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ake going into Pennsylvania, and fears serious disaster if Lee does not immediately return. The tone of his letter was very disparaging. The other letters were unimportant. A rebel mail was also captured by Capt. Dahlgren, at the same time, with many letters, but none of special importance that threw much light on rebel operations. Miscellaneous. The Yankees say that in pressing Bragg in his retreat to Bridgeport they lost 1,000 men. The dates from Port Hudson are to the 1st inst. Banks's supplies were not cut off, and he was still bombarding the place. Gen. Morgan is in Kentucky. He set fire to Lebanon, Ky., on the 5th, and captured the 20th Kentucky (Yankee) regiment. Troops are being sent from Newbern, N. C, to Washington. And this is to defeat an army which the Yankees claim already to have defeated! A city officer of Norfolk. Va., has been thrown into prison by the military commandant. The City Council held a meeting about it on the 3d inst.
d been chosen as our line at first, or at least as soon as the movements of Grant it the rear of Vicksburg rendered it urgent that assistance should be sent to that garrison, the army of Tennessee would then have been in a position to reinforce Joe Johnston heavily. A telegram from Atlanta, dated the 4th, says: We have news by passengers from Bragg's army, which we deem reliable, that the most important movements are going on, and a fight is considered imminent. We are confident that Morgan has done a grand work in Rosecrans's rear — destroying his trains of supplies, cutting off detachments, &c. We have reason to fear that the Yankee cavalry are making demonstrations, and perhaps attempting a raid through North Alabama upon Northeast Georgia. It was reported last evening that Rosecrans is falling back, and Bragg sending heavy forces back to Tullahoma. There has been no raid on the East Tennessee roads since Sam. Carter's raid on Knoxville. The bridges over Mossy Creek a