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the Yankee nation. That post he still occupies, and through him we learn everything of Hood-that we are permitted to know. Not the first word from a Confederate source has been permitted to reach us. Such being the fact, it is a little strange that the public should have been thrown into so great a panic as they have been. But that is the way with our people. They know, and have always known, that the Yankees are the greatest liars on the earth. They know that it is for the interest of Lincoln to create a belief here in the success of his plans and the invincibility of his generals, even though it should not last for more than hour. They know that it is peculiarly his interest at this particular crisis, when he has ordered a new draft, and is especially desirous to have it filled up. They know it is a principle with that Administration to claim every battle as a victory, though it be a most signal defeat. Knowing all this, our people yet give full faith and credit to everything
orld will approve her punishment, and to the sentence of righteous retribution will say, Amen! Miscellaneous. At Washington, two hundred guns were fired in honor of the fall of Savannah; at Erie, Pennsylvania, the bells were rung, the city decorated with flags, and salutes fired. At Albany and Cleveland, the event was also celebrated. The soldiers' fair at Springfield, Massachusetts, closed Friday evening, the receipts being fifteen thousand dollars. An autograph letter from Lincoln brought twenty three dollars, and one from Governor Buckingham ten dollars. The Philadelphia North American has been shown a sample of army tobacco, brought from the front, one-third proportion of which proves to be sumac. This article is worth about $60 a ton. The Fenian Brotherhood of Jersey City and Hudson have forwarded a numerously signed petition to Bishop Bailey, asking for the removal of Father Venuta, the Catholic priest who interfered with a meeting of the Brotherhood.