Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 24, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Boyle or search for Boyle in all documents.

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t all. A very stringent general order has been issued touching soldiers who surrender themselves that they may be paroled and sent home. Gen. Rosecrans has determined to send all such to Camp Chase with night-caps on their heads, after exhibiting them ignominiously on dress parade. While at Bowling Green, Gen. Rosecrans made a brief speech to Gen. Rousseau's Division, to the effect that he had accepted his new command with the purpose of making war upon the rebels. On Thursday last, Gen. Boyle, who is in command at Louisville, received the following dispatch: "Col. Foster has routed the guerrillas near Madisonville. Ky., killing twenty-five and taking sixty prisoners, including four commissioned officers, seventy-five horses, and a large number of arms and other property. Foster is still after them." The second draft in Connecticut has been indefinitely postponed. It was to have taken place on the 19th inst. On Saturday last there were 9,875 men in the variou
Prison items. --The following arrivals are reported at Castle Thunder since Saturday, viz: Jas. Broderick, deserter from Rix's artillery, stationed near Fredericksburg, caught by detective Thomas, between two beds, in a house on Cary street; J. W. Graham, company E, 25th Va. Battalion, for allowing prisoners to escape; twenty-one men, mostly hard cases, belonging to different regiments, hitherto confined at Gordonsville, were received from Major Boyle, the Provost Marshal there; D. J. Wyatt, Thomas Rowles, and James Duncan, of Rodgers's cavalry, desertion; Wilson Coots, 15th Va. Cavalry, who escaped from the railroad train while being conveyed to his company; Robert Burch, company G, 5th Va. Cavalry, and Mike Walsh, co. E, 9th La., desertion; eight men from Capt. Thornton's co., for punishment; A. Lipscomb, of the Fayette Artillery, for permitting prisoners to escape; Wm. L. Morris, of the Fayette Artillery, for desertion.