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affairs in the Southwest. The Grenada (Mississippi) Appeal is quoted as stating that a large number of Confederate troops have left Tupelo for Water Valley, some forty miles from Holly Springs. The division commanded by Gen. J. C. Breckinridge is said to have gone to Vicksburg and a considerable force of Mississippi troops to Richmond. Only about three thousand Confederates are reported as remaining at Grenada, from which place nearly all the Government stores had been removed. General Hindman has issued a proclamation addressed to the people of Arkansas, exhorting them to annoy the enemy in every possible way. "If the people do their part," he says, "the troops will do the rest." General Curtis is said to have abandoned all idea of attempting any further offensive operations in Arkansas. One account has it that he is hard pressed; that no relief has reached him, and that the whole country bordering on White river is up in arms. Another statement is that he has succeeded in
assembled at that point. Jackson, July 10.--General Van Dorn has issued a General Order No, 9, which places fifteen counties contiguous to Vicksburg and all of East Louisiana under martial law. It is declared that disloyalty will not be countenanced; the credit of the Government must be sustained; the seeds of discontent are not to be sown among the troops; speculators will not be tolerated, but be arrested and fined; newspapers will not publish the movements of troops under the penalty of suspension, fine and imprisonment. Passengers from Memphis say that Hindman has captured Curtis, and that the news was believed in Memphis. Mobile,July 12.--A special dispatch to the Advertiser, dated Jackson, 11th, states that the enemy were vigorously employed in shelling Vicksburg, effecting but little damage. The Yankees are pillaging the plantations on the river of horses mules, and everything else valuable. Negroes are impressed to work upon the canal across the river bend.