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UMARWe TV AR AID o8aTa LI MragEa ' Tw ass3W e A i0.35 ri , MAT ast, 8..e In our isueae of the 17th inst., our readers were presented with an ably written article on the advantages to- be derived from the "ubarge system" of translsotatlon. The St. Louise. sere , thy; d iist. contains an extraet f'em a lNr by the same gentlesmn, whleh farther elucidates this suateet. -A few.more such men as Mr. Elder would do more to reconstruct the South, and place New Orleans in the poil tion which nature and nature's God de signed-her to occupy, than myriads of theoretical charlatans and time-serving politiaians. We hope the day is not distant when our people will awaken from. the death-like apathy that now pervades this community, and place practical men like. our respected correspondent at the head of municipal afirs. Then the shameful speo fade of d bankrupt treasury with ample resources .would not make us a laughing stock and a disgrace in the eyes of the f naeelal world. But to the extract: We have been permitted to make the following extract from a letter written by • Thomas 8. Elder, an old, well-known mer chant of New Orleans, to his brother, J.E. Elder, an equally well-known and respected commission merchant of this city. There are some thoughts evolved concerning the barfe system worthy of the attention of capitaliss; thoughts, too, which stamp their author as a man of progressive ideh and breadth of mind. We commend the letter toitheattentive perusal of all:' " NzWaLL.exs, May 13, 1868. "Dear Brother: I noteyourremarksabout the action of some of the members of your chamber of commerce on the ' barge'inter eat, and will be glad to receive a copy-of their proceedings. I am thoroughly satisfied the whole prosperity of St. Louis and New Orleans is entirely bound up in the system of freighting. If yon draw the grain to your city, even if it pases by without breaking cargo, the producer will naturally follow his products to purchase his supplies, and you will divert an immense trade from Chicago, Milwaukee, and Eastern cities, because the returning barges will bring backforeign and Southern products at pro portionately low figures. "If salt were imported here in bulk and ' elevated' into barges, you would receive it so cheap, you could eventually supply even lake ports to a considerable extent; and if barges were construacted with proper tanks, molasses would be pumped into them atour plantations, or from vessels from the islands similarly prepared with tanks, which could be so constructed as to carry grain also in the same taiks. If this pla feasible,it would be a great saving in packages leak age, fermentation labor, It, et., and would lead to anm immmene trao both ways. I think a little ingenuity and capital would readily develop such a mode of transit and traffic. Certainly, if St. Louis could onae establish her supremacy gas the chart for these two articles, all other trade would centre aroundher. As heretofore mentioned to you my idea of fall success would be reached when every man of a few hundred dollars could own a freight barge, and have his own family aboard, and 'follow the business for a living.' As our schooners and small crafts are owned and managed, so long as the business is confined to capi talists and monopolies, we shall not reach the point of low ' freights' that we require. We want a ' river population' who will know no other mode of life; and we can then laugh at railroads and canals. Whenever this barge and towage system becomes more in practice, then will the thousands of tons of products interchange by the ex tremes of the rivers that are now entirely neglected. " Our early garden and fleldproducts and fruits would be sent to you, and, in course of season yours would be sent to us. I was at the ice works yesterday, and they were turning out ice by the ton. I could not help thinking how easy it would be to put one of those machines on a barge, and keep the air up to any temperature required, to preserve fish, oysters, and other perisha bles while being transported to distant markets. Indeed, the convenience of trans portation by barges would lead to endless interchanges which are now prevented by having your motive power attached to costly passenger boats, that cannot afford to lay still while loading and unloading bulky articles. How much Pittsburg coal could we afford to c,n,:sume if it was trans ported to us in costly-passenger steamers t " TIIOWMAs . EL.DEI." CHEAP )RY GOODS.