Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Rosecrans or search for Rosecrans in all documents.

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e was quietly taken in a carriage to the quarters of Major Miles, Provost Marshal General, where he was received by General Rosecrans and a number of other officers. He appeared to be fully composes, and abstained from the expression of any disagre face of the antagonism to the South he assumed the enemy will refuse to receive him. He was given to understand by General Rosecrans that, should he arrange to return to our lines in the same way, the President's orders to carry his original sentenre on an extra train from Nashville between ten and eleven o'clock last night. After some hours' conversation with General Rosecrans and others, he was put in an open spring wagon and escorted by squadron of cavalry to the outposts, and at 9 A. M. to quit the Cabinet by compulsion, and Butler put in his place. The Herald advocates Banks. There is a dispute as to where Burnside shall operate. Stanton and Andy Johnson want him to go to one place, and Halleck and Rosecrans to another.
n being as it were, shoved in at the door, he said, "I am a citizen of the State of Ohio and of the United States. I am here by force and against my will. I, therefore, surrender myself to you as a prisoner of war. "--This happened just inside the lines of General Bragg's army. It is plain that Mr. Vallandigham does not mean to embarrass our Government by making any appeal to it. Indeed, we think it plain that he would prefer that the Confederate authorities should send him back through Rosecrans's lines, in order that the Federal Government shall be forced to complete his case within it own territory — that his sentence and its penalty should be consummated in his own country among his own people. This would be good policy. The issue before the bar of public opinion in the United States could not be properly tried in any other way. In a distant land he would be probably lamented as among past things not to be retrieved or redressed; but in a Yankee prison he would be a case cont