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The Daily Dispatch: May 25, 1861., [Electronic resource], Statement of the Dahlonega Mint, Ga. (search)
one well in this glorious struggle, and will do more. Already she has her "Grays" at Harper's Ferry, with some three or four more companies ready in a few days to do valiant service in the cause. Captain John Buchanan (no relation of the Ex-James; oh, no, the Captain is a gentleman and a patriot,) has a fine company; Captain Jackson Grayson, of Bland county, one of the best in the State; and last, though not least, one of the finest companies of young men the State can produce was organized a few days since Their Captain is R. H. Gleaves, alias Lightning Rod. The said Captain is quite a young man, but awful tall — some six feet five or six inches high, with still an upward tendency, and one of the best tacticians in Southwestern Virginia, with a company of one hundred men, and equal to the best shots in Virginia. Such being the case, don't you think Old Abe and his vandalic horde will be ware of the day when he meets "Lightning Rod " and his company in "battle array?" Socrates.
[for the Richmond Dispatch.]to the Italians of America.University of Virginia, May 11, 1861. I read in the Daily Dispatch, of the 4th instant, an article about the proposed formation of a Garibaldi Legion in New York, intended to fight against the rights and people of the South. As the name of the legion is that of the modern Italian hero, and I am a native Italian, although now a naturalized American and a resident in the State of Virginia, I feel the deepest interest for all that regards both my native and my adopted country; and I hope, therefore, that should the intention of forming such a legion be true, no Italian may enlist under its banner. The Italians of this time are naturally bound to respect, and everywhere to sustain, the principle which Italy has assumed in fighting the battles of her independence; the principle which, being now acknowledged by the civilized world in Europe, has led to the deliverance of that lately oppressed land; the principle that only despot