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mm vs paris. jrcoED BT r ' AE18tA!i8 ~ I .rtnnxD in pastile. I _ _ , _ , . ... . I t ffraaa wDr^lar Owreepoodent of the New York ! Paws, tlept 19.—Paris is still at the sea* MnerNw it will be given up to the Attire seaside women bathe like men, it* dam hooting field women carry guns Ufas m. The huntress Diana is no longer a svftb, 4 EMp( that the huntress Diana went naked «a the woods and prairies, while our I y** 1 * armed with fowling-pices, fol - 1 ithe «hase m a serious costume. Two j ywiBKA me-Kin« who started to-day for the I conducted their operations I ~>tih«foU<»w(iig costume: I P*»« the brunette American a veston of t velvet, the color of burnt bread ; I * —■ gathered at the knees ; leggings | (mm (Ml «ff ywtUwv feather, and leather bootees; a tnloaad skirt with pink stripes; a melon hat onaaentaf with a pheasant's wing, and •Swedisb graven. F* tke American blonde a tunic of olive «ni mi outnuere, sleeves of gray silk, trim aung and collar green, fastened with frogs •and gywm olives; by the side hangs a chata . . - . of Jtassia leather; skirt of steel-gray I j wth largo hollow folds beginning at the I * pnnoesshat of green felt, with a gray «■mac the si de fixed by a bird of Paradise. To«* should have seen them going through 8 mr ensnsM with a charming little gnn, a iwwei from an Eoglish workshop. They ft vnwnd tfc «y would do more slaughter than the MtNBotaA? Frenchwoman. 1 fmwd^uwt now a Parisian man and wo- 1 very freely of the Americans. I to to a Parisian, the American woman Mthtiiss 4th if Paris from the point of view cfoMMr.ofgsjety, and of pleasure. "See,' aaàd to, •• (be American sooiety has dosed its *ad started by express in all direo- I I-hf «Migration makes a great void in 0 Pane.for it lias taken in the oapital a mo-t place. The finest hotels of the R ««arten belong to Americans—the ®.*■*** tbrnFaynea, the Simms, the Hrniths, ® ons J ®°* .. . . , I ahafosat bases of cor theaters relong to I <ka gfUm a lorgnettes of Boston and New •£«*. Trie finest turn-outs in the Champs BIjwms and the Bois belong to Americans ; who would wear toilets which turn all «*»? * nd the opera if not the in m* w bo are the amateurs who buy 1 b«st pi stares and objects of art ? Such j M * r< . tewart aDl * ^ r * ^tebbins. SStuUg, »ko tarnish the most splendid dow , tor ^ nobility of tie Faubourg St. Gimms? Always Young America. But vieooe m Paris only brings out to w aCmogiy the Anglo-Saxon character of I efa ® 14 ofc * n F e9 the women into exagger '****^ Partaiatt*. I he most extravagant toilets *.* r r ,nl young American. _ I if rham disheveled chignons ander improb- to * 7 *** ™ke *"* w always the first to display «beta; sod se to those ear-nngs representating Isnunofiv««, steamers, and omnibuses, are I are aM theta the inventions of Chioago and vestkuigttai 'But, said the yonng Parisian I poor ' we «in Bay this for them; the Amerioan I ig I Parts, in compensation for her tni.iti€ 8 , has two eminent qualities I Mit nofa «^«-feierice^ her actions an n reme tategptiysxrf absolute certainty in her rela- out Far instead of scandalizing each other I tal ww too often do, the American women sus 4 ^..^ defend each other with unshaken Swebey. liiey have the esprit <le corps to the bigfMMC point, *nd if any one dares to lack in • 3 t ta on« of them, he baa soon the whole I " «tira heels. The trench women would shoot jitay an eaârely different part in our country * ■obdanly. out TTie toengnera have supplanted the Parisian f ron <m otiwr dsya, it is true, but the Parisian of | «n-4wy ta nuira eccentrio than the Americana. 'Efha PwtrtAO of other days would not bave wbu on her head a basket of flowers and linkt, she would never have worn a miller's bal. or « tailor's, perched on her cbigaon. She «fed not cry ont, "Look at my dress, wMafe haa taken forty yards of stuff " She pnrawd arienply, and it was enough for her to Cm relied « woman comme ü faul. Bat we Immo changed all that. Now, the Parisian «■■nan travels in Italy, in Switzerland, in t lunmaoy, in England, in Ireland, and brings hmk eeoeatricities which she Parisianizes to bar taking. The results, in toilet and man n«a have made of Paris a cosmopolitan city, -and the «enter of nnbridled luxury and napmae elegance. * • * Our actrasses are becoming onriosities of ■*rt «■ well