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af 3t ' $a * A otn wl Mssenger - -oa sa , svLt s . M&Ya o, m re GBA'rBA.L IYBWB ITBMS. SDallas. Texas, has increased ts population of la 1871. before a railroad touched it, to Bastrop, Texes, cotton mills are again I head way, and are tdranog out 000 yards of Ine oustto goods. - osm is improving her stock by heavy im lose of Kentuoky sborthorns. Recently bull calves of pare blood and fashionable were shipped to Dallas. .fies Napoleon is one of the most eloquent o, Franoe. His profle, which is San exaet'bonterpart of that of the a Napoleon, also lenad a good deal of shine his oratory. Germany stands third among the countries tithe world In the proportion of railway alleage to square miles of area. Belgium is the dt, with a ratio of 1 to 6; Great Britain . mes next. with a ratio of 1 to 7; and Ger. fsI llsf the third place, with a ratio of 1 It iso eld that at Stratford obildren generally believe that Shakepspar is the writer of.every hibag that ever was printed, down to the pla _siss Oe the walls; while a few of the more istellgent doubt his being the author of the _eland tbhe newspapers, but firmly bold that 3e wsote the Bible from Genesis to Revelation. Q ebee's repatriation policy has proved very SteeosefuL The townsebhi of Ditton, Chesham and Hamberton, where free lands and grants of monesy have been made to Canadians return ing from the United States, have within the year increased their population from 500 to 3000 seal, and a new settlement is about to be arted his spring at Temimsouata. The wandering street peddler is deluding the oedulon houosewife with a preparation for the es I tvering of spoons. It is a salt of mercury -wleb when rubbed upon worn plate, imparts S" labdref argentglous, but it comes of in ýf" nop or the padding and salivates the fdmlly. The peddler should be kicked and his powder thrown after him into the street,. A boy, twelve years of age, has been lying in Jai in Salt Lake City for a year. Having re Scety been brought into court, it was found h ot he had stolen two dollars to save himself bom starvation. On soaount of his having been heavily ohained, the oourt sentenced him s" six month's confinement in the hospital, bathe mighteecure needed medical treatment. The negroes of Columbus, Ga., had a Lady * Washlngton tea party the other nlght. The + ther of his Country was dressed in Jean pan "iialns and a gray sack cost, and was booted ead sparred. Mrs. Washington wore a black - omino and a white night-cap. Mary Queen of sots appeared in a pull-back muslin, and Klng Henry of Navarre carried a blue ootton +.. mbrella. T The Mennonite settlement in Manitoba con .-talln eight townships, in which are located 31 Slllages,eahb of adosen or more houses. There ire 414 families of about 2600 souls in all, 600 seresof land are undernultivation, 6000 bushels I f grain will be sown this year and 3200 bushels I Spotatoes planted, and the settlers have some 4 S100 head of eattle, besides horses, sheep, swine, poultry, etc. A milkman was lately seeking the aid of the Spolice to trace the whereabouts of a family I who had left the neighborhood owing him f eighteen shillings. "Well, I supp-se there was nine shillings worth of water in that milk aecount," remarked the inspector. "That's where it galls me-that's where it hurts mel" replied the dealer. "They were now custom. ose, and I hadn't commeroedl to water the milk c yetP'" A book agent who has retired from active g labor upon the hard-earned aceumulations of a life of industrious cheek, says that the great B secret of his sucoess was when he went to a house where the female head of the family pre o seated herself, he always opened by saying. "I beg your pardon, miss, but it was your mother I I wanted to see.' That always used to get'm. I They not only subestibed for my books them. t selves, but told me where I could find mote I emetomers. Artificial clouds of smoke are often used in t - ranee and Germany as a protection against e host. One plan, which has been very success hW, consists in carefully mixing gas tar with sawdust and old straw and piling this mixture a in a- heaps in the vineyards. When re for use, smaller heaps are distributed Wtthe vineyard, and these will burn freely a In a few hours, and produce a very dense smoke, which decreases the radiation and pro- u