Newspaper Page Text
THE PUBLIC GOOD BEFORE PRIVATE ADVANTAGE.
I!Y ADAIIl & SMITH.
ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1862.
VOLUME I—NO. 304
s^uthent
i'JSJSCRIPTION A ADVERTISING SCHEDULE
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ADVERTISING
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IS
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86
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Yearly ailvertlsing, with the privilege of change, will
be taken at the following rates :
fur one Square, renewable once a month, I 85
K„r three Squares, W*
For one-fourth Column, *0
For one-half Column, HO
Kor one Column, - - 220
All Tabular work, with or without rules, anil adver
tisements occupying double column, will be charged
double the above rates.
AdvertUemeuts not marked on copy for a specified
time, will he published until ordered out, and charged
according to the above rates.
Advertisements Inserted In the Daily, and Wkrkly
editions, will be charged 50 per cent, additional to the
regular^laily rates.
Yearly advertisers will be limited to the space con
tracted for. They will be charged extra at regular rates
for Wants, Rents, Removals, Copartnerships, Notices to
Consignees, Ac., aud payment demanded quarterly.
TRANblKNT ADVERTISING ROST Bit PAID FOB IK
ADVANCE. . , ,
No advertisement will appear in the Weekly paper
unless by special contract.
Advertisements to lie inserted in the Weekly paper on-
m, or at irregular intervals in either of the papers, will
be charged $1 per square for every insertion.
Announcing candidates for State, County, and Muni
cipal offices, $5 each—to be paid in advance in every
loit&nce.
All advertisement* for Charitable Institutions, Milita-
ry aud Fire Companies, Ward, Town and other Public
Meetings, will be charged half price.
Marriages and deaths are published as news; but
Obituaries, Tributee of Respect and Funeral Invitations
as other advertisements. . . , D „
Editorial Notices in Local Column will be charged 20
cents per line. , . ..
Tiie paper, under no circumstances, to be included In
A contract. . . ^
No deduction or variation will be made from the fore-
going rates. ADAIR A SMITH.
Terms «r tegal Advertising.
“ales of Land ami Negroes, by Administrators, Ex
ecutors, oi Guardians, are required by law to be held
on the first Tuesday in the wenth, between the hours
I ten In the forenoon, and throe In the afternoon, at
Court House in the county in which the property is
situate*!. Notices of these sales must be given In a pub
lic gazette forty days previous to the day of sale.
Notices for Cm sale of personal property must be
given at least TKM days pluvious tothe be
piAliAe*! 1 Forty” days. „ . .
Notice that application will be made to the Court of
t M,Hilary for leave to sell laud or Negroes, must be pub
lished for TWO MOUTHS.
Citations for Letters of Administration must be pub
lished thirty days—for Dismission from Administration,
monthly six iiunittui—for Dismission from Guardian-
shlp,forty day*. ...
IfvLKS for Foreclosure of Mortgage mus* be published
monthly for four mouth*-—for establishing lost papers,
/or die f ull nam e of three month*—for compelling titles
Iroin Executors aud Administrators, where a bond has
been given by the deceased, die full space of three
,l Publications will always be continued according to
these, the legal requirements, unless otherwise ordered,
at the following rates:
< 'Itation on Let’rs Adm’u’tn • *2.7o pr sqr.
.* n n Dis’m’sory AdmVln 4.00
„ „ ** o “ Guard’shlp 8.00 “ “
Leave to Bell Land and Negroes 4.00 “ “
.Notice to Debtors and Creditors 3 00
Sales of personal property, 10 days, 1 square 1.50
Sale of Land or Negroes, by Executors, Ac. 5.00 ^ ^
Estrays, two weeks 100
K..r a man advertising his wife, in advance, 5.00
arrive West
New Schedule.
GOING NORTH.
Leave Montgomery 8 00 A. M
Poiut 1 30 P. M.
Leave West Point 2 00 P. M.. arrive Atlau-
la 7 00 P. M. .
Leave Atlanta, 7 30 P. M. f arrive Augusta,
6 00 A. M. „ „ . ...
Leave Augusta, .7 30 P. M., arrive Kings
ville, 3 00 P- M.