as onr women of pleasure and woiMi of fashion. It is hard to oompute Cbe tune which they must pass morning and tanning before their Rlassas. It is said that thmjf are establishing schools of design and of IMtad in convents, as painting the faoe has Cnsmsne the necessary part of every yonng gi*T « «donation. They mast paint their eye tMsnn that eyelashes, their cheeks, their hwaty-tpats and their lips, and they do it talk• nelly remarkable talent. "It is en tirety natural," said Madeleine Brohsn, " be «tM painted on nature. There are those nrba pax on red and those who put on white, mctading to the expression which they wish Ar < 1 * 8 - To« will hear sometimes an imperii "ir-by observe in the street, 'There i^has paid for two cents' worth of Happy lovers paint themselves and, ««happy lovera paint themselves white; nilmn is precious to stricken souls. " Th« cleverest peint themselves with an *t ma delicate that they do not appear to be ]Miatod.~ "What, my dear," said an old . Qne hota to her daughter-in-law, " yon, too, pta on r ed a nd white? " "Yes, it is to oor vnnt tlM fi snlts of nature. I suppose in your Mptm feed no need of painting." But the I «tight have replied that people throughout antiquity. Sappho put Ik to soften the heart of Phaon. i p«t on rouge to conceal the ravages At Some, when generals entered the 'ritp bt trinup \ they bedaubed themselves in **ben «rf'^fy viotory. Mile. Guimard said to Mnrahal Stebelieu, who reproached her for nexatiog henelf at twenty years of age: " The " — 11 generals put on red paint on days when they entered Rome in trinmph; is not •wrary d*y for me a day of trinmph ? " <st imracra of Josephine and Marie Louise. fJScme Greenwood in the New York Times.] «khr feiend, the old French lady of whom I already spoken, says of Josephine : -~tlfea was not pretty, but she was the most qpatatel woman in the world." Of Napoleon, «to i— a b « remembers as First Consul and as JSogpocos; «lie gives a singularly vivid descrip «fiowL She says that though in youth he was «fein and tallow, and in middle ago stoat and p s K feta taas always had a strange beauty— «tara» ymt delicate; something almost fearful. -Es «pas were like bine steel, yet. when at «■BV they had on absent, dreamy look; it was erbest they regarded yon that yon felt •JfeM T p ower; then something cold and sharp jMBtaed to pass'through yon. **Hta Saely curved ohin was firm as marble, 'bat it bod • dimple fit for a young girL Ho , beautiful mouth, wbioh seemed to smile and never smiled. His I abrupt and startling; it made one ibis if he only said Bon jour. There was iag enaf.hdi about him, even in his He played roughly, especially £mprese Marie Louise, whom he child, sometimes tossing her in ; carrying her down stairs on his *!f Mona Louise she said: " Her neck and tmma menu due, ber complexion was not bad, hat «h« had an ngly face, unmeaning eyes, amd a vile ooaei" The old lady startled me feg adding that as a wife and mother that '■-'TBB'* At tar .wcaa ctinrsniretL&jt. tire " ind my at yonr string son, we'll men the not vailed had " ness," going to get " " would fellow, derer Kerr. him." name. illegally pledge for " " all world make that jail instead Kerr, He and the qnietly warmly wife for them. lett told Kerr's affair of for I to week, and sell care counters heard rience sense bestuw.' KERRS FIRST SPEECH. [From the New York Mercury.] ~ I Now that Hon. Michael C. Kerr, or as they I call him in bis own Hooeier State, "Mike . I Kerr," has been elected Speaker of the Fed York ^ Hoase of Beprerantativer, it may not be ! uninteresting to relate the somewhat sensa tional afifiir which first attracted public at tention to his remarkable qualities. It was a good many years ago. Kerr had just hung out his shingle as a lawyer in New Albany, Indiana, and was waiting for clients. One of bis first esses was a suit which had to be ar sea* to the men, guns longer a went our I gu" e d'at Paoli, In' Orangé coôn"y7 pToH Vas fol - 1 then a wretched little village of a hundred in Two j habitants, or so. The only decent building the I j n n besides the court-house was the United I States Hotel, a large frame-house, of which I .Mr. Godfrey Harrison was the landlord. of This Harrison was a sort of adventurer, bread ; I Although not forty years old he bad been in leggings | business all over the country. Finally