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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: February 6, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 22 total hits in 7 results.
Havana (Cuba) (search for this): article 1
Canada (Canada) (search for this): article 1
England (United Kingdom) (search for this): article 1
Slidell (search for this): article 1
The "Times" and our Commissioners.
Our English files have brought us, in its length and breadth, the philippic of the London Times upon Commissioners Mason and Slidell.
The reviling of the leading British journal are even more gross and vulgar than the condensed dispatch had represented them.
It is wanton, gratuitous, brutal, and blackguard.
The writer must have bought a bad fish at Billingsgate the day it was written; and had a wrangle with one of its redoubtable dames.
The tirade be arges these innocent gentlemen with the cost of the recent large shipment of English troops, arms, and military supplies to Canada.
This cost is supposed to be about three millions of pounds sterling, or fifteen millions of dollars, and poor Messrs Slidell and Mason are charged with the sum. Invited by the advertisements of the British packet at Havana, these gentlemen went aboard of her, paid their passage money to England, and betook themselves quietly to their state rooms.
After a few days
Wilkes (search for this): article 1
English (search for this): article 1
Mason (search for this): article 1
The "Times" and our Commissioners.
Our English files have brought us, in its length and breadth, the philippic of the London Times upon Commissioners Mason and Slidell.
The reviling of the leading British journal are even more gross and vulgar than the condensed dispatch had represented them.
It is wanton, gratuitous, brutal, and blackguard.
The writer must have bought a bad fish at Billingsgate the day it was written; and had a wrangle with one of its redoubtable dames.
The tirade be ocent gentlemen with the cost of the recent large shipment of English troops, arms, and military supplies to Canada.
This cost is supposed to be about three millions of pounds sterling, or fifteen millions of dollars, and poor Messrs Slidell and Mason are charged with the sum. Invited by the advertisements of the British packet at Havana, these gentlemen went aboard of her, paid their passage money to England, and betook themselves quietly to their state rooms.
After a few days of quiet saili