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.1 AaCDirWHlT AKER
rROPBIBIOB.
IOII W H *s T E E L E .
1DITOB.
A. E. MARSHALL,
aSSOCIA TB EDITOB A HD BEPOBTKR
ATLANTA, GhEORG-IA.
Baturiar Miralaf, September 26, IMS.
FOR GOVERNOR:
JOSEPH E. BROWN.
PRESIDENT DAVIS TO GOVER
NOR BROWN.
t; Jn conclusion 1 take great pleas
ure iu recognizing that the history
oi the past year affords the amplest
jn.iiiicntion for your assertion, that
it the question had been, whether
the conscription law was necessary
in order to raise men in Georgia,
the answer must have been in the
negative. Your noble State has
promptly responded to every call
that it has been my duty to make
on her, and to you, personally, as
her Executive, I acknowledge my
indebtedness for the prompt, cordial
and effective co-operation yon have
afforded me in the effort to defend
our common country against the
common enemy/’—Jefferson Davis.
suspicion, stand true to n?, to our country
and her constitutional rights; that we firmly
believe that Capt McBride is all that the
exigencies of the times require; brave, loy
al, true, and will fully represent our gallant
soldiers in the field, and their faithful friends
at home.
On motion of L. E, Warren, the meeting
adjourned.
Lieut. D. McD. THALLET. Ch’n.
Serg’t. L. L. Cochran, Sec’y.
LEYDEN ARTILLERY.
.Some 33 or 40 ol Co. A, Leyden’s Artille
ry. who escaped capt ure at Cumberland Cap
arrived in this city yesterday morning via
Bristol and Petersburg. They represent that
nu engagement took place on Sunday last
between -the forces of Carter and .Tones, in
which we gained a decided victor} 7 . Serg’t
I).iniel is in command of this remnant of Co.
A. The commissioned officers were all cap-
tured, save one, Lieut. Loften, who is with
the Battalion. Capt. Wni. Barnes, of this
city, and Ihc other officers arc doubtless now
prisoners of war.
— >*• -.
INTERESTING TO THE VOTERS OF CLAYTON
COUNTY.
We have been requested to publish the
following proceedings of Company E, 10th
Georgia rcgioocut, which especially interest
our readers in, and the voters of, Clayton
County, and who.ie attention wc call there
to.
In this connection wc would observe that
•a truer and moregallant man than Capt. Me
Bride, does not live, and we trust that the
voters of Clay ton County will elect him by a
large majority. Ills opponent, wc learn
docs not entertain those political sentiments
t hat lind favor among those who are resolved
< d to 1 ml tie on for Southern Independence un
til it to w'on. He is, moreover, wc learn
committed to the support of Mr. Hill for
Governor, nnd wo hove bo abiding a coufl
dence in the patriotism of the voters of Clay
ton, that we do not believe they will elect as
i heir representative to the Legislature any
one so committed, or any one entertaining
views which will at all squint at any other
proposition being made to the abolition
vandals at the North than what will breathe
the most resolute and the sternest defiance,
until they withdraw their armies from the
South and propose to acknowledge our in
dependence. The candidate who entertains
different sentiment, we trust, will never be
allowed to legislate for the people at Mil-
Icdgcville, let him be who ho may, or let
him hail from where he will:
EROM COMPANY E, 10TH GA. REGIMENT.
Camp 10th Oa, Reo’t, {
-Near Waller’s Tavern, Sept. 1st, 1863. )
At a called meeting of the officers and men
of Company E, 10th Ga. Reg’t, held at the
quarters of Capt A. .T. McBride, Lt. P. Mc-
' I*. Thai ley, was appointed Chairman, and
Serg’t L. L. Cochran, requested to act as
Secretary.
The object of t he meeting being explained,
a motion was made by private M Arnold,
that the Chair appoint a Committee of three
to draft a set of resolutions indicative of
the feelings of the Company 7 in regard to the
objects explained. jThe motion being se-
eondedand approved, the Chair appointed
Sergt .1 C Camp, Privates M Arnold, and J
H Speer, as the Committee. The following
resolutions were drafted, read before the
meeting, and unanimously adopted :
Whkp.kas, Capt A ,J McBride, Company
E, 10th Ga. llog’t, has received at the hands
of the citizens of Clayton county, Ga., the
nomination as candidate for Representative
in the General Assembly of the State of
Georgia, we, the members of his Company,
in order to express our sense of his fitness
for the position to which they desire to ele
vate him, do hereby,
ilesr-1ve t 1 st t That after an intimate associ
ation with lnm for more than two years, we
have ever found him a true gentleman, a
most lffave aud gallant soldier, and, iu our
opinion, fully worthy of the suffrages of the
citizens of Clayton county.
