Across the street from the Clarion, there's buildings there now. It was a row of houses, and when you go in above Canal Street, you go to the next street. It wasn't Gravier Street then. It was called Gasket Street. Gasket and South Liberty [streets], Gasket, Marais Street, Gasket, [?Villere], Gasket, [?Poydras]. All up in there was the uptown side of the red light district. It was black and white over there, all the way to Claiborne Street. Claiborne Street and you went back there, and where Louis was, right here, that was the battlefield. Gravier, Perdido [streets]. Perdido and Bolivar [streets], back then. When they say "Perdido and Bolivar," that was a honky tonk. That's where the renegades went out there. Rough people. Rough women. That's what Louis come up with. They had a dump back there. People talk about that dump. It was at South Galvez and [South] Miro [streets] and Gravier and Perdido. That was the battlefield. They had this big dump back there. Open space where they had all kinds of [expletive deleted]. When the wagon would come, the people would go out there to see what they dumping. The reason for that was they had . . . the United States, they used to bring stuff in this country. According to the customs, you could not bring that in this country. It wasn't made right, or it was contaminated, or it was considered . . . they didn't have the right things in there to protect people in America, because you have to drink different kinds of water. You can't . . . all that kind of business. Stuff come from all the world. From India, everywhere. They sent it here to America. Try to get a market. They would condemn it for various reasons, and they had all this cargo. They bring it out and they throw it on the dump. These people in that area went out there on the dump and get all this stuff. All kinds of food goods. Something that's perishable. So what was that about?