Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 2, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Benjamin Davis or search for Benjamin Davis in all documents.

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promote peace, and to urge Union men not to rebel, to take up arms, or to commit any outrages whatever. That document was published in all the Tennessee papers. I signed it in good faith, and I have kept that faith. Wm. G. Brownlow President Davis's Fast day in Louisville. The Louisville (Bowling Green) Courier, on the 26th, learns from a gentleman just from Louisville, that the day set apart by President Davis for fasting and prayer was quit generally observed by the Southern-RigPresident Davis for fasting and prayer was quit generally observed by the Southern-Right citizens of Louisville. Our informant saw procession of Sunday school children that day, and he was quite surprised that they were not arrested by the Yankee authorities there. Public service was held in one of the churches, at which the Louisville Democrat was exceedingly indignant, and gave vent to its rage in its usual supply of billingsgate. A spy hung in Texas. The Sherman (Texas) Journal says: An old gray-haired sinner, named Jas. Z. Bell, a member of one of the Red ri
Ran away--$100 reward. --Ran away, on Monday, a negro Boy, named Essex; about five feet eight inches high; black; stammers slightly; about twenty or twenty-two years old; weight about 150 pounds; formerly belonged to Capt John Wright, of Plain View, P. O., King and Queen county, Va., The above reward will be paid on his delivery to me at my office, in this city. He may be making his way to West Point, Va. He has a wife in that neighborhood. His upper teeth are dark, from tarter on them. oc 22--ts Benjamin Davis.