Resolved 2<?, That it is with infiuite regret
ami mortification that wo hear of the exist
ence of a small party, in the county of Clay,
ton, who are favorably inclined towards a
reconstruction of rhe Onion ; that the en
tertainment of any such principles bv our
tallow citizens, is, in our opinion, traifbr^us
in principle, ruinous lu practice, and reflects
alike upon the character of Georgia, and the
conduct oi her heroic sons in the field.
ResoludXJ, That he who, in the hour of
nur country’s greatest need, sows the seed of
pineord among those who should be united
as a band of brothers, against a common,
powerful and insidious foe, is an euemy to
uw aud our country’s rights, whatever may
tie his protestations to the contrary.
ResoLed 4/A, That with the knowledge of
these facts before them, the people of Clay
ton should use their utmost endeavors to
counteract the influence of the evil-minded
in their midst, by placing in the civil offices
within their gift, men who, without taint or
REFLECTIONS ON GEN. BRAGG.
Wc find in the Richmond Examiner of
the 22 J, an editorial commenting on Bragg’s
official dispatch to the War Department and
expressing a fear that the dispatch is but the
same talc “ which told the first part of the
sanguinary contest at Murfreesboro.” The
whole tenor of the article is a reflection on
the gallant officer who haB so nobly fulfilled
the trust reposed in him.
lt is this system of censure that ha3 caused
so much prejudice against Gen. Bragg at a
time when the interest of th ecountry deman
ded that a cordial support should he extend
ed to our commanders.
Far from the scene of conflict.^without
any knowledge ot the true situation of af-
lairs, censure and recrimination have been
poured down oa a man who has, until lately
been laboring under disadvantages which
not even Gen. Loc himself could have sur
mounted—disadvantages that marred his
best laid plans, and made him the slave of
circumstances, and now that he has fully
redeemed himself before the.world, and ful
ly sustained the expectations of his friends,
we deem it. to say the least, an act unworthy
of the press, to croak over his movements,
and attempt to destroy the confidence in
Gen. Bragg that the great victory at Chico,
mang i has restored.
We of this portion of the Confederacy
feel fully satisfied, with the lacts now before
us, that had Gen. Bragg been placed in the
same position before us he was at the battle
of Ghicamauga, the unfortunate retreats and
disasters so sueeringly alluded to by the Ex
amincr would have been advances and vic
tories.
There is a time when the censures and re
flections of the press verge into licentious
ness, aud destroy the very object that a free
press was intended to propagate. When, in
the face of victory a newspaper persistsin cast
ing retlcctio ns on the man who has gained it,
the object cf the censuie is not to benefit the
country, but evidently to gratify private ani
mosity, and au endeavor, in the face ot over
whelming evidence, to destroy that fairly
earned praise and confidence to which Gen
Bragg is entitled. Wc know not if the
RichniondExamincr is tobe numbered among
that class, but from the article in its issue of
the 22 J, and its long and persistent censure
of Bragg, wc are afraid that some other mo
tive besides the good of the country prompts
this uurelcnliug persecution.
We need not, through the columns of our
paper, defend Gen. Bragg any further. Tho
late battles in Georgia have spoken in Uiun
dcr tones the just rebuke to those who have
been all along engaged in defaming him,and
the glorious victory won by our army under
his supervision, speaks In glowing terms of
his fitness and capacity to occupy the posi
tion be now holds.
Gen. Bragg’s past military career cannot
yet be published, but when the facts of his
operations, and the disadvantages under
which he labored, become known, the coun
try will have cause to thank the man, who,
with a comparative handful of men, held an
enemy nearly three times as strong, at bay
for upwards of IS months, crippled him in
several engagements, and saved the States
of Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee, from
being conquered by the enemy.
The sneering insinuations of the Examiner
can have little or no effect; its known pro
clivities to croak about everything connected
with the army of the West and of Tennes
see, will not be regarded by any one as the
true index of atlairs, or the opinions of the
people. Our people place implicit trust in
Bragg and the flying and demoralized enemy
well appreciate the talent and military ca
pacity of the man who lias inflicted ou the
vaunted floiver of their army the most com
plete and total defeat.of the war.
ments of the enemy; the toiling of them all,
and final result, will entitle Gen. Bragg to
be considered as one of the finest strategists
in our army.
THE LATE CAMPAIGN IN TENNESSEE.
While the majority of our people have
been decrying strategy and “ West-Point”tac-
tics, it is remarkable that the late campaign
between Rosccrans and Bragg lias been con
ducted solely on scientific principles. The
first movement ol Gen. Rosecrans was a
strategic one, which flanked Bragg and com
pelled him "to fall back to Chattanooga
to preserve liis army. Rosecrans finding he
could not drive our army out of that place
by lighting, attempted another flank move
ment by way of Bridgeport, so as to cut off
Bragg from Atlanta, and compell him to re
treat by way ot East Tennessee into South
western Virginia, thus leaving the whole of
Georgia, Alabama and the two Carolinas
open to him.^ The movement was well
planned, aud had it been successful, would
have been most disastrous in its effects. - To
foil this was the grand object of Gen. Bragg,
so that as soon as it became apparent that
such was the iutention of the enemy, Gen.
