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The Daily Dispatch: July 2, 1863., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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h their feet swollen and bleeding. The Yankee paper says the scene was "enough to touch the most obdurate heart." It has no word of sympathy for the white refugee. The latest from Harrisburg. A dispatch from Harrisburg, dated the 26th, says matters are more quiet there. The rebels were still in the vicinity of Carlisle, but moving slowly, because (the Yankees say) they are stopping to seize horses and mount their infantry, and thus facilitate their retreat in case of a disaster. Gen. Kuipe estimates the force of the rebels at 10,000 strong, and evacuated Carlisle because he was not strong enough to meet that number. General W. F. Smith commanded the Yankees on the South side of the Susquehanna. The work on the fortifications is progressing rapidly, and the citizens are organizing into companies to serve in the rifle pits. Four companies of heavy artillery had arrived from Rochester, N. Y.--They had enlisted for the war. It had been raining in Harrisburg for 18 hours, and