be|had a hat and olive trim frogs chata opened a grocery store in the thriving rail road town of Seymour, and there he had taken a leading part in lynching a gang of outlaws, among whom was the eldest Keno, whose five brothers were afterward summarily executed by a vigilance committee at the same place. Harrison was known to the . Reno boys, as they were called, to have ad I j anted the noöse round their eldest brother's the I neck, and they had sworn to take the txecu gray tioner's life for it Mysterious assassins had re p ea tedly fired upon Harrison after dark, through 8 nd finally, owing to the supplications of his a wife, he had sold out his store in Seymoar They ft „d movod to Paoli, where he had bought the the above mentioned hotel. When " Mike " Kerr arrived there in the wo- 1 evening preceding the day on which be was I to argne his case, he was the only guest at the woman United States Hotel. He went to bed at an view early hoar, and was awakened about mid "See,' night by a furious pounding against the front its door. He listened a few moments and heard direo- I parties in front of the hotel shouting, "Come in 0 ut, Harrison ! Yonr hour has oome now ! mo-t The Keno boys are here. Remember Jake the R e no. Come out, or we will bnrn yonr house down t •• To these calls were added horrible oaths, and the pounding was renewed with I redoubled violence. Suddenly Kerr's door to I opened, and the landlord, pale as a sheet, New gapped in: .. Mr. Kerr," he said hurriedly, » my deadly ; enemies are at the door. They want to re all venge themselves upon me for participating the in the lynching of Jake Reno at Seymour. buy 1 They have sworn to kill me, and if they get Such j nt0 the house they will do it. " " But will they get in ?" asked Kerr. dow- " They can not very easily," replied Har St. rison; " for the front and back doors are well But secured, and it will be very difficult for them out to open the window shutters." of I «< Wbat kind of arms have you in the house ? " asked Kerr. " Only a double-barreled rifle, and I doubt I if the people in the village wonld dare to come to my assistance. They knew the desperate character of the R-mo boys too well." "Humph!" seid young Kerr, "then we are I are in a pretty bad box here ! " and " Yes, we are," replied the landlord. "My I poor wife, who has been ailiDg for some time, I ig now half dead from terror, and the two her servant girls are on their knees in the kitchen, I prayiog for help." reme Kerr reflected a moment, then he jumped rela- out of bed, and hurriedly dressed himself. I " What are yon going to do ?" asked Har sus- rison. " I am going out into the yard, and shall the speak to the fellows," replied Kerr, quietly. in • * For God's sake, don't !" said Harrison. I " They are a desperate crowd. They will shoot you like a dog !" •• I will risk it," rejoined Kerr, and slipped out of the back door. Going round into the f ron t yard he saw in the dim moonlight four of | young fellows bnsily engaged in building a and She to we in to of of it of I : tire in dangerous proximity to the front door. Wnen they caught sight of his slender, straight form, oue of them shouted to him, " Halloo, who the deuce are you ?" " I am Michael C. Kerr, from New Albany, ind who are yon ? ' " My name's Billy Reno, and them three is my brothers." "What are you making so much noise for at this unseemly hour ?" asked Kerr, with the utmost imperturbability. "Stranger," replied Billy Reno, "mind yonr own business. We've come here to string that infernal scoundrel Godfrey Harri son, who murdered onr brother at Seymonr; we'll hang him on this ere tree, so we will !" "My friend," said Kerr, "there are four men with wives in the home, Why don't they show fight, then?" yelled the Rsno boys. "I will tell yon," replied Kerr; "they have not fired upon you yet because I have pre vailed upon them not to do so until after I had spoken to you." Kerr's fearless manner had evidently im pressed the four outlaws. " What do you want to say to us, then, stranger ?" asked Billy Reno, after a panse. "That you are engaged in a very poor busi ness," replied Rerr, bluntly. "All yen are going to accomplish by your violence is to frighten a sick lady, who is in the honse, half to death, besides standing a good chance to get killed ourselves. " " Stranger,'' said Billy, after