Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 6, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Cavour or search for Cavour in all documents.

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Count Cavour and the Mortara case. --The Secretary of the Universal Israelite Alliance, of London, has received the following letter from Count Cavour: Turin, Oct. 3, 1860. Sir: I have received the letter which you have addressed me in the name of the Society of the Universal Israelite Alliance, soliciting the aidCount Cavour: Turin, Oct. 3, 1860. Sir: I have received the letter which you have addressed me in the name of the Society of the Universal Israelite Alliance, soliciting the aid of the King's government in the steps which the father of the young Mortara is taking in order to recover his child from the convent in which he is at present retained. Persuaded of the justice of M. Mortara's demands, I have the honor to assure you, sir, that the King's government will do all in its power that this child, in whsure you, sir, that the King's government will do all in its power that this child, in whom the public opinion of Europe is so strongly interested, may be restored to his family. Be good enough I beg you, to acquaint the members of the Jewish Society of these intentions of the government of the King, and receive, &c. Cavour.
Count Cavour. The Zurich correspondent of the New York Journal of Commerce refers to the emphatic declaration of Count Cavour before the Sardinian Parliament, that neither in any public act, nor in any private negotiation, nor in any conference or convention, was a demand or even an allusion ever made that Piedmont should beCount Cavour before the Sardinian Parliament, that neither in any public act, nor in any private negotiation, nor in any conference or convention, was a demand or even an allusion ever made that Piedmont should be required to cede a foot's breadth of Italian territory. This declaration does not shed any new light on the much talked of matter of another cession to France. Count Cavour, says the correspondent, like all diplomatists, knows how to disguise truth; his assurances are not worth a straw. Last year he gave just as positive assurf Italian territory. This declaration does not shed any new light on the much talked of matter of another cession to France. Count Cavour, says the correspondent, like all diplomatists, knows how to disguise truth; his assurances are not worth a straw. Last year he gave just as positive assurances in regard to Nice and Savoy.