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.10 I . ./ . 1 In the whole county we had many cultivated and influential citizens?such men as Gen. Nixon, Col. Strong Judge Louis Daniel, . ? Col. Stewart, Gen. Peter Joor, Hon. Wm. Haile, Willis H. Arnold, Hon. Noel Jordan, Elijah Carver, Judge Morgan, Moses Cook. Isaac Graves, Pierre Saucier, John B. Toulm6, Judge J. C. Monet, John Martin, Major Samuel White, Leonard Kimball, Jacob Seal, Elijah and Wm. Lott, Daniel and John Burnet, Thomas Brown, /' Judge Wingate, Capt. John Bradford, Nicholas Mitchell, William and Joseph Wheat, Sidney Lenoir, Major Cleveland, Asa Russ, W. J. and Thomas Poitevent, Hon. Ben. Leonard, S. Thomas Randall, fc/ Dr. R. Eager, H. and R. Carre, Dr. R. Montgomery, J. W. Roberts, Judge Benjamin Sones, David Moye? George Holloman, Capt. Geo. Sheriff, D. S. Dewees, Felton Conly, JoTm L. Armstrong, -Francois Netto, A. H. Hersey, Judge C. B. Beverley, W. W. Frierson, Jordan Smith, Peyton Lee, Geo. Moore, George Marse, Judge Winningham, Dr. C. A. Calhoun, E. F. Spence, Charles Litchfield, . Wm. Boardman,' B. Bourne, M. A. Thompson, A. W. Cameron, Jesse Cowand, Jack Lizanna, Louis Spotorno, W. A. Whitfield, Alex. Bookter, Cader Colly, F. G. Casanova, J. B, Mitchell, S.- J. Favre, T. A. Mitchell. Wm. and Hiram Smith, A. M. Slaydon, Capt. Stocker, J. J. Bordages, Conrad HofFman,.James A. Ulman, Green Wootan, Joseph Martin. Charles Frazer, Ozanne Favre, Stephen and John Moody, James Johnston, Robert Carr, Dr. Leonard, Luther Russ, Christian Koch, John Orr, Judge Stephen Meade, Redding Byrd, D. C. Stanley, Captain Cuevas, Dimitry Canna, Alexander Dimitry, Col. Hoyt, Alex. F. Cameron, representative men of whom any county may be proud. ? If Pearlington is no longer a cotton port, owing to the removal of planters from Pearl River to the central portion of the State, it has become one of the most important points for the sawing and shipping of lumber in the South. The mills at that place and its immediate vicinity employ many steam and sailing vessels, coastwise and to foreign ports, and ovei 600 hands in their various branches of business. The four mills, with four circular' saws and three gangs, cut an average of 90,000 feet of lumber -per day. Allowing 260 working days per year this would make ? 23,400,000 feet. : , Poitevent & Favre sawed most of the lumber used in the s construction of ther N. O. & M. R. R. and its numerous bridges. kj-' Within the last few months they have shipped over l,000,000j^V\ feet to northern; western and foreign ports, !&na they have 8upplied'j|?? .for the jetties 4000 round and square piles, 700,000 feet ^3;inch|^frv iiiwpiji aujiii. lijjiwiM- ?? ? * ? ? ? :V ' ? / ? ? ' ? ' ."?v * ? 1
Claiborne, J.F.H Claiborne-J.F.H-081