Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 20, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Paris or search for Paris in all documents.

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f urging France to take the chestnuts out of the fire. The country may not generally be aware that there is at this moment an agent of the French Emperor traveling in the South, by the name of Barouche. He is instructed to say that he is simply collecting information for the Commercial Bureau, for the Minister of Public Works; but this artifice is too transparent to deceive the most credulous. He is a political more than he is a commercial agent, and his dispatches, regularly forwarded to Paris, necessarily exercise great influence over the mind of the Emperor. What may be the final conclusions of France, whether she will think it her interests to play into the hands of the revolutionary party in the South, remains to be seen. Our Government are preparing for such an emergency, and it were better for the leading Powers in question to reflect long and deeply before they take steps which may involve them in consequences they little dream of perhaps at this moment. It is beginn
Brooks and Billy Wilson. Brooks, of the New York Express, referring to the departure, for the South, of Billy Wilson's ruffian regiment, whose motto is plunder and ravishment, says: "We congratulate them upon the near prospect of exchanging the quiet shores of Staten Island for regions within hailing distance of the dominions of Jeff. Davis." A man who sends his wife to Paris, and installs a courtesan in her place, in his own house, may well afford to patronize Billy Wilson's regiment, and deserves to be at least a Corporal in it.