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, the Bank was ordered to pay all their depositors, upon demand, in such money, and according to the provisions of Butler's general order No. 30, which we published a few days since. The bells which were taken from the churches by the order of Beauregard were shipped to New York on Thursday last in the ship North America, by order of Gen. Butler. The Delta wants them united in one casting and placed on the roof of Faneulls Hall. Butler gives notice that the chief of subsistence will sell to fnteresting: Hon. Pierre Soule, former U. S. Senate, and Provost Marshal of the city, had been arrested on a high political charge, and would probably be sent North. The organ of Butler was exulting over the prospect of Halleck getting Beauregard hemmed in so that there would be no chance for him to escape, and then lating his army. The originally about the currency was a great obstacle to trade, but the papers report the gradual arrival of provisions. The True Delta reports t
ne 6.--Colonel Noble, commanding at this post, with nearly his entire command, are under marching orders for down the river, and will leave to-morrow. From Beauregard. The only reference in the Herald, of Saturday, to the command of Gen, Beauregard, is the following: The rebel armies of the Southwest, concentrated iBeauregard, is the following: The rebel armies of the Southwest, concentrated into the army of Beauregard, appear to have become so disheartened and demoralized and broken up, with his evacuation of Corinth, as to justify the conclusion that he will never be able to rally together again for battle fifty thousand of his late imposing force of one hundred and twenty thousand men. From Fremont. The neBeauregard, appear to have become so disheartened and demoralized and broken up, with his evacuation of Corinth, as to justify the conclusion that he will never be able to rally together again for battle fifty thousand of his late imposing force of one hundred and twenty thousand men. From Fremont. The news from Gen. Fremont's division yesterday reports the enemy at Mt. Jackson, with the Shenandoah river swollen so fearfully as to render pursuit of the rebels for the time impossible. The pontoon bridge, constructed to supply the place of the one burned by the rebels, was swept away, but the materials were all recovered.
bodies of troops in Georgia and South Carolina. A country cannot be said to be conquered which not armies such as there, amounting, as it is asserted to 400000 man in the field.--Again, they have the Merrimac which for the moment holds the command of the littles sphere in which she moves. If at any moment the genius of a great General were developed in any of these command, the whole fortune of the war might, no doubt be yet reversed. But there is no decisive genius on either side. Beauregard came near to it, but be was a day too late at Corinth; Buchanan came quite up to it for that one moment when he took out the Merrimac, but he was wounded. That power of wielding division of troops as a Cyclops wields his hammer, and striking blow after blow with them in standing successor has not been revealed to the American Generals — It is true, that the war has shows that mere land armies are useless against armies supported by gunboats. But the Southerns say that a season is coming
ancy to endure these terrible sufferings rather than give in. If they have, and of course, they never can be conquered.--There are histories without end of natures deserting their sea- coasts, leaving their plains, retiring from their rivers, holding their own in their mountains, and retaining their independence at last; and, if the Southerners have but the endurance of which it would be easy to cite a hundred instances, they may well laugh the idea of subjugation to scorn. But they have sometimes talked so loudly and acted so feebly — as in this case of Now Orleans — that we are not certain that words really do mean fact. It is impossible to deny what the Southern press says — that they have a great front of battle still unsure on. There is Beauregard at Corinth with a great army which has shown it can fight, and which he has shown himself able to lead.--There is Johnston face to face with McClellan at Yorktown. There is Jackson in the Valley of the Shenandoah. There are ot
e ships of the world, while the South is completely shut out. The surprise that the Confederates retreat, but that they make front at all. The London Times thinks that Gen. Butler's rule at New Orleans is exceedingly severe and harsh, and calculated to make the raising of the blockade there valueless. The London Morning Post is very bitter on Gen. Butler's proclamation, and says that not even the Austrians or Russians ever issued more severe decrees. The Post says if Davis and Beauregard can inflict defeat on the Federals the independence of the South will be achieved. If they are overcome, the South may be considered vanquished. The London Daily News regards the abandonment of Norfolk and destruction of the Merrimac as of great importance, and that it proves the resignation by the Confederates of the contest . Two ships are up for New Orleans at Liverpool. Sir L. "Pachepolle" had given notice in the Commons he would call attention to the destruction of cot
The Daily Dispatch: June 11, 1862., [Electronic resource], List of casualties of the 23d meet. (search)
honored, never having belonged to the regiment, and who was at the time of the battle very quietly residing in Montgomery. In the list of prisoners we find some half a dozen names of prisoners belonging to the 8th. Instead of 4,500 the Herald now gives the number at 280. The list of their killed and wounded has reached forty-eight hundred, and the "Union victory" is spoken of in doubtful terms. No mention is made of the capture of Price and his army, nor of the late disaster to General Beauregard--hence we may conclude, until better evidence is brought out, that Halleck's dispatches to the War Department at Washington was an unqualified lie, and on a par with those pleasant little fictions he wrote about Shiloh and Island No.10. One admirable point about the Herald is, that it never contradicts, but allows its Manichaean tales to go on from day to days as if the whole country believed them.--Its audacity is perfectly refreshing. Illustrative of the gullibility of the Yankees,