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Maige r a Catho Mestenger ar . m.r_.u hlMseeless is s.i .fas'h Cmak-The Misele now being given by the Fathers of the Congeu gaticaon the Mileson, in the Church of . 1ohn the U plie,-s prenaotie or at ames frutitl result. Thousands look tq th elichrs morning and aight; to peolt by tier ga-* and tsig uIstretion of the Rev. PFathes. Theb efesioeals are besieged from Avee o'lih n the morning until ten at naght, b i tents seehis, reeonoliatiba with" an f fende , through the mlnlatrstion of those truly es e and holy misalaes. It must be a urce oe deepest satiactio to Fa ther oyanibua to mess a harvest s abead eat gleaned by a of. men so uanieresally admired fl r their selfp-e piety and.learu ing The elese n. St.. m's will lose on Sunday, tha 98ht' Inst. mad devoted Pathes will poise to other elds lo he city whertheir .ecrts will be no les succeseoot The servies re-bald a.'the bollowlg boars: Mases every maoing at 5 and 8 doelok, tol lowed Immedietely by instruootion. Sermons every evening at Tj o'clock. A asmmeeqi.a Churo-FPather Millon, one of the eloqueSotDealniaun,who eame to this oity in reponse to a spoclal invitation from His Grace the Arbbishop, to preach during Lent, will deliver s sermon at the Church of the Annauncaton, eorner of Morales and Man deville "strste, Third District, to-day at High Mass. The Mea at thie Church commences at 9' Vlock. The Canal and Claiborne street car, as also the o the Dauphine street line pass within a few squares of the hurh. - St. Ane's Crwc&.-leat Sunday, 48th inst., Father Bourgeois will preach at this churbch for the- benedt of the orphani 8. Anne's Church is on St. Philip street, between Roman and Prieur street. A PIassit Baeunon.-As was announced in last Sunday's Sr~a, the old Board of Delegates of the Hiberlian Benevolent Aseoiation, having safely and triumphantly, engineered the Assooiation through the dficulties attend ant upon its rapid growth during the past year, submitted their report of its condition, and, it was supposed, retired, giving place to the new Board. But, in this cae, the supposition was .lneorr~tt,erthere wsoneresolution which the old Board was determined upon carrylng out be foreits disolution. In puruance ofths resolve, andin rspose to polite Invitations, about two seores of gentlemen, members .of the old and new Board, met last Monday evening in the Morning 8tar Hall. Here was spread out a mast elegant sapper from the celebrated Riohelieu restaurant, and it was discovered that the Important business of the evening as to effect the disappearance of chicken salads, tongues, hams, turkeys, etc. Both sides of the table were lined with bottles of wine to aid in the contemplated assault. After some little discaseion between the ex Prasidept and the present incumbent, as to whioh should preside, each desiring to assign the place of bon6r to the other, the party took their seats, with Mr. John McPhelln, ex-Presl dent, at one bead of the table, and Mr. Frank McGloin, President, at the other head of the table, and both preslding. Without ceremony or constraint, but observant of all these deli. oate attentions which Obtain amongst gentle. men, the Hlbernians performed their duty valiantly, though unsuseessfully, for the gen erosity and large-heartedaes of the managing committee, Messrs. L. F. Barrett and R. H. Bartley, hadgprovided a sufficiency of edibles for twlce the number of those present. After the supper, when the champagne commenced to flow, Mr. MePhello, in a short address, con gratulate4 tbhe Aevietioan upon the slrction of gentlemen of so hteh tal6bt and personal worth taoeside over the destinies of the or ganisation for the ensuing 3 ear, and proposeda toast to " The officers and members of the new Board of the Hibernian r. a t , Aid Assoolatlon." Mr. McGloin, in behalf of the.new Board, responded, thanking the old Board for the courtesy and good will shown them by this entertainment, and, after pledg ing himself and his confreres to a faithful per- I