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conscience. The rebels still hold out and refuse to submit and take the oath of allegiance. or their obstinacy General Wool maintains the blockade. If they desire starvation in preference to Yankee notions and the protection the Government om Fortress Monroe. Fortress Monroe May 27th. --The Norfolk Day Book, which was allowed to continue its issue by Gen. Wool, after the occupation of Norfolk by the United States forces, on condition that it should be respectful in its tone, was at proper strategic points, and by a deliberate combination of his own movements with those of McDowell, Banks, Fremont, Wool, and Burnside. Daily he makes progress. Nearer and nearer come the colossal hosts, and at any moment we may have tiding ton and Ohio Railroad, and, in some degree, threatening the line of their retreat by the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad.--Wool at Norfolk and Suffolk; and Burnside, or his influence, felt in Goldsboro', Weldon and Raleigh. If the railroad gap betwe