Hundreds were skating on the ice in the basin this morning;
but it thawed all day, and now looks like rain.
Yesterday the President vetoed a bill appropriating a
million dollars to clothe the Kentucky troops. The vote in the Senate, in an
effort to pass it nevertheless, was 12 to 10, not two-thirds. The President is
unyielding. If the new Conscription act before the House should become a law,
the President will have nearly all power in his hands. The act suspending the
writ of habeas corpus, before the Senate, if passed, will sufficiently
complete the Dictatorship.
Gen. Jos. E. Johnston writes in opposition to the
organization of more cavalry.
Mr. J. E. Murral, Mobile, Ala., writes Judge Campbell that a
party there has authority from the United States authorities to trade anything
but arms and ammunition for cotton.
Gen. Winder being directed to send Mr. Hirsh, a rich Jew, to
the conscript camp, says he gave him a passport to leave the Confederate States
some days ago, on the order of Judge Campbell, A. S. W. Col. Northrop says
supplies of meat have failed.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the
Confederate States Capital, Volume 2, p. 127-8
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