Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 26, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Farragut or search for Farragut in all documents.

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thern virtue of hospitality and does not like to keep his guests long waiting. There are many strangers now visiting the domains of Yellow Jack, and though they come uninvited, they will be none the less welcome to him. With an appetite whetted by a two year's fast, he must have gazed with greedy eyes from the swamps and bayous upon the pompous procession of war vessels and the swarming legions of the land, hastening to "seize, occupy and possess" the salubrious dominions of "Bronze John." Farragut and Butler, the Federal drovers, have crowded this plague market with a lot of fat Yankee cattle, and scarcely are they well installed in their quarters before the saffron-colored old gormandizer and gourmand makes his appearance. Three deaths in New Orleans already from yellow fever! Three deaths in the bright month of May, when the Crescent City is usually the healthiest city in the Southern clime. Well done, Yellow Jack! This gives earnest of business, honest friend. We have bee
cer and one seaman come on shores. The officer stated that they had understood that some schooners were here ready to run the blockade with cotton, and they (the Federals) had been sent to capture them. On being assured that there was no vessel of the kind here, he said he was misinformed, &c., and appeared satisfied that he would find none. In the course of the conversation, he said he thought Mobile would be attacked soon, perhaps after they got through on the Mississippi river. Com. Farragut had gone up towards Vicksburg. He also said that the French Consul at New Orleans was out on their fleet during the bombardment at Fort Jackson, and had expressed himself dissatisfied with the manner in which he had been treated by the Confederates at Fort Jackson. It appears from his statement that they took Capt. Pegram, who was on the Nashville. Capt. Pegram is reported as having been in command of one of our gunboats about Fort Jackson. [The statement about the capture of Cap