Newspaper Page Text
ghe
J A 71 fi
‘tel. WHIT A KER,
p n o pi i *t o b .
i o II N H. STKEtE
KDITO B.
E. MARSHALL,
i:iSOCI A TIC XDITOB AND RBPOBTBR
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
Sunday Mor&iBf. September 27, IMS
FOR GOVERNOR:
.IOBEPH E. BROWN.
PRESIDENT DAVIS TO GOVER
NOR BROWN.
“in conclusion I take great pleas
ure in recognizing that the history
( ,j the j*ast year affords the amplest
j'nstitieation for your assertion, that
it the question had been, whether
i he 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
1 lift! it has been my duty to make
on her, and to you, personally, as
iter Executive, I acknowledge my
indebted ness for the prompt, cordial
and effective co-operation you have
afforded me in the effort to (Jefend
our common country against the
cm 11 mon enemy.”—Jefferson Dams.
THE SOU THERN RECORDER AND GOVERNOR
BROWN.
The “Recorder” at Milledgevillc still liarpa
upon Ihc fancied “obstacle” which Governor
Brown placed in the way of President Davis
iu liic execution of the Conscription Act^in
Georgia, and persists still in its policy of en
deavoring to impress the conviction upon
t he minds of its readers that any other than
friendly relations exist between the two. As
an instance of this singularly morbid desire of
that metropolitan journal, it actually, in its
last, issue, referring to the high compliment
paid by President Davis to . Governor
Drown, and which we have kept standing
at the head of our editorial columns, where
we shall keep it standing till the election is
over—gives the date of the ju3t encomium;
says “it has bccu informed”—referring to
the averment on our part and others that the
President held Governor Brown “in high
esteem”—“quite to the contrary,” and that
tho “I‘resident has arid this constitutional
interpreter has given him more trouble than
all thi Governors ot the Confederacy put
together." The “Recorder” recklessly goes
farther and says, “the use made of the
compliment is a gross fraud.” Now, iu or
der to satisfy ihc public, for we do not ex
peM to satisiy the “Recorder” we shall pro
sent, extracts from two letters lately addres
j i d by President Davis to Governor Brown
both ol which will remove all doubt as to
the relations existing between these two dis
tiuguished functionaries, notwithstanding
what the “Recorder" /ut\ beard, or what it
may have asserted <>r will continue to as
sert.
The following are extracts from oncof tho
President's letters. The ‘■'daft'' the “Recor
der" will please to note :
[Vopy.\
Executive.-Office, [
Richmond, Va, Sept. 13,1863. j
/A.-,' Mc-tWhcg, Joseph E. Brown,
Milledgevillc, Ga.—
t.uK : By telegraph of the 9th inst., 1 had
) tie honor to acknowledge] the receipt of your
letter of the 29th ult., and to express to you
my deep sense of gratitude to yourself and
i he State of Georgia for the promptitude with
which so many'of her sons have organized
tor defence against the threatened incursion
of our enemy.
m y coueur in the view taken by
you*that where nearly the whole arms-bear
ing population have ottered for service, the
calls should be partial, and that persons who
cannot tie taken from home for a long time
without embarrassment to the State govern
ment and to the people, should not be so
t aken. except iu ease of great emergency. I
have ordered instructions to be prepared ac
cordingly and sent to Gen. Cobb, who has
hern directed to attend to the organization
of the troops raised for local defence and
special service.
It, will give me pleasure to receive any
suggestions you may think proper to make
aud to give them prompt and respectful at
tention.
Willi renewed assurance of my thanks for
J°nr prompt action, and gratifying success,
t remain very respectfully
And truly yours,
JEFFERSON DAVIS.
The public and the “Recorder” cannot fa'q
to observe in the foregoing that the President
“reneas" his assurances ot thanks to Gov.
Brown for his “prompt action and gratifying
success”; that the compliment paid to the
hitter in May, 1 802,J? renewed iu September,
1863, notwithstanding what the “Recorder”
has “heard.”
The other letter bears the same date. We
omit a portion ofit for the reason that it is
of a personal nature, in which, however, we
noticed a desire expressed by President Da
vis that Governor Brown should visit Rich
mond and cooler with him. This, of itself
does not look much like unfriendly relations’
personal or political, were-existing between
the two. But to the letter : _
IriVv-j
Richmond, Va., Sept. 12, 1863.
IfishKrccV t kc.v,.Joseph E. Brown,
Governor:
* Pleu^ai ccpfmy congratulation s
upon the prompt and zealous manner in
which the people of Georgia have responded
id my late call for additional troops. The
spirit they have shown is most gratifying,and
is woithy of the kiusiuen of men who have
displayed such gallautry in action as th©
troops ot Georgia have exhibited on many
fa&r.i-fhupbt fields.
\ ery respectfully
And truly yours,
JEFFERSON DAY 18.