vets fst. a A wager of a novel description was made and 0 decided recently at Maryborough, in Q seens. b land. The local paper states that an old and E dilapidated pocketbook,oontaining a £10 note, tl was thrown It the middle of the street, opposite tl the Post Ofioe Hotel. The bet was that 100 persons would pass by without picking it up. Ooe hundred and forty persons passed, out of n whom three-namely, an old man, a nursemaid ft sand a "new chum "-kicked but did not stoop it to handle it' It might have remained onno- ft tod for a much longer period had not Mr. g :;lennell's dog 'Clyde" picked it up and de ivered i4 at the bar of the Post Ot,:a Hlotel. All praise to Dr. David Ferrier, Assistant It ysclsan at King's College Iluopital, London. : We has discovered a specific for cold in the head. Being himself mooh pbject to that very unpleasant though not alarming disease, a ".`o tried what bismuth would do for him. He took repeated pinches of it as though it were o0 auff, iuhaliug it strongly, so as to carry it well at late the interior of the nostrils. In a short N time the tickling in the nostrils and sneesing au teased, and next morning all traces of ooryse tr c e oompletely disppeared. Renewed erperl- . meits upon himself and others confirmed his belief in the efoacy of this remedy, and he d a.. described it at length in the Lanoet. He Sisd the most softable formula s follows: cl Trislntrate of bismuth, six drachms; acacia al owder, two drachms; bydrooblorate of mor- ti phi.a, two grains. w : t seems to have been proved that, at high b iates of speed, the body of a vessel atutally s 7 sge above its ordiunary load water linse, end w Smthe speed ionrease, continues to rise still Shighelr. The experiments from which thee e 7rYeslts were deduced were conducted by the steel torpedo leunoh built some months since Sfor the Austrian Government, with which s segd of 19.4 knots wase attained. The differ. i s of level were determined by means of ii s plomb bobs hanging from a bowsprit at q <"Vplose distances in front of the bow, from w :tJ0vtions with whioh the altered water ti Jmbos wa measured, and diagrams made s .Y*ar~m. From theeit appeured that, up to I AkLesd of about twelve kees, the vessel sank - re d O ply in the water; bullt, on being driven P a higher sped, she semed to make an (I . sadden Iep up, and continued gradual- A - to ri bove the normal water line as the t speed Iusread. U 1, LOUslAxA CaoP Nors.-Acconots from H . country during the pot week have pi - cr generally favorable. The rain of is :l 'Jay past seems to have been general f .' ghout the State, and productiveof Is - * good. sm Sthe sugar districts erops are growing ts a, ad prospects are very good. O W.te trn Louisiana the fruit crops re _ u be generally short owing to the of as Ia March last, when the sap was in on The pecan crop promises an abundanthi 4 this year. Trees are literally ov p with foorm and looking remarkably p y.-.N. OEons Joeriat, k920. b e. C70U0UNT OF PARBI 8 80 OALah kh 2V UBY ON OUR CIVIL WAR. - EN. THOS JOBDAN'I REVIEtLW. IN. Y. World.! a of Sir : After a critical examination of the 1, to two volumes (Gasistro's translation) of the Count of Paris's " History of the Civil War al a in America," in their French orignal, and b of the two other volumes as yet unpublish Im- ed in the English dress, I dare to say as yet no work on our unhappy war has appeared so manifestly inspired by and saturated with "bias "lin all its statements with re eat spect to that war, ts causes, incidents, and s conduct. Farther, a more incapable " his the torian or editor as regards matters with ine which beonly became acquainted through others," than the Comte de Paris, has not rie attempted to tell the story of our straggle; ay and all this can easily be made" as plain u s as way to parish church." ln Suhob, Indeed, is the " bias " in which the er- 2,500 pageaof theFrench orignal is steeped, 1 wa you will find them colored with every mimepresentation that ever had birth of Ily the motives and acts of the Southern peo ry ple, notonly immediately before and during the war.but almost from the very estab lishment of the Federal Union. Thas the at Mexican war is represented as having been " Iniquitous" (p. 31), and undertaken "to dismember Mexico and to introduce slavery m In the territories that would be'taken from its