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F. R. FILDES, Editor.
YOL. 111.
she (Quitman fanner.
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For announcing candidates for office. $13.00
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„Tlie Soldier’s Grave.
Tread Hghtly—- T tis a soldiergrave,
A lonely mossy mound
And vi to hearts like mine and Ihiue,
It should be holy ground.
Speak gently—let no careless laugh,
No idle, thoughtless jest,
Ese.ipe vo r lips where sweetly sleeps
The hero in his rest.
For him no revillle shall beat,
When morning beams shall come;
For him, at night, no tattoo rolls
Its thunder from the drum.
No costly marble marks the place,
Recording deeds of fame;
Rut rudely on that bending tree
Is carved the soldiers name,
A Tame—not dear to ns but ah t
There may be lips that breathe
That name as sacredly and low
As vesper prayers at eve.
There may be brows that wear for him
The mourning cypress vine;
And hearts that make this lonely grave
A holy pilgrim shrine.
There may be eyes that joyed to gaze
With love into his own,
Now’ keeping midnight vigils long
With silent grief alone.
There may be hands now clasped in prayer,
This soldier’s hand ba*s pressed,
And cheeks washed pale by sorrow's tears, j
His own cold cheek caressed.
Tread lightly—for a man bequeathed,
Ere laid beneath this sod,
Ilia ashes to his native land
His gallant soul to God !
HMsrrUaucous.
Hi! Hi! Emigrant., Attention I—A
(.lance at Soakeinallo.
BY JACK HOME.rCIt.
Fcllow-subjestg; Nothing less than an
orei whelming desire to he ol service to
those of my fellow subjects who mani
fest a seemingly irrestrainahle desire to
emigrate could have induced me to ac-j
cept of the position I now hold as Com
missioner of Emigration under t 1 e
Soakernalian Government.
To those desiring to emigrate, and in
fact to all others who take hold of the
matter and look at it square’y all around
it is clear as mud that the Soulh so far
as accumulating stamps or even earning
a livelihood without hard work is con
cerned has proceeded to an elavated
position. Therefore it behoves all those
with whom (like myselfjhard work does
not and never did agree to look about
them for some El Dorado where they
can exist without being forced to "come
down” to the aforementioned disgraceful
ly obnoxious resource.
It is the attention of the above class
of people that I would call to the unpar
alleled inducements held out to emigrant
hy the Government of which I am the
sole representativ ;s in this unfortunate
country.
To speak of the position of Soakemallo
on the map would he entirely superflu
ous as it is a subject with which all
who arc well posted are very familiar.
The form ol government is a cross be
tween imperial and republican, with a
dash of colonai and a sprinkling of the
Mexican intermittent, style and is very;
mild—So mild, in fact, that it is next to
no government at all.
The climate—well I can’t do the cli
mate Justice so let it suffice to say that
it is most bewiMcringly estatic. The
saving of weating apparel is enormous
and should he sufficient inducement in
itself to cause the country to he over
flowed with emigrants ; the only thing
r quired in that line being a .Panama
hat and a cigarette.
The grant of land in which I am inter
ested—pshaw, I mean the tract of land
granted by Government to emigrants—
runs along the base of the Serious Sked
dadlc mountains and is the richest on j
the face of the globe. Sugar cane has :
been found growing wild measuring
three feet across the butt ; sweet pota
toes, yams grow to such an enormous
perfection that they are used for a varie
ty of purposes ; nothing can ex
coed the beauty o uniqueness of a
yam or sweet potatoe canoe, especially
■when seen sailing on one of the numer
ous natural rivers with a engar cane
mast and cabbage leaf sail. Some idea
may he obtained of the manner in which
corn and sugar cane thrive in this colony
by reading the following extract from a
letter written to me by a gentleman liv
ing there:
"Bamboozle, March 30, 18C8,
“J. Homespun, Esq , G. E. S. G.
“Dear Sir — * * * It is beyond
ray most sanguine expectations. Last
week while taking a walk through my
canefield the sun {[shining rather warm.
I took off my coat and hung it on a
cane stalk. Returning in the course of
an hour imagine my dumbfoundedness
when on looking for my coat 1 found the
cano had grown up fully thirty feet du
ring my absence taking iny coat with it
and was still growing.”