No other evidence is needed, we opine, to
satisfy the people of Georgia, ofktTtast a
large majority of them, that the charge
which a lew noisy, factious, and designing
men, ot whom the “ Recorderf* appears to be
the organ, make and industriously circulate,
of unfriendly relations axisring between the
President and Gov. Brown, baa no founda
tion in fact. To-day, we do sincerely be
lieve, and we have good reason for onr faith*
that President Davis would look upon the
defeat of Gov. Brown as a calamity fallen
upon the Confederacy; while we are equal
ly sure that such an event would be “ glad
tidings of great joy” to our enemies abroad
as well as at home. And indeed it would
be a calamity ! Every vital interest in the
State would be alfected by it. Whatever
might he the ability or the }>alru>tisin ot his
successor, it would require a twelvemonth
of herculean labor to qualify him for the ef
ficient discharge of the duties of Chief Mag
istrate, in the present condition of the State
and the Confederacy; and hence a change
now in the office of Governor, could not
but prove deleterious to the State. The
“ Recorder,” in urging this upon the people,
and in endeavoring to excite them to become
parties to apolitical 9trife at the present-time,
as well as to destroy their confluence in
Gov. Brown—a confidence thrice reposed in
him and never abused—has been, and is,
guiltjnof-a great indiscretion; but in going
further than this, and in endeavoring to ar
ray the friends of the President in Georgia
against Gov. Brown upon a mere assumption
it is guilty of what is worse than indiscre
tion, if it be not an outrage. Hence we have
in the foregoing shown to our readers the
just appreciation which President Davis
himself enter.lains of the services rendered
the Confederacy by our indomitable Chief
Magistrate, aud leave the voters of the
State to determine whether, in casting their
suffrages at the ballot box, they will be in
fluenced to his prejudice by such puerile ef
forts as have been made by the “ Recorder'
in its months of hunt after a candidate for
Governor.
Ytghtr^Smstall.
tricts declared by the President’!
lion to be in rebellion.”
“The laws of war, [whether that war be
civil or inUr'genks, convertsffevcry citizen of
the hostile State into a public enemy, and
treats him Accordingly, wlujtever may have
been his ppeviofli conduct.”
we have never doubled that such woukt’
be the conclusion ultimately reached by the
Yankee government; and have hence won^
dered that any athongstus could expect any
other terms for themselves, nnder any pre
tence whatever, than such as would be ac
corded to traitors or rebels who had laid
down their arms, and left all*®* the mercy of
tlieir government.
So f:tr fiiSm such a deftfstou intimidating
and weakening onr «fftria to achieve our in
dependence and drive back the foe, we think
it will strengthen our cause even tea fold—
And we may say that even by this decision
ihc Yankees have lost as much of qioral
force as we have gained in phsioali.
In connection wiilx the foregoing, we no
ticc a most disingenuous effort on the part
of the “ Recorder” to create the [impression
that Gov. BrowQ is part owner of this office.
It does so to avoid answering interrogato
ries that we proposed to that journal, in the
absence, as we stated at the time,of the jour,
nal of the Senate, showing the record of Mr.
Farlow. Since those interrogatories were
propounded, wc haye received the record,
and, despite the “Recorder's" opinion, have
dared to make specific charges. The “Re-
corder has been put to the test; let it answer!
And now, when we distinctly and emphati
cally pronounce the “rumor” to which it in
sidiously refers—to wit, that “Gov. Brown
is part owner of the Intelligencer”—mali
cious and false, having no foundation what
ever, wc trust gtliat it will have the magna
nimity in its first issue to disabuse the pub
lic mind of the impression designed to be
mado by those who put the “ idle rumor” in
circulation.
THE YANKEES BACKING DOWN.
When tfie war first broke out between the
United States and the Confederate States, no
other terms were employed by the former
toward the participants in that war, by the
latter, than that of Rebels, entitled to no oth
er consideration than that due rebels and
traitors. Accordingly, when Gen. Scott
made the first attempt to come down on
Richmond, now more than two years ago,
he had provided a large number of hand
cuffs with which, he vainly imagined, he
would manacle the thousands he would cap
ture. -
It was not expected of the Government at
Washington that any exchange of prisoners
would be ; allowed. Our seamen captured on
the privateer Jeff. Davis were put in irons,
and other prisoners were put in close con
finement.
It was not till forced, that that govern--
ment released the captured seamen, and con
sented to an exchange of prisoners. Thus
the “rights of belligerents” were granted to I
the Confederate States—the United States
being forced to that conclusion by our suc
cesses, and by the unanimous opinion of
foreign nations.
Still, the name “Rebels” was not.dropped;
or if any other was used, it was that of the
“so-called Confederate. States.”
But recently, however, even that latter
term gives place to our tme name, and the
Supreme Court of the United States itself
has ventured to call us the “Confederate
States. Iu a recent decision quoted by Mr.
