Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Cairo, Ill. (Illinois, United States) or search for Cairo, Ill. (Illinois, United States) in all documents.

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ied in Winchester, Va., on the 18th June, to Miss Louisa Victoria Wilden. The Fredericksburg News well says that "the very readers who are clamorous for news are among the first to condemn the papers which publish everything!" Capt. A. S. Hamilton, of the Floyd (Ga.) Sharp Shooters, was married to Miss Sallie Bowen two hours before leaving home with his command for Virginia. The printer in Colonel Seems' Georgia regiment, now stationed near Brunswick, have established a journal called the "Georgia Regimental Journal." That was a fearful joke of Lord Norbury's, in sentencing to death a thief who had stolen a watch: "You made a grasp at time, my lad, but you clutched eternity!" It is stated that Mr. Wm. H. Russell, of the London Times, visited the Federal forces at Cairo on the 20th June, made a non-committed speech, and complimented the military. The daily issue of the Mobile Mercury is discontinued. The Mercury will henceforth be published once a week.
The telegraph, falsifying as it has usually done since it has been arbitratively controlled by the abolition authorities in the North, advised that Mr. Russell, the celebrated London letter writer, had made a speech on his arrival at Cairo, in which he contrasted the Northern forces with those he had seen in the South, in a manner very complimentary to the former. This is all gammon, as the following from the abolition correspondent of the St. Louis Democrat, writing from Cairo shows: Cairo shows: W. H. Russell, the correspondent of the London Times, arrived here last evening from the South. He is very distant and reserved in regard to making any statements of the force or movements of the Southern rebels. The officers and troops here show a marked coolness of attention to him, and, in fact, very little courtesy. He is accused of having cottoned too much to the Southern rebellion, and has lost his influence and the respect which attached to him before he made his Southern tou
A New Orleans Collector. --It is stated that Lincoln has appointed a Collector for the port of New Orleans-- W. D. Gallagher by name — and that he will accompany the "grand army" from Cairo on the march southward. A contemporary well remarks that Gallagher stands a much better chance for a collectorship of some port on the Styx than he does for that of New Orleans.
kson, Mo., fifteen miles back of Cape Girardeau. The steamer City of Alton, with 1,000 troops and two six-pounders, left Cairo on Saturday night, with sealed orders, understood to be destined for Cape Girardeau. The Alton proceeded to Commerce, Missouri, ten miles below Cape Girardeau, which latter is about fifty miles above Cairo. Persons started from Commerce immediately on the arrival of the troops at Commerce, to prevent the surprise of the State troops. The Federal troops took only twast accounts had not returned. From a passenger who reached the city last night, on the steamer Conway, and who left Cairo on yesterday, we learn that a report had reached that place, that the steamer City of Alton had been captured at Cape Gird at Cape Girardeau, together with 500 prisoners. The report is believed to be entirely correct, as it is well known that much uneasiness was felt at Cairo on Monday night, on account of the nonappearance of the steamer City of Alton and her crew.