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o his orders to have routed the entire rebel army. Miscellaneous. Green B. Smith, Secretary; Charles L. Hunt, Grand Commander, and Charles E. Dunn, Deputy Grand Commander of the "order of American Knights," have made a full confession of its secrets to the Provost Marshal at St. Louis. There is now going on a grand fraternization and re-union at the Clifton House, Niagara Falls, between the following parties: Clay, Holcombe, Sanders, and other Confederates, and Dean Richmond, Ben. Wood. Butts, of the Rochester Union; ex-Governor Hunt, ex-Governor Weller, of California; ex-Governor Noble, of Michigan; Ross, Stewart, of the Nineteenth Ohio district, delegates to the Chicago Convention; three delegates from Pennsylvania; two from Iowa; two from Missouri, and five from Kentucky. There are now nine thousand rebel prisoners in the barracks at Rock Island, Illinois, and five thousand three hundred and seventy-seven at Camp Douglas, Chicago. There are also several hundre
The Daily Dispatch: October 21, 1864., [Electronic resource], One hundred and Fifty dollars reward. (search)
d perusal, we think, to satisfy any politician of ordinary intelligence that this silly pronunciamento of Southern secession abstractions is intended for the encouragement and guidance of the Northern Copperhead peace faction in this Presidential canvass. That it will be accepted by this revolutionary faction as a model of conciliation and wisdom we cannot doubt, for it has the true ring of the peace speeches of Mr. George H. Pendleton and of the moral philosophy, as a peace-maker, of the Hon. Ben. Wood. Large arrests of blockade-running Merchants. Great consternation was caused in Washington and Baltimore on Monday by the closing up of several stores and the arrest of the proprietors upon the charge of being engaged in running goods into the Confederacy. The operation was performed by a guard of soldiers. A telegram from Baltimore says: The seizures are understood to be pursuant to orders emanating from the War Department. Nothing definite is known as to the charge
With this force he will not be very likely to throw any serious obstructions in Sherman's way. If Charleston, being a strongly-fortified city, were the object of the present expedition, this army of Hardee's would be worth considering, but, as it is, the rebel tactician will only be an elephant on the hands of the Confederacy. Would that half of Lee's army were cooped up in Charleston. Rumored putting to sea of Confederate iron-clads from European Ports — the opinion in New York. Ben. Wood's paper (the New York News) has a letter from London, saying that the two iron-clad vessels built a year or two ago in France for the Confederates, but stopped through the vigilance of Mr. Dayton, have got to sea since his death, and are cruising under the rebel flag, under the names of Stonewall and Rapidan. He also declares that there is a secret treaty between the Emperor of France and the Richmond authorities. He intimates that the destination of the rebel iron-clads, which he pronou