my place. Since theD, in epite of frauds and falsehoods, all the powers of the State gvernment and bavonels of Prf6i dent Grant, I have been by 75,000 white men and 17,000 colored men, chosen to be Governor of the State of South Caro lina, and Governor I will be. The ballot- box has announced the verdict of the people and I will bs their Governor or they shall have a military government." Special ts the Lsdgor.l Lolcmma, S. C, December 6 Tie Supreme Court has just issued an order rtq iiriug Mwkey, the Speaker of the R 'publican body, to deliver the election returns to Wallace, Speaker of the Dem ocratic House, which the Court says is the legal body. Sixty-three members bring certificates from the Board of Canvassers, and bave just beensworn in by the Democratic House, giving them a legal majority. CItE'JATiOX. Tho Process of Cremating the Body tf Baron De Palm Success fully Accompll'ha4. Pittsbcso, December G. The process of crenvatiog the body of the late Baron De Palm, at Dr. LeMoyne's crematory, was successfully accomplished this morning. The body arrived at the crt mAtory yesterday, and was placed on the caUfalqua in tho reception room of the crematory. The body was taken from the coffin and wrapped in white cloth. It weighed ninety-two pounds and was of chocolate color and perfectly odorless. The viscera had been removed, the eavi- ties being filled with a mixture of crys tals id carbolic acid and potter's clay. At 8:27 a.m..Dr. LeMoyne, Dr. Oadle, of Pittsburg, H. J. Newton and Colonel Ollcott, the two latter the Baron's execu tors, curried the body to the mouth of the retort. Colonel Olcott put on the body myrrh, Cessna, frankincense and cinnamon, and thi winding sheet was saturated with alum solution. Rosh, evergreens, sprays and immortelles were etrewn upon the body, and all was ready. Ths body was on a wire cradle, which, whsn in the retort, raised it abont two inches from the bottom. The door was opened, and as the body slid in a fume of smoke from the burnt ever greens roe from the body, a fainter odor of burning flesh pervaded the building, but no unpleasant feature appeared, and the process was pronounced a success in every particular. Observations every ten minutes disclosed the fnct that the remains rapidly shrunk in siza and pa3ed away in vapor and gases. At the end of the first ho"r the bones crumbled and the outline of the form was loet. At the end of the second bour the body was greatly reduced in size, tha larger bones and ribs only being visible, and would apparently crumble at the slight est touch. At 10:15 the crib was moved back into the retort two inches, and the whole rams crumbled. Colonel Olcott then pronounced the inceneration ended and complete. Io two hours and twenty minutes after this the retort had cooled. The ashes will be collected and placed in an urn provided for that purpose. But little local interest was manifested but the press was largely represented tho New York, Philadelphia, Cincinnati and Chicego papers being represented. A meeting will be held in the town hall this afternoon from two till five o'clock, for the discussion of cremation and in humation, in which Colonel Olcott, Dr, LeMoyne and others will take pirt. A VIorMa Item. New Yori, December 6 A Tallahas see dispatch anys Mr. Pasco, chairman of the Democratic committee, tele graphed Speaker Randall yesterday to