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p. Trumbull called its opponents conspirators. Bayard said the bill itself was a conspiracy against the Constitution. Doolittle said before they would allow an independent empire at the mouth of the Mississippi they would reduce Louisiana to what it was before we bought a territory of swamps and crocodiles. At 12 o'clock the Senate was pronounced adjourned, and immediately called to order in extra session. The House refused to admit Nevada and Colorado as States. Adjourned sine dis. Gen. Sigel has resigned because of insuperable difficulties in his intercourse with the Commander in Chief. The Mississippi fleet under Commander Porter, has Monitor gunboats Tuscumbia, 5 guns; Chillicothe, 2; Iron-clads Benton, 16; Carondolet, 13; Mound City, 13; Louisville, 13; ram Lafayette, 6; Eastport, 10; De Kelb, 13; Cincinnati, 13; Pittsburg 13; wooden gunboats Conestoga 9; Tyler, 9; Little Rebel, 2; Lexington, 9; Fragg, 5; Price 4; and 12 light draft "tin clad" boats, 6 guns each.
men at once than allow this war to run into another year. We trust that the next 4th of July will enable us to see clearly the end of it. Affairs in New York. A letter from New York, dated the 2d inst., says: The Yankee Dutch General Sigel, who arrived on Thursday, met his countrymen at Turn Hall and at the Metropolitan Assembly Rooms, on Saturday evening, making a speech to each assemblage, urging upon his Dutch friends to remain united in the support of the best Government on earth as the future of their native land depended upon the success of the Yankees in crushing the rebellion. He was most enthusiastically cheered. He was subsequently serenaded by about five hundred Dutch singers, when, with his wife, Sigel appeared at a window, and was cheered by about three thousand persons who had gone thither to get a glimpse of the hero of Pea Ridge and later fields. Work continues active at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The brig-of-war Perry went into commission on the