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The Times-Picayune from New Orleans, Louisiana • Page 4

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New Orleans, Louisiana
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4
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PUBLISHED BT THE II OBLEAKS PICAYUSI FHTK6 COT A. 01. aOL.nB.OOBk., PrMHMt THE PICAYUNE 4 4i Has the Largest Circulation in the Southwest OP TH1 frCAYPHIL SLATES OF SUBSCRIPTION Daily, pr an-" aum. In (druot, 12 half-yearly, quar- Bio bJf THE FAPEK-Blnjle copies, Five OOAtS. VKEKIiT PICA.

UnA Three Dollars per 9ATKS OF All ERTISINO All traaadent advertisement, first Insertion, Mt equare, Mi each obeeqaeat Insertion 75 euu. Advertisements lor insertion at intervals tot eheaged as new oacin Insertion. All edverttaements not marked for any aped 11 ad nomber of lnaertloes, will be published six times and charged aooerdingly. Out taken at eyeeial rates. No sdverttaemeuter subscription will be stopped until arrearages axe paid, unless at the op-tlea of the proprietors.

Editorial notices of eavertleemente te be oharged twenty oenta per line caoa laeortton. FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 17, 1874. Thx Weekly Picayune. -Our weekly edition, filled with the most interesting news, correspondence and rnisoella-neoua matter, will be issued as usual Saturday morning. The "Weekly Picayune has a wide ountry circulation, and, therefore, offers to merchants and others a most desirable medium through which they may bring to the notice of the country trade their various stocks of goods, besides aflording a fond of amusement and instruction to the general reader.

Nottck to Pouncur Qltjbs. Political advertisements will not be inserted in the Picayune unless paid for in advance. Picayune is indebted to the 'courteous officers of the steamship Margaret for late Havana papers. Senator West has arrived and judging by the irate murmur among enthusiastic merchants, he may yet consider himself very unfortunate in not being the victim of a railroad smash up." Horace Greeley's advice to young men, with a slight variation of the accent, is flitting through the brain of more than one sturdy champion of the Fort St Philip Ship Canal. We learn from Major G.

W. Terrell, general agent of the Piedmont and Arlington Life Insurance Company, of Virginia, that a convention of the general agents of all life insurance companies, doing business in the South, will be held at the Bath Alum Springe, Virginia, on Wednesday. August 19, 1874. As matters of great importance in this branch of business will be discussed and acted upon, it is hoped that there will be a full attendance of those interested. The court established to determine the' Alabama claims will meet for organization on the 22d.

Considerable correspondence has already been received from the various claimants, presenting their cases and otherwise taking the preliminary steps to a prosecution of their suit. The court, it is understood, will adopt immediate measures respecting the presentation of claims, but will not proceed to actual business till some time later. Congress, just before its adjournment, appropriated $250,000 for the payment laborers on the public works of Washington City. "It now appears," says the St. Louis Times, "that twenty-five per cent, of this money goes into the hancA of a law- yer who was engaged to lobby the bill through Congress.

In order 'to secure the attorney in the collection of his feu the whole amount goes into his hands, and then returns to the commission less his reduction. Such are the advantages of a Republican administration. Who would not belong to the party of great moral ideas 1" Germarr fatalists, and specially those among them who are antagonistic to German unity, are greatly interested in the history of the Imperial Bell for the Cathedral of Cologne, made from the first cannon captured from the French in the recent war. According to ah exchange this bell was intended to take the place of the Imperial Bell" of Frankfort, which was destroyed by the fire which took place in the Cathedral August 14, 1857, on the eve of the triumphal entry of William of Prussia into that ancient free city. Three attempts to cast the new bell were failures, and the bell produced on the fourth attempt was not only minus the imperial crown, which ought to have surmounted it as an emblem of German unity, but was so disagreeable in its tone that it was out of the question to use it.

A fifth casting will accordingly be made, and the superstitious, who consider the misadventures attending the work as ominous of ill for the Empire, await the result with something akin to anxiety. Max Adeler's Book. Mr. Louis J. lioewenetein, 549 Magazine street, is the sole agent for the sale in Mew Orleans of Max Adeler's new book, "Oat of the Hurly-Burly, or Life in un Odd Corner." This book is esteemed by literary critics in other cities the best of Adeler's productions.