-J. A. BranelmaUI & Co., l86 and .588 Magazine street, have an adver tisement in another column, to which we would Invite the particular attention of our readers. This is one of the oldest dry goods establish Sments of the city, and its originators have done much to popularize residence in the district in which it is situated. Indeed, we might justly say that they bear the same relation to their neighbors that Mr. Irwin does to Melpomenia. Let Braselnan's dry goods store cease to exist, and there would be a hiatus--a void-a con troversy nsuch as happened abont the lost Pleiad. But thnotgh these gentlemen have made an am ple fortune, they have noJdea of retiring. They have now a large stock of goods which they are selling at reduced rates to make rdom for new goods. But the feature of this house is the twenty-live cent counter. Goods that a few weeks -ago soldl at fifty cents are now dtis appearing likt .,tgic "t twenty-live cents. The ladies cetrtal. .i nls, gr-;at patiet, ill Iaw:lit ing their turn. igut tile counter is all institlu tion whiclht Thielyt appreciate, and it certniihly pays -ahl rountd. Mieiael Bauet has been executed. Impeachment has received its quietaus. Connecticut has forty-four postlstes'. Gen. Schofield hjs been onfirmed by the Senate. - Sgain we have rumors of an insurrection in Poland. Fares are going to rain in Texas for want of laborers. Rockford, Ill., is to have a tliobsand cow cheese factory. It costs New Yorkers $50,000 a day to ride in the emp. An eelipee of the sun will take pilace on the 15th of August. SPeace reigns in the War Department Stanton has retired. The cathedral being built in Brooklyn will cost $1,200,000. Great Britain and Austria favors a general disarming in Europe. Herr Kerpen, of Pittafburg, has a beard Sear4 eight feet long. The latest estimateof . the Astor estate places it. 144,000,000. * Halibut is selling in Glocester, Mass., at three cents per pound. Lake Champlain has been closed ninety eight days this season. The advertisements of the London Dos. yield £3,000,000 yearly. avillage, has now six tee thousand inhabitnts. A son of Gen. Fremont has been appointed a midshipman in the navy. Twenty-three divorces .were granted in Worcester, Mass., last week. The Ohio and Ilinoiapenitentiadres have more inmates than ever efore. Four hundred thousand pairs of shoes are manufactured in Lynn, weekly. There are one hundred and deventy faro banks in New York and Brooklyn. Eleven million bushels of oysters are an nually taken from Chesapeake bay. The estimated wheat crop in California, tbis-year, is'twenty million bushels. A ladyin Portland, Me., has nine-hundred and ninety-nine varieties of buttonq. Hon. Henry Stanbery has bean nomin ated to the office of Attorney General. Woblley, Butler's prisoner, is raciously permitted to receive visits from his wife. Cyrus W. Field has insured his life for $110,000. A Field worth cultivating, truly. ' Forty thousand dollars were taken by the robbers who lately stopped the mail train. An agricultural association has~en formed in Monroe, with a capital o15,000. "Inventions relating to agriculture are forty-fold greater now than twenty years ago. A man named Ockford proposes to go over Niagara Falls in an India rubber life boat. Cows were lately killed in Indiana, by drinking brine carelessly placed within reach. The capital of the Union Telegraph is 40,000,000. It owns ninety thousand miles of lines. A company with a capital of 0250,000 has been formed. in Hamburg to colonize Florida. * There is a champion sleeper in San Fran cjsco, who slept twenty-two hours without snoring. Agricultural accounts from England rep resent the crop and the season onie month in advance. A iiugget of gold weighing eighty-five pounds, has been found on Mary river, Queensland. The remains of Mr. Douglas are to be re moved to his new tomb in Chicago, on the 3d of June. Mexican advices report the ual amount of disaffection and revolutionary ivements in- that country. The caravan for the Holy Land