Solicitor Whiting,’that judicial power is rep
resent as using the following language : “All
the Judges agreed,” says Mr. Whiting, “that
since July 12th, 1801, there has existed be
tween the United States and the Confede
rate States a civil territorial war.”
Now. this is no slight gain of moral force of
favor of the justice of -#ur cause, and augurs
still further concessions which are sure to
follow.” Whenever the Government of the
United States backed down from their origi
nal position of regarding our strike for inde
pendence. as an effort on the part of a few to
overthrow a long established government,
there was no alteri .tive left but to regard
their own government, as making war on
another with the design of bringing the peo
ple of the latter under their power, every
step ot which would be in violation of the
very principles on which their own was es
tablished. The moral power with which the
war was being waged, under the idea, that
it was against traitors, must have become
sensibly diminished amongst the States of
the old Union—a fact which we are apprised
of from other sources—and where the moral
force is wanting, the physical is of but IRtIc
avail.
Another ruling of the Supregie Court of
the United States in the decision quoted bj'
Mr. Whiting, and to which we commend es
pecially the jeconstructionistsof Georgia, in
that every citizen in a hostile State is to be
regarded as a public enemy and to be treated
accordingly, whatever may have been his
previous conduct. We are heartily glad of
this decision, and therefore quote it in the ex
act words which the Court employe*! :
“The United States have' full belligeren
[CCJAMUNICATKD.]
SSdltbr’ TuielUgehcer :—EveFsi^ce the elec
tion of President Davi3, it has been the
general wish'that the President should have
a harmonious administration! a^ce, when
ever a man rtautedto go toCod^K, the first
question was, and is, “are y^Br Davis,”
if so, well; if not we cannot supiort you.—-j
We must all stand by the President.. Now,
this is good as a general rule.
When the people conclude to make any
man their Executive, let them also give him
a legislature that [will co-operate with him
and not constantly war upon him.
Now, much has been said against Gover
nor Brown to injure him with the people,
by asserting that he has embarrassed the
administration of President Davis, and
therefore ought to be put out of the way,
Gov.Brown’s enemies are constantly crying^
Brown is against Davis and ought to be put
out of the way and give the President a
clear track. Now, if the President ever
leans on any man and l'eeis a need of sym
pathy and a strong arm, my opinion is that
to-day Davis looks for more support, and
gets more promptly what he looks for, lrom
Gov. Brown than any Executive in the Con
federate States.
Ought not thePresident to know his friends
better thanjthe enemies of the Governor?—
If President Davis is satisfied with Govern
or Brown, why the cry; Brown is against
Davi3 and should therefore be put down,—
Let the President speak for himself. The
President, addressing Gov. Brown, holds the
following language:
“ To you, personally, as her 2 Executive, I
acknowledge my indebtedness for llic
prompt, cordial and effective co-operation
you have afforded me in the effort to defend
our common country against our enemy.”
The above quotation is worth to our ex
cellent Governor enough to successfully
outweigh a thousand slanders against him
by his slanderers. Can the President say
more ? Indebted to Gov. Brown for “prompt
cordial and effective co-operation." % What
more can be said ? “ Prompt, cordial, effec
tive.” How true! Who has been more
prompt, or rather who has been as prompt
as Gov. Brown V Not another Governor in
the Government.
As to cordial, the President is the best
judge. As to effective, let the praises of
Gov. Brown lor efficiency, resounding
throughout the entire Confederacy, answer.
“ Prompt, cordial, effective."-—W hat a con'
densed history of Joe Brown’s life! Prompt,
he is always on hand when needed; ready
and in the right place. Who ever heard of
Joe Brown caught' napping ? Cordial
there is no lialf-keartedness about him. He
lakes you to his bosom or pushes you clear
away. To his friends, he is friendly—to his
enemies defiant. He i3 for you or against
you, and in either case, you will know it
and be quite apt to feel it. Effective—look
at the almost unparallelled labors of thelaft
six years. Wherever he has stricken, there
you can plainly see where heavy blows have
fallen. Where is the man who has more
effectually accomplished what he has under
taken?
Convinced of the l ight, no threats intimi
date him—no blandishment of friends se
duce him—nothing but Providential obsta
cles arrest him—but with a firm faith in the
success of the right, onward has been his
motto, aud upward his career. Among the
self made, effective men of the present gene
ration, the future historian will place Joe
Brown at or near the head of the class.
To return. The people of Georgia, in all
probability, will choose Joseph E. Brown
for their Governor again. He has done well,
and there seems to be a great disposition to
let well enough alone. In the past the peo
ple have been too eareless about the associ
ates that have been selected to aid the Gov
einor in administering the government of
the State.
Some ot his bitterest enemies have been
elected to tha Legislature, who have spent
the most of their time iu trying to harrass
the Governor, instead of serving the beat in
terests of the country. Let the people, one
time, (for it has not yet been done,) give Gov.