Another gentleman writes mo that he
las cleared ten thousand dollars (al
though he has been there but two months)
by selling the wild fruit he found grow
ing there to the natives 1
The money that can be made here in
the fruit business is beyond computation
There is at present out here an agent of
i a company us go ahead Americans, pros
| pecting for a location for a largo steam
| factory for the manufacture of butter
i and clu esc from the milk ot the cocoanut.
| In fact all fruits and grains grow here
:as no where else in the world ; melons
j grow to such perfection that the natives I
i make picturesque huts of them by cut |
: ting a large one in two scoping out the
! heart and cutting apertures for doors
and windows. Some maliciously inclin !
ed ini.ividiials who have been downjj to !
Soakamello and returned home have |
been industriously circulating reports j
cuicul. Ito injure the cause of Soakc j
malic:, emigration. They represent
that iv, iles, fevers, weeds, etc., more 1
! than counteract the advantages of tlto i
'concern. It is my intention to prove
j that their statements are nothing but |
malicious libels and are without founda-
I lion in fuel. First, they say that the
| place is overrun with snakes cotton |
I hugs, (leas weeds, etc. Now as for the!
snake s ory, it shows they know nothing
whatevei of what they are speaking ;
there are one of the snakes but they are
one of the most useful products of the
country, as those who have never seen
one of those symmetrical Soakemalloan
snake fences will testify. As for the
cotton bug 1 don’t believe those "return
id Soakemalloans” have ever seen
them for if they did they would
speak differently of them. The
cotton bug is not like the bug of the
Southern States for it is about the size
of an oat sack, and of the shape ol a cow
tick, and unlike the Southern catterpillar
and does not cat tbe leaves and stalks
of the plant but merely picks the cotton
when the balls are matured leaving the
seed on thetground. When an army of
those bugs overrun a plantation the plan |
ter "lets’em rip” until they have swal
lowed the crop when he sends out all of
his hands armed with clubs, who knock
every bug of’em stiff they are then stow ]
ed away in sheds, the cotton being all
ready for sliinment—no other packing
being requited. So much for their bug
story. Now their weed libel. The
weeds do thrive there but tlic-y are all
that species known as climbers. When
the weeds come up they naturally cling j
to the corn cane etc., and as the crop
grows quicker than the weeds do the lat
ter are consequently pulled up bodily by
the roots. So you see how much truth
is in their weed story. As for the fleas
guats, etc., they impart just the .required
zest to a necessarily dreamy life besides
affording iufiuite amusement to the dear
children.
Tbe woods are filled to bursting with
game of all kinds, including brevet men
and-brothers, vulgarly called monkeys:
but as there is no "buro agint” down
there as yet, the two races get alung
first-rate so far. The rivers and lakes a
bound in fish, and if a shipload of emi
grants on arriving in Soakemalloan wa
tors will just look over the side of the
ship into the water, they will see (reflec
ted) as fine a lot of sardines as ever they
laid eyes on. For further particulars,:
send $5 and red stamp for my celebaated
work entitled, "Soakemallo as it is; or,
Paradise Knocked into Umbrageous Re
tirement.”
Would be emigrants by calling at my
office can, for tl.o nur: bagatelle of $250
in gold, procure a certificate entitling
them to a passage in our new and splen
ded steamer Don Quixote, and 12,000 j
acres of land.
Emigrants will find on arriving in;
Soakamallo that their comfort has been
the first study of the Government. A j
fine hotel has been erected by the Gov- j
eminent, where emigrants will beac-|
comdated with luxurious board and lodg- i
ing until such time as they can select a
place to settle in; the time of stopping!
at tbe hotel lobe limited to five y ars and i
if the emgrants at tiic end of that time j
wish to return they are at liberty to do
so in one of our ships, for the same rates j
of fare, (plus a mere nominal advance) i
paid going out.
The j emigrating should take with j
them enough provisions to last them for j
the first five or six years until they get;
things under headway, not that there
would be any possibility of their need- j
ing them, but merely as a matter of form,!
you know.
The Don Quixote will be followed by
; the Wild Goose, both first class ships;
all right as far as “top hamper” is con- j
| corned, the only thing to be guasded a
j gainst is the emigrants having too much
! "top hamper” aboard in the shape of
HERE SHALL THE PRESS THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAIN, UNAWED BY FEAR AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.