her." The North he represents as "opposed %- to this odious policy," and hence reluctant he to supply troops for the prosecution of such 00 a war I And this he does as " a historian be or editor," in the face of the fact that Mr. Calhoun, in the Senate, strenuously op he posed an aggressive war against Mexico, he and introduced a resolution deolaring agaionst territorial acquisition from that i country. But not only does the Comte de ie Paris thus malign the Southern people in ,is every possible way, he also represents the Democratic party at the North as having in been at all times before the war the pliant, e. subservient-nay, super serviceable allies t id and instruments of Southern leaders in all f if their "odious measures for the spread of n g slavery and its aggrandizement." Ths he a repeats the oft disproved story that Secre- a Stary Toucey treasonably dispersed the navy t to remote stations and seas to keep it out of tj ly the way when the Southern Atlantic States a broke loose from the Union. u d This he does in the face of the unques- ti ik tionable historical fact that the Home a of Squadron at the close of 1860 was a much ti Id larger and more effective one than had ever q in before been in commission in the American d Navy, and farther, that during ths Admin- o i istration of Secretary Toucey and of his a re predecessor, Dobbin, of North Carolina, a a 10 noble steam marine of twenty-six vessels, o 1s notably the finest of their respective classes d is then afloat in any navy, had been added to ti ie our naval-establishment by the Democratic p p, party of our country, and notably more- d, over through the efforts of Senator Mallory, it is who became the Confederate Secretary of is y the Navy subsequently, and of other i~ n Southern public men who were always C ' found foremost in their support of West de k Point, of the army, of the Coast Survey fi Bureau and of the increase of the navy b: commensurately with the progress of the as k country and the advancement of naval tt science! It was to Southern men in Con- S, e gress and cabinets that the increase and ti a marked improvements both in the army ai t and navy were due during the administra- hb tionsof Pierce and Buchanan. And this tl ' foreign writer, aiming, as be tells us, "to is r instruct the European publ!c,"is unworthi- cc ly engaged when without investigation of as the records and true history he is occupied ls e in spreading such calumnies about the b, people and statesmen of eleven States of is u the United States and also of the Demo- si t oratic party, whom he constantly represents ti as animated by every species of treasonable th motive. So far, indeed, does he go in this, be that he even represents Mr. Buchanan as sc i having signed the Morrill tariff with no SI other object than the treacherous wish thus nc to throw another difficulty and embarrass- D ment in the path of his successor, by such fr a restriction as that bill was upon the th I commerce of the country I He makes his th book the vehicle for conveying to the co I European mind all the passionate views of an the North at the time of highest passion in th the very white heat of the war! There Ti fore, to say that that book "displays hr no bias" is as wide of the mark as possible, ca for to put more of "bias" in it had been se impossible. Bias is everywhere-first and wi foremost, against the whole people of the ag Southern States, to whom he ascribes no re good quality, save and except their animal of courage, while wanting in tenacity and hs indomitable purpose; bias against the clh public men of the South, back to the time loi of the revolution of 1776, to whom he Sp ascribes never a high motive, while finding oh all the cardinal virtues in the same class pr of the New England States; and biss ph against the Democratic party of the North, whom he charges with duplicity no and arrant complicity, with the alleged as treasonable purposes whieL governed the Ti Southern leaders throughout the Adminis- ka tration af Buchanan; Twice in his pages rei does he go out of his way to sully the Pt character of Chief Justice Taney. He vo charges Gov. Seymour, in effect, with an treasonable objects at one stage of the be war. In a like spirit the whole work hbas si been conceived and executed, so far as the wl small abilities of the Comte de Paris as a of writer