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guns from in front of Petersburg, but this is hardly probable. Directly those guns leave the front of Petersburg, Ulysses cases to be a Lieutenant-General. From Mobile there is nothing further. It may be proper to state that the enemy's fleet menacing that city is very much in the same position, as far as chances of success through its own efforts are concerned, as a fleet menacing Richmond from below Drewry's Bluff would be. On this side of the river all is quiet? From General Early, commanding the department of Pennsylvania and Maryland, there is no intelligence which could, with prudence, be made public, though we may state that those subjugated commonwealths have not lost any more towns this week. The capture of Stoneman's raiders. Raiding parties are not caught often, and the capture of Stoneman in Georgia is quite interesting reading. He had cut the railroad, and was on his way to Macon to liberate twelve hundred Yankee officers confined there. He got
t appears now to be in progress in Maryland, Pennsylvania, and the Shenandoah Valley, it is an unpleasant truth that the late attempt by the Army of the Potomac has served General Lee in the light of an experiment. It seems to have given him a great and valuable piece of information as to how few men can hold the Petersburg defences. Three divisions held those lines when the assailants had the assistance of a mine that had cost a month's labor, and it follows that Lee could have reinforced Early with a great many men if he had only known it. He knows it now, and it is not too late to act upon the knowledge. We shall soon, in all probability, have larger operations near the Pennsylvania border than we have had lately, and we must prepare to hear, ere the summer is over, of another real invasion of the North. Perhaps a real invasion may accomplish what so many demonstrations have failed to accomplish, and draw Grant from the James river. But if Grant is still to stay there, who sha