QUITMAN, GEO., JULY 3, 1868.
tanglefoot.
| 1 cannot close this without saying a
few Words in reference to those seurril
-1 lons scoundrels who would attempt to
■ deter people from taking advantage of
this golden opportunity, by insinuating
that those who leave at the present, are
of that class "who leave their country
for their country’s good.” Fay no at
tention to those miserable slrsrs. Lot
all of us leave this country who can uud
if those who choose to remain succeed in
straightening up things generally, social
and political, why we can coine back a
gain, if we want to, and partake of the
rewards of their labor as well as if we
- had stayed here all the time, and worried
j soul and body trying to unravel the knot
of tangled political strings ourselves.—
For further information, as I said further
up, send for my boob, and you will in the
language of tbe poet.
"Come one, come a'.l,
To Soakemallo.”
Yes, fellow subjects, leave this coun
j try, where crops won’t grow without
planting and even then the cussed things
have to bn hoed, ect, or the y won’t pay.
And where no man with any self-respect
can bt;'aught Jwith !e-’S than half a cnun'y
or so or whom unless he‘descends to such
degarding things as raision potatoes,
cabbages, ect, he can’t get along farm
| ing. it’s my opinion that it's fur more
; dignified to bust on a thousand aero
plantation, than to make a living on a
j p'.ebian ten acre farm. For furthet par
ticulars see my book, Price $5.
PECULIAR MEN.
| Josh Hillings spends his time study
| ing human and other kinds of nature and j
sending out the results of his iuvestiga-<
| lions. llis last is all about peculiar |
| men.
The Jealous Man is alwuz hunting.
lie iz alwuz a hunting for something!
| that lie don’t expeckt tew find, and after
ho has found it, then he iz mad because
lie has. These fellers don’t bcleav in
j spooks and yet they are about the only’
folks who ever see enny. A jealous man
iz alwuz happy jist in proporshun nz he
iz miserable.
Jelosy iz a disease and it iz a good
deal like sea sickness —dreadful sick and
kan’t vomit.
The Anonymous Man boards at a red
tavern, and pays for his h uird by ten
ding bar occasionally. 110 hain't got
enny more k-irakter than the jack ov
spades has When it ain’t trumps.
He iz a loafer by profession), without
enny vices.
lie rides on the box once in a while
with the driver and nobody thinks of ask
ing for his stage fare.
He sprung from a respectable family;
'liz great grandfather wuz a justiss ov J
the peaco ; but bo has got vanity euuff;
tew brag on it.
He ain’t necessarily a phool, enny' more j
; than a bull’s eye watch is; if enny I ody
will wind him, lie will sett still and run
| quietly down.
The Stiff Man looks down, when he
walks upon folks, lie don’t seem tew
have but one limber jinte in hint and
that iz lokated in hisnoze.
110 iz a kind of masculine .turkey, on
parade, in a barn yard
lie iz generally loaded with wisdom
clear up tew tbe tnuzzell and when he
goes oph, makes a noize like a cannon,
but don’t dew any damage.
I have seen him fire into a crowd, aud
miss every man
This kind uv stiff man iz very handy
tew flatter. They seem tew know they
ain’t entitled tea good article, and there
fore, are satisfied with very hard soap.
Thare ain’t but fu inen who gets stiff
on what they actually know, but most
aul ov them git stiff on what they acktu
ally feel.
Stiff men are called aristokrats, but
this ain’t so. There ain’t no such as ar
istokrats in this country
The country ain’t longenuffyet, unless
a man has got some Indian in him.
Az a gen’ral thing stiff men get mad
dreadful easy arid have tew gii over it
dreadful easy bekause folks ain’t, apt to
git a big skare at what they ain’t afraid
ov.
Stiff Man had a grandfather once who
went tew Congress orice from our dis
trikt, and the.e ain’t one in the whole
family that hav been able tew limber
since.
The Model Man never disturbs a hen
; when she is setting; never speaks cross
jto a lorst dorg; alwuz puts a five-centi
j shin plaster in his vest pocket late Sat j
j urday night tew have it ready Sunday j
j morning for the church platter ; rises;
; whenever a lady enters the street kars; j
| remembers ynre uncle plainly, and asks j
i after awl the family, if he steps on a!
kat’s tail, iz sure to do it light, and im-i
! mediately asks her pardon ; reads the ;
i Weekly Gossip and luffs bekause he
kan’t help it : hooks up his wife’s dress j
i and plays boss with the children. Never
I meddles with cream in the milk pans;
goes cazily ov errands and cams back
j in season ; attends every body’s pbuner
! al ; kan alwuz tell when the moon chan
-1 ges ; thinks just az you do, or the
j other way'if you want him to; follows
everybody's advice but his own ; prakti
! ces most ov the virtews without know
ing it; leads the life of a shorn lamb;
gets sick after awhile and dies az soon
az he kan, to save making enny further
| trouble.
j The model man’s vices are not feared,
j nor his virtews lespekted. He lives in
the memory ov the world just about as
1 long az a pleasant day duz.
lie may be called a "clever feller,” and
tint iz only a libel; but he will git hiz
reward hereafter—when tie birds git
theirs.
