News items.
The Union forces near
Alexandria, Va., recently found six brass six-pounders buried in the ground there, a short distance from the railroad station.
They were taken to
Fort Ellsworth.
In
Utah the Saints have undertaken the growing of cotton, and a considerable crop has been produced in
Iron county, where a factory is in course of construction.
A million dollars have been placed in the hands of the Barings, of
London, subject to the drafts of
United States ministers abroad, for the purchase of arms.
It is said that
Secretary Cameron, at the commencement of the
battle of Bull Run, implored the 4th Pennsylvania regiment to ‘"strike for their homes,"’ and they did so at the rate of ten miles an hour.
The
Secretary of State, of
New Jersey, on Tuesday, presented to the Legislature an abstract of the
State census.
The total population is 672,024.
Of these 644,080 are whites, 21,936 free colored, and eight slaves.
Capt. Thos. Johnston, quartermaster of the
Louisiana regiment, has been appointed brigade commissary in the field, under
Gen. McCulloch.
Bayard Taylor, who had been spending the last three months at Gatha,
Germany, with the relatives of his wife, is expected home by every steamer.
Immediately upon his return he will join one of the divisions of the national army as the war correspondent of the
Tribune.
It is understood that
Mr. Eustis, a member of the late Federal Congress, at
Washington, from
Louisiana, has been appointed, and attached as secretary to
Mr. Slidell's mission to
France.
Mr. Gerard Hallock, who has so long been connected with the New York
Journal of Commerce, has sold his interest to
Mr. Stone, the commercial editor, and
Mr. Prime, one of its chief contributors.
The paper, under its new management, has been restored to the privileges of the mail, and it is understood that it will sustain the
Government in the prosecution of the war.