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g resolution, which was agreed to: Resolved, That we place ourselves at the disposal of the Bishop and his Council to appoint such of us to labor in the army as in their judgment may be thought suitable. Revs. Messrs. Whitfield and Hays, of the Methodist Protestant Church, and Rev. Dr. Burrows, of the Baptist Church, were introduced to the Conference by the Bishop. Rev. Mr. Whitfield addressed the Conference relative to his position, and was listened to with marked attention. The Bishop responded in appropriate terms. The Missionary Society then held a meeting, and the Treasurer's report was read and adopted. On motion, the Conference adjourned. On yesterday (Sunday) morning Bishop Pierce preached at the Broad street Church, after which the interesting ceremony of the ordination of deacons took place. Last night Rev. Dr. L. M. Lee preached at Centenary Church, and after preaching several ministers who had been elected to elders' orders were ordained.
of other Generals;" and thus, "to please a political faction, a practical plan of operations which would have proved of immense advantage to the Federal arms was thrown aside, and the season frittered away in a campaign barren of results." Had General Rosecrans's second plan been acted upon Stone wall Jackson's advance down the Shenandoah Valley would never have taken place; McDowell would have formed a junction with Gen. McClellan, then in front of Richmond; Richmond must have fallen, and Gen. Lee, instead of crushing Pope and advancing into Maryland, would have surrendered with Richmond or have been compelled to retreat through North Carolina, while the State would probably have risen against him at every step of the way. Now, to have presented these plans to the War Department, would, inasmuch as they were not acted upon, be a great crime in any man; but to present these plans and tell of it also is a crime too great to be horde, and it should be expected that any General guilty of
raising funds to supply the Confederate army with medicines, surgical instruments, &c., and to day he gives a dinner at the Grand Hotel in Paris to several leading Southerners and sympathizers, including Capt. Maffit, of the Florida. And, by the way, this terrible little destructive, in a condition better than new, will leave Brest in about ten days, to resume her mission on the mighty deep.--Maffit will have to remain some two months longer in the hands of the Paris doctors. Capt. Hartstein, of the Confederate Navy, is very ill at Munich. Lieuts, Morris, Campbell. Lee, and Barron, of the same service, are now in Paris waiting for a ship. Capt. Blakeley, who has just arrived from St. Petersburg, is much chagrined at the reported bursting of his "big gun," at Charleston. He ordered at once, by telegram, a brother to the monster to be made at once. No gun of that calibre, he says, can stand a high elevation; and for point blank work he thinks nothing can stand against them.
Depot Army Committee Y M C a,and Ladies'soldiers' Aid Society,Richmond, Nov. 19, 1863. The Army Committee of the Young Men's Christian Association of Richmond acknowledge the receipt of $4,190, contributed at a joint communion of the First and Second Presbyterian Churches of this city, for the benefit of the soldiers in Gen. Lee's army. This contribution will be supplied at once for the purchase of shoes and socks for our gallant soldiers, who are so much in need of them, We would also acknowledge the receipt of $18.50, for the relief of the poor of Richmond, from the Independent Turner Association of this city. Our noble soldiers will highly appreciate these generous contributions for themselves and families, [t] Wm P Munford, Chairman.