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panic which turned our victory into a retreat and the retreat into a rout, was a danger to which the enemy was as much exposed as we, but which fell to our bitter lot, apparently from circumstances which our General in command could not control. It is well known that the Abolitionists of this State goaded Charles Sumner into making the speech which preceded the Brooks difficulty. It is now known that Gen. Greeley goaded Abraham Lincoln into the unfortunate advance upon Richmond. Corporal Raymond, too, has done his part. And the New York World has not been behind its contemporaries in urging the citizen army into the Bull Run Trap. Will the people follow these cowards, who are sacrificing the national army for the sake of the sectional party? In future, let us follow Gen. Scott. Is it not time for Gen. Schenck to retire?--Have we not had just enough of him? Why not give him a post-office in a small town anywhere in Ohio? He is an unfit person to lead soldiers. His own
Black Republican opinion of the battle. Louisville, July 29. --Mr. Raymond, the editorial correspondent of the N. Y. Times, says that on Sunday last, while the battle of Stone Bridge, or Bull Run, near Manassas was being fought, he telegraphed to his paper that the three Federal columns were more that maintaining their grf their route to the scene of action. At the closes the battle, and partly in advance of the "double-quick" retrograde movements of McDowell's disordered forces, Raymond hastened to Washington and added a postscript to his previous dispatches, in which he fairly states the result of the battle. The telegraph censor in the WashingcDowell's disordered forces, Raymond hastened to Washington and added a postscript to his previous dispatches, in which he fairly states the result of the battle. The telegraph censor in the Washington Telegraph Office refused to allow the postscript to be sent — a least so states Mr. Raymond in the N. Y Times of Friday morning.