Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 4, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Brown or search for Brown in all documents.

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at once. If Lincoln is elected they have no hopes for peace. Several hundred of our exchanged prisoners, belonging mostly to Lewis's Kentucky and Govan's Arkansas brigades, have passed down the road.--Some of them came direct through from Nashville, and say that Wheeler did but little permanent injury to the road. They state that the Southern ladies in Nashville were very kind to them, but that they were closely watched by the Yankee officials. The Chattanooga Rebel, which was being published quite successfully at Griffin, has been obliged to pack up and enter a box-car once more. Governor Brown has succeeded in getting most of, the State cotton away from Griffin. It amounted to about forty thousand bales when Atlanta was evacuated. Then about four thousand still left there up to-day yesterday. The being depopulated rapidly, each train of away hundreds. The hospitals have been to Albany, Georgia. What do you think of the position of Augusta and Macon!
ds twice the price in Texas that it does here because there is a better chance to invest it in blockade-running? Governor Brown's reply to General Sherman's "Negotiation" Proposition. As much has been said about the informal message sent by General Sherman to Governor Brown, Vice-President Stephens and Senator Johnson, inviting them to visit the General in Atlanta, for a conference in reference to the state of the country, with a view to negotiations for peace, and as the public mind ha subject, we copy from the Confederate (Ga.) Union an account of the interview with Sherman's messenger, derived from Governor Brown himself: The Governor stated that Mr. William King, who represented himself as the bearer of a message from Genrt, it desired, to go and return at such time as might be agreeable to him; that he (General Sherman) recognized him (Governor Brown) as the governor of the whole State; and as over one hundred miles of the territory of the State is now behind his li