Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 10, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for November 29th or search for November 29th in all documents.

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Capture of three Lake steamers. --The New Orleans Picayune is indebted to the courtesy of Gen. Lovell for the use of the following dispatch: Fort Pike, Nov. 29.--Captain Buckley, of the steamer Jeff. Davis, has just left my wharf, having been turned back on his trip to Mobile. He reports the capture, by the Yankees, yesterday morning, in the Sound, of the steamers Grey Cloud, Watson, and Henry Lewis--the two latter heavily laden with freight for Mobile. H. A. Clinch, Major Comd'g. Maj. Gen. Lovell, C. S. A. The Picayune further says: Since receiving the above, we learn from here agents here, John E. Hyde & Co., that the Grey Cloud arrived in port (Mobile) early yesterday morning. The wrong name has probably been given, by mistake, to one of the captured boats. Another dispatch has been received by Mr. Geddes, agent of the mail line, dated Pascagoula, yesterday, stating that a steamer name not mentioned, was captured by the enemy, in the morning,
The position of Utah --Brigham Young's Prophesy.--"Ion," the special Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Sun, Nov. 29, says: Utah has substantially declared her independence as a State, and has taken the position of strict neutrality between the South and the North in the present contest. But it appears that the delegate from that Territory will resume his seat in the Federal House of Representatives at the coming session. A statement from him as to the peculiar attitude and policy of Utah will necessarily be elicited. Meanwhile, however, I learn that Brigham Young, as autocrat of the Mormons, has more thoroughly than ever obtained the confidence of his people by the fulfillment of his remarkable and often-repeated prophecy of the dissolution of the Union. Not a single United States soldier now remains in Utah, and the travel across the plains is much diminished. There is no trouble whatever between the Mormons and the citizens of the States. The National Electr