Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 13, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Prince Georges (Maryland, United States) or search for Prince Georges (Maryland, United States) in all documents.

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. The first was W. Thornton, of the One Hundred and Seventy-ninth New York, for having deserted to the enemy. The other were: John Benson, Fifth New Hampshire; Peter M. Cox, Fourth New Jersey; and Michael Wood, One Hundred and Eighty-fourth Pennsylvania. Some fifteen deserters from the enemy came in this morning, four of them being cavalrymen, with their horses and equipments. A party of poor whites, numbering about twenty-five, said to be lately inmates of a poor-house in Prince George county, came into the lines yesterday, and were sent North to-day. They were forced to leave on account of the scarcity of food in the district where they had lived, and looked as though they had suffered for the bare necessities of life for some time. General Hood. The Tribune says: It is estimated that Hood took across the Tennessee river from twenty-five thousand to twenty-eight thousand men. General Forrest abandoned about one hundred and fifty wagons on the north side of