Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 9, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for A. J. Smith or search for A. J. Smith in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 2 document sections:

Tumbling. --We are from our exchanges that prices are coming down in all parts of the Confederacy, and we are happy to announce the same good tidings from our little remote corner. Within the past three weeks corn has come down from three dollars to one seventy-five per bushel; bacon and lard from four dollars to two fifty per pound; and flour from one twenty-five to seventy- five cents per pound, with a good prospect of its being much lower, as our wheat crop at present promises a heavy yield.--Sunny Smith, Aberdeen, Miss.
rebel army a greatly demoralized condition. The Trans Mississippi department has been virtually abandoned, and A. J. Smith's Army Corps, which was with Banks, has reached Chattanooga en route for Sherman. Sherman is said to be progressing ayesterday afternoon an attack was ordered to be made on our left at Cold Harbour by the sixth corps, and the troops under Smith; Warren, Burnside, and Harcock being held in readiness to advance in their respective fronts. The attack was made with scarrying the enemy's works on the right of the sixth corps, where we still hold them, and also the first line in front of Smith. "The latter, however, were commanded in the rear, which made those carried untenable. The enemy made repeated assa hundred of his cavalry were captured last night while attempting to make a raid in the direction of the White House. General Smith made the capture. There is no later news from General Grant's army. Three weeks ago. The New York Heral