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chment of the Washington Artillery, under the command of Lieutenant James Salvo, having in charge the following officers and seamen, captured by a privateer: Capt. L Holmes and W. Hurd, mate, late of the bark Glen, of Portland, Maine, bound from Philadelphia for Tortugas, with a cargo of 391 tons of coal, intended for the Gulf Squadron; Henry Wilson, mate, late of the bark Rowena, of and for Philadelphia, from Laguayra, with a cargo of 1,000 bags of coffee; Wm. Nichols, seamen, and Henry Anderson, a boy, late of the schooner Mary Alice, from Porto Rico for New York, with a cargo of 250 hogsheads of sugar. The prisoners above-named were removed, the Courier says, to comfortable quarters in the jail "for safe keeping until proper disposition can be made of their cases. They were accompanied to the prison by the City Police, in citizens' dress, so as to avoid attracting any unnecessary attention." A skirmish in Western Virginia. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Time
From Washington. Washington Aug. 21. --Maj. Anderson. (of Sumter notoriety.) left for Kentucky on yesterday, intending at once to assume command of his department.
The Daily Dispatch: May 20, 1864., [Electronic resource], One Regiment that got out of the Big fight. (search)
Mayor's Court, yesterday. --Thomas Boyd, charged with shooting, on last Sunday week, Henry Anderson, a free negro, was discharged by the Mayor from further prosecution yesterday morning. The testimony in the case fully proved that Boyd, acting as a guard at the Danville Bridge, only performed his duty in firing at the negro after his refusal to obey the command to halt. Andrew, slave of the Virginia Central Railroad, was charged with stealing fifty pounds of bacon, belonging to the cfusal to obey the command to halt. Andrew, slave of the Virginia Central Railroad, was charged with stealing fifty pounds of bacon, belonging to the company. An officer of the road testified that Anderson jumped from the commissary train on Wednesday evening on the plea that he had dropped his hat, and running back some distance from the cars, he was observed digging in the ground, which, upon investigation, turned out to be the bacon he was burying. The Mayor ordered him to be whipped.
thout effect. Returning subsequently to get her anchor, the rebels opened on her either from Fort Marshall or Beach inlet, to which she paid no attention until a ten-inch shell struck her on the forecastle, killing and wounding a number of men, seven of whom died on the instant. Mrs. Anne Butler, wife of the absconding Confederate States Treasury clerk, who succeeded in making his way to New York, passed through Washington on Saturday on her way to join her husband. Mrs. Butler made two or three attempts to escape from Richmond. The first time she was captured and taken back; but she finally succeeded in making her way to Point Lookout, and was brought up to Washington on the mail boat Dictator. The "guerrillas," under Bill Anderson's brother, are scourging the Yankees in Missouri again. A telegram from Chattanooga says the Federals were attacked by Breckinridge at Strawberry Plains on the 18th, who was repulsed. Gold in New York on the 21st was quoted at 221.
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