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The Daily Dispatch: January 25, 1865., [Electronic resource], Cromwell , Lincoln and Virginia . (search)
Clothing for the Army.
--The Montgomery Mail learns there is a quantity of clothing at Selma, ready to be shipped to the Army of Tennessee.
The poor fellows are in a ragged condition and badly in need of clothes.
There is a quantity of shoes, which are especially needed, also ready for shipment.
General Lyon's command sale.
--Colonel Cunningham, of Lyon's command, who reached Selma on the 19th, informs the Rebel that General Lyon's forces are all safe on this side of the Tennessee river.
Much anxiety has been felt for the safety of this portion of our army since the retreat of General Hood.
It was left on the north side of the Cumberland, and fears were entertained that it would be unable to get out. In the face, however, of innumerable obstacles, General Lyon has succeeded in placing his command where it can re-unite with the army at its leisure.
After the retreat of the army commenced, General Lyon made a rapid march in the direction of Louisville, passed in the vicinity of Elizabethtown, crossed the Cumberland near Carthage, and came out by way of Sparts and McMinnville.
The Daily Dispatch: March 3, 1865., [Electronic resource], Proclamation by the President , appointing a day of fasting, humiliation and prayer, with thanksgiving. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: December 19, 1865., [Electronic resource], Examination for Attempted Incendiarism — the accused sent on. (search)
Escape of a guerrilla — small-pox Among Freedmen in Alabama--advance in Cotton — steamer sunk--an officer Shoots a gambler.
Cairo, December 17.
--The notorious guerrilla leader, Mat. Sutton, under sentence of death, escaped from the military prison at Memphis on Thursday last.
Cotton has advanced four cents per pound at Memphis, middling being quoted at forty-two cents, and strict at forty-three to forty-four cents.
The small-pox is raging among the freedmen in the vicinity of Selma, Alabama, to such an extent that they are not allowed to enter that city except under the most pressing circumstances.
The steamer Darling was sunk at Plumb Point, a short distance below Cairo.
Lieutenant-Commander Bartlett, of the monitor Oneida, shot and killed a gambler here yesterday.
Bartlett was arrested and bound over to answer a charge of manslaughter
Miss. J. L. R. Curry.
The Selma (Ala.) Messenger has the subjoined remarks concerning this distinguished gentleman, who is well known to the whole country, and especially to the Richmond people:
"We learn with sincere pleasure that this respected gentleman, has assumed the duties of the Presidency of Howard College, at Marion.
Alabama.
"As a citizen, Mr. Curry has ever stood high in his community.
As a member of Congress, and in all his public career as a politician, he was able, incorruptible and patriotic.
And now, as a minister of the Gospel and an instructor of youth, we may expect to see his brilliant talents and eminent virtues employed more directly than before in the service of his country.
It is one of the advantages of revolutions, that while they overthrow and destroy many fictitious reputations, they only serve to bring the labors of the pure and the good into more direct subservience to the wants of their fellow-men.
Had we been successful in gaining th