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nue a monthly statement of these committals: Committed on the 2d of March.--Hon. John M. Botts, of Henrico, treason; C. Crouse, Richmond, seditions language; Lewis Dove, Richmond, disloyalty; Valentine Hechler, Henrico, treason; John M. Higgins, Richmond, treason; Chas. J. Muller, Richmond, treason; Franklin Stearns, Richmond, treason; John Scully, New York, spy; B. Wardwell, Richmond, treason. Committed on the 3d of March.--A. O. Brummell, Richmond, desertion. Committed On the 4th March.--Rev. A. Bosserman, Richmond, treason; Ebenezer Hallock, Richmond, disloyalty; Michael Kearny, Richmond, selling liquor; J. Fenton, Jr., Memphis, Tenn., on suspicion; Mrs. Annie E. Scott, Leesburg, on suspicion. Committed on the 5th March.--William Fay, Richmond, disloyalty. Committed on the 6th March.--Daniel Bitter, Richmond, disloyalty; Thomas Bergen, Richmond, selling liquor; John Denzler, Richmond, selling liquor; Henry Fitzgerald, Arkansas disloyalty; Henry Frischkorn,
The Daily Dispatch: April 5, 1862., [Electronic resource], Death of Confederate prisoners at St. Louis. (search)
March 2.--Joseph Brown, company F, 13th Ark.; James A Kirbsy, company H, 15th Ark; Alex Frange, 16th Miss. James Maxwell, 3d Miss, J. A. Sample, company B, 11th Ala. March 3.--T Gilland, company C, 31st Tenn, G. W. Paris, company D, 4th Miss. James Russell, company G, 27th Ala, Jas Logan, company G, 42d Tenn.; B. F. Gray, company D, 15th Ark.; Samuel Brown, company D, 48th Tenn., Albert Kinard, company A, 48th Tenn. J. M. Burney, company K, 30th Tenn, Clarey, company Tenn. March 4.--John Hicks, company 7th Texas, J T Fuller, company C, 42d Tennessee; L R. D. Bigble, 80th Tennessee, Geo. W Doneal, 48th Tennessee; Wm Branden, company G, 42d Tennessee, Green Stacy, Combs's battery, Tennessee, N. P Shutz, company B, 4th Mississippi, Robert Rose, 11th Arkansas. Wm S Harris, company C, 4th Mississippi. Henry Dempsey company D, 10th Tennessee. March 5.--J M Girard, company C, 4th Mississippi, W. H. Roney, company K, 30th Tennessee, J B Ford, company A, 21st Alabama, J
ich had been prepared for it; the lead around the bass of the shot was prepared to fit the grooves of the gun, and could be forced down only by great exertion on the part of the gunner, and when rapidly fired no certainty of its having been sent home could be felt, save by measurement. This vacuum in the gun caused it to burst; only a day before orders had been given to change the shot, as it was considered dangerous. The draft of last Thursday proved, like the preceding one of the 4th of March, a failure, the quota of Savannah not being made up. It must not be supposed that Savannah is unpatriotic, or has in her duty; she has now in the service forty-three companies, numbering thirty-six hundred men; while, her voting population is only twenty-six hundred enrolled, and has never gone beyond twenty-two hundred polled at the most favorable time. The commercial communities of this country have always been the object of attack by the country representation in our Legislature
For reasons which seemed to me imperative, I resolved to go in person and take command of the combined forces of Price and McCulloch. I reached their headquarters on the 3d of March, and being satisfied that the enemy, who had halted on Sugar Creek, 55 miles distant, was only awaiting large reinforcements before he would advance, I resolved to attack him at once. Accordingly, I sent for Gen. Pike to join me near Elm Springs with the forces under his command, and, on the morning of the 4th of March, moved with the divisions of Price and McCulloch, by way of Fayetteville and Bentonville, to attack the enemy's main camp on Sugar Creek. The whole force under my command was about 16,000 men. On the 6th we left Elm Springs for Bentonville, and from prisoners captured by our scouting parties on the 5th I became convinced that up to that time no suspicion was entertained of our advance, and that there were strong hopes of our effecting a complete surprise, and attacking the enemy bef
sengers. The rebel steamer Sumter remained at Gibraltar, and the Union steamers Tuscarora, and Kaorsage, at Algeoiras on the 21st of March. The sailing sloop Ino left Algeoiras at half past 2 P. M. on the 15th instant, steering in the direction of Ceuta. The St. Louis, Union sailing corvette of 30 guns, had arrived at Cadiz from Philadelphia, and anchored in the harbor. A dispatch from Liverpool of the 30th ult., says: The rebel schooner C. S. Evans was passed on the 4th of March by the G. Fleming, of Bombay. There was an unknown American ship alongside. The Union flag was lowered when the ships parted company. The Pope of Rome continues dangerously ill. The Viceroy of Egypt was ill. The Prince of Wales has left Alexandria for Jaffa and the Holy Land. The Japanese Ambassadors had left Alexandria for Marseilles. They would visit France before going to England. The Merrimac and Monitor battle in Parliament. In the House of Commons, on th
