Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 22, 1861.., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for J. W. Tucker or search for J. W. Tucker in all documents.

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Very interesting. --The Richmond correspondent of the Columbia Guardian furnishes the following incident of the return of the late United States Consul to Liverpool: Rev. Tucker arrived in town day before yesterday direct from Paris via London and Liverpool. He came to Canada and by way of Detroit and Indianapolis, through Kentucky and Tennessee, meeting with some droll adventures on route. Assuming another name, he had no sooner landed in Quebec than he stumbled upon old Giddings,ebec than he stumbled upon old Giddings, to whom he was perfectly well known in Washington. "How d'ye do, Mr. Tucker," said the old wretch. "Oh — ah," said Rev.," staring him directly in the face, and speaking in a broad English drawl, "Weally, my dear sir, you mistake the individually." "I beg pardon, " said Giddings, whereupon Rev. walked off and saw no more of the Consul to Canada. Had he betrayed his identity by a moment's forgetfulness, Giddings would have had him arrested at Detroit.
lling him and his company of regulars to join his regiment, the 2d U. S. Infantry, at Washington. Respectable authority says Colonel Siegel will be promoted to be a Brigadier General. The train on the North Missouri Railroad, conveying a detachment of Colonel Smith's Regiment of Zouaves, were fired into yesterday from the woods skirting the road twenty miles above St. Charles, and two troops severely wounded. The report that Senator Green had violated his parole is untrue. J. W. Tucker, the late editor of the State Journal, is making violent Secession speeches in the country. Colonel Steifit, of the 5th Regiment of reserve corps, arrived from Lexington to-day, and reports having captured 200 kegs of powder, 30 muskets, 1 cannon, a quantity of machinery for boring, and a mould for casting cannon, and several other contraband articles. Orders have been issued prohibiting steamers from passing Jefferson City unless they have the American flag flying. St. Louis,