formanoe of their dustles. oncluded by express. I ing, as the heighth of bhis ambition and hopes in regard to the board over which he bad the honor to preside, that whbon tley surrendered their officers to their- successors, their record t might stand as clear of errors and as fraught a with energetio, Just and beneficial measures as does that of their hosts, "The Board of 1871," to whom he proposed a toast. Toasts were then drunk to the Press, the several offcers of the two Boards, and the various branches of the Asso ciation, all of which received proper responses. t Of all the toasts of the evening, hone. seemed v to call forth such deep and sincero feeling,and b to meet with so hearty a response from- the gentlemen present, as that proposed by Mr. McPhelin, "To the Grand Organizer, the Fa ther of the Association, Captain Thos. Ried." u In proposing this toast Mr. McPhelin was more ti thans uually eloquent; with great skill 'he o0 pictured the trials which Capt. RBle had to en dure,the apathy and coldness wlth which he was c met on every side,and the calm, he might almost ti say the dogged perseverance and determination se with which he combatted them till hp saw the fe Associatian firmly established in this city, C grown from a little acorn to a strong, over shadowing oak. Unfortunately Capt. Rice was not present, elso we would hbae had the so pleasure of seeing his honest face suffused with blushes, though we hardly think we dIi mlssedaspeech,for we are sre hecould not have answered the toast, as we know his to bee heart whiobh, fearless in danger, would flutter like a ni caged bird when frightened, upon a festive oc casion like this, where he is the hero. At a late hour the assembly broke up in finespirits,. go after having spent a most pleasant evening. 5 Cosesrt for tke Aglunm of orent Csrmel. The concert for the benefit of the Asylum of Mount Carmel, given by MissTheresa Cannon, assisted by several amateurs, was well attend- fed .thanks to Mise q.a e'IKl wha smup h e sl dae heIw sgWz. -Ih t . Numebg - aN4,on e y .. ! ! W '.,. e--oz .WodLh , wn$fbed ws' ( L s. biesier ef e. O. .Vha a.a.i e ..tas c T. ne holdke. of Is. telke us obean the cart by pw reet* jua hle-slr at the asylum. 81. Patrick'* Chureu. Father Ryan's roput.t ti. for eloquence and learnlog is so well e tabllhed and: wide-spread, and his writioa is poetry sa prose have won for him ao'e ri z~ar s,, . ,. 61,. ... . .- " - , "vi Ye mu our people,, th a ed no word of exhortttioa from us is needed to secure the prewsooe of many of the oitizena of New Orleans on the ccasion. - The anouncement of the death oftMrs. eHsa Donovan, on Sunday evening last, oausedmasy a pang of sorrow and regret in the hearts of her ngeous relatives and friends it this ofty. For many days lingering between lifo and death,.ahe was a•rroundedby thoee-whose cherished hope,. of change for the better, and dread of Immediate dissolution, allowed no thing to remain undone which tended to al leviate her sufferings. Mrs. Doodvan was a native of the County of Cork,, Ireland. -She had resided in this city for forty years, and during that time ,had secured the indissoluble love and esteem of all who knew her. As a mother and as a truly Christian woman, she may be looked to as a modal. To her children, and partioularly to her son, Mr. J. C. Done van, we tender our sincere sympathy in their bereavement.. Last Tuesday afternoon about four o'clook, Clarence Johdson, a well known merchandise broker, assaulted M.; D. Laegan "f the. firm of Lagan & Macklson, Boiler-makers.' In self l defence Mr. Lagan shot and killed Mr. John- i son. The canuse of the diffculty was a quarrel in relation to some business transaction that I took place some six years ago. Mr. Lagan was severqly wounded by a out of a penknife in the hands' of his assailant. On Tuesday night about 11 o'oloek, Wm Car- t; roll, a colored mwn, was shot and instantly a killed by Albert Posee, another colored man. 8 The affray ooourred in a cofee-house at the t corner of Basin and