Bragg rapidly fell back from Chattanooga
anil concentrated his army. move
ment entirely disconcerted the plans of the
enemy, aud necessarily compelled him to
draw in his flanking columns and concen
trate liefore his centre was attacked and
overpowered. The result wa3 that Bragg,
by Lis brilliant strategy, unt only necessitat
ed the enemy to abandon liis flank move
ment, but by compelling him to concentrate,
forced a battle, which the policy of Rose-
erans would otherwise have avoided. The
enemy having been well whipped, a second
series .ot strategic movements are iu pro
gress, which will enable ua to give the fin
ishing stroke to the campaign, and if all we
hear be true, movements are iu progress
tending to its early close, with the expulsion
of Rosecrans from Tennessee.
This campaign, in point of strategy, will j
be regarded as the most remarkable one of
t be'war, and from the well planned, move •
REPORT TO THE ATLANTA EXECUTIVE COM
MITTEE FROM THE BATTLEFIELD.
'lo Col. R. A. Crawford, Chairman :
Beak Sib: I have to report that, as one
of the Committee sent from Atlanta to the
field of battle near Ringgold, that we ar
rived at the depot, four miles tlii< side of
that place, about six o’clock Wednesday
morning. With some difficulty we procured
transportation for thejstores wc carried. 1
was fortunate enough to purchase a horse
and get ahead to the field, about fourteen
miles distant, sooner than the others, and
visited a large number of the field hospitals,
and found the wounded suffering from want
of nurses, provisions, and medicines.
I found only two of our dead unbiwicd,
but i found a good many of the enemy’s
dead still lying on the field, several being
nearly burnt up, from their proximity to
some of the defences that had taken fire. Ad
the wounded had been carried to the field
hospitals, I would think about five thousand.
I found Lieut. Pittman with a severe flesh
wound through the thigh, but not serious.'—
'Also Col. E. M. Seago, of the 20ih Ga.—not
mortally wounded, as reported, but serious
ly, in the side,* having one or two ribs bro
ken, There is much need of surgeons, as
our surgeons had gone forward with the ar
my in qxpectation of another battle.
Gen. Hood had his deg amputated, but was
doing well. ^ Our provisions were gratefully
received by the soldiers, as they had noth
ing but ordinary fare. Wc determined to
establish ou the field an Atlanta Hospital
Depot, where we could deposit all our sup
plies, and the committee directed me lo re
turn to have them sent up. In consequence
ot the length of time it lakes to get down
here, I recommend that our committee send
some provisions for the wounded to the sta
tion nearest Ringgold until the .bridges arc
completed, as I found many Unrein great
need. Respectfully,
O. H. JON ES.
lard leg, slightly; corp’l E. Kenncbrew,
arm’: J~ W Smith, foot; W D Eubbarffileg;
J G 6awthron, in four places; A \ t alweli,
slightly; David Kerlin, in hand.
Co D, 1st Li Veazey Commanding.
Wounded—Lt P G Vcazy, dangerously,in
head; 3d Lt W S Ricketson, leg, slightly;
sergt J S Chapman, arm ; sergt F C Keici,
ani; corp’l JH Long, leg; N Brown,heel.
W T Flnker, by shell; R H Fiuker, breast ;
W H Hammock, knee; J M Hammock,side;
T S Smith, srm; J M Murden, leg; J H
King, hip; WG Clemmons, badly, head; 1>
Jones, foot; J S Peak, thigh.
Co E, Lt C E Simmons commanding.
Killed—Lt C E Simmons; eorpri C G
Scott.
Wounded—W II Clark, seriously, shoul
der; sergt J M Jones, ucck, W II Jackson,
leg; J C Franks, leg; B F Durvin, missing.
Co Capt James J Bareli commanding.
Killed—Private^ L W Wilking.
Wounded—Capt J J Burch, thigh ; IstLt
Gaines, back; private Charles Deerberg,
mortally iu bowels—since died; Ben Mur-
rab, arm; J M Gulley, hand, 1 D Gloer,
breast.
Co G, Capt TB Haws commanding.
Killed—private A G Lockhart.
Wounded—Capt T D Haws, foot; serg’t
Jas Wright, hand; privates J A Loflin,
thigh, severely; a J Steed, breast, severely;
J 8 Clary, leg', severely; J L Clary, foot; W
Fiannigan, leg; J I* Duunovray, leg, severe
ly; B Elliott, hand ; G Goolsby, severely,
arm.
Co JI, Capt TII Jackson commanding.
Killed—Corp’l C W Roc, jr.
Wounded—J P Lara, mortally, head ; W
M Grubb, head; II F Gable, leg; E Vates,
slightly.
Co I,Capt M A Marcus commanding.
Wounded—Capt M A Marcus, foot; 3d
Lt Teasley, leg; corp’l Poitson, neck; JE
Dickerson, side, mortally.
