labama; Leonidas Haskell, recommended by B. F. Camp, 20,000 bales, North Carolina; N. F. Pooter, 3,000 bales, 3,000 boxes tobacco; Horace H. Meloon, 10,000 bales, 3,000 barrels tar, same of rosin, same of turpentine, Florida, Georgia and Alabama; Wilson, Gibson & Company, 100,000 bales, 2,500 boxes tobacco, Carolinas, Georgia and Florida; Charles D. Chase, 5,000 bales, 3,000 barrels turpentine, 5,000 barrels pitch, 2,000,000 feet lumber, Florida; E. D. Webster and A. N. Shearer, 15,000 barrels trolina; Fergus Pennington, 17,500 bales, Louisiana and Mississippi; Samuel Noble, 250,000 bales, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and Louisiana; Robert E. Coxe, 50,000 bales, 10,000 barrels turpentine, 20,000 boxes tobacco, any Southern State; L. B. Wilson, G. O. Wallace, H. C. Hicks, J. O. P. Burnside, Alonzo Brett, Francis V. Haskins, and P. H. Whitehurst & Co., all small lots of cottons, shingles, etc. By the terms of these permits, one-fourth of the net profit goes to the Treasury, the balan