Summer Concert. To-night the eighth summer concert, of the second series, will take place at Granewald Hall. GnngTs Quodlibet of Popular Airs" will be among the attractions, with the "Barbier de "Stra-della," Les Huguenots," aud others. People's Insurance Company. The annual election for directors of this company will be held on Tuesday, the 28th between the hours of 10 A.

M. and 2 P. at the office of the ooinpany, No. Ptter street, THE ATTITUDE, OF THE, The question for New Orleans politicians to consider now, appears to be something like thiaj Can we save Louisiana without the co -operation of the parishes, or shall we concede a little to them and their plainly ex-' pressed desires It has come to this. There is no room for doubt that the city and the country are, under existing circumstances, utterly at variance with each other.

And the city must saddle its scheme, of operations with the problem here set forth. We have watched the movements of the parishes very closely from the first, and the result which has at last revealed itself is only what might have reasonably been expected. Had the name of the Democratic party retained its ancient, magic and the influence of its leaders kept its former strength had it been possible to mass our armies by the Democratic call, and lead them to under the Democratic banner the White Leagues would never have been formed. That organization, inconsiderable here, perhaps, but stern and powerful and resolute throughout the country, is the practical expression of the people's discontent and distrust. It has sprung up from the nshes not of the party, perhaps, but of its follies and its.

failures; it demands another' system of control, a wiser theory of action And the logic of events has brought about this question which, as we have already, said, the politicians of New Orleans must now consider. The parishes demand a hearing in the councils -of and their demand has so far assumed the fol-o wing shape 1. We want a Convention to assemble outside of New Orleans. 2. We want that Convention to be limited in numbers, so that its personnel may be select.

3. We want the country to enjoy an opportunity of making itself heard. 4. We want the name and the policy of the white man's party for the present campaign to be decided by the Convention thus assembled. In other words let those words seem harshfand ungrateful if need be the parishes are not willing to accept any platform in whose construction they have had no part they decline to adopt, any leadership as to which they have not been consul ted they have lost confidence in the New Orleans Democracy as now represented, and, to use a popular vulgarism, they want an entirely new deal all around.

Instead of a convention called and controlled by the Democracy, they ask for a convention which shall decide whether the Democracy is to be an important or unimportant adjunct of the common Instead of going as recruits to the Democratic nucleus, they purpose to meet as independent equals the recruits of other armies and in council with) them confer the name and shape the policy- of the- There must be no forgone conclusions, no cut and dried plans; the campaign must take its rise under their auspices, and the cause of all the people go forth with the people's direct and legitimate benediction. It were the most unpardonable folly to ignore all this. No one who views the situation in a focus one whit larger than will hold his own ward club, can ail to recognize the imminence and the solemnity of the crisis. The Democratic address has evoked no response beyond the limits of the city. The utterances of the country press and people plainly indicate that it will not, cannot evoke one.

With one hundred thousand white voters professing to cherish the same desire with a people reduced to such straits of poverty and discouragement that material relief has loomed into a grim and awf al necessity; with hearts that beat in solemn unison, and hands that ask nothing but to be directed honestly and loyally; with the supreme moment of our destiny arrived, and the perfection of our ruin awaiting us beyond, we find ourselves dismembered and dissevered void of that identity of purpose audi concentration of endeavor without' which no benefit can be attained, no, step toward the light achieved. As matters stand, there is a widening breach between those who should be shoulder to shoulder in the line. Something blinds us, something dims the truth, and folly breaks our efforts into fruitless parallels. We are bo wl-ing briskly along that well-worn road which passes through the domain of dissension, and has its inevitable ter-j minus in defeat. We have traveled it before, we recognize its ancient and familiar landmaiks, and the foretaste of the end salutes us as we go.

This question of the parishes is before you, gentlemen. It has taken seven years to run up the annual expenses of the State Government of South Carolina from $260,668 to $1,806,544. The' St. Louis Daily Times, commenting on the above, asks Who can say after this, that the Radical' party is at all deficient in capacity, especially when it comes to phlebotomizing an oppressed and helpless people The Po pe speaks most cordially of America. The Giornaie di Fireoze, in an article on the reception by the Pope of the American pilgrims, says that his Holiness, in his reply to the address of the Catholics, stated as follows; America, to-day, is the only country where I am really Pope in the eyes of the Government.

