Mobile Register
Page 2
Letter
from
[From Our Own Correspondent]
We had another good, old fashioned rain and blow this morning. The weather is delightful and there are plenty here to enjoy it.
The excitement of the last two or three days has in a measure subsided. Whether there was any cause for it or not, it has had one good effect—to arouse the people to preparation and vigilance.
The State Artillery were out again this evening, exercising with their battery shot and blank cartridge firing. Their horses are in fine condition and behave handsomely on the field. Lieutenant Howard has for several days past been experimenting at anchored target, with his 42 pounder battery, with the most decided success. They throw with great accuracy nearly to the opposite shore, a distance of four miles.
For
a week past, the vessels of our neighbors have displayed nightly signals, which
we have been unable to interpret. They
are probably of the newly adopted code, intended to take the place of the
lighthouse, long ago abolished at this point.
There is seldom, however, an arrival among them by night. Either the Vanderbilt or
Several
Mobilians have arrived since my last. I find registered at the Bedell
House the names of Mr. Riley, of the house of Riley & Anderson; Mr. Phillip
LaValle, of the Tribune office; Mr. Thompson, Capt.
Jo. Lee and Louis Vernenville, and Mr. Thompson, of
Company B, of the Continentals. Mr.
Chas. LeBaron, of your city, returns home to-night,
having spent a week with his kinsmen and old friends, in
Lober, the man that swam from
The mule that
followed the example of Lober, in swimming from
Capt. Wood, Capt. O’Bannon and several other officers are in the city this evening.