stalted from Marseilles on the 9th of March, with thirteen pilgrims. Patrick Murphy, while digging the foun dations of an old building in Hoboken, found $6000 in gold. Up to the 8th of April, fifteen hundred earthquakes had occurred in ten days on the island of Hawaii. Gen. Grant promises to write a letter. Writing letters killed (politically) Henry Clay. "Bewar the bar." Mrs. Judd, of divorce-case notoriety, is lecturing in Bridgeport, Conn. Lecturing. did the business for her. The total net income of the Irish hierar chy, last year, was £450,00(x-exclusive of innumerable perquisites. - Two boys in Mobile engaged last Sunday week in a friendly scuffle, when one of them fell, expiring immediately. Miss Hoyt, who was injured by the late Erie RIilroad accident, has compromised with the company for $9000. A queer rumor is that Theodorus had his life insured in one of the New England ac cidental insurance companies. r Some unreasonable people complain that rreleasfing the Abyssiman captives cost the English Government a £1,000,000. S Colfax, on receiving the telegram inform ing him of his nomination, instantly com municated the news to his mother. The impeachment trial is to be issued in book form. It would be a fitting punish The Abyssinian prisoners are said to be Sdown in the mouth," now that they are Snot the object of universal sympathy. ' Hard times at the North are sending Irish - American citizens West. There are many Sgood openings at the South. Try them. Blue is the fashionable color in London, - this season. It is much in vogue about St. SCharles street in the season after sunset. SThe tax of one cent a box on matchec he A Bton ma liir I nsndin two thelegssei a ate th D nhon :twoesn. - o ' •aea a Several mastodeo teeth have been uan earted in Indians. The Indiana Senators have shown their teeth to the President, but couldsii't bite S A man l Wo.olqot; Conn., hbs * lamped which has bien in the fa over h ' huadM years. That nily don't belong to the new lights _ SDisraeli, it is said direetd the Lord Dnt Latennt of Ireland to addresebls Cardinal Callea as "His xllen, the Cardinal t- Archbishop of Ireland." A woman n Charlestown, Mass-was, re Scently, shockingldoy burned by the benuine with which shd was rbbing her person for al rhemathown takheing teeth to the redent. Mrs. Lincola is amid to be engaged ona id volume of revelations of things w-ile an oc-i oupant of the White House. Quite too much d has been revealed alread y., n Four thousand dollar' worth of Slonges | whave been shipped from Key West m twoen Smonth. An. ndigenmioulys growth may be 1 seen about the coee-houses on St. Charlesne ight iThereis a an of wealth in the H ord a t Insane Asylum, who resided there twentyal years Twelve years ago, he recovered his a enses, but chooses to rened there as aenne An attempt was made some years ao to a, dam the Ohio river, but hiled. Lately, it I was bri n but steamboaten protest s against this unless the pan are five hun epant of the White Ho. too m h . h A man named Didier received two and a uarter millionsancd dollrom the city of Paris, have been shipptd rom ey Westin to I "[ menth An indigeno growthim mady be 1 which he died. or Ha dealrs of Rochester have hit upon Th a new swindle. , hey put a man in the a Smiddle of theAsy load, and after the hay is . ars.-weihedhwelve crawls ago, hel rcoverinued his n boarde nitely.. . A man n Cineinat had some trouble to 1 Sdth his amily and threatened saley, ide. I re They requested he would go elsewhere, as d agit would cause trouble. He goodspans are ture hn complied, and blew his brains out on the street. . e- A wine mercmant in Rheims ilnttled a widow C ot amedn order torecsee this brand my The "His lJaceo " made him pay oinr Hy dealers ofging her rihte. Heit pon now, too swindlte, think of Samuel Weller a he caution: "Beware of the viddere." hay is T C C n..