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y. Measures have been taken to resist the capture of the place, which we hope will prove successful. The Yankees have certainly been at Lexington; but the report that they burnt the Military Institute is without foundation. Forrest and Morgan at work. Official information was received on Saturday from Gen. S. D. Lee that a column of the enemy, 13,000 strong, had left Memphis, and was moving towards the rich prairie region of Mississippi. The press telegram, which we publish this morning, gives the cheering intelligence that this movement has been meet and successfully defeated by Gen. Forrest. The Northern news informs us that Gen. John H. Morgan is again on the war path, and moving with success through Kentucky. This agrees with information we had previously received through Southern channels. Casualties. List of killed, wounded and missing in Lieut. Col. R. A. Hardaway's Battalion of Light Artillery, 2d Corps, Army of Northern Virginia, in the engageme
h, one piece of linen handkerchiefs, one box of candles, &c. The goods recovered were identified before the Mayor by Mr. Jacobson as part of the lot stolen from his dry goods store, No. 87 Main street, about two weeks since. They were mostly packed away in a fine leather trunk, marked "Charles Wenzell, M. D., Charleston, S. C." Before deciding the case, Macklin, by permission of the Mayor, stated that the room was not his; it was rented by a big yellow negro named Peter Clark, an attache of Morgan's faro bank, who permitted him on certain occasions, when it was not otherwise used, to sleep there. The trunk was in the room when he first went there, and Peter had repeatedly warned him against touching or making any inquiries about it. He was remanded for indictment by the Grand Jury of the Hustings Court. Tom, slave of Major Walten Ballard, arrested at five o'clock Saturday morning with seven pieces of bacon, which he had in a bag, was ordered to be well whipped. A similar punish
The Daily Dispatch: June 13, 1864., [Electronic resource], From Staunton — further particulars of the late fight. (search)
ssociation.]late from the North. Petersburg, June 11. --The New York Herald, of the 9th, has been received. Abe Lincoln and Andy Johnson were nominated by the Baltimore Convention on the 8th inst. The Herald thinks that the ticket will have a hard road to travel. The 11th resolution of the Convention declares for the maintenance of the Monroe Doctrine. A victory is claimed for Hunter in the Valley, but the information is gathered exclusively from Southern sources. Morgan captured Mount Sterling, Ky., on the 8th, destroyed the bridges, tore up the track of the Kentucky Central Railroad between Cynthiana and Paris, captured a passenger train, occupied Paris, and destroyed an important trestle work at that point. His forces are estimated at 2,500. The Herald pitches into the Times, of Tuesday, for the publication of a long account of the battle of the 3d between Lee and Grant. The Times claims that it was the most important battle of the war, confess