Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 26, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Pope or search for Pope in all documents.

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The release of Pope's officers. --The release and departure from this city of Pope's officers has been noticed. The Enquirer, of yesterday, thus explains the rm the highest military authority of the Yankee Government, that the orders of Gen. Pope, to which exception had been taken by President Davis, were no longer in forcur readers are doubtless aware of the ground upon which the close confinement of Pope's officers was placed. Our Government, always anxious to conduct this contest unt was purely a matter of retaliation, forced upon him by the infamous orders of Pope. When those orders were made inoperative, and repealed, the necessity for that , further that the Federal authorities have not only declared that the orders of Pope are not in force, out live communicated to our own authorities the additional fat in force, out live communicated to our own authorities the additional facts that Pope has been relieved from his command, and his troops assigned to other corps.
Yankee Perfidies. We are among the number of those who never had much faith in the cartel. We believed that, while we observed it, the Yankees would be sure to violate it. We understand they have picketed the State of Maryland, from Baltimore to Fredericktown, with the prisoners taken at Manassas, and discharged on parole. They proclaim through their papers their determination to send the Harper's Ferry prisoners to reinforce Pope. Of course this is a palpable violation of the spirit of the cartel, and we believe it is also a violation of the letter. At least we hope our commissioners were not guilty of so great an oversight as to omit a clause forbidding the paroled troops to serve anywhere, whether against us or not. If they did, then the cartel is a blank, for the Yankees can take the prisoners, as fast as we parole them, put them in their garrisons, and take the men whose places they supply for field service against us. The old Congress of the Revolution were a one tim
the above caption, appears in the editorial department of the American: Gen. Jos. E. Johnston has been assigned to a rebel command west of the Mississippi. This means business at the West. It means something different from the sort of campaigning indulged in by Pike, McCullough, Van-Dorn, Hindman, and their associates. Our Government is therefore required to reinforce Butler, to strengthen Cairo, and to look to it that the Mississippi is kept open and free from obstruction. General Pope telegraphs from the West that the Indians are more formidable than he anticipated and asks for authority to have two regiments of volunteers mounted to pursue the Indian war parties. Yankee Generals wounded. The following is a complete list of casualties among the Yankee general officers in the battles in Western Maryland: Major-General Hooker, wounded the foot; Major-General Sedgwick, wounded severely in three places; Major General Rodman, mortally wounded. Major-General