Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 28, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for June, 7 AD or search for June, 7 AD in all documents.

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ting all the Union men they could catch through the entire country. A man who was out on a scout the other evening, tells me that he approached near the encampment of the rebels near Charleston, that he got within the picket lines, and was able to see a large crowd of the rebels — not less, he thinks, than 1,500. He saw some of the rebels go to two houses in the neighborhood and carry off blankets, quilts, and a store of honey. Mr. D. B. Rhodes, of Ripley, who was taken on the 6th of July, has been in jail in Salem, on the Tennessee and Lynchburg railroad, for ten weeks. He was released on the 4th inst., and has since traveled over a hundred miles through the enemy's country. He says he met Col. Wood, of the Secession army, about a mile from Hawk's Nest, and that he counted 500 tents. The 36th Ohio had sent out a command on a foraging scout. They brought in 100 head of cattle, taken from John J. Dickinson, who was claimed to be a Secessionist. Important movement