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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 23, 1861., [Electronic resource].

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November 14th, 1861 AD (search for this): article 1
Ran away--$100 reward. --Ran away from the Batteries in Manchester, on or about the 31 September less, a Negro Boy, named John — calls himself John Alvis, the property of Mr. Rebecca Robinson. Said negro is about 18 or 19 years of age, 5 feet 8 or 9 inches high, brown complexion thick lip and very sullen looking.--He is supposed to be in the neighborhood of Richmond or at some of the encampments below Richmond. $23 will be paid for his delivery to the I taken in the city or any of the counties $50 taken in any other part of States or $100 if taken out of the State. Samuel Hastings. Richmond, Nov. 14, 1861. no z0 — d6t&cw
September 31st (search for this): article 1
Ran away--$100 reward. --Ran away from the Batteries in Manchester, on or about the 31 September less, a Negro Boy, named John — calls himself John Alvis, the property of Mr. Rebecca Robinson. Said negro is about 18 or 19 years of age, 5 feet 8 or 9 inches high, brown complexion thick lip and very sullen looking.--He is supposed to be in the neighborhood of Richmond or at some of the encampments below Richmond. $23 will be paid for his delivery to the I taken in the city or any of the counties $50 taken in any other part of States or $100 if taken out of the State. Samuel Hastings. Richmond, Nov. 14, 1861. no z0 — d6t&cw
Samuel Hastings (search for this): article 1
Ran away--$100 reward. --Ran away from the Batteries in Manchester, on or about the 31 September less, a Negro Boy, named John — calls himself John Alvis, the property of Mr. Rebecca Robinson. Said negro is about 18 or 19 years of age, 5 feet 8 or 9 inches high, brown complexion thick lip and very sullen looking.--He is supposed to be in the neighborhood of Richmond or at some of the encampments below Richmond. $23 will be paid for his delivery to the I taken in the city or any of the counties $50 taken in any other part of States or $100 if taken out of the State. Samuel Hastings. Richmond, Nov. 14, 1861. no z0 — d6t&cw
John Alvis (search for this): article 1
Ran away--$100 reward. --Ran away from the Batteries in Manchester, on or about the 31 September less, a Negro Boy, named John — calls himself John Alvis, the property of Mr. Rebecca Robinson. Said negro is about 18 or 19 years of age, 5 feet 8 or 9 inches high, brown complexion thick lip and very sullen looking.--He is supposed to be in the neighborhood of Richmond or at some of the encampments below Richmond. $23 will be paid for his delivery to the I taken in the city or any of the counties $50 taken in any other part of States or $100 if taken out of the State. Samuel Hastings. Richmond, Nov. 14, 1861. no z0 — d6t&cw
Rebecca Robinson (search for this): article 1
Ran away--$100 reward. --Ran away from the Batteries in Manchester, on or about the 31 September less, a Negro Boy, named John — calls himself John Alvis, the property of Mr. Rebecca Robinson. Said negro is about 18 or 19 years of age, 5 feet 8 or 9 inches high, brown complexion thick lip and very sullen looking.--He is supposed to be in the neighborhood of Richmond or at some of the encampments below Richmond. $23 will be paid for his delivery to the I taken in the city or any of the counties $50 taken in any other part of States or $100 if taken out of the State. Samuel Hastings. Richmond, Nov. 14, 1861. no z0 — d6t&cw
Manchester (New Hampshire, United States) (search for this): article 1
Ran away--$100 reward. --Ran away from the Batteries in Manchester, on or about the 31 September less, a Negro Boy, named John — calls himself John Alvis, the property of Mr. Rebecca Robinson. Said negro is about 18 or 19 years of age, 5 feet 8 or 9 inches high, brown complexion thick lip and very sullen looking.--He is supposed to be in the neighborhood of Richmond or at some of the encampments below Richmond. $23 will be paid for his delivery to the I taken in the city or any of the counties $50 taken in any other part of States or $100 if taken out of the State. Samuel Hastings. Richmond, Nov. 14, 1861. no z0 — d6t&cw
come accustomed by the habits of six hundred ears, rather than pay a trading tax, what will such a pack of thieves as the Yankee nation not do to get rid of such a burden as $700,000,000 entails. At eight per cent., the interest alone will amount to $50,000,000 a year. And that interest will be doubled every year: for assuredly they will spend each succeeding year as much as they spent the year before. How is Yankee doodledam to pay, that's the question? Not by taxes; we are sure. In 1819 the British Government spent £127,000,000 sterling, that is to say about $630,000,000. This was the year the battle of Waterloo was fought, and it was that of the largest expenditure Great Britain ever made in a single year. She had in service, on land and at sea, more than a million of men, and she subsidized besides the million and a half of Russians, Prussians, Austrians, Swedes, Bavarians, Saxons, Dutch, &c., that entered Paris after the fall of Napoleon. Her expenditure was considered
ants of the Government, cost Charles This life. The Commons certainly refused to grant him supplies, and he was compelled to raise them on his own authority, in order to carry on the Government. The Whig writers say it is true that Parliament withheld supplies in order to make him concede certain rights which he withheld. Be that as it may, taxation seems to have lain at the bottom of the "Grand Rebellion," as Clarendon called it, or, as the Whigs call it, the "Glorious Revolution." When Cromwell expelled the Rump, and took matters into his own hands, he collected taxes easily enough, it is true; and he did not wait for any Parliament or Council to lay them. He laid them himself, and employed soldiers to collect them. Now, if such a people as the English then were, will smash a Government to which they had become accustomed by the habits of six hundred ears, rather than pay a trading tax, what will such a pack of thieves as the Yankee nation not do to get rid of such a burden as $
Sidney Smith (search for this): article 1
roes they have set to picking out and ginning cotton on Port Royal Island will furnish enough of that article to bring any large importation in return from any country it may be carried to, and they have nothing of their own but grain and cattle to send abroad. Of course, the custom house will not furnish such a sum, and they must raise it by taxes. But will the people pay these taxes? Not unless soldiers be the tax gatherers. Even great nations, like Great Britain, will, according to Sidney Smith, bear a very heavy load of infamy, rather than a very light burden of taxation. Tory writers maintain that the indisposition to pay taxes for the most necessary wants of the Government, cost Charles This life. The Commons certainly refused to grant him supplies, and he was compelled to raise them on his own authority, in order to carry on the Government. The Whig writers say it is true that Parliament withheld supplies in order to make him concede certain rights which he withheld. Be
Clarendon (search for this): article 1
writers maintain that the indisposition to pay taxes for the most necessary wants of the Government, cost Charles This life. The Commons certainly refused to grant him supplies, and he was compelled to raise them on his own authority, in order to carry on the Government. The Whig writers say it is true that Parliament withheld supplies in order to make him concede certain rights which he withheld. Be that as it may, taxation seems to have lain at the bottom of the "Grand Rebellion," as Clarendon called it, or, as the Whigs call it, the "Glorious Revolution." When Cromwell expelled the Rump, and took matters into his own hands, he collected taxes easily enough, it is true; and he did not wait for any Parliament or Council to lay them. He laid them himself, and employed soldiers to collect them. Now, if such a people as the English then were, will smash a Government to which they had become accustomed by the habits of six hundred ears, rather than pay a trading tax, what will such
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