could give power and force to that ci spirit. As for this "bias," it assumes every ab possible phase; crops out in every possi- to ble place. Writing for Europe, he seeks to stamp the impression on tihe minds of his readers tii that Robert E. Lee committed perjury in its quitting the Federal army to take service do with his native State. To give the idea ple that by the resignation of Lee and other a Southern oMcers the Federal army had been esl left utterly disorganited and emasculated, G particularly in the staff corps, he represents for (pretendinog to have his authority in the ho Army Register of 1861) that the offioers in the Federal army only numbered about00, lot whereas, in truth, they numbered fully Ca 1,090, or 45 per cent more than be states. doi He says that "the most part" of the su- tio perior officers of the staff resigned, whereas, tra in fact, only six out of some thirty-nine or cat forty field officers of the Adj utant General's, ". Inspector General's, Quartermaster's and Ne Subsistence Departments, and of the Mlli- tu tary Engineer, Topographical Engioeer and Bia Ordnance corps resigned; and tfinoally, he the represents that occasionally the entire body of officers of a regiment resigned, when Ge nothing of the kind happened, even in or one regimi-it. Exposed in this false "l history put forward impressively in sap- me port of a theory, he skulks behind the Im pitiable exonse of a speus calani, and in Iholets the "FPederal" flag, hoping it the ' wi tll am. weeniss i u sely for ea bibitiag wide researeh and knowledge Amerlean astrrs entering the domain c commerce and agriculture, he tells hi European readers again in behalf of he theory, that the North furalsbed a moo be larger part of the agricultural producta es ported than did the Soath. Of like aeon a rate matter, in sooth, is this work larael, made up, as for example when he speaks (p St at) of the Southern soldiers in the war wits MalMexico as recrulted from an " idle, restles and adventurous population" that hai already " bught as improvised eltisens a Teas at the time when the North and thi South were contending for supremacy o inalence in that ephemeral republic." o b that matter he is babitaally wrong when I hmay be possble so go astray; as wrong a to what ominy is as when he tries to de scribe a BlakeIy gun; or as when be 1O absurdly but ambitiously describes thi the Confederates firing enormouseylindrica i missiles out of old braes ordnance, witt much effect, at abort range, against iron, Solads at Cbarleston I Another illustration of his bias and I an done. In speaking of the losrs in battles g he invariably gives the Federal numbers as stated in Federal reports, without one word e of qalification or question, and as invaria n bly throws doubt on the. Confederate losses 0 as stated in their reports. In the same Y spirit he treats of the numbers of Federal and Confederate armies, and has charged d General Lee flatly with misstatement as to t his forces at Antietam, alleging that it was habitual to the Confederates to understate their numbers. In what I have said I have barely skimmed the surface of the mass of faults which mainly make up the history of our civil war as told to Earope by the Comte de Paris. TwoxAs JORDAN. " LIBERTY OF WOBBHIP " IN 8PAd. [Loedon Tablet. May e ] The agitation forlegalizing the introduc tion of foreign forms of belief into Spaio for this is what the liberty of w rship movem.-nt amounts to-has been foally condemned anew by Papal Brief, and this authoritative appeal to Spanish Catholicity to remain worthy of itself has provoked to the utmost the innumerable organs of the anti Catholic party throughout Europe. As usual, misconceptions and misrepresents tions enter largely into the attacks which are directed from all sides against the ac tion of the Supreme Pontiff. The Chorch of Rome is declared to be acting with tra ditional duplicity, crying up the principles of toleration in Non-Catho:ic countries like Great Britain and Russia, but as obstin ately intolerant whenever it sees a chance of suppressing religions liberty as in the days of the Spanish Inquisition. In all this there is fundamental error. It is perfectly true that the Church permits and demands the utmost liberty and toleration in countries of divided religious belief. It is equally true that in countries which have