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Lt Geo | 10 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: May 21, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 12 total hits in 6 results.
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 10
Rome, Ga. (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 10
Clinton (Alabama, United States) (search for this): article 10
Vance (search for this): article 10
Crops in the South.
Our exchanges from different sections of the South bring us the most cheering accounts as to the prospects of the approaching harvest.
The Raleigh Standard has the following from a correspondent:
Cabarrus has responded nobly to the patriotic appeals of Gov. Vance and President Davis for provisions for our gallant solders.--A large amount of corn and bacon has recently been shipped from this place, and they are still coming in. Our wheat crop is very promising indeed.
We are planting no cotton.
I fear, however, if more men are taken from the county, it will be difficult, if not impossible, to gather our crops.
A Rome (Ga.) paper says:
The wheat crop in this section is exceedingly fine, and is as promising as one could wish.
Not a single stalk of it is as yet affected by the rust.
The oat crop looks finely.
The stand of corn is good, and a large area of ground is planted with it.
A letter from Clinton, Greene county, Ala., says:"W
Cabarrus (search for this): article 10
Crops in the South.
Our exchanges from different sections of the South bring us the most cheering accounts as to the prospects of the approaching harvest.
The Raleigh Standard has the following from a correspondent:
Cabarrus has responded nobly to the patriotic appeals of Gov. Vance and President Davis for provisions for our gallant solders.--A large amount of corn and bacon has recently been shipped from this place, and they are still coming in. Our wheat crop is very promising indeed.
We are planting no cotton.
I fear, however, if more men are taken from the county, it will be difficult, if not impossible, to gather our crops.
A Rome (Ga.) paper says:
The wheat crop in this section is exceedingly fine, and is as promising as one could wish.
Not a single stalk of it is as yet affected by the rust.
The oat crop looks finely.
The stand of corn is good, and a large area of ground is planted with it.
A letter from Clinton, Greene county, Ala., says:"W
Davis (search for this): article 10
Crops in the South.
Our exchanges from different sections of the South bring us the most cheering accounts as to the prospects of the approaching harvest.
The Raleigh Standard has the following from a correspondent:
Cabarrus has responded nobly to the patriotic appeals of Gov. Vance and President Davis for provisions for our gallant solders.--A large amount of corn and bacon has recently been shipped from this place, and they are still coming in. Our wheat crop is very promising indeed.
We are planting no cotton.
I fear, however, if more men are taken from the county, it will be difficult, if not impossible, to gather our crops.
A Rome (Ga.) paper says:
The wheat crop in this section is exceedingly fine, and is as promising as one could wish.
Not a single stalk of it is as yet affected by the rust.
The oat crop looks finely.
The stand of corn is good, and a large area of ground is planted with it.
A letter from Clinton, Greene county, Ala., says:"