Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 18, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Rosecrans or search for Rosecrans in all documents.

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ving had an engagement on the day when, according to a rebel telegram, it was alleged he was replaced. A skirmish between a party of sixty mounted rebels and a detachment of Union troops occurred on Tuesday, between Franklin and Woodburn, Ky., on the railroad, in which the former were routed and driven back, our forces still pursuing them at last accounts on that night. The rebels in front of Murfreesboro', Tenn., continue to exhibit symptoms of activity, which keep the army of Gen. Rosecrans on the qui vive. . The cavalry of the enemy is constantly changing its position. The rebel Generals Morgan and Wheeler are said to be at Liberty and Alexandria, with a force of 5,000 cavalry, and are supposed to be meditating an attack on Nashville. With regard to the case of the Hon. C. L. Vallandigham, recently on trial by Court-Martial at Cincinnati, on a charge of using "treasonable" language at a public meeting at which two military officers, disguised as civilians. reported
Tennessee. --The Winchester Bulletin, alluding to the order of Rosecrans to send all beyond his lines who refuse to take the oath of allegiance, says: Mr. Wheless is in our town, having succeeded, under cover of night, in escaping to a land of freedom. He was to have been sent North. Dr. Watson and Ex-Governor Neil S. Brown have arrived at Columbia, having refused to take the oath. About seventy-five of the most prominent citizens of Nashville are honored with a place in the penitentiary. Many other citizens are being sent North.