In all the countries of Europe I fear lest I should see my acts controlled or opposed bv the civil power, while to America can freely send all Pontiflcial documents, without fearing that the Government will oppose their publication." FEDERAL INDIAN POLICY. Gen. Sherman commends himself to consideration because of bis possession of the virtue of directness in the use of language, and his almost brutal hatred of shams. He has no soit of tenderness for pretense, and the most pretentious fraud extant is the Indian policy of the Federal Government, to which Gen. Sherman draws attention in one of those characteristically incisive letters with which he sometimes 'favors, startles and entertains his friends and the public The candid General pithily sums up the policy which he derides, in these neatly satirical sentences The Indian Bureau has fed the Indians all winter, and.

the ponies are fat, so the savage warrior is in tine trim foi the acquisition of fresh scalps and plunder. Next fall, after the summer's aotivity, they will all be taken back and fed. Columns of facts, figures and reasoning could not have more explicitly exposed the weakness and folly of the policy pursued towards the Indians, than the half doen lines quoted above. The Government has not only fed and cherished the murdering and plundering savages, but its agents have furnished them with the most approved fire-arms besides. Every army officer of experience has protested vigorously against this puerile, bartering treatment of a race which knows no magnanimity or gratitude where its hereditary antipathy, the white man, is concerned.

Fear is the only passion of the Indian mind which can be made subservient to his subjection. The kid glove and cologne water treatment only excites the contempt of the Indian, who warms his toes by the fire in winter, secures his, arms, fattens his ponies, and laughs in his sleeve at the weakness of the Great Father, and then starts out on his marauding expeditions in the summer, well knowing that the Indian Bureau will gently chide his summer indiscretion, on his return, and proceed to deal out food to the weary soul, and wink at the acute and speculating agent who hastens to meet the warrior with a fresh supply of arms, if he should have been so unfortunate as to lose his trusty Springfield or Winchester during his campaign. We do not comprehend, in view of the facts, of recent and previous Indian outrages, that Gen. Sheridan was so very inhumane when he practiced extermination upon a notorious tribe a few years ago, and brought down upon his head the virtuous indignation of slippered and cigared editors, who wrote "their denunciations in the security of well-furnished apartments, and in the full possession of their hair. Of course, the murdered men! women' and children on the frontier were not to be taken into the account.

The untutored savage Bhonlu be dealt with after the Christian mode of warfare. This is all very fine, but your savage does not comprehend that sort of warfare. He would exterminate the whites if he had the numerical force. Is the Government prepared to allow the wholesale slaughter of whites upon the frontier to go unavenged i I The Great Substitute for Calomel. In Cundurango may be found the oaly substitute for calomel ever discov-eied.

Acting directly tu the liver, it relieves the system of all superabundant bile, restores the stomach to a healthful condition, and sets the kidneys free to perform their functions, while toning up the entire nervous economy. Among the many who owe their restoration to Cundurango are a number of our leading citi sens, whose testimonals may be found in this morning's Picayune, together will an appended list of Maguire's ce ebrated specifics. Messrs. Morrison Woodward, No. 1 Magazine street, corner of Canal, are nolo accents of Maguire remedies for the Southern States, Mexico and Cuba.

By Telegraph, Baton Houge, Jnly lli. To' J. B. Woods No. 124 Uravier street: Great Republic will arrive atlO to-night and leave on time tor of.

Liquis. J. P. 100NG, Clerk. Trenton July 16.

To William B. Clarke. 52 Carondelet street steamer Willie will arrive riday ut 13 and leave Saturday rBitively. W. Blanks, Master.

Baton Rouge, Jnlv lC To Sinnott AdamB nVV .1 arrive at 7 P. leave Sat- unlay on time, K. Sinnott. Steamer Bart Ab e. DIED.

FONT A tfclarentrn. Jnlr IS. Dr. JULES FONT, nailtjeol atctB, aged S9 years. The ranrrnl will take place from No.

3 If South Franklin atraet. between Clio and Erato, at 10 o'clock Thia Morning. friends and acquaintance aie retrpectfour invited to attend. HALL OF THE ORuKANS DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION. The member ot this eta-elation are notified to meet at their hall, 18 St.

Charles atieet. Tills (Friday) Evening at 4 o'clock, for the purpose of attending the funerai of Dr. JUIJES FONT, late a member of this Association. I C. 7.