Oo K, Capt Marie Latimer commanding.
Wounded—Capt Latimer, dangerously,
side; 1st sergt J TDeas, thigh ; G L Waller,
thigh; sergt G li Medloek. thigh ; corp’l C
J Rocker, thigh; (> LDickson,badly,mouth;
J T Mason, arm; J W Nelson, hand and
thigh; J T Hawkins, shoulder and thigh;’
C 11 Eubank?, heel; M E Parker, slightly.
DM DUBOSE,
Col. 15th Ga Reg.
T. if Remsqn,
Lt and Act’g Adj’f.
21st Ga reg—Wm Ash, co E.
1st Tcnn reg—J Salmond, co A.
51st Tcnn reg—W A McGill, co F.
9th Tctm reg—Y B Oldham, T W Davis
and C C Sinclair, co G.
6tli and 7th Ark regts—W R Kemp, P E
Ward and D W Johnson, co F; R C Win
kle aud Wm Cathey, co D.
Sth Ark regt—P M Jeffrey, co G; W J
Langston and Joseph Jones, co F.
2d Ark—S II Wall, co I.
39th Ark reg—J J Wilson, co B.
23bh Tenn reg—Tlios Dyer, co G.
The majority of these have been forward
ed to other hospitals. Nearly all arc only
slightly wounded.
Southern Confederacy.
Lisr OF WOUNDED
UECBIYED AT THE MEDICAL COLLEGE 11031*1
TAL UP TO TITK XTGIIT OF TilE 22DINST.
11'. F. Westmoreland^ Surgeon in Charge.
ATHEN/EUM.
Lessee and manager, - w. si. CKIM
(Also of the Mobile and Montgomery Theatres.'
OPEN EVERY EVENING
Saturday 28tli,
LADY
D-—L
A CALL FROM CABBOLL.
Camp near Whitehall, )
Fulton Co., Ga., Sept. 23, 1863. )
At a meeting of Capt. Sharpe’sjcompany.
of Carroll infantry, held this day, Capt. G.
S. Sharpe was called to the chair, and Lieut.
W. H. Acklin requested to act as Secretary.
On motion of private II. F. Mu:rel], the fol
lowing preamble and resolutions were read
and unanimously adopted, to-wil:
Whereas, there arc several persons now
offering themselves as candidates to repre
sent the people of Carroll in the next State
Legislature, and whereas, it is the right of
every voter, (and is especially important at
a time like the present) that he should know
the position of every candidate on questions
affecting the great cause in which we arc en
gaged for independence, and the citizens of
onr said county having, on the first Tues
day in this mouth adopted resolutions ex
pressive of their views on several of those
question ; therefore,
Resolved, That the Secretary of this meet
ing adopt such method as he may think
proper to correspond with each of the afore
said candidates, and that each one ol them
be requested to answer categorically wheth
er or not he endorses or subscribes lo the
said resolutions.
Resolved, That lhi3 resolution be present
ed to each militaay company from said coun
ty now here in camp, and their concurrence
respectfully asked thereto.
On motion the meeting adjourned sine
die.
G. S. SHARPE, Ch’m’n.
W. II. Acklin, Sec.
. At a meeting of Capt. Tumlin’s cavalry
company, held this day, the above and lore
going resolutions were unanimously adopt
ed.
J. S. TUMLIN, Capt.
Sept. 23, 1863.
At a meeting of a portion of Capt. Wm
Duke’s company, Carrol! Guards, the above
resolutions were unanimously adopted, this
24th Sept., 1863.
*■ B. II. WRIGHT,
Lieut. Commanding.
The above was presented to Lieut. Smith
in command of Cant. Ling’s company, who
refused to take any action thereon.
W. II. Acklin, Sec’y.
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 24, 186.3.
The several candidates for the Senate from
7th Dist., and for represent a ive from Car-
roll count) 7 , will please notice the above, and
may send their answers to me at this place,
Capt. Sharp’s company, Neely’s Battalion,
Ga. Home Guards.
Respectfully, &e.,
W. H. ACKLIN, Sec
FROM TENNESSEE
Wounded received at the (late City Hospital
Dr. Paul F. Eve, of Nashville, Surgeon in
Charge.
Sth Tennessee regiment—J (’ Williams,
private.
10th Tennessee regiment—Private J Stan
ton, Lt Jas Conroy, Corp’l T Conolly, Pri
vates AX Tool, T M’Laughlin, M. O’Donald,
G Gost, M Miles, Corp’l T Cowley.
20th Tennessee regt—Private E McCam.
lltli Tennessee cavalry—Private J C Wil
liams.
18th Tennessee regiment—Private S C
Bowers, Serg’t J Bowers, Privates W 11
Marshall, J W Ruther.
41st Tennessee regiment—Privates J
Furris, M Myers.
50th Tennessee regiment—Corp’l J
Moore, Private D Letcher.