Leave Kingsville, 3 30 P. M. f arrive Wil
mington, 1 80 A. M.
Leave Wilmington, 2 30 A. M„ arrive Wel-
dou, 11 30 A. M.
Leave Weldon, 12 00 M , arrive Petersburg,
3 Leave Petersburg, 4 00 P. M., arrive Rich
mond, 5 15 P. M.
going south.
Leav' Richmond, 5 00 A. M., arrive Peters
burg, 0 15 A. M- ... ,
Leave Petersburg, 7 00 A. M., arrive Wel
don, 10 15 A M. .
Leave Weldon, 10 45 A. M , arrive Wtl-
iniugtou, 8 00 P. M. .
Leave Wilmington, 0 00 P. M . arrive Kiugs-
ville, 7 30 A. M. .
Leave Kinesville, 8 00 A. M. f arrive Augus
ta, 2 30 P. M. . ...
Leave Augusta, 3 45 P. M., arrive Atlanta,
■’ 15 A 51
' Leave Atlanta, 2 45 A. M„ arrive West
Point, 7 45 A. M.
Leave West Point, 8 la A. M., airive Mont
gomery, 1 45 A. M. ... • n
Leave Montgomery. 3 la P-*M., arrive Pen
sacola, 12 45 A. M.
ROBERT L. CRAWLEY,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IK
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS,
—A N D—
Commission Merchant,
In Franklin Building, Alabama Sl,
ATLANTA, [augSl]..
$1; and
nsertion less than one
GKEOIIOIA RAILROAD.
Augusta to Atlanta, 171 Miles—Fare,...„$5 50
GEORGE YONGE, Superintendent.
MORNING PASSENGER TRAIN.
(Sundays excepted.)
Leaves Atlanta, daily, at 7.00, A. M
Arrives at Augusta at 5.55, P. M.
Leaves Augusta, daily, at 8.30, A. M.
Arrives at Atlanta at 7.15, P. M.
NfGHT PASSENGER AND MAIL TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta, daily, at 7.40, P. Mj
Arrives at Augusta at 5.4.8, A. M.
Leaves Augusta at 4.00, P. M.
Arrives at Atlanta at 2.05, A. M.
TO CONNECT WITH
ATIIEXS and WASHINGTON.
Leave Augusta 8.30, A. M.
Arrive at Athens 4.56, P. M.
Leave Atlanta 7.00, A. M.
Arrive at Washington 4.15, P. M.
Leave Athens 0.00, A. M.
Arrive at Augusta 5.55, P. M.
Leave Washington 10 00, A. M.
Arrive at Atlanta 7.15, P. M.
TO CONNECT WITH W Alt REN TON.
Leave Augusta 4.00, P. M., and Atlanta 7.00,
A. M.
Arrive at Warrenton 7 50, P. M.
Leave Warrenton 2.00, P. M.
Arrive at Augusta 5.55, P. M., and at Atlanta
at 2.05, A. M.
This lioad runs in connection with the Trains
fthe South Carolina and the Savannah and
Augusta Railroads, at Augusta.
ATLANTA A WEST-POINT It. K.
Atlanta to West-Point, 87 Miles—Fare,..$3 60.
GEORGE G. HULL, Superintendent.
MAIL TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta, daily, at 3.00, A. M*
Arrives at West-Point at 7.30, A. M.
Leavos West-Point, daily, at 2.00, P. M.
Arrives at Atlanta at 6.28, P. M.
FREIGHT TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta, daily, at 8.00, A. M.
Arrives at West-Point at 4.45, P. M.
Leaves West-Point, daily, at 7.30, A. M.
Arrives at Atlanta, at 4 52, P. M.
This Road connects with the Montgomery A
West-Point Road at West-Point.
WESTERN «fc ATLANTIC RAILROAD.
Atlanta to Chattanooga, 133 Miles—Fare,....$6.
JOHN S. ROWLAND, Superintendent.
NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta, daily, at T.3U, p. II.
Arrives at Chattanooga, at 4.10, A. M.
Leaves Chattanooga, daily, at 6.05, P. M.