otton. Feb. 8, schooner Louise, Byers, Charleston, rice and cotton. Feb. 10, schooner Courier, Davis, Charleston, cotton. Feb. 12, steamship Nelly, Moore, Charleston, cotton. Feb. 13, schooner Sue, Smith, Charleston, naval stores. Feb. 16, steamship Kate, Lockwood, Charleston, cotton. Feb. 24, steamship Cecile, Peck, Charleston, cotton. March 3, schooner Chase, Allen, Charleston, lumber. March 3, steamship Elia Warley, Swasey, Charleston, cotton. March 4, schooner Sir Robert Peel, Guage, Charleston, naval stores, March 8, steamship Cecile, Peck, Charleston, cotton. March 10, schooner Zaidee, Adair, Charleston, cotton and tobacco. March 11, schooner British Empire, Parsons, Jacksonville, naval stores. March 11, steamship Kate, Carlin, Charleston, cotton. March 12, schooner Kate, Sabiston, Charleston, cotton and lumber. March 17, schooner Laura, Ferklenberg, Charleston, cotton and lumber. March 17, schooner C
Ill., Camp Morton, Indiana; Camp Chase, Ohio; Madison, Wisconsin; St. Louis; Johnson's Island, near Sandusky, Ohio; and on the Atlantic coast, about 20,000 rebel prisoners of war. The British schooner Mary Harris, from Nassau, N. P., entered at New York last week, had as part cargo 74 bales cotton and 100 bbls. spirits turpentine, and the British schooner Blanche, from same port, 209 bales cotton. The term of Senator Chandler, of Michigan, expires with the present Congress, on the 4th of March next. His chances for re-election are said to be small. Hon. T. F. Bowie, of Maryland, who was arrested and taken to Washington some days since, has been honorably discharged from custody. The circulation of the Maryland News Sheet in Norfolk has been suppressed. Seventeen of Morgan's cavalry, among whom was a minister, were put in the military prison at Louisville on the 25th ult. In Orleans county, in New York, they give a cow to the wife of every married man who
Election of Senator, &c. Raleigh, N. C., Nov. 27. --Hon. W. A. Graham was to-day elected Confederate States Senator in place of Hon. George Davis, whole term expires on the 4th of March. Mr. Graham was the Conservative nominee. The Senate branch of the committee to confer with the President in relation to our coast defences, is Eli W. Hall, of New Hanover, and Dr. M. F. Arandell, of Catarett. The House branch is composed of M. Q. Waddell, of Chatham, and Judge Person, of New Hanover. They left for Richmond this afternoon.
or the purposes of the war. The Banking bill, which has passed, and the Treasury note or finance all bill which is under consideration, will invest him with almost unlimited power over the range, finances, and currency of the country; and that other bill which is pending before the House, providing for the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, will give him full authority over the liberties of the individual citizen. In a word, we may say that with the adjournment of Congress on the 4th of March, President Lincoln, for the two years remaining of his term of office, will be clothed with dictatorial powers — political, military, and financial, over State and citizen, and by the action of Congress and under the authority of the Constitution. This organic instrument and the laws passed in pursuance thereof constitute the supreme law of the land. Nor do we think it can be successfully denied or contested that in straining its warlike authority to the establishment at Washington
Charles E. Kent, was sent before the Hustings Court for trial for going at large, and bailed by her master. Timothy Durgan, who had violently assaulted Jacob Isler in the house of Thos, Phillips, without cause, was discharged on promise of immediately going back to South Carolina, where he bal's from. The case of Richard Morris, charged with stealing a number of articles of wearing apparel belonging to Andrew J. Myer, and of the value of $915, was called and continued until the 4th of March. Martha Williams and Martha J, Scott, two impudent colored females, charged with abusing Mrs. Caphart's children in the street, were respectively ordered twenty lashes, and committed for not having registers of their freedom. Charles Shellingsburg was fined $10 for permitting a nuisance to exist on his lot. William Haines, charged with cutting a cushion and injuring the furniture of the Theatre on the night of the 24th of February, was required to give $150 security for his