BUCK, President. M. D. GAR DITIB, Secret' 7. TOTJBWrjCR On Thursday, Tory 1, 1874.

at 4:40 P. NATHALIE yB.KHlNSA.V, wile A. Foornier, of this city. The inneral will take place at 4fc P. M.

This Pay, from he late reel denes, corner of Lanrei and Jtna streets, Blxth District, which the friends and a a of both families are respectfully 1 a-rited to attend without farther notice. Belma, Mebile and DemopoUa, papers please copy. OEHXIB Thursday. Jnly 18, at o'clock BRT JOSEPH OEHEEB. arad P.

ALBSBT eleven years and three month, yoongeet eon of the late ChaaJ Geheeb and Belinda Medley. The friends land acquaintances of the family and those of Geheeb. are funeral from lis brothers, Charles and Theodore respectfully Invited to attend bis aia lata residence. No. 489 Poydraa.

sear corner 3H o'clock. of Galvei street. This Afternoon at FORT) On Thursday, the 18th at 10 o'clock. P. i.u tuKU, area tniriy-nve years, a native ox jranan.

ox oam, county Galway, IrelAnd His foneral will take place This Afternoon, at dock, from his late residence, half-past corner of Clio and Clara streets, sua friends and acquaintances are Invited to attend. SPECIAL NOTICE. New Orle in. SU Iaala ud Chicago Jtatlraad Company, New Orleans Jackson and Great Northern Railroad Company, Consoidated. Mlaaiaaippi antral Railroad NI ORLE AN8, July 16, 1874.

COAL OIL, POWDER and COMBUSTIBLE articles will be received by this Company for shipment on Thursdays and Mondays, at the GOVERNMENT TARD. near our old depots. Jyl7 Zw XL A. BCRKE, Freight Agent. NO.

ISO CANAL STH.EKT. it PLEASE GIVE TOUR ATTEHTIOJT TO THE FOLLOWING REASOSS WAY THE NEW AMERICAN IS THE BEST 8EWING MACHINE MADE: It runs the lightest of any Shuttle Machine, It makes the least noise. It has a SELF-SETTING NEEDLE, SELF-REGULATING TENSION and SELF-THREADING SHUTTLE. It never skips stitches or the It Is most easily learned. It can be instantaneously ao Justed te use from No.

SCO to No. 10 cotton. Its perfect simplicity of mechanism makes it easy to learn "by the most Inexperienced. It is thoroughly made In all its parts of the beat materials, and every machine is warranted by the company and lta agents. It will laet a Ufetlmo and never get oat of order.

The construction of its shuttle and shuttle, race la such' that no wear comes on t'e shuttle, as In other machines. Its shuttle never wears out. It wearing points are adjusted on steel cea-tres, i hereby avoiding friction and adding greatly to its durabiUty. Its shuttle and bobbin can be taken ont and replaced in one-fourth the time necessary with other machines. Itt feed can be quickly raised or lowered to adapt it to thick or thin material.

ItssUtch can be regulated from above while the machine la in motion. Ita tensions are easily, evenly and perfectly adjusted. Its under thread is drawn from a short, deep bobbin, giving a perfectly, even tension, and ever breaks the thread. It makes the lock-stitch th) strongest and best. I The most scientific machinists of Europe and America have tailed to find a single point whereon an improvement could be made.

YOU ARK CORDIALLY INVITED TO CALL AT THE OFFICE, Caaal ISO And examine this Perfect and Faithful WOMAN'S FRIEND. AU Improved MACHItsE ATTACHMENTS. THREAD, OILS, NEEDLES, AT- Tfce Ltwcnt Kates. We want agents and canvassers In every county i i in the South, to whom we 1 I OFTEB LIBERAL INDUCEMENTS I. G.

BERRY. Manager. Address: AMERICAN B. H. O- AND SEWING MA.

1 CHINE COMPANY, 180 Canal street. New Orleans. Machines cleaned and thoroughly repaired. AU the improvements, attachments, etc added to old machines. N.