the most complete and real unity of Catholic faiith the Church resolutely con demos, and most ever condemn, that arti ficial fostering of heretical disunion known by the misleading name of religious liberty and toleration. The only re!igion in Spain that requires freedom, the only Church in Spain that can suffer from intolerance, is this Catholic religion and Catholic Charch; and how can that Church beless oppressed, how can it be more th.,ruoghly tolerated, than when it is recognized in law, as it is in fact, as the soleand single religion of the country, to be respected by all authorities, and to be defended against all outrages i Is the legislation of a country to be guided by the evident welfare of the population or is it not ? Without going beyond the con sideration of a plain common sense ques tion of this sort, it is possible to dissipate the whole of the clouds of words which has been raised over this subject. Tuere are some seventeen millions of Spaniards in Spain, and these seventeen millions want no Church but the Church of their fathers. Does anyone desire to deprive them of the free exercise of the only religion with which they care to be acquainted t Certainly not the Supreme Pontiff or the Spanish Epis copate. What then, can be alleged in support of this preposterous demand for the introduction, of foreign worships There are some scores, or perhaps some hundreds, of English, German, and Ameri can diplomatic (ficial- , traders, railway servants, and mining engineers, together with a few dozen of Protestant Biblical agents, with abuse of the Spanish national religion in their mouths, and bad editions of the Sc,;ptures for circulation in their hands; and this is to be a reason for de claring that the Church of Spain ought to lose its old rights over Spaniards, and that Spaniards ought to be deprived of their old right of having their national religion protected from offensive and often blas phemous attacks. There is really, and trere can really be, no question about liberty of worship even as regards non Spaniards in this matter. The agitators for this pretended liberty know very well that if all they want is really permission for a handful of foreign Protestants to perform their particular de votions without penalty for themselves, and without offence to others, nothing can be less difficult than to obtain this permis sion to the utmost reasonable extent. It wherever there is a colony of Protestants of numbers sufololent to require some spe cial facilities for the exercise of their wor ship, the proper representations are made to that effect, and the proper securities given that legitimate devotions shall not be made a pretence for offensive prosely tism, it is perfectly certain that the requis ite license could be easily provided for. A dozen or a score of meeting houses or tem ples for such foreign residents in a dozen or a score of cities and seaports could be easily arranged for between the Spanish Government on the one hand and the foreign Governments on the other. This, however, is very different from the sweep ing and universal license which would let loose a flood of foreign itinerant anti Catholic controversialists, often of no doubtful antecedents, upon a Catholio na tion, setting up their discussion booths and tract agencea by quiet country sides, pla carding the corners with denunciations of '"Mariolatry," with selections from Mr. Newdegate or "Maria Monk" on conven unal institutions, or quotations from Prince Bismarek and Dr. Falck on the Jesuite and the Pope. If Spain indeed were as England or Germany, broken up into a thonsand sects, or devoid of unity and careless of unity, E "liberty of worship" in the sense whichb is meant by the agitators would indeed be impossible to be denied. For here, just as in Spain, the eme test of what the mas of the people requires would atil efies to - suggest thesoltation. The Spaniards want of liberty for the Spanish religion, and as the of only Spanish religion is the Catbholie one, ise liberty to the extent of perfest freedom for a the Catholic religion meets the necessities 5 ob of the case. In Germany and England I x- liberty for any particular creed alone would u- be hopelessly below the deplorable neees ly sities of anob a fragmentary religious con p. dition, and the Church recognisee the fact, - th as the Church always