hurry the committee up, as important witness were in the city, and could be held for a few days. FLORIDA FOR HAYES. A riaal "Count In" tor fheBfpab licna. Washington, December C The fol lowing is just received: "Tallahassee, December 6. The count io just Gnished. Hayes' majority is 930. The Republi cans elect the 'Governor, Lieutenant Governor and both members of Cvogre n. All quiet. Signed " Lew Wallack." Klver TelrKrantii, Cairo, December G A rrivcd-rRobert Mitchell, New Orleans, 1 a.m.; Belle Memphis, Memphis, 10. Departed Mitchell, Cincinnati, 2 a.m. Weather clear end cald. CixmxKATi, December 6 River fall I iog, Clear end uioderatiog. BlOGRil'lUCAL. PermnM Kkelrlipo of thi Member l Ibe loninu Uruerai Assembly of roaiacuee. Under this heading w propota to give, from time to time, a short eketch of etch member of the LegiiUturo.l GEOUUE B. PETERS, George Boddie Peters, jr , one of the six members elect from Shelby county te the lower house of the Legislature, was born at Bolivar, Hardeman county, Tennessee, January 11, 1850. He is of Scotch-Irish extraction, his mother being a Mc .Null and a near relation to Jas. Iv Polk. He was prepared for college in the schools nt bolivar, entered Washing ton and Lee University at Lexington Va., and remained at that institution irom ioib to isii), worn it was in its palmiest days, under the presidency of General Robert E. Lee; took a thorough collegiate course; received from the Graham Society of that college, in 1369, its gold medal for being its best debater; graduated in 1870 with high distinction, receiving the degree of bachelor of arts and delivering ths valedictory to his class. He graduated at the law school of the Cumberland University nt Lebi non, Tennessee, in 1S71, and began the practice of law at Memphis in the same yeir; was married in lisii to Miss Kate Greenlaw, of Memphis. At the Shelby County Demo cratic Convention hell September 15, 137-1, Mr. Peters was noaiinatej for the lower hfme of tie Legislature on tho first Fallot by an almost unanimous vo'e; ct the election November. 31, the sama year, he led the ticket and ls elected by a vote of 8719 over his next h'giest competitor for the same posi 01, a republican, who received 6103 majority for Peters 2610. He sertei in the Legislature of 1875 the Thirty-ninth General Assembly was a member of tho Judiciary and Finance Committees and chairman of the Com mittee on Commerce. He introduced a number of important bills during the session, and took an active part in push ing ihroujh the v irioua reform measures accomplished by that Legislature. This year he was renominated by the Democ racy of Shelby county by a very flat ter. n vote and went before the people tipjn his legislative record. Tne Conveatioa adopted a low tax plat form aid npen this he stood, at the same time favoring an adjustment of the Slate debt upon such a basis that the interest mig'Hbs promptly met and the bonds paid at maturity, aud opposing the doc trine of repudiation io every shape and form. Durini the canvass he made a number of tble aud effeclive speeches denning his position and views clearly and boldly. At the election on the 7th of Novjmb'r he azaia led the ticket by handsome majority, receiving 8557 votes. Mr. Ptten competitors received an average of abojt8100 votes. Tildsn's tj e wis 8536 Mr. Peters is tha only member of the la ?t Le;islature