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e honorable position. Mr. Wirt Adams, a citizen of Mississippi, and a commission merchant of New Orleans, and late Commissioner from Mississippi to the Louisiana State Convention, is mentioned now as the next appointee for that Cabinet office. D. P. Blair, Esq., Special Post-Office Agent for Alabama and Northern Mississippi, is also spoken of for the place. I am advised that the Hon. W. P. Chilton, of this city, and Deputy in the Congress from this District, was tendered the office by President Davis. No more competent gentleman for that post can be found in the Confederate States or anywhere else. He possesses a superior intellect, sound practical sense, much experience, enlarged views, pure private character, and is emphatically a working man, and withal is a Christian gentleman. It would prove greatly to the interests of the department and the public interests if he would accept. I presume his large practice as a lawyer, his regard for the interests of his clients, is the bar
y hints at, coercion, that in less than six months you will see a Southern army invading the North under the lead of President Davis in person. I say "my prediction," it is not prediction, and I now tell you what I know, that it will be done, and Vent in your own State, will be in the scrummage. Do you doubt it? if you do, you need not doubt any more. Look at President Davis' Inaugural again, and all men who know Davis, knows he never speaks words without meaning. Seward, if no one else, Davis, knows he never speaks words without meaning. Seward, if no one else, understands him, for he has stripped him many a time of his hellish masks and held him up in his naked deformity to the world. Yes, Seward knows Davis. This war is a game that takes two to play at, and when once commenced it will not be ended on SDavis. This war is a game that takes two to play at, and when once commenced it will not be ended on Southern soil. The people here are just as cool and as dispassionate to- day as if Lincoln had never lived. We are prepared for the most, and the worst, and we now say, "lay on Macduff." Our harbor is filled with vessels, and we notice a large
By Hector Davis, Auct'r.Trustee's Sale of Valuable slaves at Auction. --As Trustee in a deed of trust; dated December 13th; 1860, and recorded in the Clerk's Office of the Husting Court of the city of Richmond, and at the request of creditors secured in said deed, I shall proceed to sell, at the Auction Rooms of Hector Davis, in the city of Richmond, at the hour of 10 o'clock, on Monday, the 18th day of March, 1861, six valuable slaves consist of four Men, who are all young and active, ont; dated December 13th; 1860, and recorded in the Clerk's Office of the Husting Court of the city of Richmond, and at the request of creditors secured in said deed, I shall proceed to sell, at the Auction Rooms of Hector Davis, in the city of Richmond, at the hour of 10 o'clock, on Monday, the 18th day of March, 1861, six valuable slaves consist of four Men, who are all young and active, one Boy about 16 years of age, and a valuable Woman. Terms.--Cash Wm. H. Hardgrove, Trustee. mh 8--10t
Davis, Deupree -- Co. will give their entire attention to the Sale of negroes, Publicly and privately. Odd Fellows' Hall, Corner Mayo and Franklin streets, Richmond, Va. Ro. H. Davis, Wm. S. Deupree, S. R. Fondren. Rufus G. Maddux, Clerk. de 1--1y