82d Tennessee regiment—Private E
Ilowell.
154tli Tennessee regiment—Private J
Adams.
4th Tennessee—M M Bedford, Private.
lltli Tennessee—A J Street, Private.
8tli Tennessee—J Berk, Private.
3d Tennessee—M Roberts, Private.
37th Tennessee—J M Carne, Lt.
6th Tennessee—J H Lanier, Private; J M
Smith, Serg’t; J W Key, Serg’t; W P H ughes.
Private.
45thTennessee—EP Underwood, Private
R J Ivey, Serg’t; B H Foster, Private; JM
Neal, Corp’l; A Raoul, Private.
52d Tennessee—D K Odell, Private ; J C
McFarland, Sergeant; B M Stewart, Ser
geant.
38th Tennessee—W M Ilastin, Private;
J Clayton, Private; II J Hathcock, Corp’
J W Barker, Private; J KRamsey,Private,
J T Knox, Private; J A Hastin, Private ; B
F Mosley, Private.
9th Tennessee—J J Latimer, Serg’t; J T
Glover, Private; J P Melton, Private; H C
Hunter, Private.
2d Tennessee cavalry—P Poston, Private
J T Baylcss, Private.
1st Tennessee—J A Sawell, Private, J
Calthorp, Private.
51st Tcnnessc—G W Lee, Private; C R
Robley,Private; W CShanfield,Private; J
T Wilson, Corp’l; C A Mulheram, Private;
J II Clemen, Private; D E Grigwood, Cor
poral; RK Oust, Private.—Knoxville Regis
ter.
LIST OF WOUNDED
ADMITTED TO THE FAIR GROUND HOSPITAL,
NO. 2, ATT.ANTA, GA,, ON THE 22D.
S E Chailie, Surgeon in Charge.
LIST OF CASUALTIES
Of the 15 th Ga. Regiment on the lOth and 20 th
Sept., 1863—Ch>h D. M. Du Bose Com mand
ing.
The following list is from ihahand of the
Adjutant, and therefore may be relied on
as being as nearly correct as can be obtain
ed. There are perhaps two or three wound
ed or killed which are not mentioned iu this
report, from the fact that it was impossible
to obtain correct information concerning
them at the lime the Adjutant made his re
port The regiment, though a mere skele
ton, not only sustained its good name, but
added new laurels to.lhose won in the many
hard fought battles of Virginia, Alaryland
and Pennsylvania -.—Southern ConfeiUi aey.
Field and Staff.
Col D M Du Bose, wounded slighliy, shoul
der ; T H Rem son, Lt., and Act Ad’r, shock
ed by shell.
Company A, Capt Calloway Commanding.
Killed - Corp’l Miles Bolton, Private T P
Chafin.
Wounded-Capt Calloway, thigh; 1st Lt
Thos Bolton, side; 2d Lt Junkin, knee;
sergt N Striblipg, ankle; T Z Prather, leg;
J M Woodruff, arm; W N Fanlding, hand ;
M Binns, jaw; W G Pullen, jaw; J \V Dye,
hip; J B Bunch, leg.
Co B, Sergt T Caw thro n Commanding.
Wounded—Thos Hatrrison, neck, slightly.
Co (7, Capt IT J Willis Commanding.
Wounded—Capt W J Willis, foot; serg’t
E B Tate, breast, seriously; sergt J RBuj.
37th Ga regt—T W Jackson, T .T Middle-
brooks, J O femith, W Z Fuller, J H Till
man, M C White, A J .Williams and J M
Williams, co C.
26ill Tcnn regt—W HZeilglec and Joseph
Cruncly, co E; Jas Gibson, Henry Richard
son, Wm Poptin, A J Brien, Jno T Bryan
and K H Johnson, co C: Matthew Fox, J J
Fox and Jas Woods, co C; John German, co
D; Geo Brewer, co E.
33th S C Batt—W K Evaus, Jno May, J
McCluney and T J Hollingsworth, co D;
Thos Liudley, SI C Stone, J "Person and Lt
Cooper, co C; Isaac Austin and J II Bryson,
cn B; OB Bates aud W A Nelson, co F; A
R Brnmlet and J C Fousche, co E. *
7ih 8 C Balt—DC Martin, c.i E; D Sparks
co I.
25th Ala regt—J J Miusher, T J Ward
aud H V Atkinson, co B.
7th Texas regt—J E McDavid, co I.
18th Tenn regt—J Dick, co G; W Moncs,
J Hollis, T P Bradley and P Gallagher, co
E; H Crook, co F; II C Austin and A B Bo
ring, co D; J L Hendrickson, co M A; F
Findley, co 1.
29th Miss reg— S G Stewart, J|H McClel
lan and J F Bennett, co Ki W W Belothe
and C E Taylor; co C; T A Slater, co H, B
F Goodman and H M Craig, co E; F F
Lamb, co A; G W Ross, co B; N M Briirus
and W R Ilowell, co A.
