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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 8, 1864., [Electronic resource].

Found 374 total hits in 202 results.

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Albemarle (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 10
Present for Gen. Robert E. Lee. --A citizen of Albemarle county, Va., who emigrated to Illinois in 1857, has just returned. He concealed within the lining of his vest a beautiful pin-cushion, presented to Gen. Lee by a young lady of Wood county, Ill. One side of this "token" was white silk, on which was a Confederate flag, bearing the motto "Conquer or Dic." The other side was blue silk, with white dais, and the word "Love" in the centre.
Wood County (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 10
Present for Gen. Robert E. Lee. --A citizen of Albemarle county, Va., who emigrated to Illinois in 1857, has just returned. He concealed within the lining of his vest a beautiful pin-cushion, presented to Gen. Lee by a young lady of Wood county, Ill. One side of this "token" was white silk, on which was a Confederate flag, bearing the motto "Conquer or Dic." The other side was blue silk, with white dais, and the word "Love" in the centre.
Prices going up. --At the auction sale of Messrs. Robinson, Adams & Co. yesterday, sugar, coffee, and molasses advanced in price. Sugar brought $9 a pound and molasses $51.
Prices going up. --At the auction sale of Messrs. Robinson, Adams & Co. yesterday, sugar, coffee, and molasses advanced in price. Sugar brought $9 a pound and molasses $51.
Chunky Creek (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): article 11
The fate of the negro children. --We learn from a reliable source that the bodies of over twenty negro children have been taken from Chunky Creek since the Yankees left, who were thrown in by the inhuman scoundrels to get them out of the way. We have heard of other cruelties in the neighborhood of Meridian, which are too horrible to publish.--Brandon (Miss.) Republican
Brandon (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): article 11
The fate of the negro children. --We learn from a reliable source that the bodies of over twenty negro children have been taken from Chunky Creek since the Yankees left, who were thrown in by the inhuman scoundrels to get them out of the way. We have heard of other cruelties in the neighborhood of Meridian, which are too horrible to publish.--Brandon (Miss.) Republican
Meridian (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): article 11
The fate of the negro children. --We learn from a reliable source that the bodies of over twenty negro children have been taken from Chunky Creek since the Yankees left, who were thrown in by the inhuman scoundrels to get them out of the way. We have heard of other cruelties in the neighborhood of Meridian, which are too horrible to publish.--Brandon (Miss.) Republican
Jefferson Davis (search for this): article 11
A bold Run. --By a late Nassan paper we notice the arrival at that port of the schooner J Davis, 23 tons, Captain Gordon, from Wilmington, N. C., with 23 bales cotton and 36 bbls. tar and pitch. Leaving the Yankee blockaders wholly out of the account, it was a bold thing to venture upon the voyage at this time of the year in such a tiny cockleshell.
A bold Run. --By a late Nassan paper we notice the arrival at that port of the schooner J Davis, 23 tons, Captain Gordon, from Wilmington, N. C., with 23 bales cotton and 36 bbls. tar and pitch. Leaving the Yankee blockaders wholly out of the account, it was a bold thing to venture upon the voyage at this time of the year in such a tiny cockleshell.
Capt. Wm. D. Fair, formerly of Lynchburg, Va., died recently in California.
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