recognizes facts, wise as ly and well, and simply claims for her wor ad ship and her services the fall liberty which of is being claimed by, and granted to, the se thousand and odd conceits of private preju of dice with which the unfortunate country ur swarms. Certainly in England or Ger It many the Church could never, so long as aW their divided and broken religious condi a- tion subsists, think of elaiming for her wor to ship an exclusive privilege of liberty. ae Were England and Germany to become lI happily once more what Spain is still, with ;h populations exelusively Catholic save a- perhaps some diplomatic staffs or some busy or corious travellers, then indeed, m without swerving an inch from her imme as morial principles the Church would say: s All reasonable liberty of faith and worship d will be secnred by an exclusive liberty of a- Catholic faith and worship, because the is whole people is Catholic, and because the e most overwhelming reasons forbid a nation al to encourage the wanton introduction of d foreign errors and imperil the precious o possession of religious truth and unity by a the imported presence of unnatioal agits e tors. Not controversy but devout living according to the Faith, not ever seeking y truth in order never to And it, but having a found it to treasure it above all things else, r is the object and policy of the Christian e and Catholic religion. Let Spain be pru dently tolerant, indeed, of such honest convictions as are led by honest business to her shores, but to pass from this to the pertorbing. license that would assail the true faith of all in order to satisfy the con ceit or the bigotry of a group of aliens is as - unwise in policy as it is false in morality. WaSTErani MUSICAL CRITICISM. - The SLa rone (Wis.) Se thus describes the fiddling of Camilla Urso, and the perform ance generally in that town : a The fiddler Urso more than carved the fiddle. She dog sweet morsels of music out of it, all the way from the wishbone to the part that goes over the fence-last. She made it talk Norwegian, and squeezed little notes out of it no bigger than a cam I bric needle, and as smooth as a book agent. But the most agile flea catcher was Six teen fingered Jack, the sand-hill crane that had the disturbance with the piano. We never knew what the row was about, but when lie walked up to the piano smi- W ling and shied his castor into the ring, anybody could see that there was goingto be trouble. He spit on his hands, sparred a little, and suddenly landed a stunning blow right on the ivory, which staggered the piano. and caused an exclamation of agony. First knockdown for Jack. He paused a moment then began putting on blows right and left in such a cruel man ner that the spectators came near breaking into the ring. Whenever a key saowed its 91 head be mauled it. Another example to M.,bie is the P.ed- J mont factory on the Salnad river in South Carolina. It hasjust been completed, and is now in smoota running olJ-er, making cloth equal in texture to the Graniteville factory. One hundred hands are employed, and the annual consumption of the raw material will be about 4 000 bales of cot ton. The Graniteville mills made a profit of $54. 765 60 last year on a capital of $600,000. And this is exactly what we have so persistently preached to our people here. It is not necessary to put millions into a cotton mill to make it pay ; and surely the employment of even a hundred bands, from the now unutilized labor of Mobile, would be an equal gain its way A to a round little profit of $55,000, or near ten per cent. of an investment like that of Graniteville. How much indirect profit, in additional inducement for cotton to Mobile, and for handling and charges on it, a mill would result in, wehave already discussed. -Mobile Register. Be Frank Beard, the .:st, while at dinner recently, was talki:,: of a man in Nassau street with three handsu. " How is that t" asked Beard. " He's got A little be hind band," was the reply. " You are a more extraordinary man, was the reply, "for you have two heads; you have a head of your own, and you've got ahead of me.' CISTERN MAKERS. R, BROIDERICK, CISTEEN MAKXE, Noe. 13'2. 