Bienville streets. Cause of quarrel unknown. b ra Wednesday morning about 6 o'clock the ted body of a man named Thomas Murphy, was iro found dead between two bales of cotton on ing boardhhe steamboat Thompson Dean, lying at ken the foot of Poydras street. Murphy came on oth board the boat at the Month of Bed River, and Sofwas intouxiated. Coroner Creagh helt an in nlt. quest and the verdiet returned was'"death fhom ex- uffocation,n it being supposed that he, while to intoxated, fell ptween the two bales of cot Ign ton and was unable to get out. ok Some time during the day, last Wednesday, ol- Jno. V. Childs, the engraver, committed slt nk elde by poisoning himself with laudanum' he Domestic difficulties made him unhappy and ny led him to commit thq rash act. .- Krupp's great iron works at Essen, Ger many, cover nearly eight square miles, and Lty oneand-a half miles are undercover. They m- furnish employment for ten thousand men, ng who do their work under a discipline as . strict as that of the militafy service. Cast- i l ins weighing forty tons have been made a several times in these works, and ten and r er twelve ton blocks are every-day siglti. a ed There are forty-nine hammers in the works, t n- of which four or five are twenty-flve tons, a ;n three or four fifteen tons, and a large num- h a Avrg and ten tons. The greatest of all b te hammers is a wonder; and eost Are v hundred thouesand dollars. Italonndations is are one hundred feet deep, construeeted of P w three tiers-the first constructed of solid b a masonry, the- seon of the heaviest and tt of stoutest oaks to be found in all Germany i id sad the third of cylnldrical segments o d cast iron, upon which an anvil block rests. co n The head of the hammer weighs fifty tons. ti - Its face is of steel, abd in making it, after It r- the steel had been cast, and while it was il S. molten, cast iron was poured into it from aI * the back. Everything that belongs to it, at and td the engine that operates it, is in du- es plicate and triplicatee. Four steam cranes th serve it, and these are each tested to bear at d two hundred tons, and arejntended to bear *w , at least forty ingote, rhich are the a s largest cast. In 1866 sixty-one thousand ad tons of steel were turned out of. these wi works. as pth The jewels belonging to the Apollo Gal- wi lery of the Louvre were concealed during ie I the Commune in a small room, carefully p I walled up, on the second story of the pi building erected by Francois I, over the- na Salle Henri II, and the Salon dep Sept in Cheminees. The work had been so skil- be fully executed that the insurgents, during see their two months occupation of the palace, ag must have passed before it a thousand '" times without suspecting that this treasure wl of jewelry, rock crystal, enamels, etc., es timated at 50,000,000 francs, was so near them. The credit of this success is due to tri Count Clement de Ris, Conservator, and to we the employees of the museum, who were be several times on the point of being shot Wi for refusing to disclose the place of con- ti cealment. 1 abl " There is a tide In the affairs of man which, m Aaken at its sood, leade on to fortune," In the dr' oode line, this flood harneoe and people should va¶! th.ss of i.tby purchng, at one. all necesary b winter goods which are now beig offered at exraore dinarlyow priesby Yarme Y.L, Byn & Co., unplare pe cornr of NaeSiene and Jekeon streets. The stolk in thll stablisbment l warranted fresh and per- on feet. Mews. B. & Co. wlil continue to sell all their god ry hep oro raw daye in order to get thet winter d of of their hand, to make room fur their splendldwioek of spring goods which will soon arrive. T SrLas.