Nrwqiapor Patronage.
Many long, weary years of experience
in the newspaper business, has forced
the conviction upon us that newspaper
patronage is a word of many definitions,
ami that a great majority of mankind
are either ignorant ol the correct defini
tion, or are dishonest, in a strict biblical
sense of the word. Newspaper patron
age is composed of as many colors as
the rainbow, and is as changeable as a
chamc'con.
One man conies in and subscribes for
a paper and pays for it in advance, and
goes home and reads it with the proud
satisfaction that it is his. lie hands in
his advertisement, asks the price, pays
for it, ai 'S to his place ot business,
and reaps too advantage thereof. This
is newspaper patronage.
Another man says "you may put my
name on your books,” and goes off with
out saying aj word about pay. Time
passes on, and you want money, and
ask him to pay what is honestly due you.
He flics into a passion, nerhaps pays,
perhaps not, and; orders his paper stop
! ped. 'This is called newspaper patron*
. . . ...
I An other man has been a subscriber
for a very long time, but has never paid
a cent, and at, last becomes tired of you
and wants to change Ho thinks lie wants
a city paper. He tells the postmaster
lie don’t want it, and you vv U get a pa
per marked "refused.” Hut does he call
and pay you ? Oh, no ! he wants his
| money to pay for his city paper. He
! will pay you alter a while, he says—
j Hut lie never dfles unless you sue him.—
I And this, too, is called newspaper pal
; ronage.
j Another brings in a fifty cent advev
I tisernent, and wants a two dollar notice
given it, and if you refuse, lie goes off
mad. And this is called newspaper pat
ronage.
Another man lives neer you—lie does
not like the editor—the paper is too
small for him—yet ho goes regularly to
his neighbor's and reads it, and finds
fault with it, and quarrels with the opin
ion of the editor. Occasionally he sees
an article he likes, and begs or gives half
a dimo sot the number. This fs called
newspaper patronage.
Another man takes two or three city
papers, and cannot afford to take a home
paper, but ho likes it, and comes into the
office and begs one when lie is in town.
This, also is called newspaper patron
ago-
Another nnn takes a paper, he takes a
copy for himself and family, and pays
for it, and does all he can to got new
subscribers—he never grumbles, but al.
ways has a'cheerful word for the editor. I
11 any Lem of interest occurs in his
neigborhood, he informs the editor.—
This is newspaper patronag..
Another man has a patent and wants
you to give it a two dollar notice every
week; “itw.il be of interest toyourroad
or»,” lie says, but although knowing it
will benefit, him most of all, bo does not
offer to pay lor it. This is called news
paper patronage.
Another man has taken the paper for
several years but has not paid for it, and
conies in with a four or five dollar adver
tisement, and asks you to insert it for
nothing, because lie is an old patron of
yours. This is called newspaper p3t
ronage.
Another man—a young man about
town—no use of his taking a paper, he
knows all that is going, fiy-and by he
gets married, and bands in a notice with
"just hand me a dozen copies.’ He gets
them, and when yon mention pay he looks
surprised—“you surely do not charge for
such things I” And this is called news
paper patronage.
Another man (bless you, it does us
good to sic such men) comes in and
says, "the year for which I paid is about
to expire, I want to pay for another.”—
He does it and retires. This is newspa
per patronage.
Now is’ot newspaper patronage a cu
rious thing? And in that great day
when the gentleman in black gets bis due
—as he b : ,-r 'ly will—how many of the
patrons enumerated above will fall to his
share? Now, it will be seen that while
certain kinds of patronage is the very
iife and existence of a newspaper that is
more destructive than the deadly night
shade.”
Iteaeer ! where do you stand ?”—Ex
change.