Brown a friendly Legislature that will cordi-
aUy aid him in-helping to save the coua-
f ry Y LrolIiCr volcr ‘ “ y° u ask of candidates
ar ° yOU !'° r C ° rdial,y ^staining
President Davis, so ask of candidates for our
Legislature, are you for Joe Brown and
insist upon au affirmative answer in each
tm W W0UNBED
etvkd at fair ground hospital no
sept. 22.
n. ir. Broun, Surgeon in charge.
->th Texasjre^RTWil»M.W AHdm
B J Baldwin, A. Bike. O Omaly. T 1 arcei,
li Campbell, A J Fairchild.
18th Texas regt—Jesse Jones. ,
*». Tame —.TnD Griffith. G W r iei.cn
^TfchMissississppi regt— F J Tidwell, J C
B 24th Miss'regt—-T S Springfield,C B Camp
W 8ffi Missregt—J Butler, W E Carlyle.
4th Ga bat—Wm Bird. lav w
2d Ga bat—W Thompson, Jas t inlay,
F Newman, A Clakely.
~w mu, sent j juunson, o' §Oih Ga—Capts W Craig and J A Coffee,
William* G Hickman. 8 H Kennedy, N sergt J C Spear, Lt P M Bostick, privates J
ij , -r p Tones J N Tones, J D Jones. WLittlle, J Coffee, JM M Parka, E Gillespie,
sm mSs-JN Andrews/F Knight, J AffW Parish H T Riley, J no PiunkettRob
Travis, capt W W Hall, Lt J M Edwards. ^ M w ” ” °‘-’-
21at Miss—J H Johnson, Johnson, C
ler i5th Ga regt—C H Eubanks, J D FemeU
C Rocker, W J Reynolds, *W R ^ eals > * T
Franks. _ _
aaUSSSSq. M J Wood
G W MartinTfcrg It B Beard, dM^auloa.
le himself into the Le-
! tike warm profession, or
That VtiTn n
case
Let no man smug
gislaltrre under a
the cry or no party. That wan will have a
party as soon as possible. His party w m be
down with joe Brown. 1 f Gov. Brown has
done so well, with Legislatures that have
tried to wrong him, wliat would ho do heart
ily supported l»y all branches of the Gov
ernment ? Let us try him and see. x
Lieut. W. II, Clayton, of ihe Till
Georgia regiment, now at Charleston, will
leave this city this (Saturday) night for his
command, and will take charge of any letters
for the members of that regimen, and see to
their delivery, that may be left for him at
Dr. Taylor’s Drug Store, by 4 o’clock JP. if.
this day.
Estes, E C Ferguso-, • w t
Goodson, W J Shelley, SH Cummin, WJ
Harris, J M Hudson. G \V Rscse, b W
Hayes, J A Brady, A J Ketelium, G E Hol
lis, W J Young, J K Richardson, J M
Christopher, corporal; W H Bailey, L A
Smith. , T
18th Ala regt. — W D Freeman, corpl; Juo
W Womaock, L Adams, A J Adams, Sam
Owens. T B Bailey.
23d Ala regt—A J Hunt, Jno Wilson E
F Boyd, sergt; J W Roberts, sergt ; L C
Cannon, corpl; H M Thompson, sergt; W J
Reed, N S Pearce, W G Norton, A C Au
brey, sergt; A Mauldcn, A L Barclay, N L
Duncan.
5Gtb Ala regt—J C McConnel, J M Pago,
G W Still, LtfM N Blythe, M M Gill, sergt;
J J Albertson, J M Langford., corpl; J A
Johnson, J Brothers, C F Smiley, J L Dey-
mon, Jno Cates, E F Mize, Jos Reeves, J S
Huey, G Benson, sergt; J A Taylor, J W
Hasty, corpl.
1st Ala regt—Sergt L R Hays.
47th Ala regt—D J Smith,sergt; A D .John
ston, J H Knox, M K Joliastop, Jos Smith,
P J Hammond.
34th Ala regt—Jno Cormick.
47th Tenn regt—T J Brown, RC Roberts,
sergt maj.
1st Tenn regt—R W Jacobs, Isa Stout, F
W King, J R Smith.
13th Tenn regt—A H Brown.
11th Tenn regt—Jno Orme, L Pitts, R N
Ogwin, Pat Gorman, W O’Brien.
12th Tenn regt—A B Wilson, N Hicks, G
W MoDonald, B F Allen.
6th Tenn regt—J J Cathay, sergt; S L
Shelton, J W Simond.
8th Tenn regt—H H Bradley, J M Brooks.
W J Letchford, D Warren, J R Gilbert, J
J W Madden.
38lli Tennessee regt—Private* T Haney.
9th Tennessee regt—W S Ayeoek.
20th Tennessee regt—D McDomel!, J F
Moss.
5th Tennessee regiment—C P Ownly, 0 J
Craig.
51st Tennessee regiment—R A Rice, N 15
Scott, W R Byrn, H II Bowen, serg’t; J H
Scott, J J Marshall. A F Boswell, W W
Chamberlain, E Hall.
