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The Daily Dispatch: August 4, 1862., [Electronic resource], From the North--foreign recognition — recruiting in Baltimore, &c. (search)
willing hands of the "contraband." "Now," said the gentleman, when he turned them loose, "go and tell your master, Lincoln, that two negroes have flogged you from your heads to your heels." In Washington city there is a vast deal of speculation about the movements of "Stonewall Jackson," and the constant departure of families, with bag and baggage, for localities further North, has given rise to the supposition in the minds of Baltimorean that they have a dread of an attack upon the Federal capital, though it may possibly be nothing more than the usual summer hegira. Dr. Day and his brother, who were arrested at Drainsville and imprisoned in Washington, have been set at liberty, in consequence of the release of some civilians at Richmond by the Confederate Government. Common white cotton goods have gone up to 25 and 30 cents per yard in the Northern markets, and with a meagre prospect of an increased supply of the raw material a further advance is considered unavoidable.