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From Maryland.all quiet at Hagerstown. Martinsburg July 9. --Our army is at Hagerstown. All quiet there to-day. A cavalry skirmish took place yesterday. There is no information of the whereabouts of the Yankee army. Maryland Heights have been reoccupied by a small force of the enemy. An ordnance train has just passed on the way to Gen. Lee, who is waiting for it.
igh, which, besides bursting her 15-inch gun, had her engine damaged, and this afternoon the tugboat James F Freeborn, Capt. Waring, tows her to New York for repairs. The following vessels constituted the naval force under the command of Rear Admiral S. P. Lee, in the James river:. Monitor battery Lehigh, Captain Howell; monitor battery Sangainon, Captain Nicholson, gunboat Mabaska, Captain J. B. Creighton; gunboat Morse, Capt. Babcock; gunboat Commodore Birney, Lieutenant Lamson; gunboat ides mortar boats, a land force is essential to attack the rear of the fort; and in the opinion of several prominent and experienced officers this mode is about the only practicable one to get possession of this rebel Gibraltar. The reason of Admiral Lee's advance may have had a very important object, and succeeded admirably, but beyond the capture of an unoccupied fortification and a sail up the river we have not heard of any more practical results. Don't want to fight. A Washington
Yankee raids. --Now that Meade's army of hirelings is again on Virginia soil and said to be advancing in this direction, it is highly important that the entire militia of the adjoining counties should be thoroughly organized and equipped, ready at a given signal to assemble and chastise those hands of raiders that will surely be sent out to destroy railroad communication and devastate the country, if not to sack and burn Richmond. Without the aid of any portion of Gen. Lee's army the militia are abundantly able to repel any assault that the Yankees are likely to make on works of internal improvement, and if every man will but do his duty Yankee raids for the future will do but little damage.
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