Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 25, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Grant or search for Grant in all documents.

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Jamestown up to Rainbow Bluff. Over one hundred and fifty torpedoes have been taken from the river already. They are put up in block tin cans and placed from three to eight feet under the water, and in rows across the river at intervals of a few miles. The Louisville Journal (Prentice's paper), heartily approves and endorses Mr. Yeaman's speech in Congress in favor of amending the Constitution so as to abolish slavery. It deems the extermination of slavery not only a fixed fact, but in every way desirable. Sixteen years ago General Grant was setting type in an Ohio printing office. General Butler is to have an imposing public reception when he returns to Lowell. The total cost of the marble for the capitol at Washington, and for cutting it, is $2,778,544. Mr. Melvin S. Whitney, one of the most opulent and respectable merchants of New York, committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor, in his apartments in West Thirty-second street, near Broadway.
The Prisons. --An unlawful assembly of ten or fifteen negroes were committed to the lower station- house yesterday morning. Fifteen lashes each were given them by order of Chief-of-Police Reuben T. Seal, after which they were discharged. At Castle Thunder nothing of importance transpired. A limited number of deserters were lodged therein in the afternoon. A few prisoners, captured from Grant's army, were committed to the Libby in the afternoon. One thousand Yankee prisoners, intended for exchange, will be sent northward by flag-of-truce boat this morning.