Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 16, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for David Thomas or search for David Thomas in all documents.

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ate, and financial report of F. Ward of the Baltimore Advocate, were referred to the Committee on Baltimore Advocate John Lanahan said that he had signed the report of the Publishing Committee as a business paper. At 10 o'clock, on motion, the order of the day was taken up. The time allowed for speaking on the slavery of marital was extended to 30 minutes. The following questions were propounded by the Bishop, in writing, and answered by him in the same way: Sr. David Thomas — Is there anything in the new Discipline which would be a bar to the ordination of a local Preacher holding slaves? Answer — There is not, in my judgment. N. J. B. Morgan.--Is there anything in the Discipline to prevent the reception of slave holding members into the Church? Answer — In my judgment, there is not Rev. Mr. J. W. Start.--Is there anything in the Discipline to justify an administrator in arguing and expelling a slaveholder from the Church? Answer —
and successful as a schoolmaster, he had a great taste for polite letters, as he translated the Satires of Perseus into prose, and the "Philoctetes"of Sophocles into verse. Born in 1684, this eminent Irishman died in 1738. The second, also Thomas, was son of the above: born in 1721, at Quilca, in Ireland, educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Dublin, and led by wayward taste into the theatrical profession, in which he succeeded, being, indeed, a formidable rival to Garrick aands, to have taken wing, in length, in the brilliant form of the Rivals. Next came Richard Brinsley Sheridan, second son of the player, and this lady dramatist. -- Born at Dublin, in September, 1752, he died in 1816. He left two sons — Thomas, a man of great ability, and (by his second marriage) Charles, a poet, whom the writer of this knew very well, for his death took place only a few years ago. He was Sheridan's son by the second wife, Miss Ogle, and had none of the hereditary good