returned to the House. His experience, brilliancy and industry ill give him a leading position in the House. His name has been prominent'v sugeested in connection with the Speak ership, and although strongly jressed for that position by many friends, both here and in the other divisions of the ate, he has not yet signified his inten tion of runninz for the office. He was ften called te the chair during last ses sion, and presided with that e33 and presence of mind and readiness which characterize him at all times. In church matters Mr. Peters is an EpiscDpalian. In social lif;, genial and easy of address; at the bar and before the people, esteemed and respected; pos sessing a liudable ambition, based upon merit and capacity, and baing fiuely edueated he is regarded as one of the rising men of the State. The vote of Shelby county at tho No vember election stood: For President Tildn,8536; Hayes, 8127. For Governor Po.-ter (Democrat), 6845; Thomas (In dependent Democrat), 9670. For'Con greas, Tenth distriet, Casey Young (Dem ocrat), 8503; W. M. Randolph (Republi can),8092. For lower house of the Legisla ture the bghest vote received by a Demo crat, George B. Peters, 8557 ; highest received by a Republican, I. M. Hill (elected), 8183. Average vote cast for Representatives, six in number, about 8100. A new island, hitherto unknown te geographers, has bean disncvered at the mouth of the Siberian river Yeneai, by Professor Nordem-sjgid, the Swedish traveler. It ij about Hurt j-faur English milei'in length. INSURANCE.. HERNANDO Insurance Co, MEJIP5JIH. Oilice : No. 22 MacHaoa Street. 9. 11. DtlNROOMB W. K. HAhURKAIil V. M. NtLiiuN -.....Fres'lent, Vio-Prniient. Senroturr. nimtaaorat ryNsosaB. . w. b. j aljirkath. A . VArriA hi, T . . h, HAN Ai'KK. It. t. COCHRAN, W. IS. MALLOKI, JOE BRUCE, J. A. till AN B, n. s. ioars. W.S, TAYLOR. tnearrn ftRMnM l.on hr Fire, Sin. fia wnd Klv r Kimfca. sr Rltki oa Private DwelUnn MpoMnlly LECAL. '.Trust Halo. TIT VIRTUE OP A DEED OP TRI'ST OP V ,r'""ri' ,n no1' H, rKei 62. 61 and At u'f m.detomeaa I routed, to ffouro cnrliiin in deblodnen mentioned therein, I will, at tho ru lueit of tho bone&ciariea, tell on NiilnrJay, Jannary C, 1877, t the touthet corner of Mole arid Mndinnn trceU, la the city of Menllii. t 12 o'clock m.. at publio auoiion, to tbe hUhem bidder forcH'li, tho outhwet quartenif neoilon2d' In tcwnnhlp 1. range wet ba il meridian, I hiciliai. oeaaion, and the lmpreveinonta thereon. Equltjr of redemptioe waivfd. i lie title U belirijnd to be gr.ad, but 1 tell and will eonvr ai 'liurUi iy. KH'J J. N. FORD, Tiuatee, Blankets! Blankets! Blankets! henkesTbrothbrs INVITE ATTENTION TO THEIR LARGE STOCK OF FINE AND MEDIUM BLANKETS Good 10-4 IVLito Blanfccts, per pair, Better 104 Wltito Blankets, per pair, Extra Hoary Blankets, per pair, : 12-4 Oregon Blankets, per pair, : Shaker Flannels, Red Medicated Flannels, Home-made "White Linsey. JLaOUIS XUES, . DEALER IN STOVES, TINWARE, And House Furnishing Gcods. Also on hand a full line of miin:is HAilDWARE, 394 Slain Street, Memphis, Tenn. BST Onr assortment of -n ddS wood nrniji,. ... . cliy. All klndior-l'iu Worlt..neh. li.mr:,!US. Mt . lVfc,.. p., NlMtrf n'-t ETTQ No, 305 Main Street. p REDUCE STOCK WK WILL SELL Gunpowder, 75n. tl. beit $1 25: Or.n,,&V.te? COFFEES. Old Oov. Jva, 35c; ACrU.in, 4V; Mooho. 