Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 5, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for August 30th or search for August 30th in all documents.

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of the Administration to suppress the rebellion. In a word, the veriest rebel may read the platform without taking offence, while no truly loyal man can fail to be disgusted with its manifest truckling to the disloyal elements in the loyal States. Upon the whole, the platform is a pitiful affair, and will be expectorated upon by all sorts of people. Wheeler's operations in Tennessee. The following is the latest Yankee dispatch about General Wheeler's movements: Louisville, August 30.--Passengers by the Nashville train say that Wheeler, with his entire force, has appeared at the bend of the Cumberland river, three miles below Gallatin, where they captured a company of United States troops, and were attempting to cross the river this morning for an advance upon Gallatin. His force is variously estimated at from five to twelve thousand, (the former number is probably nearly correct.) A report has reached Cave City, Kentucky, that the colonel commanding the post at Galla
to be possessed of sufficient information to explain the true situation of affairs. The report, as usual, gathered proportions as it progressed, and by nightfall the croakers were brooding over the most exaggerated statements and false representations. We give below such reliable accounts as we have received: The evacuation of Atlanta. The following is the essential portion of a dispatch from General Hood, dated. "Headquarters, &CL, September 3. "On the evening of the 30th August the enemy made a lodgment across Flint river, near Jonesboro'. We attacked them there on the evening of the 31st with two corps, but failed to dislodge them. "This made it necessary to abandon Atlanta, which was done on the night of September 1st. Our loss on the evening of the 31st was small. "On the evening of the 1st of September, General Hardee's corps, in position at Jonesboro', was assaulted by a superior force of the enemy, and being outflanked, was compelled to withdra