B. The above machine la manufactured In the city of Philadelphia, and the company in placing their improved machine before the publio do so under a fall guarantee, it having been thoroughly tested by thi severest critica, and has met with universal commendation by all who have used it. It sews very rapidly, and the extreme lightness with which It runs places it at once in GREAT FAVOR WITH DELICATE LADIES, who have heretofore been unable to use Sewing Machines. The company natter themselves, and they are sustained by the pubUo In the opinion, that all the intricate principles which have heretofore perplexed' the machinist and annoyed the operator have, by a succession of happy ideas, been entirely overcome, and that the NEW AMERICAN STANDS PAR EXCELLENCE in the Ion list Sewing Machines, without a rival the world. Cash purchasers will find them liberal in the extreme.

G. BERRY. Manager, JjlT lm New Orleans Office. IMPORTANT. TO EVERY MAN, WOMAN AND CHILD IN THE WHOLE WORLD.

YELLOW FEVER MAY VISIT US IN EPIDBMIO FORM, SMALL POX IS ALREADY PREVALENT. TYPHOID, BIL-LIOUB AND OTHER LOW TYPES OP FEVERS ARE CONSTANTLY PREVAILING. The main, and in fact. PRINCIPAL CAUSE of the above diseases Is Torpid Liver, Constipation, and a bilious or malarious oondition of the system. NO PERSON NEED to fear an attack of any epidemie when the system is in perfect order, and free from bile, malaria, eta, and the circulation of the blood la in perfect condition.

Asa means to bring about this healthy condition of the body. It is a well established fact that the world has never before known SO RELIABLE a remedy as A-GTJIRE'a CUNDURANGO LIVER, SIDNEY and BLOOD BITTERS. As any one who has ever taken it will tell you that it Is THOROUGH, yet MILD In its action, doing NO vlo. lenoe to the stomach or system In any manner, bnt mildly removes all malarloae bUe and poisonous matter from the system, thereby dissipating biliousness, constipation, lassitude, headache, nervous debility, etc, causing the blood to become healthy, and the circulation perfect. DO NOT WAIT until you are laid up In bed.

and completely broken do wo, hut atone get a bottle ot MA-GUIKI'3 CUNDURANGO. take it and without fear, and thus avoid an attack of any WE CAN KErER you to thousands who hare used the Bitters and have been saved in many Instances from an untimely grave. To onr knowledge, no one has ever need it without having became an advocate for It, and acknowledge its wonderful powers it quickly dissipates Jaundice, Rheumatism, Chills and Fever, and all diseases caused by a torpid Liver, and they are many. WE APPEND THE NAMES of a few out of the many thousands that have voluntarily represented to us the great benefits they have derived from its use, and if you still doubt, all yoa have to do is to either ask or write to any of these parties and they will themselves tell you their experience In the use of Cundurango. IT IS 'A THOBOUGH VEGETABLE SUBSTITUTE FOB? CALOMEL.

MAGCIKG'S CUNDURANGO NEW ORLEANS. AprU 23, 1874. Messrs. Morrison A Woodward, corner Canal and Magazine streets, city Gentlemen Having received great benefits from the use of nfagolre's Condarango Llvr Kidney and Blood Bitters, wish to express to you our high appreciation of its great virtues, especially as an alterative, depurator diuretlo and purgative, acting as thoroughly as ealome' blue mass and other mercurial preparations, yej mildly, and without their irritating, nauseous and Injurious effects. Believing it to have the merit claimed for it.

we recommend it to all who suffer from Indl geetlon. Constipation, Headache, Fever anl Ague, and other diseases Induced by Torpid Liver and Kidney oomplalnts. Mason Piioher, 109 Customhouse. J. G.

Farbam, of J. U. A H. M. Payne fc Co.

Charles R. Railey, 88 Magazine. E. K. Converse, 84 Magazine.

Peter Moran. (Page A Mo ran.) James F. Casey, Collector of Customs. Johnson Armstrong, 53 Camp. Robert L.

Adams, of Robert L. Wirt Adam B. P. Ethel, 7t Poydraa. John F.

Thomas, 108 Camp, Gazette Office. Robert Chapsky, 44 Magazine. Silas Weeks, 48 Carondelet. C. A.

Green, 62 Union. J. N. Harrison, 209 Camp. A.

S. Davidson, Canal Street Ferry. Charles Grioe, Steamer Natchez. -James Littlejohn, 89 Natchez. John M.

Burrows, 72 Gravier. J. annoy, 117 Common. J. P.

Harrison, 64 Baronne. J. W. Davis, of Davis Freret. H.

