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The Daily Dispatch: September 6, 1864., [Electronic resource], Another Newspaper correspondent banished. (search)
llows: He had been charged with writing the New Orleans letters to the index, and Banks was determined to find out whether the charge was true or false. Accordingly he set a watch upon the letters that came to him (Condon) through the post-office. One of these, as ill-luck would have it, came from the Index office, with a draft enclosed for correspondence. The letter was resealed and allowed to be delivered to Condon. He endorsed the draft and sold it; the proof was positive, and the order for his banishment at once followed. Mr. Condon had charge of the Picayune at the time that journal was seized for publishing the bogus proclamation, which fact happened most unfortunately for the paper, as it has rendered the chance of its reappearance almost hopeless. Those who write from Banks's headquarters, or under his tuition, assert that 'it will not be' allowed to appear again, but this, I apprehend, depends upon how long the usurper holds away in the city wherein it was published. "