5th Ark regt—J F Wright, co B; G M
Langston, co C..
29th Miss reg—A W Warren, co C.
Hi Aik reg—J L Boatner and P T Jack-
sou, no C; H Wilson, Richard Wallace, E T
Manuine, Wm Smith, W J Saucer, S Wat
kins and John Camerou, co S; Sergt Wood,
J B Roberts, J D Sawyer and J 8 Black
burn; co K; R U Newton and L B Johnson,
co F; N M Barker, co G.
38th Ala reg—S F Smith, co J.
69th Tenn reg—C B Morgan, co D.
1st Ga bait—R A Beasly, co A.
5th Confederate recriment—S U Hawkins,
coll.
15th Ga reg—Lt N R Walton, co If; W O
Clemens, W 8 Fiuker, Thos Smith, R II
Fiuker, F C Bold and J M Jones, co D.
8th Tenn reg—Peter Flamming, co E; Jos
Hamlet, Thad Law and L Sadler, eo G;* M
B Harrison and L A Craft, co B; G N An
derson, co Iv.
17th Miss regt- R J LivingstoD, co C; L
Darling, co E,
25 Ji Alabama regimeut—Serg J A Thom
as, G Sailors, Serg F M Robinson, aud J R
Betts, company F; 8 G Lottes, G G Cooke,
and II F Dai 1!', co E; T M Jones, 11 Norton,
G Warren, and G W Rodgers, co A; G W
Lawney and J) L*Williams, co G; S Talbot,
P W Dowell, T R Stallins, W R Williams,
co I; E W Reece, J W Wilson,. corporals J
Humphries, J II Maeheu, co D ; Sergts I’ V
Bodeford, A M Coon, J C Shelnne, H P
Prescott, and II Parks, co K.
l ltli Alabama regiment—\V T Carlysle,
co B; F M Iloopcr, and P W King, co A.
26th Tennessee regiment—Lt A B Cleve-
linger, co C.
22d Alabama regiment—J L Fau ,r , co I; D
JI Curly, co C; C Morrison, E B Hammer,
II M Carp, A T Nelson, co H; N T York
and J M Roberts, co E.
loth Ala regt—Corp’l D Wilson, W D
Powell, A B Graham, J Redman and P Cone,
company 1; W C Ming, co B ; W W Mob
ley, J Mann and E Jones, co E; W P Cone,
W U Cooper, and J M Hood, co C; J C
Melntirc, f) II Thomas, J M Lewis,!’ JMc-
Intire, J W Williams and H Mnrphy, co H;
T .1 Ray, Win Crane, G O Bray, J Lamford
and J T Pryor, co F; F M Gregory, compa
ny J>.
lltli Ala reg't—W Foster, co E.
15th Ala reg’t—T JI Harris, co C; M Pat:
tenav, co K.
26th Ala reg’t—J Jonas, eo K.
4ih Texas reg’t—Wm Baine, co G.
2J S O reg’t- J S Chainey, co F.
29th Ga reg’t—J Perraonter, eo H; W L
Johnson, eo i.
47th Ala reg’t—E II Hudson, eo 1; M W
Mathews and R JI McDaniel, co D; Wm
Dowell, co C.
13th Ark reg’t—JI R Clillon, co II.
33d Ala reg’t— W C Riley, and F West,
co D
4th Ga batt—Serg’t E Iv Hardin, sharp
shooters, company C; Corp’l S C Holmes,
co 1>.
18th Ala reg’t—J A Glenn and S II El
liott, co i>; Serg’t G N Levy, co G; Corp’l
J .T More, co C; T A Dogen, G B Dozier, E
P Sewell, F M Frazier aud li D Wire, co B;
J C Crews and T Hanson, co K; J W Rog
ers, co H; D L Cleveland, co F.
27ih Ga Regt—J P Yeckery, RF Barrow,
A F Owens, J K Meyers, J T Powell, B M
Garcy and W B Fain, company D; G M Mc
Kinney, company B; B II VY Agylc and J T
Wliilmoitb, company F.
20 Ga Bat—J A Ellis, A M Mattock, W
T Smith, P W Maloney, serg’t J W Slaugh
ter, corporal J D Benson, serg’t J T Lowe,
S II Rainey, W J Dorset, A J Thundeibnrk,
J D Albright, W D Duskin, T Florence, J
C Fuller.
29tli North Carolina Reg’t—D C Reml>3,
co C.
31 Ark. Regiment—N A Werick, compa :
ny G.
18th Texas Regt—S W Wood, C II King-
ley, A Brandt, W G Sheppard and F Smith,
coin L; J F Bellany, com JI; B Bradshaw
and W M Gilder, com Iv.
4lli Ala Rc-g’t—P II Ligon and B Drake-
lord, co B.
1st Ga Bat—S SMullins and H C Thorn
ton, eo C.