16th Tenn regt—A Smith, W Loftr, A
Kirby, G G Taylqf, P O’ Simpleton, .1 W
Meadlow's, Jno Moore, T J Templeton, J
Dryon, J Lytlle, J W Johnson, W G Can
trell, sergt; E S James, C II Butler, T J
Cantrell, W D Farlington, J W Meddows,
Jno Moore, T J Templeton.
27th Tennessee—Wm Lawson, W D Tid-
* will, J C Aberhethy, serg’t; J K P Hnlv,
serg’t.
1st Tennessee—Henry Levy, 11 11am-
bard.
15th Ark regt—Priv J T lied wine.
2d Ark reg’t—J C Bozicr, serg’t; H R
Dorman, W Manning, M P Davis, F N Chaste,
James Walton, serg’t; J W Goodin, A Ham
ilton, J Ford, R W Downey, W J Chadick,
W D Adams, J P Lockhart. J H McClendon,
J W Bullock, sergt; J O Davis, A S Brown
3d Ark regt—G II King, J S Jolley, J F
Brooks, W J Alderaon, M D McGrogau,
12th Ark—J P Alley.
7th Ark—A J Huly.
8th Ark—E B Mathews.
6th Ky regt—Lt Wm Knott.
24th S C reg’t—Priv G W Jutty.
Ferguson Battery—W N Cater.
1st Confederate—J F Parduc, corp; D G
Autry, B F Satterfield. ‘
10th Confederate—W B Scott. *
3d Confederate—J Thompson, ^
13th La—Jno Cane.
4th La—W J Smith.
20th La—C T Sanders, Lt;
29th N C—J W Bood, W R Hollified.
Others had been admitted previously,
whose names we will endeavor to obtain.—
Most of these being only slightly wounded,
have been forwarded to other hospitals.
received at winshii- as*d
24., -
Thoes.
17th Miss—L S Marshall.
33d Ala—Jno Moore, R G Skipper,AV C
Byrd, S M Miller, J W Brooks, \V B Cum-
bie, B W Musgrove, R J Blair, G W bteed-
on, B D Simmons, Peter Moors*.
59th Ala—A Robin,'* Jas Pylet, N B Me-
glathery.
12th Ala—Jno Simpson, SG Wilson, Asa
Battle, M Comply, Wm Arp.
34th Ala—A J Chester, T A Veyer.
22d Ala—W R Albright. .
58th Ala—R Mattison, G Cf Goulding
Istbatt Ala leg—W E Hudson, J S Cham
bers, H C Turner, Jas Reid, J W Reid, W B
_ Higginbotham, G T Williams, A H Boles
J TTruwit, L Gibson, L H Higginbotham,
J L Webb
11th Ala—F T Dunklin, J W Dunn, WP
Perry, N Pritchett, J C Rich, M C Hubbard
A J Knott, B Knott, .T W Levin, J R Tur
ner, W L Hays, S J Johns, J M ’McArthur,
j T Thrasher, G G Evans, Sergt .T M Culow
S M Hinson, corp C W Cardin, D E Atkin
son.
38th Ala—J Overetral.
15th Ala—N Cummins, J C Whatley, E
Enfingen, T N Sheppard, R Wedlock, 1) O
Cameron, T Miller, W Philips, J L Osborae
W C Lewi?.
48th Ala—J G Gabriel
36th Ala—J M Hays.
47th Ala—Sergt F M Power, M D Clem
ents, Jas Waldrup, .T E Hughes.
18th Ala—W C Cnrry, J W Half, L Con-
nally, J H Em men?, J Jones, M A McDufly,
J W Johnson, R L Shaw, W F Reynolds, *8
Driggers, Sergt J M Wilson.
4th Ark—R J only i).
6th Ark—Glautoun, sergt J T Hamilton,
capt T Hawkins.
49 Ark., J D Kaddlc.
Is! Ark., J II Jeffries.
2d Ark., S R Hester, Vv r 1> Cooley, R G
Sullivan. '
5th Ark,, J W Griffin.
Editors Confederacy: Above I send you
list of wouudcil received into hospital
the 20th. Most of them have been
transferred to Griffin and LaGrange or Mont
gomery. A majority are slightly wounded.
I have performed eighteen amputationp.
Will send you this morning a list of those
now iii t^tc*hospital, with a statement of their
condition.
he.i,
a
since
Craig, C M Russell, W Ooxwell, G Stringer
Capt J Trisscll, Lt R A Hewey, and corpl M
Swain. *
29th Ga— Sergts R Alexander and G ft
Green, priv B F Lynch.
43d Ala—Priv J G Hawkins.
Stanford’s Bat—W A Pledge, Quartering
ter 8er«r, privates C D Abbott, K E Per.
pies.
1st Ala Legion —Priv J F Rust.
24th Ala—Priv VV Ratley.
