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f the case and we may as well look it in the face. The Republican makes the following na ve admission in its com ts on affairs on West and affairs at ink What particular strategic importances may be we do not profess to have specially studied, but we believe it to be always good strategy to fight the enemy and whip him. That was a more general opinion before broke out than it is A whole camp Skedaddled, The New York Post states that about 9 o'clock on the morning of the 19th, the 30th and part of the New Jersey regiments, numbering about men who were in camp near Roseville., N. J. sc tions The Post says: The we sworn to on Thursday received their clothing yesterday, and "skedaddled" to day atte nly imploring the officers to give them a day or two of grace in town. The camp is near Newark, and the men effected a "strategic" movement down the bank of the canal to that city, choosing the shortest route. As they passed the guard the men seized the
won so much notoriety as General "Stonewall" Jackson. His first wife, as is well known, was the daughter of Dr. George Junkin, now of Philadelphia. Yellow Flyer at Key West. A letter to the New York Tribune, dated Key West, Fla. September 13th, says there is no abatement of yellow fever there. All the hospitals are filled and the vacancies made by death are quickly supplied by new cases. Dr. D. A. Lewis of Philadelphia superintendent of the hospitals, died of the fever on the 1st inst. The letter says: The military hospitals are quite ample in accommodation for both officers and soldiers, where they are made as comfortable as good nursing care, and situation can make them. Here however, a large preparation of the cases terminate fatality. Thus far not a women or child has died of fever. The general hospital at the barracks has one hundred and twenty sick, and some die here daily. There have recently died of fever three officers of the Ninetieth regiment N.
sachusetts, and Gov. Sprague, of Rhode Island, who manifested the most treasonable spirit under the pretence of negro philanthropy. Let a signal example be made. There is still room in Forts Lafayette and Warren. A Yankee Sketch of a rebel General. The Philadelphia Presbyterian gives a biography of Major General D. H. Hill of North Carolina. It says: In former days, General D. H. Hill was Professor of Mathematic in Davidson College, North Carolina, which position he left in 1850 to become Principal of the North Carolina Military Institute, at Charlotte. He was then familiarly known as "the Major,"having won that degree in the army of the United States, which be resigned to enter upon civil life. He was born in South Carolina, educated at West Point, and fought under General Scott Lom Vera Cruz to the city of Mexico, and hours still on his personal house honorable scars which he in the great contest. He is a small, slender man, with a quest, determined air; not q
nd that the real, hard, open fighting had been done by the South. So inve in this en ty to Northern men and the Northern character in General Hill, that it creeps out in unexpected places and in most remarkable ways. It would puzzle the ingenuity of most men to impart sectional feelings and prejudices into the neutral region of pure mathematics, but General Mill has succeeded in conveying covert sneers by algebraically symbols, and ting disparagement through mathematical problems. In 1857 the published a text book called the "Elements of Algebra" of which "T. J. Jackson," then "Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy in the Virginia Military Institute," new the famous rebel General, said, in a formal recommendation, that he "regarded it superior to any other north with which I am accumulated on the same branch of refence." In this book we find a number of problems, of which we give the following as temples. "A Yankee mixes a contain number of wooden nutmegs, whi
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