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pon the expected attack on Fort Pulaski and the city. The steamer Fingal, and other vessels in the harbor, were ready to be sunk or burnt. Considerable mortality prevailed among the rebel troops in the vicinity of Savannah. Our informant says they have been dying in large numbers from sickness induced on account of the dirty condition in which they keep themselves. As heretofore frequently stated, the city might have been easily taken by our troops at the time of their first landing at Port Royal. An attack was then confidently expected, and the whole city was in a state of intense excitement and alarm. The Federal statement of the battle at South Mills, N. C., given above, is so grossly false as to astonish even those who are accustomed to peruse the columns of the Northern journals. It is by such lying reports that the Yankees have become infatuated with the idea of easily subjugating the South. Another extract has an allusion to the same fight. We copy from the Baltimor