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exhorted the country people around as to dry all the peaches and apples they can, for army use. Yesterday the ladies of the village (our place numbers about 1,200 people, mostly factory operatives,) received an invitation to meet together for the purpose of preparing to work up into sheets, pillow-cases and shirts a thousand yards of suitable material presented by several liberal gentlemen of the place, for the army hospitals in Virginia. Wheeling refugees. The ladies of Clarke county, Va., are desirous of knowing by a notice in this paper, where a box of clothing could be sent so as to reach the Wheeling refugees in the army. We are informed that they are serving in Gen. Johnston's division of the Army of the Potomac, and that their gallantry in battle has rendered them eminently deserving of any favor which the ladies can bestow. To correspondents generally. We are under the necessity of repeating that we cannot undertake to return rejected communications.
The Daily Dispatch: September 3, 1861., [Electronic resource], Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch. (search)
Deceased. --We regret to learn that Wm. P. Southan, late Professor of Greek in the Richmond (Baptist) College, died at his father's residence, in Clarke county, Va., on the 22d ult. He was quite young, and endowed with remarkable talents.
J. T. Goode, late of the U. S. Army, arrived in Petersburg recently, latter a perilous journey from Utah. He is a son of the former Congressman from that district. George W. Stainback, who served in the war of 1812, and has filled an office in the Bank of Virginia for many years past, died in Petersburg on Saturday last. The steam tug W. W. Townes, and four substantially-built arks, were sold in Petersburg, on Saturday, to the Confederate Government, for $10,000. Thomas W. Barnes, convicted at Memphis, Tenn., of the murder of John Hendrihan, has been sentenced to be hung on the 4th October next. The wife of General Flournoy, of Arkansas, has become a having micmac since the recent death of her husband. So says an exchange. Henry McKenzie, of Talladega, Ala., is the owner of a quarry of lithographic stone, probably the only one in America. Major High M. Nelson has been elected Captain of the Clarke County (Va.) Cavalry, vice Captain Hardesty, resigned.