Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 13, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for George Sumner or search for George Sumner in all documents.

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officer commanding them is said to have killed three rebels with a revolving rifle, and on approaching our stockade found it occupied by rebels, but six of our men being in it when they were overpowered by the enemy. Miscellaneous. George Sumner, brother of Senator Sumner, of Massachusetts, died in Boston on Tuesday. Vice-President Hamlin is raising a cavalry regiment for his son to command. A line of steamships between San Francisco and Japan is forming. The Boston coSenator Sumner, of Massachusetts, died in Boston on Tuesday. Vice-President Hamlin is raising a cavalry regiment for his son to command. A line of steamships between San Francisco and Japan is forming. The Boston coal dealers have put up the price of coal to $11 a ton. On Wednesday 777 bales of cotton, captured on board the steamer Kate Dale, were told in Philadelphia at prices ranging from 30 ⅓ to 92 ½ cents per lb. Eighteen of the colored waiters of the Delavan House, in Albany, were drafted, Sixteen of them took the skedaddler' railroad for Canada. The total exports of ice for the year from Boston amount to 58,791 tons, against 57,542 during the same period in 1863. A terrible gale s
ourie, Scotland, and referred at considerable length to the American question. He justified England in recognizing the Confederates as belligerents, and answered some imputations brought by the people of the North, particularly the speech of Senator Sumner. He also replied to the complaint of the South in regard to the recognition of the blockade, and asserted that although self-interest demanded that England should break it she prefers the course of honor, as it would have been infamous to br but would not yield one jot of its right to the menace of foreign powers. He complimented the Federal Government and Mr. Seward upon the fairness with which they discussed the matters of difference, but said there were others, including Senator Sumner, who had acted differently. He denounced the efforts of those who sought to create trouble between America and Europe, and with expressions of friendship towards America he asserted that all his efforts would be to maintain peace. Spea