another pause, " yon seem to be a man of sense. Bnt would you let your brother.be murdered by a fellow, and then do nothing to the mur derer ?" "Who murdered your brother?" asked Kerr. "Why, Harrison. He was one of the lynchers at Seymour. We have sworn to kill him." "Look here." said Kerr, "I told you my name. I am a lawyer in New Albany. If Mr. Harrison had a hand in putting yonr brother illegally to death, you come to me, and I pledge you my word that I will prosecute him for it, and it shall not cost you a cent, either." The boys were silent. " Besides, " added Kerr, raising his voice, " all of you are very yonng men, I see. The world is open to you. It is easy for you to make a good living. Yon onght to know that violence will sooner or later bring yon to jail or to the gallows ! Don't be fools, and, instead of risking yonr lives in a fruitless and oowardly undertaking, go home and behave yourselves. If you will do so, I, Michael C. Kerr, will help you whenever you need my services." He had become quite eloquent by this time, and when he had closed bis impressive appeal the Reno boys shook bands with him and qnietly left the place. We need not say how warmly the landlord and his poor frightened wife thanked the courageous yonng lawyer for the important service he had rendered them. When Kerr, on the following evening, lett tor home, Godfrey Harrison insisted upon accompanying him to New Albany, where he told a number of citizens all about Mike Kerr's plucky speech to the outlaws. The affair became the town talk. Kerr got plenty of clients in consequence, and a few months afterward he was elected prosecuting attorney for I loyd comity—the first step on the ladder to distinction and fame. Tua Confidence of Dress.— Ralph Waldo r.mersOD, in bis new book published this week, says: "If a man has not firm nerves and has keen sensibility, it is, perhaps, a wise economy to go to a good shop and dress bim sell irreproachably. He can then dismiss all care from his mind and may easily find that performance an addition of confidence, a fortification that turns the scale in social en counters and allows him to go gaily into con versations where else he had been dry and embarrassed. I am not ignorant—I have heard with admiring submission the expe rience of the lady who declared 'that the sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a tranquility which religion is powerless to bestuw.' " the for law and tion this, mi in who men their have have the ment ing They ous of years in work that in of sas and a tbeir sippi and has of lous ing Mr. the His reform, danger the ing. Moses work We that the the atives wrong local from 23 d. at The has floesse the an ferior. upper the Diana, The French where and forced, is limit. more of upon In equal haps that been taste not a of now that marches age heavy ot an An the spares wind. Did morning, yonr to you was a they be at a of ar in in of ! W7/0 SHOULD RULE IN THE SOUTH. While we belive that in most of tbe North ern States a preponderance of the intelligence, the high purposes, the honeet motives and the enlightened coqscienoe of the eitizens has hitherto been at work in the Republican party, and is still to be found there, - and while we believe that the great interacts of the nation as a whole are likely for some years to come, to be safer in the keeping of that party than if given over to its opponents, we have been convinced by the events of tbe last few years and are more and more confirmed in the eon viction every day, that men of the Conserva tive party in tbe Southern States are mach bet ter qualified to control their local administra tions, and are able and disposed to give those States mach better governments than they have ever had or have any hope of securing through what is spoken of there as "Radical rule." There the state of things is the con verse ol that in the Northern States. The intelligence, the culture, tiie best motives, and the most conscience are to be found as a rule in the Conservative party. In general, too. we believe that tbe motives of those who make up that party are parer and the pur poses higher than those which have animated their opponents. And aside from any theo retical considerations, they form the active and responsible body of the citizens, and their interest is in good government The native