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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: February 11, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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January 1st, 1864 AD (search for this): article 4
fy on oath to be necessary for the effective operation of the road, not to exceed one for each mile in actual use for military transportation — the names of such employees to be reported monthly to the Secretary of War, with a certificate accompanying such report that no one liable to military duty has been employed, where it was practicable to procure one not liable, capable of performing the required duties; the white officers of negro fire companies in cities in existence on the 1st of January, 1864; and the Secretary of War, under the direction of the President, is authorized to exempt or detail such other persons as he may be satisfied ought to be exempted on account of public necessity, and to insure the production of grain for the army, or for non producers, he may grant exemptions or details to such overseers, farmers, or planters, as he may be satisfied will be more useful to the country in the pursuits of agriculture than in the military service; provided the exemption shall
October 11th, 1862 AD (search for this): article 4
55, was stricken out, and a substitute adopted that all provost, hospital and conscript service, all clerks and assistants in the Quartermaster and Commissary departments, guards, laborers, &c., shall hereafter be performed by disabled soldiers, and when these are exhausted the President shall call upon the Governors of the several States, for quotas of men for such service, who are not liable to military duty, exempts one editor who was owner or editor of a newspaper on the 11th day of October, 1862, or prior to that date, and which has been so published regularly since that time, and who is a practical printer, and such journeymen printers, as such editor may, under oath, declare indispensable for printing such newspaper; the public printer and those employed to perform public printing for the Confederate and State Governments; Presidents and teachers of colleges and schools, regularly engaged as such for two years previous to the passage of this act, whose schools are composed of t