Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 13, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Mayor or search for Mayor in all documents.

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ing that policy of non-intervention; and are we at this time, now we have borne all the distress--[A voice: "Is it over?" Another voice: "Surat!"--now that we know we can do without their cotton--[A voice: "Surat! I hope you have got plenty."] Mr. Mayor, now we have borne all these things--[A voice: "Sit th' drawn!"]--now that they, the Southerners, find their cause to be desperate, they are rising in favor of the glorious cause of slavery. They come by a side wind; they want, by false assumpablish--[uproar]--despotism, degradation--[Uproar. A voice: "Sit th' drawn, own lad?" Laughter. The Mayor: "Cut it short, Mr. Ashton." A voice: "Sit th' drawn a bit.". Laughter. At this point the audience indulged in a general conversation. Mr. Mayor and gentlemen! [Gie o'er — gie o'er!"] the Southern sympathizers are now seeking to ally England with France and other Powers to save the slaveholding Confederacy, that boasts that they trample under foot liberty, equality, and fraternity! ["O