Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 11, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Crafts or search for Crafts in all documents.

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rger, that he received his death wound.--He was smoking a cigar at the time he met his death, and said to his men, "Remember, when you are out of ammunition, steel will kill the devil." He immediately threw up his right arm, and fell over his horses neck to the ground. Some of his men ran to his succor, But his wound proved immediately fatal. The deceased Colonel was a lawyer of New York, and a son of ex-Recorder Riker. His death is much regretted by the army generally. The Abolition Crafts. The Boston Courier, of May 31, has something to say about the proceedings of the Abolitionists, which we copy: The anti-slavery zealots, priests and people have held orgies, here, during the week, worthy of pandemonium, or the limbo of fools. It is in vain to address a word to the besotted faculties of fanatics, who, in the very agony of civil war which but for abolitionism never could have been, so lightly disregard the infinite suffering and the infinite ruin to which they are mi