-Great reductions in the prices of all one gooda have bees made by Messre. Drasemsli & Adams, Sand 86 Uasgltne street Fancy silk whicbloh the, have heretaofrs been esllngat l i and sio per yarud, the I they are now otserjn at st. ladies wll consult their t awn i rat b ug atct once sthi silken oppocte- Ib th -whl There are two things that a man seldom l'i forgets-his &rst oe and his first smoke. on die Sbeeon ezile Is alamostv tI . whIch omassenia ts eN poll a hli-, ,i We t Puevi onW ther il *- bssasdo ?f j rep s- a eeshos . S sations a baer ars. reshleslee aes w* •luoi. ,of ,itheir lab ab it l i tI worl' Per enLituries it 1" mteat traveler. Thq t S w rvelation in theinternal yof empire was brought about in ten treheree e pelthirvileg o sioe te yeLa 1611. Thdre Uno middle ea in the country dstric of Japan. and lhe ipgreater portion ,oof the ppul hi impei poesanry. Th eople are no better Shan serfs, and Shve been dependent for their liberty on thept ae r..o the Daimlos, or petty perie - oes. There have been several hunre of those lords, mostly descendants of their kings. ho, at one period, maintainted n dependent sovereity. The power of the D l eno was e g yeaklors ed in the six teth cet by Talk Ses, the reign lug king. Thia able ruler earried on a long and bloody civil war with his nobles, I and wheo fortune declared is his favor he raised himself to imperial power: .nce then there has been 'a strong ceutralised tuthority that has kept in sulejection both t the nobles and their adherects. The reforms Introdaeed by. Tilke Sam gave a more settled Government to Japan rid the Central power beem established on a secure foundation. Thi last barrier I to this result was removed by the ,over throw of the Tyoon, who divided the honors and likewise the responsibility with a the Mikadtlo.or rThe. pre ent Mikado Ior Emperor of Ja pen, has mnifested a willingness to throw e open the whole country to foreign inter- s1 courso. Should this wise resolution pre- h vl, we may son expect to reap more ec- i tions that .promise to follow so uspicion a beginning. Even now, numerous Japan ese othon are being edeucated nl our prin. cipogal colleges, whil the nationseems read to adopt many of the habits and ustoms with which we have made them acquainte by the limited intereourse that has already taken place between us. The Japanese are the most proficient of Eastern nations in many of the arts of civ Silied life. Among these is their knowledge of the raising of silk wormsand the manu facture of silk. This employment has been understood by them ever since the Afth Century. Uice and teae are two of their are skilled in the working of metals and making various wares. Some of these manufaotures are not only useful, but wrought after the most approved models of symmetrical beauty. Telegraphie communication has already been established between Russia and Ja pan. Wires are now in working order for the conveyance of messages between 8 Petersburg and Nagasaki, a distance of nearly fve thousand miles. Is it too much to ezpect that before many years a like communieation will be established between San Francisco and the islend Empire T .. - - An original simile is becoming a great desideratnm. So many speechbes are made on any subject of general interest that it must be difficult for speakers to find any such gems of speech wherewith to deck their statements. The present prostration and antcfipated resurrection of France Lnas 1 .". _a_. of - I have given rise to may striking figure I but they have now become trite. M. X_. - vier Marmier, who has just been elected by S ,i-French Academy in the room M. de I Pongervllie, deceased, introdeuced one into I his "Discours de Beekptiou" which de. I eerves some credit for olrinallty as well as beauty. "There is," said le, "in the depths of the north a phenomenon which cannot be seen without admiration, al though it is renewed regularly every year. It appears in summer when the hour of nI ght approaches. The sun slopes grade Sally slowly, towards the horison. The shadow does not yet spread itself over the earth. Only, on the surface of the sky, there is, as it were, a white gaune which slightly dims its brightness, and in the woods, on the fields, on the waters, there is a great silence. Nature slumbers. Then, sdddenly, behold the' east clothes itself with purple, the luminous rays reappear, and movement springs to life again. It is the awakening, it is the dawn. it is the day which begipsagain hpked to the day which has colie to ho end. While recalling this pectacle, which I have so often-contem plated in Sweden and Norway, I think that nations in their summer time have phpses in which their vital force seems to become benumbed, when the sun of their glory seems to withdraw. But, patience ! it will again be seen in all its splendor, that im mortal sun which no ocean can extinguish, which no night can veil." A ROLAND FOR AN OLIVER.