Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 9, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for George S. Foote or search for George S. Foote in all documents.

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n peace propositions and the Northern peace party. The New York Times has the following article as a leader: It is at least a curious circumstance that Mr. Foote, of Tennessee should have brought forward his propositions of peace in the rebel Congress at the precise moment when I has become important for the success of thhe party the justice to believe that they are laboring not for the independence of the South, but for the of the North. They the Confederacy, but merely to Mr. Foote, on the contrary, is earnestly bent upon achieving a complete separation of the two sections; and we interpret the conjunction of his remarkable speech at Richmolute enough to avail themselves at once. The foolish story set afloat by somebody in the office of the Philadelphia Inquirer who had taken the pains to lead Mr. Foote's speech, of the tenor of the Southern peace propositions, would not deserve a moment's attention, were it not to be feared that in some parts of the country it
The Daily Dispatch: October 9, 1862., [Electronic resource], Affairs in the Kanawha valley — Sale of Salt. (search)
e further instructed now to bring in a bill providing that all Treasury notes, not bearing interest, issued on and after 1st day of December next, shall be made fundable in Confederate States stock, bearing six per cent interest per annum. Mr. Foote, of Tenn, introduced the following resolution as an amendment to the amendment: "And that it shall be the duty of said Committee to inquire into the expediency of making the notes and bonds of the Treasury a legal tender in payment of allto ascertain his views, and his answer was that it was his expectation and desire that the Court should not be held in the then state of the Court should not be held in the then state of the country; and he thought the President was right. Mr. Foote, of Tennessee, offered the following amendment to the original bill: "Nothing in this act shall be so construed as to justify the President or those appointed by him, in setting aside or disregarding the provisions of the Constitution of
One hundred Dollars reward --For the apprehension of my negro boy Joe, who left the army, near Manassas, immediately after the last battle there, taking with him my Bay Horse and Mule, Joe is about 5 feet 7 inches high, black, sprightly in manner, and quick and intelligent in his replies. He was seen about the 15th of September near Stevensville, 29 miles above Gordonsville with the hors and mule in his possession and said that he was trying to make his way to Richmond. I will pay the above reward for the delivery of the Negro Horse, and Mule, or $50 for the apprehension and delivery of the Negro alone and all expenses incurred. Geo. S. Foote. Surg. C. S. A. Address, Surgeon J. Chambliss, in charge of 2d division General Hospital, Camp Winder, Richmond, Va oc 7--m*