Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 26, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Montgomery or search for Montgomery in all documents.

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pon private property, and then they talk of blockades, of reinforcements, and all that, but yet they send no armies, no reinforcements, or any such thing. What, between the fright they got when we made a few air holes in the Star of the West, the impoverished and bankrupt state of their Treasury, and the contemplated invasion, they certainly have been brought to a stand still, and eventually to a dastardly back down. All the high officials of the military have been called suddenly to Montgomery — what for, no one knows, but it is thought by well informed men that it is to arrange the army, and have the officers assigned, and to consult as to future operations. I hear that in a few weeks at most, one hundred thousand men, many of them veterans, will be ready for extraordinary service, and plenty left to take care of the mercenary Northern soldiers, who may be sent off "down South" to ages clear of them at home. If the people of Washington city only did but know what a few of us h
The Cotton crop. --It has now become a fixed fact, that the cotton crop of 1860-'61 will be nearly a million bales short, and that all the additions that may be made by the influence of the Bears to the receipts, cannot carry up the crop to four millions of bales. Galveston acknowledges that she will be 50,000 bales short; Montgomery 40,000 bales; Columbus, 40,000 bales. The total deficiency at the seaports, including the overland cotton from Memphis, which is now put into the New Orleans receipts, is near 700,000 bales, and the weekly receipts will, it is said, increase the deficiency. Prices have advanced since these facts have been known, and it is said that many very lengthy and apologetic letters have been written here by shrewd European houses abroad, acknowledging that they have been in error in estimating the crop, and imputing the blame to the political state of affairs amongst the Cotton States.--Charleston Mercury.
The Savannah News of the 22d inst., contains a special dispatch from Montgomery, announcing that Major Coppins, of the New Orleans Zouave Regiment, with 500 men, was ordered to Pensacola on the 21st. An Universalist Church was consecrated in Baltimore on Sunday, Rev. A. Bosserman, of Richmond, addressing the society on the occasion. Washington telegrams state that the vacant Judgeship in the U. S. Supreme Court has been tendered Hon. Geo. W. Summers, of Virginia. Peter Schwine, in jail at Wetumpka, Ala., for the murder of his wife and a servant, committed suicide last week, by cutting his throat. Mr. Raymond, editor of the Times, it is understood, will be appointed Consul to Paris, a very agreeable situation, with a salary of $5,000 a year. The Albemarle (Elizabeth City) Southern, of the 20th inst., says that Hon. Kenneth Rayner has come out in favor of the secession of North Carolina. The U. S. sloop-of-war Cumberland arrived at Norfolk, Va., Satur