Carter, Canal Street Ferry. B. A. Owen, Steamer Natchea. Edward Newman, Third and Baronne.

Jas. H. Hnmmel. Our Home Journal. W.

S. Mount, Carondelet and Union. Thos. Woodward, 94 Conataaoe. John A.

Russell, 2 Second street. Rev. A. J. Tardy, 296 Josephine.

And many others. Au oi we pnpuwgiu oomponsaea uj Messrs. Magnire are HN RIVALED as specinoa lor all diseases for which they are respectively recommended they embrace, In part the following For Diarrhea and Bowel Complaint. Maguire's Extract Bonne Plant For Debility or Want of Blood. Maguire's sarsaparlUa Tonic.

For Ague and Chills, Maguire's Ague Mixture. For Kidney Afflictions, Maguire's Extract Buohu. For Rheumatism, Neuralgia, eta. Maguire's Alterative For Coughs and Colds, agulr Expectorant Syrup. For Consumption, Maguire's Tar, Glycerine, Whisky and Bock Candy.

For Piles, Maguire's White Rose Pi's Cure. For Worms, Maguire's Worm Ppwder. For Sprains. Bruises, eto Maguire's Arnica Liniment. For Colio or Weak Stomach.

Maguire's Jamaica Giager. For Toothache or Pains. Maguire's Electric Fain Cure. HAIR RESTORATIVE BALM, packed two dozen in a ease. ANTI-BILIOUS PILL8, one (I) gross in a case.

EYE WATER, for sore and weak eyes. RING WORM LOTION. HORSE LOTION. MORRISON WOODWARD, 1 Magazine street, New Orleans. La, Sole Agents and joint proprietors tor the Southern States, Mexico and Cuba.

Jjl6-2dp "FIRE AND UH INSURANCE" AGENCY, No. 9.. NORTH BRITISH AND MERCANTIL INSURANCE COMPANY LONDON AND EDINBURGH. Capital, Gold Tea Millions. ORGANIZED IN 1S09.

ISSUES POLICIES ON MERCHANDISE. FURNITURE, AND DWELLINGS, -At- LOCAL BOARD BATES, WITH. USUAL FIFTEEN PER CENT. REBATE. ALL LOSSES, WHEN ADJUSTED, SET TLED THROUGH THIS OFFICE.

WW. E. FITZ GERALD. LOCAL, AGENT, No.3.M..CABONDELXT 3 iETNA JLIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. OF HARTFORD, CT.

Assets Nearly Twenty fiTllIioa Dollars. OBGANIZED IN 1820. No experiment, but a GENUINE LIFE COMPANY, offering BONA FIDE INDEMNITY la ease Of DEATH. Isaacs Policies, on all the approved plans, at the Lowest Bate, consistent with security and Indemnity. No Increase of Bates, and No Danger of Withdrawal on Account of Southern Mortality.

AT.r. LOSSES, WHEN ADJUSTED, SET TLED BY THE MANAGER. WM. E. FITZ GEBALD Ne.

9 Carondelet street, MANAGER, State of Louisiana and Mississippi. Jalo74-tt CITY, TAX-PATK K3. We are paying atd CITY TAXES at a liberal diseonnt. 7 JOHN KLEIN A CO. 33 Carondelet street.

Front Offload Jy5 WeFrSnThSaAMoE lmldp CARPET AND Oil. CLOTH WARKH0TJ8S. ELKIN Ss CO.t 16S Canal NEW CANTON Mattings, White. Cfc and Fancy- OIL CLOTHS from to 24 feet wide. -CARPETS of every description.

At extremely low pr oea. Jyl ImeedMp LOUISIANA SAVINGS. SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY. 81 Camp Street. Capital, SS0O.OO0.

E. C. PALMER, President. JAMES JACKSON. Vice President Directors: ED.

CONERY, FRED. WING, 1 J. H. KELLER, W. H.

THOMAS, DAVID WALLACE, JAS. JACKSON. E. PALMER. Its capital gtvea security to depositors, ha.

posits of Fifty Cents and upward received, uj SIX PER CENT, interest allowed. JylO tf JOHN S. WALTON. Caahu- G. 01.