134 and 136 Jolia Streot. Between :amp and Maasuine, New Orleans. Constantly on hand an assortment of New and Seoond.haud Cisterns. All orders promptly attended to ap9 7S it -- A. MURRAY, Cistern Maker, 191.... Magazine street ....191 (Between Julia and 8t Joseph.) DIPLOMAS AWARDED iN 1879 ASD 1873. i·ttern madetoorder and repaired. All wor warranted. A 1ot of is. terne. iUi 1iOto9o.000oallons. made of tad bhst materisa and workman. ship, kept constatl on hand and for sale at prices to smlt the times. Ordes pmoptly attended to. UlO9 765 1. MIS'ELLAEIUJS ADVE£TISEUENTS. J H. KEL;ER. - MaUrACrvut OF 110 QAa Ega ALL KINDS 0 LAUNDRt AND TOILET O8AP. my2l 76 ly HOLD THE MIRROR UP TO NATURE. Life-Like Pictures at Reduced Prices. J. H. KAMMER, UPPER CITY PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY. 572 ........ Magazine Street ...........572 Opposite Me agaun Market. eautifull, f inished CARTES DE VISITS, at per dsemn. RXMBR&ND'tkad COPTING aspeelaity. Swork finished neatly. C4U and a the styles. J. H. AMMSB, Artist Photomrpber. .m Msnsdta skros ,pp opmto E asa Mrks4. ." A " THTHE WORLD'S AWARD ,e sauses iIN IeM1aExe NN "THE WORLD'S FAVOII 11 00 o d E III MN NM NN 00 as THERE WERE SOLD d uuasq III N MM1 " 00T . uas in NM 3M NMi 0 3333 528,755 Sewing Machines, THAT NEARLY ONE-HALF Again Victorious Over All Competitors. THE WORLD'S AWARD SAGAIN BZ3OITVW 3? ', "THE WORLD'S FAVORIITJ OF ALL THE EWING MACHINE SOLDES FOR 1875: THERE WERE SOLD WHIH I UFFIIENT EVIDEN CE OF ITS SUPERIORITY OVER ALL 528,755 Sewing TM achines, OFWHICH 249,852 WERE OF THE SINGER PATENT.' THUSOILE LIFE IT WILL BE CEEN THAT NEARLY ONE-HALF. OF ALL TE EWIN MORGAINES SOLD I TE YEARJUNE 18 WERE87 SI NGE R'S, WHICH IS SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE OF ITS SUPERIORITY OVER ALL OT -0 - Snd for ILLUSRANTED CTPROGRLCESSIVE and PICE LIST, ITUTd for CLSU RATES. dd THELL HE NEW MAND IMPROVED COMPANY, 1Other Plans of Pol...--es as Issed by this Company. jag 76 Sm NNW ORLUAN OBILE LAUICE INSUcRTHNCE COPdent. JOHN MOBGUIR E, ALA.-Pident ORGANIZED JUNE 1871. A VIGOROUS AND PROGRESSIVE "HOME INSTITUTION," ISSTIfI1G POLIOIE HLL THE NEW AND IMPOVED PLANtry Before insuring Your Life Ewisewhere, Examine into the Life Endowment Other Plans of Policies as Issued by this Company., MAURICE McCARTHY, Presldent. J')HN MAGUIRE, Vle.-President. H. IL FRIEND. SOoretary. SHEPPARD HOMANS. Actuary. PeMwsb desring Insurance. or thoe wishing to ast as Agents, will pe...o addrss H. M. FRIEND, Semretary, myso 75 ly Meblla. Alab BELLS. E UEE EYEELL BE L OLDr. Z.g.&ei.d i. R1T. C.pfTie tU. c" and Tin. m.Jnsdh th 4.t otaEyNeng. Infsreto r CA.. celeh-W.. Po r C(HE A -"AD 16MI.. PEII... WarMte0.d. Plllu.t d Caat~ R rae.o i 7e. &ENVAYSNDUZE & Ti.T, m.ae tMa wt ess.sd SL,Ctsi.ac. o8 75 ly B.J. WEST. Agent, New Orleaa MENEELY'S BELLS. The genuine TROY BELLS, known to the public since li86 which, by their uniform excellence, have acquired A reputatllon unequalled by any and a sae Catalogues free. No agencies. Pestomce address, either TROY or WEST TROT, Jyss 7ly MENEELY & COMPANY.. MOSHANE BELL FOUNDRY Manufacture those celebrated BELLS for CHURCHUS, ACADEMIXS, ETC. Price List and Circulars sent free. HENRY McSHANE & CO., JiS7 l y Baltiaor'. Md. jv18 751, seow SGLASS STAINERS CUTTERS, AND EMBOssEgl CURURCI WINDOW A SiPZCIAITT. VV COULTEB 4k is.O, le, 6104 E. dSt.,odq i s i4 IS ) , e¶-. CARRIAGE MAKERS. W. F. CLARK, 134 and 136..... Rampart Street.....134 and l Between Toulouse and St. Peter, Iaw OIL1Ama. - Manufacturer of all kinds of - Carriages, Barouohes, Buggies Express Wagone, Platform and Elliptio 85,b Wagons, s8WW o MACHINZ WAGONs, sr Agent for Jas. Cunningham & Son's celbmtedOle Country orders promptly attended to. le W J. THOMSON & BROS., Carriage and Spring Wagon laker, 68 and 70........Rampart Street......68 aad Between Common and Gravier. Received Highest Premiums at State Faire of 1871.1 1873 and 1876 for beest amily Photon. Vlotort O and Top Bugglaes Beer Wagon, Grooar Wagon, Zxpres Wagon. ote. atie practical worLkmen, and emlofi_c . Sbeta mecaniel, we aro prepareld og omatM or repair Carriage, Des leeta BSpring Wagonie.etl. refer to many buanee meon In the oity ueingl " our maanuifture. All work gnateed. feUl... JOSEPH SCHWARTZ, InPOrTU AID DZI&ZI ID Carriage, Wagon and Cart laterals, Springs, Axles, Bolts, Beady.Made Wheels Bodles, Wood Work, Trimmings. PAINTS AND VA.RNISH] , SAeVra PATYENT WEE Carriage and Wagon Maker and Repaid N- areeme and lasheb - Nor. 48 45 and 477 Per 4Me Skere,