Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 18, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for McClellan or search for McClellan in all documents.

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od soldiers, and so far outnumber us that even inferior valor might be compensated by superior strength. But nothing can compensate the vast superiority of talent on our side. The Yankees have no General who is at all equal to even those officers who are not ranked higher than third rate with us. As for those of the first class, their whole military, put into one mass and boiled down, would not furnish an amalgam that could be compared to the most indifferent of them. How many Popes and McClellan would be take to make one Lee or Jackson? This superiority of the Southern mind on the Northern was felt in the war of the Revolution and continued to be felt as long as the two sections constituted one people. The North felt it, if it did not acknowledge it, and experienced in the presence of the South the same uneasy feeling which Shakespeare makes Augustus confess that he felt in the presence of Auguste. The North was over-crowed by the South, and felt itself compelled to submit
From the North. We continue our extracts from late Northern papers, McClellan denies failure to send Pope supplies, in Saturday's Journal of Commer The Washington Star, of the 10th September, denounces Pope's report as false, mischievous, &c., and says it is verbatim the letter of the New York Time's correspondent. The New York Herald of Saturday, 11th says our forces been gone to Hager town on their way to Chambersburg, Pa., Our cavalry have been to Havre de Grace A. New York Herald, c the imbecility that has marked the course of the Government. The N. Y. Times, trims its sails to me of the storm of indignation that sweeps over the North with all the adroitness of an experienced navigator, and forgetting its denunciation of McClellan three or four days ago, scuds before the wind ahead of all other craft on the new tack. From its eleventh-hour convictions we extract the following: In a word, the battles of the last year — the conflicts in front of Richmond, the retreat
Yankee engines --There are now at the York River Railroad depot two very fine Yankee railroad engines, the Exeter and Spark, which with some slight repairs, can be made available in a more creditable business than hauling supplies to McClellan's played out "Army of the Potomac." When Gen. Stuart's cavalry made its detour in rear of McClellan's army, he found the above engines on the road above the White House, abandoned by their possessors, and not injured. For fear they would carry themble in a more creditable business than hauling supplies to McClellan's played out "Army of the Potomac." When Gen. Stuart's cavalry made its detour in rear of McClellan's army, he found the above engines on the road above the White House, abandoned by their possessors, and not injured. For fear they would carry them off, his men disabled them. Afterwards, the Yankees burned off the wood work and threw, the connecting rods in the river. Save these injuries, the machines are as good as ever.