Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 8, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Doubleday or search for Doubleday in all documents.

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He said one General who lately made an order returning fugitives, was a native of Massachusetts, and he (Mr. Sumter) had used his influence to get him appointed. If he had known that Gen. Horker would have made such an order, he would never have tried to secure his appointment. When a General falls in battle, some honor mingles with the feeling of regret, but where a General fails as General Booker has failed, there is nothing but regret to be felt. He referred to the order of General Doubleday as a contrast, in which he did hero to his country. He also referred to the case of General McCook in the West, and the Provost Marshal of Louisville, as a disgrace to the army. He read an account of the oppression to which the blacks at Louisville had to submit. Mr. Davis (Ky.) asked where he got that account. Mr. Sumner replied, from a newspaper in New York. Mr. Davis said that there was no doubt of its falsity. Mr. Wilson (Mass.) said he had abundant evidence o