An Impressive Sermon. —A young min
ister went out to preach, and observed,
during his discourse, a lady who seemed
I much affected. After meeting he con-;
j eluded to pay her a visit, and see what
j theimpressions’of her mind j’we re. He
j approached her thus : "Well, madam I
see you were affected much to day du
ring the preaching. “La me,” said the
lady, ‘l’ll tell you about six years ago
! me and my husband moved to this place
| and all the pioperty we had was a don
key. Husband ho died and me and the
: beast were left alone. At last the beast
died, and to toll you the truth your voice
! put me so much iu mind of that dear old
critter that I couldn’t help taking on and
! crying out right in meeting.”
‘No one would take you for what you
! are,’ said an old man to a dandy, who
had more hair than brains. ‘Why?’ was
j immediately asked. ‘Because they' cannot
see your cars.’
SALARIES UF CLERGY IN NEW
YORK. j
"Those who serve at the alter sh a
live by the alter,” says St. Paul. But
the good saint had probably not thi
fainlest idea how well some of his suc
cessors would manage to live in this
way'. It is stated that the Rev. J. A. 1)
Wingfield, of Petersburg, Va., lias boon
called to the Church of the Holy Saviour,
on Twenty -first street, at a salary ol
$15,061). The call is loud enough, and
the reverend gentleman must be unusu
ally deaf if lie does not hoar it at that
figure. Dr. Potter, a nephew of the
Bishop of Now York, lately accepted the
care of the souls of those who attend
Grace Church for the consideration of
SB,OOO a year and a small white marble
palace oil Broadway.
Dr. Hall, of the Presbyterian Church,
corner of Nineteenth street and Fifth av
enue has come all the way from Dublin
to feed the flock that worships there,
which he consents to do for the modest
pittance of SIO,OOO a year in gold and a
handsome parsonage The Doctor has
tho old country' lioiiuns about currency ;
he dousen’t understand greenbacks, but
prefers his pay' in solid metal. I)r Mor
gau Dix, of 'Printy, receives $12,000 and
a house; while the more popular preach
ers go up to a much higher figure, Dr.
Chapin receiving not less than fifteen to
twenty thousand in salary, and the result
of outside literary' work, while Henry
Ward Beecher’s income reaches from
twenty to thirty thousand from like
sources. On the other hand, tho Cath
olic clergy are underpaid, and have to
distribute a good part of what they re -
ceive amon t e poor of their; a-ishc:, —
Newark Adwrlixir.
HOUSE SERVANTS.
Hiring house servants in the South is
a sore and never ending trouble. The
colored people have very vague ideas of
responsibility and the manner in which
they obtain their situation encourage
their disposition to bo careless and indo
lent. They leave Mr. Jones to-day, and
are hired by Mr. Smith to -morrow. Oerti
ficates of character arc not systematical
ly required, and n smooth face and long
tongue will generally secure for the pou
sessor any vacancy' that may exist in
the sweeping rooking, or "-'ashing do
partments of a super respectable family.
Housekeepers do not reflect that they
throw their houses open to strange ser
vants who have but half a name and not
a vestago of local habitation. They give
them tho run of their yards rooms and
closets, and yet are surprised if petty
fhefls are common and extensive robbe
ries not unusual. There is scarcely a
dwelling house that cannot be easily en
tered at night by a person familiar with
the premises. Bolts and bars, blinds
| and shutters arc not all sufficient and a
service of a week will give a sharp girl
or man all the information necessary lor
a successful midnight burglary. More
over while the raw and inexperienced
country negro is hired without difficulty
there is little incentive to improvement,
and tho servant standard must remain
low.
The remedy is an obvious one. No
servant should bo emp’oyed who does
not bring a certificate of character, and
this rule should bo inflexibly observed
Servants will then know that unless they
behave well they will not find work a
gain and this knowledge will tend to
make them respectful, faithful and dilli
gent. It will make situations valuable,
will prevent those sudden departures
which now throw households iuto confu
sion and will teach servants that honesty
industry and good conduct alone will se
cure them a profitable and respectable
livelihood. In this way what is called
the ‘‘engaging occupation” may beYnade
tolerably safe and pleasant— Charleston
News.
Wa?* The following capital story is
credited to Garrison the abolitionist: An
unlucky fellow, who may as well benam
ed John Brown, became the subject *of
church censure and discipline ; and a
vote of expulsion was about being passed [
when a passenger came in and announc
ed that an outside meeting had just been
held, and that the outsiders had resolved
not to receive Mr. Brown back among
them, unless returned in as good a condi
tion as when the church took him.