Arrives at Atlanta, at 2 32, A. M.
EXPRESS FREIGHT, MAIL AND HASSKSOUK TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta, daily, at 3 00 A. M.
Arrives st Chattanooga, at 2.31, p. M,
Leaves ChattaNooga, daily, at 1.60, A. M.
Arrives at Atlanta at 1.00, P. M.
This Road connects,each way,with the Rome
Branch Railroad at Kingston, the East Ten
nessee and Georgia ltialroad at Dalton, and the
Nashville A Chattanooga Railroad at Chatta-
ooga.
MACON A WESTERN RAILROAD.
Atlanta to Macon, 102 Miles—Fare, $4 50
ALFRED L. TYLER, Superintendent.
Macon 4 Western Railroad Company, )
Macon, Georgia, July 30, 1861. )
O N and after Sunday, 4th of August, the
Passenger and Mail Train will run as fol
lows :
Leave Macon 10 A. M.
Arrive at Atlanta 4 P. M.
Leaves Atlanta 1.40 p. M.
Arrives at Macon 7.05 P. M.
The 11 A. M. train from Atlanta connects at
Macon with th6 Central Railroad 10 P. M.
train for Savannah, and South-western Rail
road at 11.45 P. M. for Columbus.
WM. H. DeSHONG,
REAL ESTATE AGENT
•ASP
COMMISSION MERCHANT.
I HAVE opened a house on Whitehall street,
near Mitchell, for the purpose of doing a
GROCERY AND COMMISSION BUSINESS.
All kinds of Country Produce bought and sold,
and a well assorted 6tock of Groceries kept on
hand, which will be sold cheap for cash. A
reasonable share of patronage solicited.
I will sell on reasonable terms, for cash, the
following farm and improvements, and the
stock annexed. A fine inducement is here
offered, as it will be sold at a great bargain :
100 acres of land, 45 in cultivation—10
acres sowed in wheat;
2 good milch cows:
1 ox, four years old :
1 heifer, two years old;
1 call', eight months old ;
I cart;
100 bushels corn:
2000 pounds fodder;
13 bushels wheat;
700 pounds bacon;
7 bushels oats;
300 pounds oats in sheaf:
1 horse and buggy ;
Plows, hoes and alt farming utensils.
Tliis place is fifteen miles from Atlanta, on
the main road leading to Fayetteville.
feb6-tf
Lincoln Outwitted I
I
T is well known that OLD ABE has block
aded our ports and exerted all his energies
to prevent our getting
.GEORGIA.
bk WITT BRUYS. THOS. W. SAY AG*.
BRtTYN & SAVAGE,
AH CHITECTS,
Savannah, Georgia.
ir.k In BstUersby'a new brick build
ing, corner ot Bay and Dray
ton Streets.
W ILL lurnish Plans and Specifications, aad
give thc-ir personal attention to the erec
tion of Buildings in any part of the State.
Refer to the Citizens of Savannah generally. |
March IS ly.
J. T. PORTER,
COMMISSION MERCHANT
ASD
GENERAL AG EAT
For the purchase and sale of all kinds of
Produce,
MARIETTA, ST ATLANTA, GA.
Refers to— —
Massey A Lausdell, Atlanta, Ga.
Reese A Linton, Augusta, Ga.
Rev. W. C. Bass, Macon, Ga.
Dr T N. Poullain, Greensborough, Ga.
Geo. W. Williams 4 Co., Charleston, S. C„
Stratton 4 Seymour. Nashville. Tenn.
J. H. Willy, Nashville, Tenn.
jan‘2y tf
OILS ? MACHINERY «* TANNINE,
But we have succeeded, and now have—
OIL FOR COTTON SPINDLES,
OIL FOR TANNERS,
OIL FOR BURNING,
LAMP OIL.
lire //.? vjb also
ALCOHOL,
COPAL VARNISH,
JAPAN VARNISH,
COPPERAS,
ALUM,
SODA AND SALARATUS, Ac.
and as l'u "au assortment of
Drugs and Medicines
AS THE TIMES WILL ALLOW.