BAYLY Sc POND, WHOLESALE OBOOllg AXD r' COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 48 mnd SO Canal and 67 and 69 Comma streets, NEW ORLEANS, LA. Referring to the above oard, and thanking sr friends for past favors, we now propose te give their orders onr usual prompt attention, at lowest market prices. i Je28-2m Q. M. BAYLY A POND.

BODICE'S COMMERCIAL. COLLEGE, The Commercial Atheneum of the South, eoraar Camp and Common streets. Story Banding. Open Day and Evening the entire Bummer. Ail branches of Commercial Science are taught by actual practice, through mercantile and banking offices, and daily leoturee.

No copying from books at Boole's CoUega. An English. aeparW ment for boys twelve to elrhteen years ef age Is a special feature of this institution. N. B.

SOULK'S CONTRACTIONS ET NUMBERS, lust published. 270 ttmo, is the only boek before the public containing ally elucidated operations in English, French, Carman, Austrian. Koaelaa and Brazil Exchange, baaed upon the new values of foreign money ana. the new methods of quoting English ana German Exchange. Price t'i- SOCLE'S PHILOSOPHIC WORK ON MATHEMATICS 880 is the great arithmetical work: of the age, and should be la the bands of all business men, teachers sad studeDte.

Price 13. Both bonks for sale at the COLLEGE OFFIOS and at GREaHAM'8 and HARP'S Book Da-pots. Jy5 lm2dp CARD. TEXAS REAL ESTATE DRAWING. The Hon.

Jas. T. D. Wilson, Mayor of Hsu ton, and the City Council. Indorse the enter, prise as follows HOUSTON, Texas, April 29, 1874, We, the undersigned, regard the Real Estate Distribution, which J.

E. Foster proposes make on the 20th of Jnly next, in this city, as calculated to promote improvements, sad placing within the reach of many, who ether, wise would be unable, a chance to aeoure a homo for them and their families, and having, from onr long acquaintance with him. every confidence In bis integrity, we feel Justified la saying, that we believe he win carry out hi Distribution honestly and fairly, according to his adrertta James T. D. Wilson Fred.

Stanley, F. W. Heltmann, John Maher, N. P. Turner, B.

F. McDoaough, B. Baer, John D. Usenet Robert Burns, M- Harrington. Capital Prise.

$5000, Gold. Ten Raaldences ia Houston: Population 20,000, and the railroad centre of the State, and nearly lso tracts of laad in different' portions of the State. Value of prises. 78,000 tickets, at S3 each. -Address J.

E. FOSTER, Manager, Houston. Texas. T. W.

HOUSE, Treasurer. Jots 4m FAIRBANKS' UNITED STATES. 8TANDAXD SCALES. WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. THE BEST IN THE WORLD.

Highest Friz at Farts, 1867. Highest Prlxe at 1S7X. Hlsheat Prize at JHaatreaJ, 1S73. HIgheot Prix at SUeta, Georgia, 1873. Ut THEIR CORRECTNESS OF PRINCE) PLX8, IN THEIR ACCURACY OP ADJUSTMENT, IN THEIR DURABILITY.

And- 5 IN THEIR CONVENIENT ADAPTABILITY TO EVERY BUSINESS NEED." THEY ARE WITHOUT A PEES. H. TB0EMSTEBS 8TKKL CORN MILLS SCHBXVEE'8 LETTER PRESSES, BALDWIN'S CELEBRATED ALARM MONEY DRAWER. Every variety, and for an uses, to be hxd at then? Warehouse. Ne.

83 Canto JtreeW New Orleans. W. B. BOWMAN. Ax 4.

LYRICS. A VOLUME OF POEMS. BY PEARL RIVERS. To be had at the book stores of JAMES A. KESHAN, Camp street.

FORGE ELLIS A BRO 83 Camp street EAXN A CO- JaaodAW 174 Canal BF. SIMMS 28 Nacbex street AGENT MI8ISSIPFI MILLS. Woolen Fabrics, for spring, summer ew In handsome style. TWEEDS, assorted colors. COTTON GOODS.

OSNABCBOS, 8 os. Heavy 8HEETI NO, 4 4. 7-8 SHIHTI Wf. Brown DHtLLISO. WOOLEN GOO I S.

Color! Cot ton Heavy CH KCK8, blue, brown and Oiav Cotton A RN S. all wees. 6 to 12. ewwlng THREAD, 2 and Jy4 lmeod NOTICE TO i 1.

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Years Available:
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