15th S C Regt—L Bagley, C D Gregg, co
E; GW JlcCown, co F; J C Gaskins, co
G; G Strater, co D ; W F Sanders, W Ris-
inger, R F Crim, and J E Price, co C; R F
Briggs, co B.
S C Bat—M Riddle and Thos Farrow, co
E. '
7th S. C. Regiment—William Busby,
eo JI.
38th Alabama Regiment—B R Hopkins,
co F.
36th Alabama Regiment—F Osvcn, O S,
co K.
30lh Ga Regt—W II Smith, co B; J H
Buchanan, co E.
53d Ght Regt—J S Bailey, co H; GD
Luster, co F
Cobb’s Legion—J II House, co D.
56th North Carolina Regiment—T A San
ders, co C.
5th Arkansas Regiment—J Rickey, com
pany C
2d Arkansas Regiment—J W Jlayors, eo
M.
28th Tennessee regt—Serg D Darrett.
27th Tennessee Regiment—B A Trawick
and N II Clover, company A ; Jasper Dick
ey, company E; J S Whitefield co lv.
29th Miss Regt—P C Loveioy and S Red-
diek, co D.
21 st Mississippi Regiment—J AMiiler, co
K.
17th Miss Regt—GII Starnes, co I; Lt W
D Pratt, co 1).
1st Ga Battalion, S S—Miles McDaniel,
co B.
30th Miss Regt—J M Ray and II C liar-
f )ew - (JO (;}
46ih Ga Regt—W II Russell, co C.
1st LaCav—J RGwinn, eo F.
52d Tenii Regt—Wm Dunham, co D.
51li Ga Regt—B W Parr, co K r.nd J W
Tennon, co F.—Southern Confcdcracy.
vrill be jierfjrmctl t’.e C.imeiiv
ot the
AND THE
oa TUK
Widow of Polerina!
AND
THE SPECTRE BRIDEGROOM
ou
A Ghost in Spite of Himself
In which every member of the Star Com', any will am , a:
tS^A mianl will bo pi iced in tlm Theatre 11 p.e.-en.
order. Seats reserved for Ladies.
Price:—P;iri|Uette, $2. Upper Tier, $!.r>0. Colon*,.
Gallery. #1.
AUCTION.
This Morning at 9 O’clock.
1 Fine JIahogany Secretary,
1 Center Table, Marble Top,
1 Work Table, Mahogany,
t Fine Mahogany Chairs,
1 Fine Sola,
Bedstead and Spring Mattresses,
Child’s Cribs, Bureaus, Ac.
ALSO
2 Fine New 11 Shooters, 7 inch, Fsocc-h
Navy Pistols,
1 Negro Woman,
Several Cases Smoking Tobacco, by
SHACKELFORD, SAINT & CO,
Septl7—dlt A. & Com. JI.
LARD 0 I L.
FOR SALE.
H lOlltisr market price paid for Tallmv and
L*ai-<1, by
S«ud26-d.twlm
Gr.J-.NN', T All OR A CO.,
ut Walton Spring. At taut a.
PAIRS rf Ladies Heel Gaitera (black) of all
sizes, received on oorslenment. and for sale
RaAIJiUdLLim & KIMUSHT’S,
General Commission House,
Sept26-Jtf Whitehall S*re''
200
ai
Wounded Texan
s.
lTmOM the Counties of Mat-ijrorda, Jackson, Fort Pciid,
JL’ Wharton, Colorado, and ILirrii, can And a tunm ;*i
my house with my kindest attention by oomint; t.* M:uti
son,Morpan County, (!j., directly on tho Gto'pia Kail
Road. 71 miles from Atlanta.
Sept2G-d4i* JOHN It. WALKER.
RECRUITS WANTED.
I AM allowed until October the 1st to fill up the ranks
of my Company attached, to Col. Nestdt’s Replment.
now at Macon. A few more recruits will he received.
Apply to J M. RASBURY,
A- lanta, Ga., £C-dit* Iient. Cotnd’p.
LAND FOR SALE!
W ILu be sold at public sale in NR A’N AN, Crwet
County, on the J st Tnesday In October
next, within the legal t ours of rale, n y piantaiicm
containing 12IS acres, about 20) in bottom and
about 600 in woodland. There is a
Good New Dwelling House,
with 8rooms, kitchen, smoke house, nc.jro homes, two
pin homes and screws, and all necessary outhuildiogo —
The place is well watered and conveniently situated cn
the public road lending from Newnan ’o GrantviltB—S
inile3 irom Newnan and 3 ,rom Granvville The sale
will be positive, aj I have to raiso money. The highett
bid will buy the land, and the purchaser can buy Oorn,
Fodder, Oats, Shucks, 4i> or 50 head oi
Cattle, Hoich, 25 head of choice Sheep,
ard many other necessary and valu&ld ■ ardclea.
For further particulars call ou me at the p'ace, t r ad
dress me at Orantville, Ga.
