The industries of New Orleans, her rank, resources, advantages, trade, commerce and manufactures, conditions of the past, present and future, representative industrial institutions, historical, descriptive, and statistical . nd sufficient to satisfy the wants of customers from any sectionof the South. The head of the house is a man of rare capacity and consider-able means. The business is being pushed rapidly into new localitit-s where the finequality of the goods delivered attracts favorable attention to the house. This is ameritorious concern, well deserving th.^ good fortune that


The industries of New Orleans, her rank, resources, advantages, trade, commerce and manufactures, conditions of the past, present and future, representative industrial institutions, historical, descriptive, and statistical . nd sufficient to satisfy the wants of customers from any sectionof the South. The head of the house is a man of rare capacity and consider-able means. The business is being pushed rapidly into new localitit-s where the finequality of the goods delivered attracts favorable attention to the house. This is ameritorious concern, well deserving th.^ good fortune that has attended its energeticefforts thus far; sound and trustworthy in every event. GREVE & WILDERMANN. Western Produce, Coniniissirn and Forwarding Merchants: 20 South Ieters street. Joseph G. Greve and J. R. Wildermann associated themsehes for the purposes ofconducting a commission business in New Orleans some time in 186S. Owing princi-pally to their own generous business efforts, they have been measurably successful inretaining the confidence with which the business world was inspired upon their adventinto it. Their best trade is in the city, but they ha\e a fair share of the patronageof the interior The Industries of New Orxeans. 141 S. OTERI. Importer and Wholesaler of Fruits, Foreign and Domestic; Commission Merchant and Agent for theOteri Pioneer Central American Line of Steam Packets: 23 and 25South Front street near Gravier_ Long before attention had been directed to the long neglected Central Americantrade by the newspaper agitation thereon of the last couple of years, Mr. S. Oteri, whohad been for more than twenty years trading with the Caribbean ports as a fruit andproduce buyer, determined to try his fortune and risk some of the profits he had gainedin the establishment of a line of steamers to Central America. That was in 1874, nearlyten years before there was any public interest in the matter, and the line then set inoperation is now appropriately know


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Keywords: ., bookauthormorrison, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookyear1885