Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 31, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Smith or search for Smith in all documents.

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The Virginia Sentinel. The senior editor of this excellent paper, R. M. Smith, Esq., left Alexandria on Friday morning, passing through the lines of sentinels without detection. He publishes a card in the Enquirer of yesterday, addressed to his patrons, in which he gives a history of events in Alexandria, and adds: "Itn could it have stooped so low as to do obeisance with mouth in the dust." The readers of the Sentinel, and the public at large, will be glad to learn from Mr. Smith that, in anticipation of the probability of this inroad, he had removed his large and valuable job office, presses, types, &c., and otherwise reduced the office dmit of the continued publication of the paper. The arrangements, if any, which will be made to resume the speedy publication of the Sentinel will be duty announced. Subscribers who are indebted to that paper, and who desire to assist Mr. Smith in his present exigency by making payment, will please address him at Warrenton, Va.
Dispatch.] Annapolis, May 27, 1861. I am enabled by a gentleman going direct to your city to send you a few lines from this point. The grounds and buildings of the Naval Academy are now occupied by the Thirteenth Brooklyn Regiment, Col. Smith, numbering about nine hundred men. They are mostly clerks from the city of Brooklyn,--genteel young fellows of good address, short wind and impassible legs. With these are amalgamated one hundred and fifty "fire laddies" from Williamsburgs whselves, and the daily insults which are experienced by men and women, especially the latter, is rolling up against them a debt of hate which the people of Maryland will one day wipe out in blood. To conciliate the people as far as possible Col. Smith at this point is returning to their masters fugitive slaves. No less than eleven have been thus disposed of within the last three weeks. The people understand the bait, however, and are not to be caught with such chaff. The latter are by no m