Hamilton, MarkJey & Joyner.
January 15, 1862-t27jly’62.
CUTTING k STONE,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Foreign aud
Domestic
DRY GOODS,
4'tONNALLY’S Block, Whitehall street, four
doors from Alabama Street. aprll.
"Sj\r uA. NW JE31> s
At the Atlanta Steam Tannery
FOR CASH,
5,000 Cords Bark.
per Cord will be paid for Chest
nut-Oak Barks.
per Cord for other Oak Barks
J. VV. BARTON
January 17-dtf.
SILVEY & DOUGHERTY,
HAVE just received
a large lot o(
I
*1
ISTICW
GOODS.
HOOP-SKIRTS from 3 to 50 Springs
VIRGINIA PLAIDS,
PRINTS, GINGHAMS,
MUSLINS, BAREGES,
DRESS SILKS,
Military Huttons, Trimmings of all kinds,
MOSQUITO BARS,
GLOVES, HOSIERY and
RIBBONS, of great, variety
A large variety of
STAPLE GOODS.
Also, a splendid assortment of
JEWK1RY, W ATCHE9,
A heavy stock of
ALL KINDS OF SHOES
All bought for Cash, and will be sold cheap.
SILVEY & DOUGHERTY.
Atlanta, Juiy 3—d&wtf.
SALMONS & SIMMONS
e on
A3D
.A
A
A LARGE LOT OF
MILITARY GOODS AND BUTTONS,
ALSO AN EXTENSIVE ASSORTMENT OF
Colored & White Flannels,
L1NSEYS AXD KERSEYS.
A beautiful Lot of
LADIES’ CLOTH CLOAKS,
CARPETINGS
AND OIL-CLOTIIS.
GENTS’ AND LADIES’
BOOTS AND SHOES,
And some 50 or 60 dozen
HOOP SKIRTS,
Which they offer for
CAS H .
Corner Whitehall and Alabama Sts.
Atlanta, Georgia.
SALMONS & SIMMONS.
March 28—Oct. 22.
F. MY J ACK, -A_gent,
Baker and Candy Manufacturer,
nicxt aoon to w. r. hburins & co.,
Wh.iteh.all St., ^Atlanta, Georgia.
K EEPS constantly on hand an excellent stock
of CONFECTIONARIES,
FRUITS,
* NUTS,
PRESERVES,
JELLIES,
PICKELS,
Ac., &c.
Aiso, Fine Imported WINES, BRANDIES,
TOBACCO, CIGARS, 4c., 4c.
Also, a great variety of Fancy Articles—Baa
kets, Toys, 4c.
The Ladies and the Public generally are rej
spoetfully invited to call. mar8
COLORED PHOTOGRAPHS.
P ORTRAITS taken from Life, or copied from
Old Daguerreotypes, 4c., by the Photgraph-
ic process, and
ENLARGED TO ANY SIZE,
from Miniature size up to the size of Life.
Persons having Daguerreotypes of their de
ceased reiativeB and lriends, now have the op
portunity of having them copied to any size
hey may wish, and painted up to the Life in
OIL OR WATER COLORS, OR PASTEL,
with the certainty of getting a perfect likeness
in every respect.
Gallery on Whitehall Street, Atlanta
Georgia. C. W. DILL,
Apri 3. Photographer.
WHO WANTS A TAVERN?
I OWN THE NOTED ER
IWIN HOUSE, in Cumming, on
the main route from Atlanta and
Marietta to Dahlonega, about on
the halt-way ground, where the mail coaches
meet and return tri-weekly.
This house is large and convenient, and to
it is attached a livery stable, and five or six
acres of rich laud immediately adjoining. I
also have a snug little farm of one hundred
and six acres of land within four miles of the
town, all of which I offer for sale on reasona
ble terms ; or I would exchange a part or the
whole of it foT real estate in Atlanta, either
vacant or improved.
Capt. V. A. Gaskill, at Atlanta, or myself at
Milledgeville, can bo seen or addressed. Pos
session can be given at any time.
IRA R. FOSTER.
January 22-dlm.