-During the trial of Mrs. Wharton at Annapolis, last week, the following colloquy occurred between the Attorney-General and Dr. Warren, a distinguished physiMan of Bal. timore, who was under cross-examibation : Attorney-General-A doctor ought to be able to give an opinion of a disease without making mistakes. Witness-they are as capable aspwyers. I Attorney-General-Doctors' mistakes are buried six feet under ground; a lawyer's are not. Witness-But they are sometimes hung on a tree ! To the grear cotsteation of our buffaloes panol u stled dies tros* and shunt one thouised wild Isldias have made 15o er aee J oan a n hunt. It is stid the Duke undertoo thie n ex wite th. sieUt.oviw St or stu4bm so ed t alps tr dB_, hb ewesD d ew s ke ew troub d espusto wbhich thin ijmm hii If he haud bee won ofor reaa, be would ba re11 p that JOs Mller, 07 Molo eress had tis brned which marks the sus LUL9 . Ltflhbl asd * slpaa Mr. Mllr' be esd with.t issb e deeerex u e ssd sells st prise to suit the hard Is oweU e to the C * ee eitl fows. e -_ - ...... world owes allll * tender a 'dpol an "ht i s Sclrrie" B thet 6 mad. the Hafored Sall I relatie a salponE toh the s eprema I btameet of tbi owesaal. Deawmese dtit C dre ereo'w desw putroy og p r " t tI for '7 niýhgr ,# Jna a .ws oge 1 of lthe mos Prevalenht imee-at kta. s de: It was the-hi of Bdeelhhe that' I e saved His lie eellows. The- sibllfl-o t & the riansly i based on the Luiaeselblilr of the marit tin.. Tbis the Cohurlgori osve f i upphdand Poer~ d ed s ht Intgo ~ * .ua the~ l !_ a S tbrm uawlag abe them Cha r o hu sad safeguardl of liberty and :bilns e ad o the Chrro h s. ho ti e tio:le -it"vi lo8 stato , such s we hna v mrs. Her. e Iathefrsaestep ise td a by r oa progressr Is In whiac the Charoheu.eds humant. We a oLts mea the aziom proved rby a thou- I a od _yes of experieneo that tbhe family is i' the saleunit. It w as the Chosab La t tMugbt d realIsed thbe axioPms whi all Ot stansmenl , eeand rpolital ee es acceptlls After reformn the facly, she reformed h the state. Heathen staeesmtsnjp proceed- v edo othe, assumption that the overned b eecreated for the governors. The P- 0 lamids overshadowed a multitude of toi1-l a log slInt av sboero twhb' to rgrd theilr * sovereirna abd, the Supreme Disp r of i their lives and fortunes. Re ubilcs a Greee and Rome neover were repubeon n aG the Christian sense.r The Churoel on the r downfall of the Romrn Empired took the us barbarians in hand, shaped their wild tfi ob-eftsinal- ntostb e forms of haelino ent, in and-gave to their disunited sa . an ogas- te mp form. aiset admits that the Churc- TI originated the idesn of election, personal f the rightofhep to rebel ta iependence, be sad the abolition of slavery. " Here then is Li the Church fashioning the two elements of p1 alt pro 7res4-the famil .and the free itb atate. _Wiltout'these subsstiegl the re- is lations established by her, all progres Is impossible. To her, as to scuree and m+ fountain, all modtrn progres and olvilisz- sat tion can therefore be traoed,-Cbo.ojc of Booard. -p as T. W. As A AUxAGos.