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From Washington. Washington, Nov. 14. --It is authoritatively announced that the President has never publicly or privately pledged himself to secession, as Hon. Mr. Keitt is reported to have asserted in a recent speech. The postmaster at Orangeburg, South Carolina, has tendered his resignation, to take effect on the 1st of January, unless South Carolina secedes sooner than that time. His resignation has been accepted, and he is requested to name his successor. In the event of his not procuring one who will give the necessary bonds, the office will be discontinued. Col. Gardner, in the ordinary routine, has been relieved from the command of Fort Moultrie, Maj. Anderson, next in rank, has been appointed as his successor.
The capture of Fort Moultrie. Charleston, S. C., Nov. 14. --The Mercury, referring to a dispatch published in the Philadelphia Inquirer about the taking of Fort Moultrie, pronounces it utterly unfounded, and says unless Northern journals send out more reliable agents, they must expect to suffer in their pockets, as well as have their fears excited by unjust apprehensions. The capture of Fort Moultrie. Charleston, S. C., Nov. 14. --The Mercury, referring to a dispatch published in the Philadelphia Inquirer about the taking of Fort Moultrie, pronounces it utterly unfounded, and says unless Northern journals send out more reliable agents, they must expect to suffer in their pockets, as well as have their fears excited by unjust apprehensions.