Southerners, who, by tradition and the stress oi events and circumstances, find themselves so generally in opposition to the Republican party, have every possible incentive for desiring well-ordered cemmuni ties, settled industries and a state oi things which shall foster the growth and develop ment of their material interests and the pro motion of peace and prosperity. They have every reason to wish lor wise, stable, economical and efficient governments, for all they have and all they can hope for de pends on this. It wonld also be conducive to their well-being to do right by all their citi zens, conceding to them equality before the law and exact jastice in all their relations, and we have no donbt that a very large por tion of them are willing and anxious to do this, and that this sentiment will extend with every passing year. They have among them many of the worse elements of sooiety, ignorant, prejudiced and brutal, which cause a deal ot mischief and obstruct their better purposes, but they will bring these more and more into subjection, until they will be no more troublesome and mi 8 ceievous than the corresponding elements in other sections of the oountry. On the other band, the " Radicals " of the South have been made np largely of negroes, who mean well in the main, but are densely ignorant on the snbject of political duties and responsibilities, and easily led by designing men and adventurers from other parts of the country whose purpose has been to advance their own fortunes regardless of the interests well-being of the States in which they have settled. Their leaders and managers have in most oases proved themselves to be unscrupulous tricksters or unconscionable villains. Tne Radical governments of the Southern States which were inaugurated nnder the re construction acts turned out to be in most cases the most outrageous parodies on free govern ment ever tolerated by intelligent men. Ex travagance, recklessness and official plunder ing characterized them from first to last They burdened those exhausted ' L 'JL dis heartened communities with taxes t griev ous to be borne, they piled upon them loads of debt which will hamper their energies for years to come, and they m^uansged affairs in the most disgraceful way. As soon as the Conservatives succeeded in wrenching one of those States from the clutches of the plunderers, they began the work of reform, and there can be no question that tbe government of Georgia, for instance, in the last two or three years has been a vast improvement on what went by the name of government nnder Bullock. Arkan sas was in a state of ohaos and disorder, and suffered from wretched maladministration until the Con servatives succeeded in trailing and adopting a new constitution and electing a Governor of tbeir own. There is little doubt that Missis sippi and Louisiana, nnder Conservative gov ernments, would begin that career of peaoe and recuperation which has been so aus piciously began in their sister States. The single case in which a Southern State has escaped from abominable misgovernment without overthrowing " Radical rule " is that of South Carolina. After a series of ridicu lous and shameful burlesques on State ad' ministration, all tbe better elements, know ing it to be hopoless to attempt to eleot a Southern Conservative, united in support of Mr. Chamberlain, a Republican and a man of Northern birth, who has proved to be what the best of Republicans are in the North. His administration has been one of thorough reform, honesty and t fficienoy, but there is danger that South Carolina can not maintain the position which she has succeeded in gain ing. The recent election of ex-Governor Moses and Mr. Whipper as Cironit Judges indicates that the old influences are still at work trying to pnll the State back into its de gradation. We wish, for the sake of the Republicans, that it were otherwise, bat we are forced to the conclusion that at present it is better for the Southern States to have the Conserv atives in the ascendency. They may be wrong in some of their views on national questions, but they give the States far better local governments tban they have ever bad from Republicans.