A young Indian girl, who had curi
ously watched the process of making
barrel beads in a flouring mill in Wino
na, Minn., stole iu one day, and, taking
possession of the stencils, ornamented
her blanket with the words "Ellsworth’s
Choice,” and paraded the streets in
| great delight, but to the disgust of Mr. I
| Ellsworth, who is a bachelor, and has
| made no such choice.
‘I wish I could prevail on neighbor;
j Kinder to keep the Sabbath,’ said good
j old Mr. Jones. ‘l’ll tell you how to do
| it !’ exclaimed young Smith ; ‘get some- j
j body to lend it to him, and I’ll be bound !
lif he don’t keep it. He never was known ;
to return anything he borrowed.'
j Sonin wag says the reason we have
| such dark nights now and then is be- j
j cause Butler steals “the silver lining of!
ithe clouds.” Good tor the wag. Let
him wag on.
—-- . ■» -•-
When you hear a man say “life is but
| a dream,” tread on In's corns and wake
.him up. Life i» real.
[53.00 per Annum
NO. 22
GEOKGIAftLEGISLATCTRK—MEMBERS.
SunatoHa,—Wist District ; A A Btailler, r.
2-1 District; T U Campbell, r
3d District ; K D Graham, <l.
4th District; J M Coleman, r.
sth District; A Corbitt, r.
sth District: Joshua Griffin, r.
7th District; M C Smith-r.
Bth District; B F Drirtton. r*
Dth District: R J Niabct, and.
loth Distrit; F 0 Welsh, r.
L 1 th District; C R Wooten, <l.
12th District ;C R Moore, <l.
13th District ; W B Jones, r.
Uth District ; J J Collier, d'.
15th District; (no election.)
Kith District; I! Hicks, and.
!7th District : M W Hnngerford, j%
18th District; B Conley, r.
I Dth Dittrict; J Adkins, r.
20th District ; George Wallaco, r
21st District; Wm Griffin, r.
22d District; T J Spoor, r.
23d District; W J Hnderson if.
24th District ; B B Hinton, and.
25th District : E 1 Higbee, r.
20th District ; A D Nunnalv, <k
27th District ; John Harris, r.
28th District; W F Jordan, r.
29th District : Josiuh Sherman, rv
3Cth District ; J H Me Worker, r.
31st District ; W F Bowers, r.
32d District : J C Richardson r.-
33d District ; A M Stringer, r.
34th District M A Candler, and
35th District W T Winn. and.
3fil.li District; W C Smith, r.
37th District; W W Merrill, r.
38th District : W Brock, r.
39/h District; A W Holcombe, A
loth District; C J Wellborn, <f.
list Dist.iict: J B Dickey, r.
42 I District ; J T Burns, and.
43.1 District ; Joel O Fain, and.
11th District ;B R NoCutching, n.
K K present ativ es .— Appling ; I*l #m Rullnh. cf*
Baker ; A M George, and.
Baldwin; 1* O’Neal, r.
Banks Win R Bell, r.
Berrien ; Titos Paulk, iv.
Brooks ; \V A Lane. I.
Bibb: II M Tunica, r ; J Fitzpatrick, r ; J IT
Brvan ; W S Houston, r. [Franks, r,
Bullock ; W M Hall, and.
Burke ; M Claiborne f.; J Munn r r.; J A Mnddeur.
Butts ; T M Harkness, ct.
''atoosa ; A S Fowler <f.
Chatham ;C K Osgood, r. James Porter, r. j
Camden ; V. lfillyer, r. [James M Sinn, »,.
Campbell ; W S Zellers, r.
< 'arroll; John Long, and.
Cass; F M Ford, and.; N J. Cranford .f.
Chattahoochee; W A Me JJougold, and.
(-harlton : F M Smith, r
Chattanooga : CC Cleghorn, and.
Calhoun : F L Pepper, r.
Cherokee : N J Perkins, <L
Clark ; M Davis, r.; A Richardson, r.
Clay ; R A Tumi paced, and.
Clayton : A E Cloud, and,
Clinch : G Lastinger, r.
Columbia : J M Rice, r.; Koinulotzs M*ore, r.*
Coffee; J R Smith, n.
Coweta : F M Scroggins, r; P Sewell r.
Cobb: W I) Anderson, and; N N Gober. and.
Colquitt ; W W Watkins, r.
Crawford ; Wm G Vinson and,
Dawson: .1 L Perkins, r.
Dade: J C Nisbet, and.
