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The Daily Dispatch: October 2, 1863., [Electronic resource], An attempt to discover a murderer by photography. (search)
re can be no doubt of his success. If the Yankees have the overwhelming force of which they boast, why is it necessary to deplete one army in order to strengthen another? In order to reinforce Rosecrans, also, they are stripping the whole lower country of troops, thereby exposing it to reoccupation by our troops. Why all this, if they have the hosts they pretend to have? The fact is their mighty armies are, for the most part, "men in buckram." They exist nowhere but in the imagination of Seward and their editors. Their real strength is not greatly superior to ours. Our people, when they feel a disposition to despond, should think on these things. They should reflect that if they are straitened, the Yankees are They should observe that they strengthen one army without weakening another, or overrun one part of the country without abandoning its equivalent somewhere else. When the first Cabinet of Gen. Jackson exploded, a caricature was published well known at the time