39th Ala—Priv J M Gowan, M E Dre*=
C0U.
. 44di Ala—Privates A Marlin, J D Camp,
3d Ala-—Private A Pearson.
4th Ala—Lt T L Samuels.
23d Ala—Sergt J W Sumner, private J ft
Bryan, W Barker, T S Ferry, M Smith, J
H Higginbothan, J C Pike.
36th Ala—Private J Gregory, T M
J WMcRca.
16th Ala—Privates J E White, T Ryan
44th Ala—Priv E N Walker.
47th Ala—Priv G W Shorter.
33d Ala—Priv W C Micklcr.
28th Ala—Priv IV T Craterrell.
58th Ala—Priv G W Ramsey.
38th Ala—Privates J M Mitcham, .1 fl
ThomtOD, G Brown, H C Henderson, T H
McGill, W P Barry, 8 Boykin, Sergt C F
(Jerald.
15th Ala—Priv M A Mebrin.
4Sth Ala—Privates J J Cantrel, T A Col
lins.
40th Ala—Privates J M Smith, D W Mor
row.
Martin’s Battery—Sergeant If B Ains
worth.
McDonald’s Battery—Priv Pritchard.
39th N C—Privates G W Glaze, J Mo.Ge-
bar.
1st Confederate—Priv T Shehane.
51at Va- 1 -Corpl II J) Cat ter.
3d Fla—Sergt Daniel Hay.
SPEC IA Li NOTICES.
UCA.ULIKU EATTfiKY, (
kf
Very 'respect (idly, yours, &e.,
G. G. ROY,
Asst. Surg. in Charge;
WOUNDED
BIiACKIE HOSPITAL TO SEPT.
16th La—J D Wvley.
4th La Bat—A A Pickens.
13th & 20th La—Jas Murphy.
1st Kv C&v—D R Willett .
6th Ky—R Tindell.
8th 8 C—W H Hathcock.
37th Va Cav—J V Campbell.
54th Va—C Bush, W T Webb.
1st Texas—S Lasiter, J P Neal, J YV Arm
strong, W A J Armstrong, A J Watts, corp;
. r- x t \T«kl /. "IAT IT WnfaAn (l-
house, A Thompson.
5th Texas—^G Beckman.
25th Texas—Sergt J M Markley
11th Texas—W Allbright, \V A Tomp
kins.
4th Texas—J Thomas.
4th Fla—J J Page, J P I’arneli, H J Ger-
ty, J W Johnson.
3d Fla—W Holloway.
32d Tenn—Lt D S Hammond, W Holland
J M Hawsley, Lt R F Holland, G W Mc
Guire, L H Coal, J T Noah
9th Tenn-G W Trotter, A D Hazlewood.
15th Tenn—Sergt P Lyons, corp D Carey.
W H Bums, J Pierce, S Blankenship, M
Judy, C Staggs, D McCarty
37th Tenn—Sergt A J Sanders, corpl J
Doyle, C McCormick, C Welch, P McDer-
mot, R M Mason.
4th Tenn—J A Pollock, R tf Mornsooj J
D Dark.
4lstTenn— M Dukes.
50tli Tenn—W J Brigham, if H Horn,
Sergt W W Thompson.
15th Ga—J W Terry.
2d Ga—A A Montgomery’.
7 th Ga—J C Putts.
Sweet’s battery—A Murphy.
34tli Miss—A Bradshaw.
13th Miss—C R Hand, J C Beard, — Mc
Adams, E L Collins, J Quattlcbaum.
30th Miss—N Davis, G W Robbies.
24th Miss—W W Cowart, Sqgt T L Read,
A J Denmark, E Ronncsville, A Pipkin, L
Hunnicutt, P S Jenning3, A J Walker, J I
Narrow, S P Headley, D F Gilliam, J B
Buchanan, G W Bean, G W Wilson, J G
Moore, L Millender, T H Gillian.
8th Miss—F J Turner, Wm Johnson, J
Blackwell.
45th Miss—W A Allen.
WOrNDKDblRMAININO AT WINSNIP AND r.t.A.-'
K1E HOSPITAL.
Assistant Surgeon G G Roy iu change.
Co El, 40Miss, Capt M Found , severely
in neck.
Co F. 32d Miss, A Bradshaw in head.
Co G, 44th Ala, privates F T Dunking, J
Rich, in band; Co I, B Knott, in hand.
Co Iv, 44th Ala, Sargt J M Culver, head ;
private? U G Evans, hand; J A Henson,
head.
Col. 44th Ala, J F McEachern, arm.
Co E, Sell Miss, C J Turner, arm.
Co L, 15th Ala, W L Lewis, hip, J L Os-
bum, loot.
Co E, 4th Fla, M Herren, hip.
Co 1C, lltli Texin, W A All bright^ abd< -
men.
Go F, 47th Ala, J A Hughes, thigh.