DeKalb : W H Clarke, and.
Decatur: B F Powell, r; John IHgdon, p.
Dooly; Hiram Williams, and.
Doughterty ; P Joiner, r; A It Keid, r. ?
Early : II C Fryer, and.
Echols : H W Phillips, and.
Effingham : M Rowls, and.
Elbert : U O Tate, and.
Emanuel -.John Gilli*, <l.
Fannin: A Hearn, r.
Fayette ; P II Brussel I, r.
Floyd : D Scott, and : M Ballanger, and.
Forsyth: Henry C Kellogg, and.
Franklin: J A Harriaon, and.
Fulton : E M Taliaferro, and : J E Gullatt and ; V V
Gilmer: Jas M Ellis, r. [Sisson,
Glasscock : J II Nunn, r.
Glynn, R B Hall, r.
Gordon ; It A Donaldson, and.
Greene ; R L McWhorter r: A Colby, r.
Gwinnett: Louis Nash and: R M Park*, and.
Habersham: W.S Frwln, and.
Hall: Davis Wolchell, r.
Hancock: W II Ilarrisou, r ;K Barnes, r.
Haralson: W r.
Hart: James Au<*n, r.
Harris : W 1 Hudson, r; Sam William*, r.
Heard: M Shackelford, n.
Henry: J A Maxwell, r.
Houston: James K Mathew*, and ; CC Duncan, ts r
Jackson : A J Bennett, r. [H R Felder,
Jasper: T M Allen, r,
Jefferson: Benj Ayrt } r; Alex Stons r r-
Johnson: J W Meadows, and.
Jones: W T McCullough. <l.
Laurens: George Linder, r.
Lee: Sam'l Lindsay, r; G F r.
Liberty: W A Golden, r.
Lincoln: Platt Madison, r.
Lowndeg: J W O’Neal, r.
Lumpkin: \V P Price, and.
Macon: Henry Fyall, r; Rob’t. Lumpkin, r.
Marion: W M Butt, and.
Mclntosh: T G Gambell. jr., r.
Meriwether: P W Chambers, r; W II Y Hal I, r.
Milletl F M I) Hopking, r.
Mitchell: J M Rusty, r.g
Montgomery: J J McArthur, and.
Monroe: W A Ballard, r; G II Clower*, r.
Milton: G M Hook, and.
Morgan: A J Williams, r; Monday Floyd, r.
Murray: J N Harris, and.
Muscogee; Jos G Maull. r, Ab Smith, r.
Newton: A II Lee, r; JF Harden, r.
Oglethorpe: J W Adkins, r; J Cunningham, r.
Paulding: S F Strickland, x.
Pickens: S A Darnell, r.
Pierce: B W Carpenter, r*
Pike: R A Seale, and.
Pojk: L II Walthall, and.
Pulaski: J M Buchan, r; S F Salter, r.
Putnam: S C Prudcn, r.
Quitman: L C A Warren, and.
Randolph: WM Tumlin, and ;D Goff, and.
Richmond: E Tweedy t r.; S E Bryant, r.; T. P
Rabun: McK Fincunnon, and. [Beard,
Scley: Thomas F Rainey, r.
Striv en: W I) Hamilton, r.
Spalding: J T Ellis, and.
Stewart: C C Humber, and.; J K Barmins,* and.
Sumter: G N Harper, and.; J A Cobb, and.
Talbot: Marion Betliune, r; J T Coetin r.
Taliaferro: WF Holden, r.
T&ftnll: R C Surrency. and.
Taylor : Frank Wilcbar, and.
Tho n vs J U Evans, r ; W C Carton, r.
Terrell : F M Harper, and.
Troup: J II Caldwell, r.; J T McCoramiek, r. ■
Twiggs; II Hughes, r.
Towns; Geo W Johnson, r.
Union : J II Pendland; and.
Upson J C Drake, and.
Walker : W B Gray,|d.-
j Walton: J B Sorrels, and.
Warren : John Neal, r.; S Gardner, r.
Ware : Joseph D Smith, and.
Washington: RW Flournoy, and.; WG Brown; d!-
Wayne : G WRumpb, and.
Webster: G S Rossor, and.
| White: C II Kytb, and.
! Whitfield : J E .Shumate, and.
Wilcox; D Johnson, and.
Wilkes : R Bradford, r.; E Belcher, s: ■
Wilkinson: C II Hooks, r.
Worth ; June* M Roiue. tL