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The Daily Dispatch: December 4, 1860., [Electronic resource] 3 1 Browse Search
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terest in the preservation of harmony and peace rise and take these matters out of the control of men who get their living by agitation. The Journal of Commerce gives the following explanation of the recent landing of ammunition at Fort Moultrie, South Carolina: Some weeks ago four gun carriages for "flank defence," and eighty-four boxes or cartridges, having twenty rounds a piece, were sent on to Fort Moultrie, in pursuance of the ordinary routine of supply. For the last year Capt. Foster, of the Engineers, has been engaged in repairing the Fort, and the gun carriages are needed to complete the armament --The cartridges are sent to all the forts in the country once a month, on average, all the year round. They are intended to supply a deficiency in the ammunition caused by fall practice or firing salutes; or to replace those cartridges in which powder has become "caked" by long standing, and which are removed to the nearest Arsenal of construction to be made over. Change
Passengers per Steamship Yorktown, Parrish, Master from New York: J. B. Whitehead, N. B. Hawes, R. Klyne, Jas Smith. H. W. James, R. Pierson and lady. J. E. Meyers, A. Berndoffer, O P. Tucker, Mr. Harrison, R. G. Patterson C. H. Foster, A. M. Burt. C. Duwail, A. Bush, Mrs. Hunt, Mrs. Ketchum Jas. A Gibbs. Mrs. S. Smith and two children, M. F. Corbelt, Mrs. Capt. Russell and niece, Samuel G. Baptist. Mrs., F. A. Voorhis and child, F. R, Price. D. Tuttle, and 14 steerage. Also from Norfolk.--Henry Joslin. Mrs. Cone, J. A. Ronaldue, Jas. H. Thomas, Jos. Zimmerman, Jno. Bullock, Jas. Sterling.