Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 3, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hunter or search for Hunter in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

f the public enemy, the courts cannot be held. The bill was debated and then rejected. Mr. Hart, of Albemarle, called up a bill providing for an increase of the salaries of the professors of the University and to provide for the education of disabled and wounded soldiers. The bill increases the salaries of the professors to four thousand five hundred dollars and appropriates seventy thousand dollars to the education of disabled soldiers. The bill was advocated by Messrs. Hart and Hunter, and opposed by Mr. Johnson, of Bedford, and was finally passed. Mr. Christian, of Augusta, offered a resolution that the members of the Legislature of North Carolina, now in this city on official business, be invited to privileged seats on the floor of the Senate, which was adopted; and Messrs. Christian and Nash were appointed a committee to inform them of the fact. The committee, after a short retirement, returned and introduced Judge Perkins, of North Carolina, to the Sen
landed from a gunboat at the plantation of Mr. Charles F. Wren, on James river, and having burnt the houses, carried off all the cattle and grain from the plantation. Rumored raid on Weldon. The Petersburg Express states that the Yankee raid recently reported as advancing on Weldon from the Chowan river has retreated. Yankee peace Commissioners. The report circulated yesterday that Pierce, Fillmore and Chase had been appointed commissioners to confer with Messrs. Stephens, Hunter and Campbell was entirely without foundation.--The latest news we have received from the North is through the Yankee papers of last Monday, which were published before the news had reached there of the appointment of our commissioners.--Besides, there is no reason to suppose any persons will be specially appointed to confer with our commissioners, who went on to see Mr. Lincoln himself. From the South. No official intelligence from the South relative to Sherman's movements was made