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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 17, 1863., [Electronic resource].

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Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 10
mes on Confederate military movements. --The London Times, of the 26th ult., has an editorial on the late military operations of the Confederate commanders, resulting in the defeat of Rosecrans and the retreat of Meade. It says: In these last operations in Tennessee and Virginia the Confederate commanders have displayed a degree of military skill and a power of combining their force that the Federals have never been able to attain. The armies of General Lee and General Bragg, in Georgia and Northern Virginia, were more than four hundred miles apart in a straight line. Yet they cooperated with and supported each other with as much celeray as if they were engaged in one operation. A whole corps has been taken from one and added to the other with facility as great as if the main bodies had only been separated by the distance of a day's march. The immense advantage of railroads for the purposes of war has never yet been so signally proved as by the transfer of Longstreet's
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 10
tary movements. --The London Times, of the 26th ult., has an editorial on the late military operations of the Confederate commanders, resulting in the defeat of Rosecrans and the retreat of Meade. It says: In these last operations in Tennessee and Virginia the Confederate commanders have displayed a degree of military skill and a power of combining their force that the Federals have never been able to attain. The armies of General Lee and General Bragg, in Georgia and Northern Virgias great as if the main bodies had only been separated by the distance of a day's march. The immense advantage of railroads for the purposes of war has never yet been so signally proved as by the transfer of Longstreet's corps from Virginia to Tennessee to aid in the defeat of Rosecrans, and back again to enable Lee to make this advance so confidently. The troops thus twice moved from point to point must have traversed more than a thousand miles of road, some of the railway lines they took be
Virginia (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 10
e military movements. --The London Times, of the 26th ult., has an editorial on the late military operations of the Confederate commanders, resulting in the defeat of Rosecrans and the retreat of Meade. It says: In these last operations in Tennessee and Virginia the Confederate commanders have displayed a degree of military skill and a power of combining their force that the Federals have never been able to attain. The armies of General Lee and General Bragg, in Georgia and Northern Virginia, were more than four hundred miles apart in a straight line. Yet they cooperated with and supported each other with as much celeray as if they were engaged in one operation. A whole corps has been taken from one and added to the other with facility as great as if the main bodies had only been separated by the distance of a day's march. The immense advantage of railroads for the purposes of war has never yet been so signally proved as by the transfer of Longstreet's corps from Virgin
P. Lambert (search for this): article 10
Arrests upon charge of theft. --John A Tibbs, charged with stealing an overcoat, and P. Lambert, charged with stealing a pair of boots valued at $170, were arrested and lodged in the lower station house yesterday evening.
A notorious bandit killed. --A correspondent of the Athens (Tenn.) Watchman writes that Goldman Bryson, the notorious bandit, was killed in his own house by a squad of men, mostly Indians. There is no doubt as to the certainty of it. A very respectable citizen from Hiawassee, Ga., was in Murphy last Saturday, and saw Bryson's boots, pistol, furlough, (from Burnside for recruiting service,) his vest, that was bloody where he was bayoneted, and his mustes roll which is rather an important document. Capt. Vaughn, from Tennessee, surprised a party of Bryson's men that had stopped for dinner below Murphy, and captured a contain and 17 men, and killed four, and this party of Indiana pursed Bryson 14 miles through the mountains, to his own house, and shot seven balls into him and ran a bayonet through him. He had but six dollars about his person, and that Confederate money.
A notorious bandit killed. --A correspondent of the Athens (Tenn.) Watchman writes that Goldman Bryson, the notorious bandit, was killed in his own house by a squad of men, mostly Indians. There is no doubt as to the certainty of it. A very respectable citizen from Hiawassee, Ga., was in Murphy last Saturday, and saw Bryson's boots, pistol, furlough, (from Burnside for recruiting service,) his vest, that was bloody where he was bayoneted, and his mustes roll which is rather an important document. Capt. Vaughn, from Tennessee, surprised a party of Bryson's men that had stopped for dinner below Murphy, and captured a contain and 17 men, and killed four, and this party of Indiana pursed Bryson 14 miles through the mountains, to his own house, and shot seven balls into him and ran a bayonet through him. He had but six dollars about his person, and that Confederate money.
A notorious bandit killed. --A correspondent of the Athens (Tenn.) Watchman writes that Goldman Bryson, the notorious bandit, was killed in his own house by a squad of men, mostly Indians. There is no doubt as to the certainty of it. A very respectable citizen from Hiawassee, Ga., was in Murphy last Saturday, and saw Bryson's boots, pistol, furlough, (from Burnside for recruiting service,) his vest, that was bloody where he was bayoneted, and his mustes roll which is rather an important document. Capt. Vaughn, from Tennessee, surprised a party of Bryson's men that had stopped for dinner below Murphy, and captured a contain and 17 men, and killed four, and this party of Indiana pursed Bryson 14 miles through the mountains, to his own house, and shot seven balls into him and ran a bayonet through him. He had but six dollars about his person, and that Confederate money.
t of the Athens (Tenn.) Watchman writes that Goldman Bryson, the notorious bandit, was killed in his own house by a squad of men, mostly Indians. There is no doubt as to the certainty of it. A very respectable citizen from Hiawassee, Ga., was in Murphy last Saturday, and saw Bryson's boots, pistol, furlough, (from Burnside for recruiting service,) his vest, that was bloody where he was bayoneted, and his mustes roll which is rather an important document. Capt. Vaughn, from Tennessee, surprised service,) his vest, that was bloody where he was bayoneted, and his mustes roll which is rather an important document. Capt. Vaughn, from Tennessee, surprised a party of Bryson's men that had stopped for dinner below Murphy, and captured a contain and 17 men, and killed four, and this party of Indiana pursed Bryson 14 miles through the mountains, to his own house, and shot seven balls into him and ran a bayonet through him. He had but six dollars about his person, and that Confederate money.
Goldman Bryson (search for this): article 11
A notorious bandit killed. --A correspondent of the Athens (Tenn.) Watchman writes that Goldman Bryson, the notorious bandit, was killed in his own house by a squad of men, mostly Indians. There is no doubt as to the certainty of it. A very respectable citizen from Hiawassee, Ga., was in Murphy last Saturday, and saw Bryson's boots, pistol, furlough, (from Burnside for recruiting service,) his vest, that was bloody where he was bayoneted, and his mustes roll which is rather an important document. Capt. Vaughn, from Tennessee, surprised a party of Bryson's men that had stopped for dinner below Murphy, and captured a contain and 17 men, and killed four, and this party of Indiana pursed Bryson 14 miles through the mountains, to his ownand 17 men, and killed four, and this party of Indiana pursed Bryson 14 miles through the mountains, to his own house, and shot seven balls into him and ran a bayonet through him. He had but six dollars about his person, and that Confederate money.
Indiana (Indiana, United States) (search for this): article 11
A notorious bandit killed. --A correspondent of the Athens (Tenn.) Watchman writes that Goldman Bryson, the notorious bandit, was killed in his own house by a squad of men, mostly Indians. There is no doubt as to the certainty of it. A very respectable citizen from Hiawassee, Ga., was in Murphy last Saturday, and saw Bryson's boots, pistol, furlough, (from Burnside for recruiting service,) his vest, that was bloody where he was bayoneted, and his mustes roll which is rather an important document. Capt. Vaughn, from Tennessee, surprised a party of Bryson's men that had stopped for dinner below Murphy, and captured a contain and 17 men, and killed four, and this party of Indiana pursed Bryson 14 miles through the mountains, to his own house, and shot seven balls into him and ran a bayonet through him. He had but six dollars about his person, and that Confederate money.
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