8ept26-dCt* L. \V. CAMP. •
EXECUTORS’ SALE.
W ILL be sold before the court house don-at Deca
tur, in DeKalb County, Ga., on the first Tuesday
in November next, two negroes betonping to the esta'e of
Wm. Johnson dec’d, to-wil: Sarah, a woman' about SO
years of ape, good cook, washer and ironer; her daugh
ter Jane. 14 years of age, very likely, a good honse glr 1 .
Sold for the benefit of the heir3 and creditors of said de
ceased. Sept. 28ni, 1SC3
B. F. VEAL.
SPECIAL. NOTICES.
42nd Senatorial District.
We are authorized to annonnee the name of Ol*.
JOHN XV. LlilVIS as a Candidate for the Senate
of Georgia, for the Forty-Second Senatorial District, cbm.
OK'd of the Counties of Chattooga, Floyd, and Bartow.
SeptiM .Itc-
se, 26-wtds
THOS. JOHNS IN, )
TO THE RESCUE!
T HE business of onr boose will be tem
porarily suspended until the Sick a ml
Wounded of Gen. Bragg’s Army are proper
ly cared for.
CRAWFORD, FRAZER d- CO.
Sept25—<131
CHOICE INVESTMENT.
Interest Bearing Confederal^
3XTOTXJS,
(AL WA YS CONVERT ABLE;)
In Sums to Suit Purchasers,
For Sale by
CRAWFORD, FRAZER A CO.
Sept 22-d5t»
S TO P! HOLD!
GO IN CAVALRY.
T HE undersigned Is raising a Cavalry Company for
Cobb’s Legion now in Virginia. Any one having
to go In service will do well to call arrl see me. Whether
they have horses or not, they will be mounted if cot
able to tarnish their own horses. Men over 40 and un
der IS are the kind of men wanted. Call soon or you
willlooBe a good chance. I have been in service IS
month] In Virginia, and know that is the place for health
and to do good service. Any one having a portion of a
Company raised will do well to call and eee me. Head
quarters at Jack, Bryson & Co., Whitehall 8treet, Allan-
to, Ga. W. F JACK,
3ipl‘22-dlw Co. G, Cobb’s Legion.
Confederate War Tax.
The Assessor shiil require each tax-payer to make due
return on oath of all the following articles held or owned
by him on the 1st of July, 1563. which are the growth or
production of any year proceeding the year 1323:
1. Naval stores,
2. Salt,
3. Wines and spirituous iinhcrs,
4. Tobacco, inariafa:ta.'-cJ or unmanufactured,
5. Cotton.
6. Wool,
i. Flour,
S. Sugar,
h. Molasses and Sy tup,
10. Rice,
11. Oilier agricultural products,
The As:e:sor shall furlfr-r require returns to be made
on oath of all bank cotes and other currency «n hand or
on deposit, cn the 1st day of July, 1363, and of all
credits held or owned on the 1st of Ju’y.lSCJ, on which
the interest has not been paid, an 5 are E0 ‘
p'.oyed in a business, the in sou.*? derived from wldoh is
taxed by the tax act.
T„e above tax is required to be. paid on the 1st day of
October, 1 S’3. W. T. ME_D.
Confederate Tax Collector,
Office Mahl-nbrink’s Building, Whitehall Street,
Hcpi24-a. t
$250 REWARD.
K ANAWAY from the subscribers on the night or the
1.0Ji Sept 1863, live miles south of Marietta, Ga ,
five negro boys, viz: Blit, aged between 25 and 8j black;
Henry, aged lSyear3 black; Simon, 21 years very b'ack;
Jake, aged 19 black and very likely; Smith, sged about
16 mulatto. The above boys was all broughvin the last
few days from near Cleveland and Georgetown, Tenn.—
The said boys took with then 8 double barreil shot gags',
and no dcubt are trying to make their way to East Ten
ntssce. The .above reward wid be paid ior the appre
hension of atl of them, or $50 for any one of them take n
up and lodged in soiuwjail so we can get them. Address
either one of the unders'gned, care Inmao, Cole A Co.,
Atlanta, Ga. JOSEPH TUCKER,
JONATHAN WOOD,
Sept23 dlw* JNO. F. ROGERS.
NEGRO BLACKSMITHS
WANTED.
r|1EN GOOD NEGRO BLACKSMITHS, fc* wh’.ih the
I hi.-hest wages wilt be paid at the Columbm t rmo-
ry. JOHN D, GRAY & CO,,
Columbus, Ga.
Apply to Pease A Davis, Atlanta, Ga.
Sept23 —d-2w
Bichromate Potass,
£* /Y/V I*® 3 - Bichromate Potass on consignment an i
UUl/ for sale by BOLOMON BKCS.
Aug 21-Jtf
STERLING EXCHANGE
For Sale By
OUAWFORD, FRAZER & CO.
Sepl22-d5t