-The Irwei .hed erhe 'wls Scorrespondent thus writes about the change Swhich recent ocincurrences have broughtble about: re In mall matters, as well as in great, the Sit influence of the Fenian care in opening the eyes of-Englishmen to the inljuatieot conduct they have been pursuing towarde 1 th the natives of the "sister isle," is becoming . apparent. Any one that knows anything TO of Catholic affairs in England must be t r, aware that great coint has been made by Catholics, during many years, of the prison authorities in refus g Catholic S Clclergymen access to se the C cprisoners n dergoing confnement in these places. The Iria~apers are now publishing the Swhadverti recent occf a little worknces having refer-ght Sene to that subject, and in that adertise mt infent I ofd the olowin re in paae the id "The consciencesof Cathollc.rishpr a eryesin English jaito thave beenfor many a Se naives oppreed in a manner so unweoming J, appso and so mischievo, that kn oustory will atholy win belief in Ireland, accus-t be t Sawartomed that Ireland e to as bcenes of made ressionlics,two long years, of t hee beeson mainthoritied to win for Catholic n prisoners religiol- instruction, relios service on Sunday, and protection from r. proselytism. Thanks to the persevering y efforts of a few determined and faithful men-thanks-to--devoted priests, who have w is borne every kind ot insult in the cause g thak also, e it said, to recent evets. , which have awakened in theails heart of Efornglish mag .trates that fear which is thate beginning of wisdom-a favorable change is observed in t Sthe treatment of Catholic prisoners, and if we could attract the sympathy of the Irish In clergy aon Sndaity, the jails of England would ti r.soon cease to be what they are now-pet-eri houses and dens of infection or oand futh poor t who are sent to prison for small offe ves to d learn there how to commit great crimes." We have received from Mr. George Ellis, c- No. 7 Old Levee street, opposite the post officake, the Eclectic, toew Eclectic, Litte's at Living Ae, and lHarser's Bazar. We doubt ie hether any similar establishment in the countr heatments large a stock of literary n Stertainment as that of Mr. Ellis's. The lergy and laity, the uilg of Engls Cand woutoli Srie.n.ls .eoistyV will see i na .1 t ice in another n- omn, that a lnt cling is called I; this eve b ning at half-past live o'clock. -" RAD Pic-Ni'.-We r are rquested to state that a grand pic-nie. for the erection of a new y Catholic school. will ie gieu n in Gretna, on M.onlday stied T"iiit:ny, .Jitine -tli 111 n9th. As the object for which this pic-niic is .o 1a give.n it. is a very lanInbalel one, we ho1.. to see it well t4 patronized. The adiission priue is only twen tS ty-five crents. 0 ,dnt of thes.fe*iblftle Becord informs us Is abot twe:ae al d-t many i~n thMe city, but whens the.war eumOthe.pupils were taken away ad te Bro swere flnally obliged to .eave the place. There are two coavents-in St, Anmustnoe now,-one in charge of the 8isters ofr Mercy, and the other belonging to a French order, called -the Sisters of St. Joseph. The Sisters of Mercy impart g tuitous instruction to abonu one hulad children, and have a few boarders in their. convent besides. The Sisters of St. Joseph have been here but a short time, but have already done much good, and are highly appreciated. Two- of these Sisters -are teaching the colored children, and have about sixty pupils.' Foz.this they receive no compensation whatever, except a' little present oeccsionally, while some Northern lae,_ mengaged in the same calling, are lbrally pild out of the funds eollected in the North. It is probably because the re ligion of the-isters of St. Joseph and that of the managers-of the Freedmen s Aid Societies are widely difirent, that:-the Sis ters are overlooked in the distributioa of the funds. The negro population of St. Augustine is quite large, perhaps one half, and the t are Catholis. On Easter Sun ymornin I counted forty-ei ht eolored oommnnieants in the chureh, a r was an formed that nearly as many re veaom munion a few days before. The wealthy non-Catholics of the city have made and are still-making vigorousefforts to keep the negroes from Joining the Catholic church, but without much success. It is unques tionably true that "Catholioism has made' great progress among the Southern negroes mince the war, and ajthough the other sets spend a great deal more money in efforts to secure the colored people to their side, the Catholics keep ahead everywhere.-- Testi mony to this fact is borne by persons who have observed the progress of religious feeling among the negroes in. different parts of the South. WENDELL PHILLIP'8 LECTURE.