—Boston Daily Globe Dec. 23 d. French and American Women. Albert Rhodes in bis book, "The French at Home," says; The face of the American woman is more beantifnl tban that ot any other country. It has delicacy of coloring and feature, and floesse and intellectnality in expression; bat the body supporting tbe bead, regarded from an artistic and hygienic point of view, is in ferior. For breathing and digesting, the upper part is lacking in depth. In a word, the American is more fragile; she is hardly a Diana, and the Frenoh is something more, although not the Hebe of Rubens. The American has more intellect than her French sister, bnt the latter has softness where she ha« pertness. There is nervous ex citability and cleverness in one, mellowness and equality of character in the other. The forced, brilliant vitality of woman in America is snbject to fits of reaction, for natnre has its limit. In the French woman the mind is more even and cheerful, and in the absence of exhanstive and irregular demands made upon it, the uniform health is better. In qualities of pnrely mental character the equal of the American woman cannot per haps be found in the world; bnt with all her knowledge and intellectual activity, she lacks that which made tbe Greeks what they have been and the French what they are—organic cultivation. Entwined in these words are taste and art. A riper civilization, though not a purer, shall invest her with a knowledge of these tbingB and a barmony of character now possessed; and with it will come, ahs ! that decadence in morals which always marches on the heels of the Beautiful in every age and in every climate. It is sad that such heavy tribute should be exacted as the price ot an added enjoyment, but art is inexorable. An economical party explains that March is the cheapest month to travel in, as nature spares the voyager the trouble of raising the wind. Did yon ever come down stairs on Sunday < morning, and ask yonr wife to pat a button on yonr wristband, but what she lifted her eyes to heaven, and with clasped hands, assured you that, when that shirt was put away, there was a button on it ? |1 I. D. S for and has we than been bet The a to to do BUSINESS DIRECTORY. America« (Waltham) Watch«*. A-If. HTLL, JIWELER, 8« St. CHARLES 8TKXBT Solid Geld Casea, 160; Stem Winden, ISO Aaellcaccra. A JH. PONS, »0 Camp street, will sell every Tw* day, Thursday and Satnrday, at 10 A. M. FRANK SHARP, No. lT)Poydrae atreet;dallyoale< Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Satnrday. Boots and Shoes. H. MUMME, 55 Magazine street, corner St. Vary, and 451 Dryades street. Boots, Shoes, also, Hats and Tranks. Blacksmiths, Wheelwrights, Etc. KA8SEL, PH., corner Dryades and Delord streets. Work done promptly and reasonably. _ JO RDON A SHAULES, corner Grossman ant Front Levee streets. Also steam pipe fitting, etc. Brokers. _,*• H. LEVY a CO., las Gravier street Gold an t 8ilver, Stocks end Bonds. Bar Rooms. „ SALOON," 5 Decatur street, oppoalt» Post Office, S. F. Hun roe. • Blind, Mash and Boor Factory. _R08ERTS A CO., 229 Gravier street, Cabins Dwellings, Storehouses, etc., made to order. Billiard Saloons. MILLER'S BILLIARD SALOON, oor. St. Chariot and Common. Miller Brothers, Proprietors. Only Galley, 1 second to tl 50 14 none. Card Photocrnphs ir dozen, at PETTY'S First-class urbon street, near Canal. Our work Cordage, Woadeaware, Demijohns, Eto. MORRIS, J. C., 42 and 44 Tohoupitonlas street Paper, Brushes, ''ricking, Brooms, Matches, eto. Corn-Mills and Feed Mtcrcs. STOCKTON, G. W., 283 and 285 Rampart street Hay, Corn, Meal, eto. Feed ground to order. Clothing, Etc. H. B. STEVENS A CO., Fashionable Clothlen and Men's and Boys' Furnishing Goods, 135 Canal 8PKOÜLE A McCOWN, 42 and 44 St. Charlet street—Fine Clothing and Gents' Furnishing Good* Cordage, Cotton Dock, Bolt Hope, etc. D. L. KANLETT A CO., 24, 2« and 28 New Loves, oor. Gravier. Tatharo's Shot. Oriental Powder, Capa Coal Oil and Coal Oil Lamps. PUROLINE AND PORTABLE GAS LIGHÎ CO., Wm. E. Jervey, Supt., 95 and 97 Gravier street. Foot Hurgeon. DR ATWELL. Foot Surgeon, 101 Canal street. Cures Corns, Bunions. In-growing Naiis. jal» Grocers. RICKBRT, F., A CO., 65 Tohoupitoulas Wholesale Grocer and Commission Merchant. Gold Pea Manufacturers. A. M. HILL, 86 St. Charles street. Repointing 7.>ets Solid Gold Pearl and Rubber Pencils, Pioks, eto. Hay, Corn, Onto and Bran. WM. SCHINDLER, Hay, Corn, Oats and Bran at lowest market rates. 