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of Colonel William M. Searing, returned to Albany from the seat of war.--A rebel camp near Carthage, Tenn., was surprised by a party of the Twenty-sixth Ohio regiment, who captured twenty-two prisoners, and thirty-five horses, besides destroying all the camp equipage.--Cincinnati Commercial. A large meeting was held at Newark, N. J., by the Democracy of that city, to express their opposition to the recent arrest and banishment of Mr. Vallandigham. There were six thousand persons present, and the sentiments uttered by the various speakers were heartily applauded. Speeches were made by A. J. Rogers, Eli P. Norton, Judge A. R. Speer, and General Theodore Runyon.--New York Daily News. The town of Tappahannock, on the right bank of the Rappahannock River, Va., was this day captured by four Union gunboats. A party of troops landed and carried off and destroyed a large amount of rebel stores, etc. They also captured a large quantity of personal property, and a number of negroes.
stitution to the Secret Committee of the French Revolution. Of this institution Judge Advocate Joseph Holt was the chief. After an investigation continuing through several months, a majority of the committee made their report to Congress. That report not only failed to establish the charge, but the committee were forced to confess in it that the witnesses, on whose testimony Holt had affected to rely, were wholly untrustworthy. Shortly after this report was presented to the House, Mr. A. J. Rogers, of the committee, a very respectable member from New Jersey, made a minority report. He asserted that much of the evidence was altogether suppressed, and that the witnesses, who had received large sums of money from Holt for testifying to the criminality of Mr. Davis, recanted their evidence before the committee, and acknowledged that they had perjured themselves by testifying to a mass of falsehoods; that they had been tutored to do so by one S. Conover; and that, from him down throu
tion (ship), 237. Rheins, Charles, 200. Rhett, General, 131. Richmond, Va. Kilpatric's raid, 424. Dahlgren's raid, 424-25. Evacuation, 556. Tobacco burned, 565-66. Ricket, General, 286. Ripley, General, 114, 133, 270. Rives, General, 40. Roanoke (frigate), 165, 166. Robertson, General, 270, 271. Roddy, General, 462, 472, 473, 474. Rodes, Gen. R. E., 103, 105, 131, 282, 302, 367, 434,437,438,449. Report on battle of Seven Pines, 104. Rodgers, Colonel W. P., 329-30. Rogers, A. J., 420. Rosecrans, General, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 356,357, 358, 361., 362, 364. Rosser, General, 271, 451, 452, 453, 454-55. Rost, —, 311. Ruggles, Col. George D., 262, 263. Russell, Colonel, 28. Lord John, 319, 321, 322. Reply to U. S. demand for the Alabama crew, 217. Statements to U. S. concerning shipment of armaments, 225, 226-27. Russia. Reply to arbitration suggestion, 319-20. S Sabine Pass, Battle of, 198-99. Reports, 199-200. Sachem (gunboat), 197
Colonel, Hon. Henry M. Shaw, of Currituck; Lieut. Col. Wm. J. Price, of Wilmington; Major, George Williamson, of Caswell. company a, (from Pasquotank)--Jas. W. Hinton, Captain; Wm. Bagley, 1st Lieutenant. B, (from Currituck)--Jas. M. Whitson, Captain; Thos. J. Farris, 1st, B. F. Simmons and Enoch Baxter, 2d Lieutenants. C, (from New Hanover and Brunswick)--Henry McRoe, Captain; C. H. Barron, 1st, and Thos. W. Davis and W. L. S. Townsend, 2d Lieutenants. D, (from Granville) A. J. Rogers, Captain; A. H. Gregory, 1st, and Robt. B. Gilliam, Jr., and J. C. Cooper, 2d Lieutenants. E, (from Cumberland)--John R. Murchison, Captain; K. M. Murchison, 1st, and Neil G. Monroe, and--, 2d Lieutenants. F, (from Warren and Franklin)--C. J. Jones, Captain; Wm. M. Walker, 1st, A. Alston and L. Henderson, 2d Lieutenants. G, (from Pitt)--Ed. C. Yellowley, Captain; Amos J. Hines, 1st, and Chas. D. Rountree and W. N. Peebles, 2d Lieutenants. H, (from Cabarrus)--Rufus A. Barrier,
le to maintain the peace of the city, and the sheriff added that unless the force was at once withdrawn he should call out the First Regiment of the National Guard, a fine new corps in thorough discipline. Shortly afterward the troops, after patrolling to and fro, withdrew, not, however, before the civil magistrates had been affronted by the jeering of certain "respectable" rowdies who had come to see the soldiers "pitch in." In the meantime eloquent addresses were delivered by the Hon. A. J. Rogers, M. C. elect of the Sussex district; Hon. E. P. Norton, of this city; Judge A. R. Speer, J. C. Fitzgerald, and F. R. Teese, Esqs, and the venerable Judge Crane, of Boonton, who all commented upon the military display, rebuked the usurpations of military power by Burnside and the action of the Administration in the Vallandigham case, and were cheered to the echo. The following preamble and resolutions were "unanimously adopted with enthusiastic cheers, in which several soldiers j