-In "Notes from New York," in the Mobile 2nme., we find the following allusion to the lecture on O'Connell, the concluding portion of which we publish in another column:-. Mr. Wendell Phillips, in his recent very successful lecture on Daniel O'Connell was greeted in one assae with a merriment on the nap di ea wie~h-he was far from intending to excite. He described a visit paid to O'Connell by a Boston gentle man, who foolishly undertook, in response to.the welcome given him by the Great Lib erator as a citizen-of Massachusetts to apo logise for slavery. " Stop,"-said Dan, "you are from Boston I believe." "Yes," said his visitor. " Then, befo you endeavor to convince me that it is it for one man to hold. another man In boInd I must go up stairs and lock up the spoons." The ex plosion that followed-this aneedote waus overwhelming to the orator, who had un consciouly and pnhal tonehed a c hord of assmociation that will wibrate n forever in an American audience. A Boston gentle man, and the-necessity of looking up the spoons, suggested-Butler to every mind, and the name of Butler went round the room in a universal whisper. The lecturer vainly endeavored to proceed for several minutes, and once agu, when he had re thread of his discourse, the "larfter " broke out afresh. The name of Jack Ketch is not bound by a more lasting cord to the gallows than the name of Butler to the disappearance of spoons. CoNvERsxoN.-Many of our readers may recollect the celebrated theological contro versy which took place many years since, between Archbishop Purcell, of Cincinnati, and Dr. Alexander Campbell, president of Bethany College, Virginia. A few days igo, the Most Rev. Archbishop of Cincin nati received into the Catholic Church a grand-daughter of Dr. Campbell. The ar gaments of both gentlemen were published, and impartial Protestants at the time de clared the Baptist got worsted. His de neanpant, at least. seems to be of the same opinion. But it is all the work of God. - Tulane Building, the headquarters of Garth waite, Lewis & Stuart, is the place where the largest anm: bst assortment of ready-made clothing, tr.m,,ks, valises, traveling bags, and shawls, can , folmnd in this city, and at prices, too, that cani.,t fail to lie satisfactory. Philip McCanne, No. 166 Camp street, copper, tin, and sheet-iron worker, and dealer in stoves and grates, is prepared to execute all orders in his line, in thie most workmanlike manner. Give him a trial and you'll never go elsewhere. HARDWARE, CUTLERY, AND STOVES. J. L AITNe C. L AKUNrSL. 8 J . AITKENS & SON, t aiMoKIrRB AND DRALER8 IN HARDWARE AND CUTLERY. For Machinists, Builders, and Housekeepers, g Tchoupitoulas, Nos. 68, 70, and 72 Delord street, mhl 3m New Orleans. RDWARD O'ROURKE. MATTI/IW MEAGURN. ] O'tOURKE & MEAGIIER, STEAM BOILER MANUFACTURERS -AN!- BLACKSMITHS, 'os. 183 and 185 Fulton, and 213 7inx Levfe streets - -- between St. Joseph and Julia streets. Low Pressure' Locomotive, Fined and Cylinder Boil. F ers, Clariflers, Filters and JuieBoxes male atihe short est notice. S ill make contracts for Bollets. and all necessary con nections. such as Fire Fronts, Grate Barn, Steam and .tand Piipes Valves, etc. Chimnevs and Bre. thlng, all i of which will bo furnished at the Incest foundry prices. All wrk done at'this estahlishment will he nuaran eed equal in point of workmanuship and material to any in the city or elsewhere. Planters and Merchants are respectfully invited to call and examine our work and prices. msal Iy: - E.... WADVERTISEiEUTS. i UNDR THE DImMwTION.OP The St. Joseph's Plo-Nio Assq elauon, -ON - - SATURDAY ad'BSUNDAY, JIULY 4th and 5ti, •At TAB OAKELANI COtvla. . ., TIN Direcotr of the StL Jepb'e PicI-Nic " Stake pleasure I eanesanz toat orarea. a have bees mad to give a GRAD PIO.N ta es d 5tm Jab sat t whch l al. ealE - Ps flralla wie i tether wtth is)mMd atlltractive InSenrto re. AalU •i.t e y esmette Mule RPie t alt/ie daleslasect Ies arq eese .trottim . d iU wMeb wa l o SI~ ,pe h oro veyaneP .i'-es L sn - i t he d.A .aNt r .un . Heat -- 'ki ret . sr o Bas o a reesdta x. ý aaZ' arO r soons assraate, 11i TleH sl , sedee _a years, !wiltA peres,) free. , CHEAP DRY GOODS J. A. BRASEL & CO .. . Respectfuly cell the attentioa of psrsbao, a1R - GOODS to their larlge and unueniywu sdeeted seckof SUMMER DRY GOODS, Which they ofer at price to Nisthe cltest hbys. a Immene etoek of DOMESTIC GOODS, At NoeW Yor rWhe.p FPrAIee. SN end 53N..... MAGAZINE STRET.....I6eed (1 Corner of St. Andrew street. N. B.