179 Tchoupitoulas street Hides and Tallow. HAY A MTCTTT.lt , Wholesale Dealers. N. O. BUTCHERS' HIDE AND TALLOW CO 193 Sooth Peters street. Hats, Caps, Eto. ADAMS' O. O. D. Hat Store, 26 St. Charles street Trunks, Traveling Bags and Umbrellas. Liquor Dealers. BEHAN, THORN A CO., New Levee and 14 Tchbupitoulas, wholesale deai ers, Highwines, Spirits, Aleohol, Brandy, Gin. Lumber. MÄHEN, EDGAR L., yard oor. Bienville anr Peters ate.—Sawing of all descriptions to order. MOFFETT, A. W., yard and mill on Levee, ons square below Canal street. P. O. Bot 2RO* Notaries. TRIST A CUVELLIER, 140 Gravier street, be tween St. Charles and Camp streets. Plambto«, Goa Fitting, Ranges and Pomps. SULLIVAN A BULGER 115 Poydraa street, neai Camp. Also sell the Bara tow Range. Oils, Lamps, I,on terns, Chandeliers, etc. J. H. SCOTT, Oils, Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers and Lamp Goods, 68 Common street. Planes, Organs and Moste. PHILIP WE RLE IN, 78, 80, 82 and 90 Baronne street. Toning and repairing attended to. Shirts nod Gents' Furnishing Goeds. R T. WALS HE, 110 Canal street, near St. Charles Makes Shirts to Order in any Style. Beales and Safes. FAIRBANKKS A GO., U Gamp strata NORRIS, JNO. W.. 27 Canal street, General Southern Agent for Diebold, Norris A Co. Sogar*, Molasses, Byraps, ete. BARR, JNO. J. A CO., 20 and 22 Peters street, op posit« Customhouse. Wholesale dealers. Bevring Machines. L G. BERRY, Agent for New American Sewing Machine, 180 Canal street. jalS GREGG'S DEPOT—154 Canal street—All kinds, |1 per week. Also, Fashion Emporium for the South. Bteaell Werks and Magie Battery Maanfae tory. ROBERT CHAP8KY, agent, 22 Natchee street— Stencil Cutter, Engraver and Stamp Maker. Willow Ware. V. BIRI, Nes. 120, 288 and 253 Chartres street, im porter, manntaoturer and dealer in Baskets, eto. UPPER CITY DIRECTORY. Dry Goods, BRA8ELMAN A ADAMS, ou Magasin* strata ooraer St. Andrew. Beet, and Shoes. GEMBLE'S Blue Store, 578 Magazine street, Boot* and Shoes made to order in latest style. Furniture, Loeklng-Glnsses, ete. HELDERICH, F., 624 Magazine, bet. Jackson an« Joséphine. Also, Upholsterer end Mattress maker. Hair Goods for I -adle*. ROLLAND, K., 635 Magasine street. Brides' hair dressing at residence. IME. E. MULLER, 604 Magasine street, formerly I. Crozad. Fancy Article*. Millinery. SAMSON, Mu C., 605 Magazine street able Milliner. Mme. M. LAHNSTEIN, 603 Magazine street Also. Fancy Articles. Country orders promptly attended to Planes und Music. D. LEECH, 620 Magazine street. Pianist for parties Pianos Tuned, Repaired and for Rent Bowing Muchlnee. J. BOOTH, 618 Magazine street Machines ra paired, rented end exchanged. " Upper City Cigar Emporium." JARA, F. — 632 Magazine street—Meeraohaua Briar, and all other kinds of Pipes, eto., eto. Weed, Coal and Lumber Yards. W. H. ZIMMERMAN, 782 Magazine street be tween Washington and Sixth streets, Fourth District DRYADEB MARKET. Hair Goods for Ladles. SCHILLING, GEO. T., 381 Dryades street, manu facturer of all kinds of Homan Hair Goods, Fancy Toilet Articles, etc. M. Schwabacher. J. M. Frowenfeld, Late with Schwabacher A Hirsch. S CHWABACHER A FROWENFELD, General Commission Merchants and Dealers in Grain and Western Produce, 73 Peydras street. Liberal advancesmade on consignments. an8 ^DVERTISE IN THE Handsboro (Miss.) Democrat. It is THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM in Southeast Mississippi. Merchants and business men can have Advertise ments inserted in the DEMOCRAT, by the year or for a shorter period, at liberal rates. | Address 03 tf P. K. MAYERS, Editor and Propriété« Handsboro, Mississippi. All and ant t at PREPARE FOR THE HOLIDAYS! EYRICffS GREAT SOUTHERN BOOK HOUSE IS THE CENTER OF ATTRACTION. WE HAVE THE LARGEST STOCK OF FIXE BOOKS, BIBLES, PRAYER BOOKS' AND HYMKALS Juvenile Books IN GREAT VARIETY. Ad] immnnse assortment of TOY. BOOKS, LINEN BOOKS. I I I I NEW GAMES of ALL KINDS. DRESSED AND OTHER PAPER DOLLS, WRITING DESKS, TOURISTS' CASES, PORTFOLIOS. CDT GLASS INK-STANDS, BRONZE INKSTANDS. BRONZE THERMOMETRS, INK-STANDS IN RUSSIA LEATHER. RUSSIA, SEALSKIN AND MOROCCO I I . I POCKET-BOOKS AND CARD-CASES, ODOR-CASES, CIGAR-CASES. FIRIE'S EMACULATE WRITING PAPERS I AND VISITING CARDS, In all tbe Fashionale Styles and Tints. We call special attention to our stock of Prayer Books and Hymnals, in ENTIRELY NEW AND ELEGANT BINDINGS. All new editions, printed from new plates. Oor stock of Standard and Illustrated Books, IS FINE BINDINGS, is very large. WE HAVE I I 1 I I I to. No Auction Stock ! ALL FIRST-CLASS GOODS WE DO NOT BUY JOB LOTS. b21 we A 1 MARGARET HAVGHEBY. Margaret's Steam an 6 Mechanical Bakery, Manufacturer of I BÄEAD AND CRACKEB* OI ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Ron. 74, 76 and 78 New Levee straw MW ORLEANS, LA. __ ly» tf THE GAS NEW ORLEANS SAVING CO., I JOHN M. PUTNAM, Manager Offlce — 33 CAKONDELKP 8TREBT, |PBOPRIETOR OF THE KELLER PATENT GAS CHECK AND GAS BURNER. I 1 ? 