COLE & WYLY
Wholesale anil Retail
Dealers In
C HINA, Glass, Silver, Plated Ware, Vases,
Parian Figures, Kerosine Lamps, Candle
sticks, Tea Trays, Table Mats, Baskets, Glass
Shades, Table Cutlery, 4c., 4.,
C HEAP FOH CASH.
White Granite and common Crockery at
wholesale, at Charleston prices, nearly oppo
site Beach 4 Root’s, Whitehall street,
Atlanta, Georgia.
April 2d, 1831.
FRESH
Drugs and Medicines.
HUNNICUTT, TAYLOR l JONES,
SIGN OF THE
GOLDEN EAGLE
Corner Peachtree
and Decatur eta.,
ATLANTA, GEO.
H AVING une(jualed faiji^ties for the pur
chase and Direct Importation of goods, the
Proprietors would respectfully call the atten
tion of Physicians, Merchants, Planters and
the public generally, to their extensive new
and carefully selected stock of DRUGS, MED
ICINES, PERFUMERY, FANCY ARTICLES,
PAINT8, OILS, AND DYE STUFFS, which
they are now prepared to sell on the most rea
sonable terms for Cash or approved paper. In
addition to their stock of Staple, Drugs and
Chemicals, they have a full assortment oi
TOOTH. NAIL, HAIR AND PAINT BRUSH
ES, DENTAL AND SURGICAL INSTRU
MENTS, 4c., 4c.
They are also Sole Proprietors and Man
ufacturers of TAYIiOR’8 ANTI-DYSPEPTIC
ELIXIR. march 30 ’61.
BROWN, FLEMING & CO.,
ATLANTA,
MASONIC IIALL BIJIL1>I!V«
NEW ORLEANS,
97 GRAVIER STREET.
WHOLESALE
Produce Dealers
AND GENERAL
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
(Hotifctlcracg
P ARTICULAR attention given to, and or
ders solicited for, Sugars, Molasses, Wool,
Hides, 4c., 4c.
Jan. 1, 1862—tf
Water Pipes, Fire Bricks, &c
T he southern porcelain manu
facturing COMPANY, Kaolin, South
Carolina, are now prepared to furnish at short
notice,
W2VTER r*XP*EB,
double glazed, with a perfect vitrious body
suitable for conduit pipes for cities, Ac., from
twenty-six inches diameter to one inch, capa
ble of sustaining a pressure of 150 head of
water. Also,
FIKE BRICKS
which have no superior. We also manufacture
all kinds of C. C. and Granite Ware, and would
most respectfully solicit orders for the above
Goods. W. H. FARROW, Agent,
Kaolin, S. C.
COLE 4 WYLIE, Agents, Atlanta, Ga.
aug 8 tf
CONFEDERATE
ON HUNTER STREET,
^Atlanta, Georgia,
GULLATT & BARNES,
W HO are prepared to do, at the shortest no
tice, all kinds of work in IRON and
BRASS, and machinery jobs of every des
cription.
JAS. E, GULLATT, W. BARNES.
Aug. 31-dt 12 feb. ’62. dec. 14.
A. T. AXDKRSOS G..W. ADAIR. . .
• A. D. ADAIR.
nOn LBS. Pates, Joles and Rumps ;
i y,UUU 100 Sacks Liverpool Salt:
160 Sacks Packing Salt.
For sale bv
febl-tillap22 BUTLER 4 PETERS.
ANDERSON, ADAIR & CO.,
Wholesale Grocers,
PRODUCE
AMD
Commission Merchants,
Opposite Georgia Railroad Bank
IN WOODRUFFS BUILDING.
W E have now in store, and to arrive from
New Orleans and Tennessee, a very ex
tensive stock of groceries.
We invite the attention of merchants and
dealers to our stock. We are enabled to offer
inducements to the trade which cannot be sur
passed in this market.
We solicit consignments of all kinds of pro
duce or any articles to be sold here. Our care
ful personal attention will be given to selling
on commission or filling any orders for goods
in this market.
