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e at 6 o'clock A. M., on the 10th. The rebels have cut the Northern Central Railway, fifteen miles from Baltimore. The Baltimore and Ohio railroad is greatly damaged. Most of the rolling stock has been sent to Philadelphia. The dispatches say there are some encouraging features which it is not prudent to publish. The Ashland Don. Works, fourteen miles from Baltimore, have been destroyed. Dispatches, dated at 8 o'clock P. M. on the 10th, say the rebel cavalry are all over Baltimore county, but it is not feared that they will enter the city. Sullivan's advance guard, of Sumter's command, is reported to have captured Martinsburg, numerous stores, and a number of prisoners — Telegrams from Harrisburg say the rebel force numbers forty thousand. Gov. Cartin telegraphed the Mayor of Philadelphia that the people were not responding freely, and says the authorities at Washington to-day have authorized men to be mustered in by companies, which yesterday they refused perempt
ghters of certain city Judges, who were jubilant at the approach of their friends. Others propose to put in prison fifty prominent secessionists as hostages for any prisoners the Confederates may have carried off. The other suggestions are fully as barbarous as these two. The American favors these plans, and says: On what principle of equity, we should like to know, does Robert Gilmore, father of the notorious Harry, keep a rendezvous for traitors at Glen Ellen, in the heart of Baltimore county, from which, as from the robbers' castles of old along the Rhine, Issue forth rebel guerillas, to steal horses and purses, burn railroad bridges and Union people's houses? Such a haunt would not be tolerated in any other land. It would be razed to the ground by the military authorities. The people have not acted up many impulse of righteous vengeance in this matter. Gov. Brown's and Ishmael Day's houses are in ruins; but Glen Ellen, the rendezvous of traitors, still stands. In some
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