40c: Jvoatied or Uround.5o extra. .., AVliolo ana Ground k4 plccs of oil Vniw i- TillB CELi:ilKATEI Il7fll'ltivi navn offsr a liberal discount to tho trade, and Store, TVo. G. H POMTIROY Sr. CO. PEOPLES INSURANCE' (TnfflPAWv Cf Hwipliip, Tcnn., Office, No. 16 Madison Street. ' Cash Capital, : J OPFICKItSi ,r v . DIIIECTOU81 "..".omwon 11, T, Lemon, C. li. ChaMi tnock J-.n-ky. John Uverton, Jr.i T W.E i'"i-'i"u- nm nil c m. of hnsinoM JEWELERS L0ID & FEITZ, NO, 224 MAIN STREET. Holiday Goods! AND PRESENTS! BRIDAL Bin JEVELRY AN3 EiLVERWfiRE, Latast Styles and Lowest Prices, Treble-PIatod I Silr-erTabl8 KniTeg flt v pr coz'D. EAN0LNE bUB, STOCK AND SELECT SOON A FOKTfwi; I'lUOM.Tovr it... uary2!u77.'ttt cw Orleans. Tuc.day. Jan- i.oalsiaiM Mat, Lolfnry Company. This n-titiit,on wag roiu!ar!y incorporated by the Lricrlnture of tho ,-tito for IMnea M.00-XIK) to which it bun tince uddcd n r x , ,c, faP' of M- " S O It AN D SING LK moW""'18? U1 Plat"! inn .,?r'.,:11' ,v R P. 13,000, lCATITALPU.'ZK. '71 riu.ts.s .4)500 - 10,0 0 fi.'OO ... 2.rm ... 2,000 ... 2.f)W ... 2.MJ0 ... fi.mo .. ft ooo ... 6,0(10 ... ti.OOn .. 6,000 IO ., 075 450 1 t'Kl.K.. 1 " ., 1 2 5 fill' (I (to ', "i i lil f,0 1() SO ltKI tm fiO M l.WJU ArraoxiMATMp,' rumrs; 9 Apprii'luiaiion l'ri'.e ot tl'O 2 :; I f 0 .... 1,803 Priie. nmniintini: to... trjj w CUAs. T. llyWAKD. Now Orleans. La. I ?-?',Tilftl!Tl"lI),l",M n February ,i?V-.o1.1rit l0ech. Capiul 1'riie tJO.000. NQX'SCE ! Sr. I.nnx, November 10, 1576. "yE UAVK I'lus da y. APPOINTED Orgfil Brothers & Co. fjoltJ AtJtMttM For tho Sale of Our Cilrbr.Ued UIAM3?J3 AriTI'FrtlCTON METAL AMI JOURNAL BEARINGS, Who will gnprly the Triide Btid Consumeri at Mauulaclurcm' I'ricce. Diamond Anti-Friction Uetul Co. 7 t "8 POH POMEiia. hllOW BILLS, CABUs L tirftilBra,elo..aottcn nowiil, il,l,., nyie or tynee and on euicrior .rr of any dnjired color. o to the Lodgu '.offioeland e auiiut tUckJaudlprioe. LOT'iERY. : -0 : $2 00 : : $2 75 $3 50, $1, $5 : $10 00 AT TUB FOLLOWING TRICES FOR A FEW TEAS. Jspan.TOa, fl. bout $1 S1-.: Oolonif.Mn.T.'in 1 k..( ti .-. - - -.-i-v, luiatu, uvu, IV J, 91, 001 boat U2fi rWaTti,.,, oi... m..i.-l. o.. t solicit mtrS ,,r .. ?ie our lca6t 1 owdor- Wei 365 Main Jtr 61-138 1 : : : $300,000 J. B. Rob) Ktnm Greenlaw. noa property jn.nrod unnn mn.t f1Vnn,lile tBrir... WATCHMAKER. MARBLE MOJ.fuilEJiTS -DODOHT ATI !HI DNKUUP:r HALE or- ilnldoon, Rr.ilett & Co., -WILL BC Jl.OSKO OUT AT LOWER KA7.ES THAS .1IA2BLE WAS Ever Offered in this City Before. THE STOCK E'ilBH A(!E3 ITALIAN WAR. TAJiH!ircMOh,,JENT'i(- 1UiAU SftUKS. lAKi.lv IS, and a lino variety of work aa L'ble for children'! itraves. This toch: added to what I firorioai.ly hnd on hand civet me one of thlnrgonand be.st sc'.ccted ossartmeett of tnarule in tbohoiith. Prices ere reduoodto tho lowest li.in? ralos, and aU iuv wiertt U KDoa-nooiutl. TH0S. MA.VDffF.LL, 3S Tnlon st. 7f-t BUTCHERS. lip I'liMnp. 7 . ib (Iirjp'd Engliih). II. SEES S- rSB.v&S0, Cornpr ol SeoonJ and Jefferson streets. 64-89 BOLOGNA SAUSAGE ! II. BKESiEL, SR., Sc SON, Can supply the trade with fresh 1IULOG.YA Nf.lSACJE At lowsura 5. Cornpr of Secoml nud JelTergoii Hts. 4 -19 FUWNjrrujfte. etc. flOW ABRIViriG : Carpets, Furniture, Matu-osses, OiiClotbs, Shades, otc, AT VERY LOWEST TRICES, WHOLESALE AJ RETAIL, iIi:U)MTFJI&l0 . SgO JTnjn St. PFESSIIOWAL. I. .1. ltiijol3i2 Attfirrej-at-Law, (C-Jj o