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Ranaway. --$25 Reward.--A negro man named Gilbert, aged between 40 and 50 years. His color is black; whiskers grey, under the chin. He is about six feet high; black hair. His clothing is a black coat and plaid summer pants. I bought him at Dickinson & Hill's auction room last Tuesday. He was brought here by a gentleman named Thos. G. Neal, of North Carolina. He left my premises Saturday afternoon, between 2 and 3 o'clock. The above reward will be paid by M. A. Myers, 66 Main street, Richmond, Va. Or lodged in some convenient Jail de 30--t6thFeb*
Ranaway--$25 Reward. --A negro man named Gilbert, aged between 40 and 50 years. His color is black; whiskers grey, under the chin. He is about six feet high, black hair. His clothing is a black coat and plaid summer pant. I bought him at Dickinson &Hill's auction room last Tuesday. He was brought here by a gentleman named Thos. G. Neal, of North Carolina. He left my premises Saturday afternoon, between 2 and 3 o'clock. The above reward will be paid by M. A. Myers, 66 Main street, Richmond, Va. fe 3--1m* Or lodged in some convenient Jail.
Ranaway--$25 Reward --A negro man named Gilbert, aged between 40 and 50 years. His color is black; whiskers grey, under the chin. He is about six feet high; black hair. His clothing is a black coat and plaid summer pants. I bought him at Dickinson & Hill's auction room last Tuesday. He was brought here by a gentleman named Thos. G. Neal, of North Carolina. He left my premises Saturday afternoon, between 2 and 3 o'clock. The above reward will be paid by M. A. Myers, 66 Main street, Richmond, Va. fe 3--1m* Or lodged in some convenient Jail.
Ranaway--$25 Reward. --A negro man named Gilbert, aged between 40 and 50 years. His color is black; whiskers grey, under the chin. He is about six feet high; black hair. His clothing is a black coat and plaid summer pants. I bought him at Dickinson &Hill's auction room last Tuesday. He was brought here by a gentleman named Thos. G. Neal, of North Carolina. He left my premises Saturday afternoon, between 2 and 3 o'clock. The above reward will be paid by M. A. Myers, 66 Main street, Richmond, Va. Or lodged in some convenient Jail. fe 3--1m*
Twenty dollars reward. Runaway, ten days ago, a Negro Boy, about eleven years old. Said Boy is black stout built, and stutters a little, and has a scar on his left forehead. He is in Richmond and was seen in the Old Market a few day ago. His name is Henry, and was brought to this city by M. A., Myers on the 5th of February, last from Norfolk. I will give the above reward for the delivery of said Boy to me, or secured in any jail, so that I can get him. A. Wolff, 64 Main street. mh 29--6t
said he owed an apology to his honorable friend and the House for having on a previous occasion misinformed them on this subject. In fact, it was only at the close of last week that he received the information which he was now about to give. He had stated before that two gentlemen--one the purser of the so-called Confederate States steamer Sumter, and the other a gentlemen who was formerly United States Consul at Cadiz — were proceeding on a voyage from Cadiz to Lisbon, and, according to Mr. Myers, the purser's statement, hearing that a fellow-citizen was ill at Tangiers, they landed to see him, and were returning to embark when they were met by the American Consul, accompanied by Moorish guards, arrested on the spot and carried to the Consulate. They were then loaded with irons and confined in an improper place. The commander of the Sumter, hearing what had occurred, wrote a letter to the Moorish authorities, and sent it to Mr. Hay, Her Majesty's Consul, requesting him to deliver
uston, Corresponding Secretary of the Sunday School Society, was instructed to employ himself until the next General Conference in raising funds for the Sunday School cause, and to remit the money so collected to Dr. McFerrin, Treasurer of the Society. Dr. Green moved that the Christian Advocate and the Southern Christian Advocate he united, and till the next meeting of the General Conference, published in Atlanta, Ga., under the joint editorial control and management of Drs. McTyre and Myers. Agreed to. Bishop Soule. We copy the following astounding information from a late Yankee paper. We hope to have good grounds for its complete refutation hereafter: It will be gratifying to the many friends of the Rev. Bishop Soule, D. D., who is the Senior Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, to learn that he is still a staunch advocate for the Constitution and the Union. Chaplain Stevenson, of the Fifteenth Indiana regiment, had an interview with the Bishop a
Harrisonburg. N. P. Banks. Major-Gen. Commanding. New Market April 20--9 A. M. To Hon. E. M. Stention, Secretary of War: The fight of Jackson from the valley, by way of the mountain, from Harrisonburg towards and Orange , on Gordonsville is confirmed that morning by our scouts and prisoners. N. P. Banks, Major. Gen. Commanding. The Captures officers of the steamer Hunter. Boston, April 18, 1862. --Thomas E. Tansall, late United States at Tangiers, and Mr. Myers, Puteer of the Sumter, arrested at Algeeras, Morocco, arrived here to-day in the bark Harvest Home, to which they were transferred by the United States gunboat Inc. The prisoners were in irons, which were removed by order of Marshall Keys, and they were army to Fort Warren, to await instructions from the Government. The Nashville at , N. P. Nassau, N. P., April 11, 1862. --The rebel steamer Nashville arrived April 1st, and changed her colors to the British, under the name of
— Cowardice. A division of the enemy, commanded by Gen. Huribut, was in the brunt of the battle on the field of Shiloh. His official report gives the casualties as follows: killed803 wounded1,417 missing170 total1, loss of Myers's and Rosa's batteries: Horses124 Guns at Caissons4 In the official report of Gen. Huribut we find the following "I recommend that the officers of the 13th Ohio battery be mustered out of service, and the men and material remaini3th Ohio battery be mustered out of service, and the men and material remaining be applied to filling up the ranks of some battery which has done honor to the service." The reason for this we find in a forward portion of the report, as follows: "A single shot from the enemy's battery struck in Myers's batter, when officers and men, with a common impulse of disgraceful cowardice, abandoned the entire battery, horses, caissons and guns, and fied, and I saw them no more until Tuesday."
s, E P Young, J B Mickle. Company C.--Killed: Sergeant C D Blackburn; Privates W C Draughon, J C Gambill, J M Jones. Wounded: Sergeant W E Benson; Privates M Bonac, R Burns, A S Samuel, A J Mondy, and F N Ingram. Company D.--Wounded: Privates W H Andrews, D F. McKinney, J J Page, and J F Locke. Company E.--Wounded: Captain N M Morris; Privates J L Wyatt, J B Stone, W H Weaver, J M Robertson, and J S P Wimberly. Company F.--Killed: Private R Brooks.--Wounded: Sergeant J T Myers; Privates Thos Brake, A N Ross, S E Spurgeon, J W Watson, J H Shanwall. Missing: Privates B L Stavely, J A Holmes, and M E Spurgeon. Company G.--Killed: J D Booth. Privates H Collier and T D Dickson, mortally; W C Hogan, H A Norfleet. Company H.--Killed: C C Tilley. Wounded: Orderly Sergeant L S Eddins; Private B W Coleman. Missing: Corporal Pat Meade. Company I.--Killed: E Wilson. Company K.--Killed: J W Gunn. Wounded: Privates C L F Worley, C C Atkins, and Richard
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