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New York and Baltimore papers, to the 25th instant, inclusive, furnish the following interesting summary: From Petersburg and vicinity. The 13th corps, under Gen Smith has crossed the Appomattox river and joined Grant's main body. The Washington Star of Friday, 24th learns from parties arriving from the front than whilst the 2d and 3rd corps, Hancock's and Wright's, were making, on Wednesday last, a flank movement to the left, in the direction of the Petersburg and Weldon Radinary contests on record — The river is so narrow at that part that the vessels will have no opportunity of and hard knocks will only decide the right. Our officers court the trial, confident of their ability to come off victors. Lieutenant General Grant and Major General Butler were on the Agawam, having an interview with Rear Admiral Lee, at the time of the approach of the rams, and witnessed the firing of the heavy guns from the monitors. Miscellaneous. The meeting at Mozart
roken shrines, and the hopes of mankind betrayed and destroyed, let him or her step into one of old Abe's "Volunteer Refreshment Saloons" and take a drink. There is a panacea for every human woe. It seems to be the belief of His Excellency that as mankind fell by the forbidden fruit, they have only to distil the fruit to repeals all the damage it has occasioned. It was eating the thing, not drinking it, which was Adam's fatal blunder. Such appears to be old Abe's theory, and we dare say Gen. Grant agrees with him in that opinion. But the "Sanitary and Christian Committee" part of the Baltimore speech is a better joke than the Executive joker has yet got off in any of his wonderfully funny orations. The world has never seen the like before, he says, and we may add the hope, will never see the like again. The world has seen for many centuries Christian Associations, commonly called churches, (which, being founded by the Divine Founder of Christianity, may not have been the ecla
villain" without catching the Solferino fever. This man has discovered that Gen. Grant, from the moment he entered upon this campaign, had determined to make the Soat he could have done so without losing a man, he is ready with an answer. Oh, Grant wanted to try all plans — he tried the straight road and found that would not dhe South, expected to serve Cornwallis precisely as he had served Burgoyne. So Grant can never forget Vicksburg, any more than poor old Scott can forget Lundy's Lannapproachable by a naval force, and has an army now nearly equal in strength to Grant's, which moreover it has beaten until it has become an object of sheer compassibut whistling to keep up the spirits on the part of the Yankees. They see that Grant, after unheard of losses, is in a situation from which he cannot retreat withouour work for us. Either way their job is a desperate one. If, in the meantime, Grant, baffled on that side, shall lead his army back to this, we shall be told that
while the impression prevailed among our citizens that a fight was brewing. But the firing was discontinued in less than thirty minutes, and matters remained unusually quiet during the balance of the day. The Southern railroad is still inoperative, the enemy being within the vicinity of the Six site House in large force. But this does not place the city nor Gen Lee's army in a state of siege. We are still in communication with many portions of the South, and can stand such a siege as Grant thinks he has estabitioned for twenty years to come. The raiders. As the raiders advance upon their line of contemplated operation and become nearly further removed from us, we hear less of their movements. There is no doubt that they contemplated the effectual destruction of the Danville Railroad and at the time this is written the latest we get from them is up to Friday night, when they were scattered from green Ray to the . The latter locally is about six miles from Parkville Jun