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story. One day the Daily Bulletin, published there by the "blue belly," came out with an editorial denouncing these reports, and significantly added, "We have known men hung for much less offences than this." This was a settler, and Knoxville the next day was perfectly silent on the Chickamauga subject. It was ten days after the battle had occurred before it was allowed to be talked of in the streets. Gen. Burnside was very kind to the citizens generally, as were his officers. General Hartsuff was in command in the city, spoke of Gen. Ewell very highly, and told with consiberable jollity of a champagne supper in Washington, at which he was present, where several Southern officers, about leaving for the Confederacy, were taken leave of by their friends who still remained in the U. S. Army. The soldiers were kept in tolerable subjection, and citizens were not interfered with to any great extent. One of the sights to be seen in the city was a Yankee soldier with his head shav