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ermont soldiers from this place on the City of Richmond to New Haven, Conn., en route to the United States General Hospital at Brattleboro', Vermont. The intentions of the Confederates in Texas. The New Orleans correspondent of the New York Herald, writing on the 16th ult., gives the programme adopted by the "rebel" leaders in Texas and the trans-Mississippi districts. He says: The armies now commanded by Holmes, Price, and Parsons, in Arkansas; the forces of Smith, Hobart, and Taylor, in Northern and Central Louisiana; those of Greene, Straight, and Major, in the southern part of the State, and part of the troops of Magruder, in Texas, are to be concentrated at Niblett's Bluffs, on the Sabine river, which, together with the lake of the same name, forms the boundary between Louisiana and Texas. The evacuated regions necessary to be occupied, for military reasons — for instance, demonstration against the advance of our armies — will be held by a mere handful of mounted me
Five hundred dollars reward. --Ran away, on Friday morning, October 30th, 1863, a negro boy named Taylor, twenty two years old; black, with a pimpled face; rather above middle height, straight, and well made; good-looking, and remarkable for his genteel air and manners. Had on when he left a brown military jacket, with brass buttons, marked "I;" black pantaloons; took no baggage except a bundle of shirts and drawers. Five hundred dollars will be paid for his actual delivery to me in Richmond; or two hundred dollars for information which will lead to his recovery. John M Daniel. oc 31--3t*