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t's old army, and so called after the Tennessee river, up which it moved last year to Shiloh — He does not rank Thomas, the commander of the Army of the Cumberland, as some writers have stated, nor Burnside, who commands the Army of the Ohio, nor Hooker, who brought out two (not three) corps d'armee from the Army of the Potomac. Hooker's reinforcements will not exceed twelve thousand men, which, added to Sherman's column of 20,000, makes the total reinforcements sent to Thomas 32,000 fighting mHooker's reinforcements will not exceed twelve thousand men, which, added to Sherman's column of 20,000, makes the total reinforcements sent to Thomas 32,000 fighting men. Estimating Thomas's army at 50,000, Gen. Grant, the Commander in Chief of all these forces, will have an army for the invasion of Georgia of 82,000 men, exclusive of cavalry. Burnside will not be permitted to join this formidable force, at least for the present. The enemy has not yet rebuilt the railway bridge over the Tennessee at Bridgeport, nor the bridge over Running Water Creek, between Spellbound and Brown's ferry. This latter bridge is 120 feet high, and is represented to be a
Later from the North. We have received, through the Agent of the Press Association, the following summary of news from the Baltimore Gazette of the 18th and 19th inst: A Chattanooga dispatch, dated Monday, says the Confederate battery on Lookout Mountain had worked vigorously all day, alternately shelling Hooker's camp, Moccasin Point, and the Chattanooga camps. Shells were also occasionally thrown into the town, but the fire had resulted in no casualties. Gen. Sherman has made a junction of his entire corps with Gen. Grant's right. The Washington Star, of the 18th, has information of the advance of Longstreet upon Burnside, and presumes that the latter has withdrawn from London and other exposed points and concentrated at Knoxville. The Star thinks the rebels will find it a difficult job to rid themselves of Burnside. Gold in New York had advanced to 149 with an upward tendency. Later from Europe. Four days later news from Europe has been received by