Co li. 4i9t Ala, T F McCrow, arm. -
Co I, 41st Tenn. M Duke, arm.
Co I, 33d Ala, W C Byrd, shoulder.
Go A, 38tli Ala, Jas Hughes, hand.
(Jo b, 27th Miss, Capt W_W Hull, thigb.
Co E, 27th Miss, Lt J M Edwards, hand.
Co C, 1st Bat Aia-Legipn; W E Hnrmau,
arm, James Reed, baud.
Co H, 1st Tex, J P Smith, hand. i
Co G, 4th Tex, J W Thomas, hand. j
1st Bat 1st Ala Legion, Lb Col J II Holt,
badly in thigh, ig-
Co F, 1st Bat 1st Ala Logion, Captain N
Stallworth, shouhler
38th Ala, Adjt A R Murray, leg.
Co A, 44th A!a, Captain D N Bozeetnatt,
badly in thigh.
Co E, 6Sth Ala, f.icut John Clow, badly
in tldgh-
Co J4,1st Fin Cav, Sergt M W Simmons
Co D, “ “ J W Harvey r .
Co A, 88th Ala, B Smith.
Co D, 5di Ga, J V Hall and H J Hill.
Co A, 58th Ala, W F Price.
Co G, 9th Miss, T J Everett
Co E. 5th Ky, E B Ballard; J Johjieon.
Co G, 30th Ga, D LLee aud J J Fair.
Co G, 4th Tenn Cav, H Hawkins.
Co C, 4th Ky, W T Greenwell and R H
Marshal.
Co K, 41st Miss, J T Calhoun..
Atlanta, Ga.., Sapt, 25,1863.
[From the Knoxville Register.]
List ot wounded received at the Gate City
Hospital, Dr. P. F. Eye, Surg. in charge.
4th La Batt, privates J P Mehdjry, A M
Mock, B Branegan, J Glover, P P Miller, J
M Curry, S Gutine, R F Scott, E G Alnutt,
M D Jones, J G Dowdy, D W Frisley, li I)
Watley, Lt F H Couch.
34th Miss, J W Westmoreland.
12th Miss, J Robertson.
29th Miss, W T Ward, G W Clark, L M
French, sergt J L Bishop,
loth S C—Priv W E Parker. „
Hampton Legion—Priv J Carson, J S At
kinson,*D N Daers, J W Doughterty, Wm
Lunday, Robt Hodge, Caps J F Brown,serg’t
F Sewell, priv P M Nelson,
15th Ark—Privates J M Murphy, II Cank-
ling.
8th Ark—Privates J G Bandy, RO Tyler,
J B Hunt, corpl Wm Smith.
3d Ark—Capt B B Newburn, private J E
Carter.
1st Ark—Priv J W Sumner.
14th Texas—Privates II S Calhoun, J W
Linn, A Stephenson, S T Langhonx
5th Texas -Private J B Harvey.
9 th Texas—-Sergt A E Dale.
1st Texas—Lt IIII Robertson, priv J Frcy-
lish.
5th Texas—Priv A Black.
7th Texas—Priv J S Duncan.
10th Texas-Privales L Hancock, G L Ivis-
inger, W H Hill.
2d Ga Reg—Capt W H Brown, sergt C C
Raleigh, corpl Wm Robert, privates J C Mc
Daniel,Q Robertson,W D Sbaw,J R Young,
C C Duncan. J H Thomas, W P Goodwin,
and sergt G Hunt.
2d Ga Bat—Priv S A Young.
5th Ga—Capt G W Larkin, Lt J Barrett
and J C Joyless, sergts S P Martin and VV
Q Harp, corpl,“'T L Wiseman, privates J M
Horn, W T Cowles, E M Kelly, M Lydon,A
Hoffman.
4th Ga—Priv H Dickinson.
10th Ga—Priv R R Morton.
15th Ga—Privates B Murmh, W E Fort-
son, M Brown, T B Johnson, AB Caldwell,
and J Wright.
17th Ga—Sergt J II Colquitt, privates J A
Huling and Thos Bambery.
18th Ga—Privates J T Roberts, J A Thomp
son. •
18th Ga—Priv J V Fitzgerald.
30th Gx—Capt F L Waltnah, privates M
C Duke,J A Dodson,W Holifield, G R Duke,
W A Lsmoa, J Eodaley. J .H McCnllom, J
M Robsrfo, W F Elder, J T Nolan, J O Mor
gan. .
06th Ga -Priv J S Pruitt,
37th Ga—Sergt J V Moore, privates J N
Mainor, W J Penn, T J Barrow, B A Moore.
IS Milt8SDiii.h olSiivanne'i.SeptW, 1S83.