-sor yards DRESS GOODS at is coat, worth 0 cnto. sD .... lew Orle·a. y 0 O R VEýW BGORNand SaWL Fer arls, wholesal, ad reti, at the les market rateb GARTWAITE, LEWIS , . , - RsySO it 571 Mý;aim xad HALL YOUn Ma'N CATBOUc lFa . SozDarr or Sr. PATMra's, New Orleaes, May31 INSM PLisC Odcers and Member of the above _ oety are S.hereby _notified to meet at thetr Hall, THIS SIun da) VERNNING, at bhalf.pastfve o'elock, pecldey. Punctuel attendane toi reruested. By order or the Prealdent: mylO It - WM. H. DEVES, Secretary. PH IIO..... COLPPERTIN AND SHET roaptrkee ad deraler in toves and Grates No. to order. myl SmAR B. Lc'WN' L SODA WATER " noManuftryN of D cClo ef rMLe spct fully Infem .-his feads ande pl th a p b t b his oeaed the establishment formerly knows as lpse's laime No. e1 Canal street, corner ofl Dauphin. fe e sale Sod Water, Nead, Pastry, Ice C noem, and Con. 1H am re owill led the Soda Water a Need i he of the quality which has already made them ba well known and all other articles of the bet quality. m nst Im . 7 -MaKrA. No. 7 lnew Levee street, between Poydrss and LabdJ te, NEW ORLEANS, Still continsln to maefacetors all daesriptead of Crackers, iNavy, ilet, and Freneb dawe. Pptheg e delivered ln ael parts of the sity free of drayage. W VRmT I liND J .GIBBONS 00., BDDALER IN• oRAIN, CORN MIEAL, AND HAY, Ss............ ......Poydres street..................35 myl7 ly New _rleap _ JAMES J. JONES, PAVER, FLAGGER, AND GRATE RSET ., No. PsutoPer attention to Edgigo and ocreting Rsslee-C or er Seventh and Fulton teptsm Orders left at the oicc. of the Mosniuo rTAwill be promptly attended to. - myl7 ly MRS. E. W. TURNER, No.110...........CANAL STREET.............Ne. 115 Is about closing out a beautiful stock of Millinery and Fsocy Goods, which she is selling at Cost, o cheap, that any one wishng to select a Bonnoet, Hat, or Dress, al ready made, could not fail to be plesed with their pur She has also an extensive assortment of Soesra, Hanldkerchiefs, Buttons, Trfmmlng. Ribbonh lowere. Feather. Infant Cap, and Embrodered Shawl and Sacues; Ladise' Under-Clothing. Collars. Cuds, Cluny eCrocet Lace and Inasertnlgs--all to be sold oheap Call ane examine. - ap Im PEET, WILLIAMSON & BOWLING, (Formerly Peet, Simm & Co.,) nr"Orxse AND WHOLgsAL DARaxLg LI DRY GOODS, SNe. and 25 Magazine str Oleat, fo- ly -•o Orlaa BOOKS AND STATIONERY. J. X. KnMll. n~a. oscaxy I t DICKEYa fH OLf ALK AND R TAIL --OOKSL- l'.3 --D IT-TIoNCEBG, 106 Canal Street, New-Orlean, La. law, Medicael, Miscellanenus, School, end Juveelle Booka. mylt am P. F. GOGARTY CATHOLIC BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, 1I51Camp street, opposite St. Patrick's Churohe, Has a general stock of SCHOOL BOOKS, eepecally those used in Catholic Schools and Colleges. Bible, Prayer Books, Standard and Mlscellaneoue Werks, ap proved bythe highestCathoilc authorities. Al the latest Catholic Pnblicatlons, Beads, Medals, Cruct sand reli glou Pictures General agent fer all Catholic Newspa pers and Naganlnes. Bane Bells, NBae, 3Bes, and Score T EITZIWILLIAlN f CO., FOREIGNT AND DOMESTIC STATIONERY, BLAINK BOOKS No. 1s CAMP SITREET. NEW OkRLK,. BLank Boeks of every ia- and style made to edesr, and Books neaty bound. Job Printing, such - Cards, BIll Heed, Latter Ne.d. Cirmalars, Bill of Lading, eto., neatly and promptly eae ueuse a. nc r.;uwe, mset rltes. WE HAVE OUR OWN PRINTING OFFcl AND I Orders reapet y solicited ad -areelly eteded to, myl7 3ma pHILIP ANTONI, BOOKSBLLER AND STATIONEER, No. 153 Joephine Streetsnext doer to St. MarY', Oerma Chnrnh Ke.o.lon hand gene.ral stoc Cat.hol Pat eeks.. BIhesD, LIves o Saints, Asetcal, ControversJi, and Itistorcal works. Also Elole Breriaris Alter cards Craeter, .uctery IJnom, Ol-stocks. Plea Cibieeeims and Chalioes. a erg.. _55'brtmon of Beua, eod Meoile: Crulcifxes Holy-water Founts Stature, all k/inds of religions Pictures. Ala, tihoeanly-n Wpu re --" - Pi-strme framed and tede to ot.re Also, Counter Show-esaea for sale. eplo Se