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The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1861., [Electronic resource], Camp Pickens — Company "H"--Justice to Capt. Beggs--Miscellaneous News. (search)
f this city, was about to be used at Fort Ellsworth, it was taken down and chopped to pieces last night by the parties who erected it. The roads leading out of the town are strictly guarded, and the utmost vigilance is practiced to guard against the holding of communication with the enemy. An Englishman who was traveling to his farm in Fairfax county, was detained while on the road, and returned to Washington to have his passports from the British Consul at Baltimore signed by Secretary Seward. The French Vice Consul for Richmond arrived here this afternoon en route for that city. The Inspector General inspected the five regiments now quartered in this vicinity this afternoon. From the upper Potomac. Hagerstown, June 26th. --Three deserters (Germans,) from Luzerne county--George Watchler, Conrad Voilmer and Jno. Santer-- of Col. Oakford's 14th Regiment of Pennsylvania, were brought back here to day by Chas W. Rossler, Chief of Police at Scranton.-- Fift
The real traitors. --The Concord (N. H.) Standard holds the following language: The real traitors who are responsible for the disruption of the American Union and the present civil war, are Wm, H. Seward, Abe Lincoln Hannibal Hamlin, Charles Sumner, Henry Wilson, John P. Hale, &c. They have accomplished the disastrous result by preaching abolitionism, denouncing union with slaveholders, and offering in Congress petitions for the dissolution of the Union. If there are any persons in this country who deserve the doom of traitors, they are these authors of our national calamities. And if this war continues three years, they will be obliged to flee their country or receive a traitor's fate. They have misled and deceived the people to the ruin of the country. And when the reaction takes place, as it surely will, popular vengeance will seek them for punishment. When disaster and suffering pervade the North, as they certainly will; when the people cry out under the burden of