Ui. Lditok:— Please al'oar me space in your paper to
return Uianks to my *oopartial friends, ,! lhe Perp e” of
FuIIqq County, for su^gest’ng my name In a recent Issue
of tha Gazette In connection with n seat In I he Repre
sentative branch of the Georgia Legislature at ita next
session; and to ray, that, alUiough but an humble soldier*
X feel that I caa best serve them and my native State in
the army (where I have been for two years past) thaa In
her Legislature. I have no partiality for war;' but, on
'the contrary, a.3 la well kaowh, exerted my beet efforts
to avert the cntel and unnatural one now being waged
against us by (tie government and people of the United
Slates. For this I was denounced aud vilified by many
who, though bold in warring upon those of fellow-eltTzets
who chanced to differ with thempo/ilicyily, have show t» •
too much dU--)'ct!ou (.’) to risk their valuable (?) lives
In defense even of their own liberty anil property, ar.d
the honor and Ilvej of their wives and children:
“Pte mouse ne’er shua’d.the pat ai they did budge
“From “ Yankee*” to “go worse than ihey.”
Yeti cannot reconcile IS with iny sense r( duty |h.
abandon my present post — in front of, and near to, the
hated A>e—
“Slaves for pillage lighting,
Obdurate vassals, fell exploits «flhctmgL
In bloody deaths and ravishments delighting,
Nor children’s tears, nor mother’s groan’s respecting- —
Until they shall have been soundly whipped and forced
to ackdowledge us as a Free and Indt pendent Nation.
. I remain, dear sivery respectfully, your obedient
servant', C. R. HANLHTER,
V Captain Jo Thompson Artillery,
Commanding ISaitrry and Post.
42nd Senatorial District.
We are auLhorizod to announce the name of Dr,
JOHN W. LEWIS as a Candidate for the Senate
ol Georgia, for the Forty-Second Senatorial District, com-
pojeffof the Counties of Chattorg*, Floyd, and Bartow,
Se|»t2-t dte
Confederate War Tax.
The Assessor shall require each taxjmyer to make due.
return on oath of all the following articles held or owned
by him on the 1st of Jnly, 1808. which are the growth or
production of any year proceeding the year 136S.
1. Naval stores,
‘J. Bait,
8. Wines and spirituous liquors,
4. Tobacco, manufactured or unmanufactured,
5. Cotton,
6. Wool,
I. Flour-,
£>. Bogar,
a. Molasses and Syrup,
10. Rice,
11. Other agripullural products,
The Assessor shall further require returns ti be navde
on oath of all banX notes and other currency t n baud or
on deposit, on tire 1st day of Jujy, 1SC3, ?£nd of all
credits held or owned on the 1st of Ju’y,l§61, on which
the Interest has not been paid, and wbfeh are not em
ployed ia a business, the iajoice derived frem whiuli i«
taxed by the ta^act. ,/
The above tax laT&cpuied Lodx- paid on the 1st day of
oaqber,18J8. “ W. T. ME_D,
Confederate Tax Collector,
Office MnhUnbrink’s Building, Whitehall Street.
*7t
ATHEN/EUM.
Leaner- and Manager, - W. H. CBIbF,
(Atao of Ihe Mobile and Montgomery Theatres.'
OPEN EVERY EVENING
iVTouday 28tli, will be performed the beautiful
Play of Ihc
LADY Ot LYONS
OR
Love and Pride!
To cor elude with the Farce of
ROUGH DIAMOND
Or Country Cousins.
ISiy-A ausrd will be placed In the Theatre to preserve
order. Seats reserved for Ladies.
Prices—Parquelte, $2. Upper Tier, than. Colored-
Gallery, >1.
ALSO WILL BE SOLD AT THE
LARGE AUCTION OF
M. W. Hutcheson & Co.,
Monday 28th. 1863.
Wltite bed sheeting,
Linen aud cotton towels,
Calicos,
Ladies dresses, made up,
And v^ious other articles.
Sept 27—dlt
on
Administrator’s Sale.
U nder an order otthe Honorable Court or Ordina
ry of Spau’.iiing County, will be sold before the
coart house door in Griffin,‘within the legal hours of sale,
on the first Tue3dav In November next, SSIjfe' acres of
land, more or less, known as the stand of taa late Dr. J.
yf Adams, at Double Cabins, being lot No. 79 and part
of‘lot No. S2,in the 8d district of originally Henry, u jw
Sysnldlng county,. Abo, tea Negroes, to wU: America,
84- Preston, between 8 and 9; Margaret, .; Silva, «;
Oaihtrine, bitween 5 and 6; Julia, about 23 years old,
tld. and her two children, chapman, 4 years and wUl h
month i old; Rhcda, 25 years old, and her chl d, W
months oldr Allto besoll a3 the property of the estate
of Joseph W. A damp, deceased, lor the benefit of bis
Sept £7-d once a wegjt till day* - —
PIKE SHERIFF SAltK.
the legal hour, of * le »he o^ld **J ™ of David F. Rl-
6dj .lnln(? lata, ““^1^ * MMgham vs. David P
lev hr » fi H. McCLRNDON, sheriff.
. geptjr-st>ri