Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 31, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Joseph R. Anderson or search for Joseph R. Anderson in all documents.

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s. The expedition ended in a failure, and the capture of several prisoners by us. The gallant Mosby is understood to be again in the saddle, and his success cannot be doubted. Beyond this, the most perfect stagnation continues to prevail on both sides. In our own camps, however, drills, inspections, and reviews, are of daily and weekly occurrence, which furnish a pleasant relief from the monotony of camp life. During the present week Gen. A. P. Hill has reviewed the veterans of Anderson's, Heth's, and Wilcox's divisions. The respective brigades were in excellent condition, and presented an imposing illustration of the "pomp and circumstance of glorious war." These occasions are largely attended by both sexes — especially by the fair sex, who grace and enliven the scene by their presence. On the authority of an Assistant Inspector-General of Gen. Lee's Staff, whose weekly rounds of the army afford that scrutinizing officer ample opportunities for knowing, the whole army w
Liberal. --One of our citizens, Mr. Joseph R. Anderson, who has reaped a large wheat crop, is having it ground at the Gallege Mills and the flour sold to families at $27 per barrel, and this, too, when the same grain of hour is being sold by merchants general, at $45. Messrs. Warwick & Barksdale, to their credit be it said, are selling flour to families at $25 per barrel, and will continue to do so as long as farmers will furnish the wheat at Government prices.