References:—Mfessrs. J. E. Adger 4 Co.,
Charleston, S. C.; Messrs. H. 4 J. Moore 4
Co., Augusta, Ga.; Messrs. J. W. Ware 4 Co.,
Columbus, Ga ; Messrs. Denmead 4 Wright,
Marietta, Ga.; Hon. E. A. Nisbet, Macon, Ga.;
Hon I. L. Harris, Milledgeville, Ga.; W. L.
High, Esq , Atlanta, Ga.; Dr. Joseph Thomp
son, J. J. Thrasher, Esq., and any of the
Banks, Atlanta, Ga.
Jan. 12-diwtf.
DR. e. W. BROWN.
O FFICE—At his residence on Calhoun street,
near the Medh-al College. march 20.
ATLANTA
CLOTHING HALL.
I HAVE just returned from the North with a
large stock of READY-MADE CLOTHING
and am ready to supply the cit
izens of Atlanta and the sur
rounding country, with
COATS, PANTS,
VESTS, SHIRTS,
Handkerchiefs, Neck-ties,
HATS, CAPS, SOCKS, and everything else
in the Clothing line, ol good
quality and at LOW PRICES.
All who desire BARGAINS
jshould give me a call.
—ALSO, ON HAND
Jewelry I Knives I
C o m b s I
A.nd other Notion*.
M. OPPENHEIMER,
Whiteall street, nearly opposite
march 15tf Eddleman 4 Bank
Vice in Riclinioml.
One of the fruitful beds of vice in Rich
mond is the large number of unlicensed grog
shops in the by-ways and disreputable parts
of the city. Our police reports will show
that a large proportion of the murders and
felonious assaults which have occurred with
in the past faw months in this city have orig
inated not so much in the regdlar bar-rooms
of the city as in these contraband dens of tilth
and iniquity. Our soldiers are dosed in these
places with the vilest poison ; they are the
rendezvous for rowdies, market-men, and
cheap “shoulder-strikers;” and “free fights’’
are not unusual diversions of the company
which frequent these low-priced haunts of
vice and lawlessness.
We give the police of Richmond the cred
it of haviDg made earnest and vigorous exer
tions to shut up the unlicensed grog-shops of
Richmond; but our policemen are simply too
few for this or any other considerable task of
reform. With the gambling-houses, the bro
thels, the theatre, and hundreds of disrepu
table places in Richmond, living under the
guise of restaurants, cook shops, “attended
by mulatto women,” and club-rooms, known
by the rowdy designations of Washington aud
Baltimore refugees, all demanding attention
and surveillance, our police are but little able
to attend to tbe grog-shops and common re
sorts of rowdyism.
Richmond, from a quiet city, famed for its
good order and its enticements to residence,
among a population excellent in its morals
and refined in its manners and social distinc
tions, has suddenly grown up into a noisy,
reckless and bloated metropolis of vice. It
requires that enlarged and well devised sys
tem of municipal government which is neces
sary for the good rule of a metropolis. The
present police system is miserably inefficient
for Richmond in its new situation, with the
influx into its society of all sorts of people,
who have planted new and strange hotbeds
of vice along its streets, corrupted its tnorals
and converted a well ordered provincial city
into the proportions and condition of an over
grown and disorderly metropolis. We want
a strong city ^government, with distinct de
partments. Our police should be largely in
creased, organized on an entirely new basis,
and made a distinctive corps under the gov
ernment of commissioners. In all the large
cities of the North, the establishment of po
lice boards has been found necessary to re
lieve the mayor in his administration, to eo-
cure an efficient police organization, and to
discriminate against partisaq influences in
this important and vital branch of the city
government. With our present petty system
of eight day policemen and a night patrol
with locust clubs, our city, notwithstanding
the best efforts of mayor and police, might as
well be surrendered at once to the daily
strengthening domination of vice, lawlessness
and violence.—Examiner.
Confederate Congress—First Ses.ion.
The following Is a list of the members of the First
Congress of the Permanent Government of the Gon-
feder&te States, which meets in February next :
Those marked with an asterisk (*) are members of the
Provisional Congress.
SENATE.
I James Phelan.
ALABAMA.
Wm. L. Yancey,
C. C. Clay, Jr.
ARKANSAS.