-I listened to a Ed I good one" on Thurlow Weed, says aNew ly York correspondent. Weed had about as mudh qystem in keeping his accounLts (and of his money) as Micawber. He was a little r. greater. an, .ougb, and had that grin of e/ good se hic suggested to him the pro - prier of plaeing any specflosum of money a wie he didn't want spent a random in ri the hnabd of some fnancier friend In 1856 ir " T. W." came to New York and received 7 $25,000 from his Republiessa fdeads--10, d 000 for o defeati p Fillmone Sfor fee the see of the t Bepubliesnes nAlaty, and $5000 for the tc i_. J.oureal. For safe keepJng he gave t6s. o central opmmtles $10,000 y nor the Jouwd. credit da requested his partner (Mr. 1Siner, believe) to plaeo the secret $10,000 to be used lagaint his old friend Fillmore, to hi. Sinca ' credit ,t in bank, whicb ould be drawn as desired. h He did so. One fine morning Sinclair a dropped dead from heart disease. The $10,000 stood to his personal credit with out a word of explanation. In vain Thbr low Weed sought the ear of the bank of ficers. They could do nothing. The executors of the estate found the $10,000 to Mr. Sinclair's credit. They could not, without proof, hand It over to Mr. Weed or his political friends. Thus it was swept into the dead man's estate and into the hinds of lie fascinating widow. Not a dollar wagseed to defeat the placid Mil lard Fillmore. A year thereaftr. the hon orable ex-President from Buffalo, and the charming widow ofMr. Weed'sparsner were attached by that mysterious influence pre sided over. by Venus. A fewumonth's later they were united by the yuemslal knot, and -poor Weed saw his- darlinl-$10,Vo ralsea to defret Fillmore, in 1856, directed from its orniglqal purpose into the unsue cessful canidate's "marriage portion." It is said that Thurlow Weed tells this joke on himself with a relish. - e " Irenimas," the senior editor of the New r, York Observer, offered fifty dollars reward, h some weeks ago, if any one could furnish a e well-authenticated case ofmeanness meaner a than one he gave, where a minister's wife , was invited to visit a week annng if pie, and theamount of her la,,rd was ater , waruds deducted from her husbaud's salary. a The responses to his offer have been so nu merous as to overwhelm ¶him, and in leis h despair he gives them to the larger jury of s the Observer readers for decision. Onoe case is of a hard-worklng missionary, who, t on a $400 salary, Just managed to keep-his a family alive. He Iad agarden twenty-five e feet square in front of his house. When the secretary of the society tLt supported 1 him called on him he asked what was the value of the garden patch-$25 t " No." $20 "Hardly." About $181 "Yes." When the next quarter's salary came, $18 had been deducted from it. Aoother in. stance was of a "donation " party given to a minister. All the gifts were marked with such price as the givers chose to put on. them, and the sum total of these amounts was deducted from the pastor's salary. Among the rest was a little pack age of black pepper, marked two cents! At anoter smilar " donation" party, two fans were sent in, valued at five cents each, and this amount was deducted from the minister's salary. Go to a brick yard and take a brick, freshly-monided, and press a leaf upon it; a gentle pressure of the finger will sumce. Yet subject that brick to the kiln, and it will come back _witk the. Impression ihof. frceable. Build it into a house and you may see it across the street. The child's mind is the moist brick. Delay not to bring tbe truth of God Into contact with it. Under his blessing the beautiful im pression will last eternally. le's ldisa Torolp Pectoral Balm is an sshs eavs wor *sessr sao lls. er t .- hm wqd nei~le -.~ *em aniS :-st-I . m the lass: ui , t-- p town, bý6 rrea I" ... .... C , .,,i--a.M -- - 7: guar tha vM90 M . teia4lll ieho , " j - 1t Sgard thmake an lmng i. niousfd lto the aIe,e,,.laln,_ _ sweot winOmn+ riosl of,- monit" N u a young ello--'s ° . - P r nsrer in a ayou hllow, lader ver as S. .with dill a lod, who, w °lh and b4 , oulsd not-work i his way into t -he helig. I. iW b Voi be ain set sd-- ua6 ee - u Lati rsash othe r point off meate r the Itn for a e mthreiato .N-- at a -. opvoi d to I d8n lop-·je ir, n ofludn the Bro aNI ii Ien theree greatn ramee of uet. thea ull mw ýabek he mAacin a the bead of t d aotlt~tadig te eset icofarefm reels one hwo wod ae. so the "i o-to re