Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 29, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Beauregard or search for Beauregard in all documents.

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the Armies of the United States. This is the third change which the Yankees have made in their Commander in Chief since the beginning of the war. First, it was Old Scott, "the first Captain of the age;" then came George R. McClellan, the "Young Napoleon;" and now it is Halleck, who has hitherto received no special designation, except that conferred upon him by a New York correspondent of the London Times, "Major General of the Liars," and which he soon after illustrated by asserting that Beauregard, who outgeneraled him in such an astonishing way at Corinth, had lost fifteen thousand stand of arms and twenty thousand in killed, wounded, and prisoners ! Coincident with the appointment of a new General-in-Chief is the inauguration of a reign of crucify and barbarism, compared with which all that is gone is mere child's play. Gen. Pope's orders for the arrest of unoffending citizens at Fredericksburg; the merciless and unheard of decree for the banishment of all families who will
will be king yet." They think England must soon interfere in their behalf, in order to obtain cotton. France they believe to be more friendly to the Confederacy than England. The gentleman knows nothing definitely of the number of the rebel army at Richmond when the attack was made on McClellan's lines, but it was his opinion, formed from conversation with well informed men, that the force consisted of from one hundred and fifty thousand to two hundred thousand men. He thinks none of Beauregard's army, from Corinth, was there. The army had been in creased by conscripts, and reinforcements continued to come in during the six days that the contest was going on. He knew nothing of the rebel loss in the battles, except that it was large. At the time of the battle of Fair Oaks, or Seven Pines, as the rebels call it, their numerous hospitals were all filled with wounded, and many were taken to private houses. The mortality among the wounded was large. Those who were able to be