1 ,? 8e 1 Ga8 . ( ' heck " and Burners are now bid ns rapidly introduced in all the principal cities of thfi oonntry and Europe. They are extremely .im j^T cannot get ont of order, are automatic in action an* cost but little; are applied wl'bout any cutting a pipes or disturbance of the meter, and «re ^ 1 Ouaranteed to Saxrc 20 to 30 yaer ooxxt, I aooordlng to location and pressure of gas. Several hundred of these Check« are now in ua > in this oil, x«BRaa^riB¥TirSKafs IQlo. {.________ B ^fany -, . JOHN M. PUTNAM. "J 21 6m _ 33 Carondelet .treat John Ö. Fleming, ......-Paydras 8treet .„_.__. mmm H* has the largest assortment GAB FIXTU REM NOW IN THE CITY, Having just received from New York a fresh sut I ply of the latest patterns. All of which, for oash, can be porch Med at n I lowest possible prices. Chandeliers and Gas Fixtures re-bronzed ln * styl« I equal to that of the nraiiutactrirer.. DEJMT1STRY. I REVOLUTION—REVOLUTION— In theprioee of Dentistry. In order to most tag demands of those whose means are limited. I imm to insert sets of Artificial Teeth, at «15 and «2crôolê ta- Artificial Teeth inserted with or with sat 0t root ®' -All materials which I ||| ■thesioa." " " ---**"' 150 Canal, betws W»lj G. P. MALONEY, D. D. 8 ~~i Carondelet and Baronne at _ New Oris. Teeth I GREAT Teeth t KEBUOVIODg I 830—Geld aad Platinum Bets_830. leva .1 Usual charge *100. I *1» —Aluminium and Other Materials_|l|i Usual charge «50, " 83—Gold Fillings—83. . Usual charge «5. I Amnlgnm and Gulllols C Fillings—81. Usual oharg* *3. DR. G. A. BETANCOURT. 173 8L Joseph St., bet. Camp and St. Cher leu _ New Orieai'C, L Offer* to insert Sets of TEITH the above pitasm wun 9T without the extract on o i the roots. ' taa)5 r " Tm 5^L iaie P urit y of Material«, at alee tarn fitting of Plates, stability and duration of fil liage a» if paid the highest price«. Extractions and ether operations performs* fta means of amesthetio agents. - istan Toothache cured insu Consultation gratis. taneousiy. MEDICAL. IJD R. W. G. AUSTIN— Residence aad »flee 348 Bt. Charles street Corner of Erato, Slate at Geo. A. Fosdiok a Co.'s. 47 Carondelet stall I ORDERS LEFT PROMPTLY ATTENDED V At home from 7 to 9 A. M- and 5 to 7 F. M. ' RAILROAD». I ^EW ORLEANS, BT. LOU28 AND CHICAG J RAILROAD COMPANY. GREAT JACKSON ROUTE, I Commencing on SUNDAY, October 31. 1875 1 5:30 P. M. ' Trains depart and arrive as folio wi : (From Calliope Street Depot.) DEPART. ARRIVE. .....A. M. I Expreee..... 11:30 P. I Itall........5:30 P. M. I MaU........12:30 P. 1 I Accommodation. (Monday)... 10:30 A. M ruuman palace Bleeping Cars thronth to Bt, Lome, Chicago, Louisville and Cincinnati. Only one ohange of sleeping oar* to Eastern cities. Tickets for sale and inform* tion gives at 28 Gamp street, oornar Common. _ A. D. SHELDON, Arnu. E. D. FROST, Gen'l Manager. ftPU, B Uhl WE»» CARD». ÇOAL-COAL— COAL— W. G. WILMOT A CO.. 186 Peydras Streek Wholesale and Retail Dealers In PITTSBUKÖ AND OTHER C0AL& PLANTATIONS, STEAMERS, FACTORIES AND y a mit, rim Supplied at Short Notice and at Lowest Raise. Orders for GOAL IN CASKS promptly attend) A to. Branch Office and Depot on the ' vvee. head) I Robin street. wm > . - * mh25 tf YV'AJVG ta COTTAM. Successors to WANG, WHITE 4k CO. Wholesale Grocers and C)""tc 1. si un MsrahimtG M Peydras strqpt, -Sol* Agent* for the ' ■ ••OLD CONTINENTAL» RYE WHISHT. For flavor and style as well as quality aad prie we ean safely say this well-known Brand eaaaetf ourpssssd in this market. Is! ' ÜRESH GOODS EVERY DAY A —AT— JOHN MeMAINHS, 373 aad 374 Magasine aad 40 _ street. Fresh STRAWBERRIES, Country BUTTEE. Creole EGGS. Pure HONEY, Gilt Edg* Gosh*« BUTTER, choice Sngar-eured HAMS, and all ether family groosriee at the lowest possible priese. . ,£