aitn ee., And if ther ot lloi t Geranlo. SO, OQO~dIU tothet muohbdespieed Latin. a~l hold00 thei aelenso poe ahe tes hd no the sles se-.td, onltt, a mdo y the mIetet bloe dmi- o Ger ma; hed wol hd bold a low pane reokiesm one who would say that they wili nOt~remanthezb And If thet a nosa I the head Lof the t lieS Iaother aena-the iatsleetual, mamelyI s must be admit. The nubr bt and h aih aracer of the Gu pedo Intileets f a soommniy may -beo l taelng to represrsn the frorof intolligsase belon_lng to % i nd i.n these roep.et the Latin ?aoea do not bhow baly. nselepectals plentyr-ia also ahown the w ruiety of Aede that are ult atred I athe many ways lif is improved; and In this reepect the conu -tries inhabited by the Latin rases can again make no icoonmiderable boast. The on. troionof thO Sue an.aandt tboe cutin t" ofthbe 1nm Cenia Tunnel are ficts tbhati pek llko trupets . . .. ,-' In i . .. . . . and el- dayi a -a nth • Ile DONOVAN Itred Jear a4. CIl 1. nail, "-roo . cet SaRa =., & f Oea ed r cte fr t wam· y ot.o a 10,- o7 P u t - - lOr JACOD OTT, Whe BUILDERG e 184 Delord Street, near Tivoli Cirle. he Jobbog d arn with atek Prespt and- Proe hi o_ ",at ,eeu'*o .-aag e Un*an.. a p e.adsdtar h il71 ysip iT ----. -- ZL. - JS Pui L Eat , , "rrzlt., 1eb he WandBrikraaae, .m prs.s . .f m, Crbin bh- Orders Sal at reddaes eaurn. oa magnolla nad Well. r- aly .tee ...aor ealthi h th t r et..si ., will be SProasptly Oppto. °e Omip ; M. I. BYRNE & CO. THEIR OHEAP SALE or F WINTER GOODS! 4 STIL LOWER PRICES. 'AII-Goods Warranted Fresh and Perfect. It S - la e a a pper Ceae of Nagal e a nd o aean S b. DRY GOODS Ofr ALL KUIw, AT HARD TlM=. PRICES. BLACK ALPACAS-BUFFALO BRAND. JOSEPH MILLER, JR., 607 ........ --. - azlne Street............ 60 Jn .t Oppoalte St. Eli eth A sylm. IVE TIIOUSAND YARDSC or FANCY SILKSI A ONE DOLLAR. all Recenty Sold at 11tre usd 50a. BRASELMAN al: ADAMS, '86 a ....al... AGAZ,_,$ - Wod__ . . ,. B .-SmIla BRdatlo,, .-an e,a.. _ talle i SPECIAL NOTICES. UIBEI -IA B*X OE - - IN ErxIa7nl RANK 01 Nrw ORLZANS 2If __ Ortamos, an. 1, _w.--At the An.nal Ed m.. held .s. em te h lnetu,. DirA tero rths tk, the fallw. 1 lag gentleman war eleotd for tk emsrat wr de Ptri . Eri.n1 MB cloesky, .dwrud Caa:rl. Joab-rdeeu , M Tep. Meaa, - The. alm., Adhee Theman, Wn., eart, . iobhelas Burke, Edward Swoasey, And at a msea.g o the Dtnea s i day, Mr. P. to CONERY steele YuheatedaLt Elsa" jal I. JAS J. TAMrlURI, Oaa.i R. Nam . sAý. .."... a A 9t o ...I,............. -I uC·in be'...ý * 145* Qý1NeLM.... M r. 1le M . s. Qiu so -n 1r t "P·_it~~c __-' 3~ U! ~ r.'.....,, ~ J . W. xmcxe, u.m. J " 'air .tea .a ' -"7i , $ J5amawr A. D. !0 em >» b ýd b far ;. - .it~ P. OE KCiV p yLrv..inp. .. " 11h& of~a Oh.Ui b iM....1d Kway K ý 9 0ir a UR SO PutMa3Nw. OWr ýPla ?Smrnuan 1Y PE 0351X. (iN £ij P i .iij wtfr""tal rCleao w oa e7' corns It wan. eke washe Op -~ *·d I·~~~ orn." ~aftm w.7na .4'L I tooef. Irandrf a 63 ncs*I h 0..R. Uwquhat, i9. A. I ehzshhgr, TNOMA* Dashed.. 16..BOOTS JND bliOlS, sfw..i c:.waPýOsdra" 41frt., D. BVS FABSIONABLE MhT- AND CAp WTO 174....C......... Pol aed aw.u..j CBaaaw.uf 'is.uaq -aoal~,i Children'Las 5504 1k and -waMI All ora 3tampt l d anr.l aksas44 THE IUBEBNIA, ZNSURANON ,Obm OF NEW ORLE.9L 0791CM. HO. "! AM P ZTrrr Insures -Fire,-Mnrn anS River llhb 10MW mm HMD3I ise Peai. _TEao T. NUAaGS Rodt Cey. . .isn. ?.OG& rmm, Ct. ziw -. -. lmar, J.. - - NEW. sUPLIJS Or PEW BOOt JUST aBCBWaD AT. Elder's Cathollo Doo ShO Cmp stremt Laess Squars - PASSION PLATONIAST CAR5H4 SONGS mad IALCADONS5.IO SaSas.z-Us ma LhS, Laws ise Pas - PICTORIAL DILS 5 is' t NLG OIF LIMUUWI .JjfI esws. P0o5 ,A X0P-D St e.a...- , 3.. .bumelanls . Lsae re. .. sau, I14 bti CHAS. D. ELDer , e ookam. PULMONIC PASTE. CATARRHS, BRONCHITIS, CONSUMPION. •m - Wholesale Druggists, - * 130..............Canal stre.. ... - ja isysp Now Orleans. WANTS-FOR RENTrS-ETc. Who r Aindsa s Id a f bm ye i g hm ma i. Iaa b ee n brih a mm Hm p es-f. :l.4 wa at. br..Iymd la, ty' 1 - s , C f 113.*.. ....~rtft·-- j **p rekr