Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 30, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Pan or search for Pan in all documents.

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rivers. The spacious and airy buildings of the musket factory furnish capital barracks, barring the brick floors which prevail in the lower stories. Our Southern allies take to the hills wonderfully, considering that numbers of them never saw an elevation of over forty feet in their lives, while many of them have only the Southern idea of a landscape, "a line and a pine." They look well, drill well, and don't appear to suffer from the dines. The banjo, the fiddle, and the pipe (not that of Pan,) constitute their main "distraction." The Pennsylvania troops, moreover, who have threaten us with attack, are actually disbanding. The Chambersburg Valley Spirit of two days ago, received here last evening, mentions the dispersal to their homes of all the troops (five companies) quartered in that place, and says that most of the much larger force embodied at Camp Sifter, in the neighborhood, would also refuse to enlist for a longer term than the original three months. In the same way,