Robert W. Johnson,*
C. B. Mitchell.
FLORIDA.
James M. Baker,
A. E. Maxwell.
GEORGIA.
Robert Toombs,*
B. H. Hill *
KENTUCKY.
Henry C. Burnett,
Wm. E. Sims.
LOUISIANA.
Edward Sparrow,*
T. J. Semrnes.
MISSISSIPPI.
G. Brown,
MISSOURI.
John B. Clarke,
R. L. E. Peyton.
NORTH CAROLINA.
George Davis,*
Wui. T. Dortch.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
Robert W. Barnwe’l,*
James L. Orr.*
TENNESSEE.
Gustavus A. Henry,
Laudon O. Ha>nes.
TEXAS.
Louis T. Wlgfall,*
W. S. Oldham.*
VIRGINIA.
R. M. T. Hunter,
Wm. Ballard Preston.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
NORTH CAROLINA.
BRYSON & BEAUMONT,
Manufacturers and Dealers In
MEN'S A BOY'S CIOTH/NB,
GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS,
CLOTHS, CASSIMEBBS AND YX8T1NQS
Markham’s Iron-Front Building, White
hell, Street,
r. m. bktson, I ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
V. M. BHAOMONT ) April 2d, 1861.
ALABAMA.
Dist.
T. J. Foster,
W. R. Smith,
J. P. Ralls,
J. L. M. Curry,*
F. S. Lyon,
W. P. Chilton,*
D. Clopton,
J. S. Pugh,
E. S. Dargan.
ARKANSAS.
G. A. Garland,
James M. Patterson.
(Incomplete.) .
FLORIDA.
James B. Hankins,
R. B. Hilton.
GEORGIA.
Julian Hartridge,
Chas J Munnerlyn,
Hines Holt,
Augustus H Kenan,*
Bavid W Lewis,
W W Clark,
Robert P Trippe,
Lucius J Gartrell,
Hardy Strickland,
10. Augustus R Wright.
KESTUCKT.
( Not yet elected.)
LOUISIANA.
Charles J Yillere.
Charles M Conrad,*
Duncan F Kenner,*
Lucien J Dupre,
John L Lewis,
John Perkins, Jr.*
"Mississippi.
J W Clapp,
Reuben llavis,
Israel Welch,
H C Chambers,
0 R Singleton,
E Barksdale,
John J McRae.*
MISSOURI.
W M Cook,
X. C. Harris,
Casper W Bell,
Adam H Condon,
G G West,
L W Freeman,
Hyer.
Diat.
1- W N H Smith,*
K K Bridg es,
O R Keenan,
T D McDowell,
A H Arrington, ’
J R McLean,
W S Ashe,
William Lander,
B S Gaither,
10. A T Davidson,*
south Carolina.
1. John McQueeD,
2. W Porcher Miles'*
3. L M Ayer,
4. M L Bonham,
•k James Farrow,
U. W W. Boyce.*
TENNESSEE.
1. Joseph B Heiskell,
2. W G Swan,
3. WH Tibbs,
4 E F Gardenshire,
5. Henry S Foote, Jr
6- Meredith P Gentry,
7. George W Jones,
S. Thomas Mennes
U. J DC Adkins,* ’
10. John V Wright,
11. DM Currin.*
TEXAS.
1* John A Wilcox,
2- C C Herbert,
3. P W Gray,
4. F B Sexton,
5 M D Graham,
6’ B H Epperson.
VIRGINIA.
M R H Garnett,
John B Chambliss,
John Tyler,
Roger A Pryor.*
Thomas S Bocock,*
John Goode, Jr.,
James P Holcombe
D C DeJarnette,
William Smith,
10. Alexander R Bo tele
11. John B Baldwin,
12. Walter R Staples,*
18. Walter Preston,*
14. Albert G Jenkins,
15. Robert Johnston,*
16. Charles W Russell.*
THE CITY MILLS,
O N Decatur Street, have a full supply of
FLOUR, MEAL, GRIT8, SHORTS RYE
BRAN and CORN for sale. Patronage is re
spectfally solicited.
jan. 19-!y. J. M. NAC’E & CO.