Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 18, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Canada (Canada) or search for Canada (Canada) in all documents.

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The London Times and other English journals are strongly of opinion that it would greatly please the Southern Confederacy to get Great Britain involved in a war with the United States, and that Great Britain ought carefully to avoid such a collision. Of course it ought!--It has too large a debt owing it in the United States; too much at risk in Canada; too many merchantmen on the ocean, to permit, for a moment, the idea of hostilities with the United States, But how can the to the Cape Fear river, and will, we fear, enable the enemy to blockade the river completely, giving them, as it does, a secure lodgment on the left bank. Fort Caswell and several other works still guard the southern channel of the river. Fort Fisher is thirty miles below Wilmington. Some regard the fall of Fisher as a disaster, while many are disposed to consider it a blessing in disguise. The latter, who are, it must be said, a numerous and sensible class, contend that Wilmington, as a seaport, has, f
News from Europe. The China, which left Liverpool the 31st of December, and Queenstown on the 1st of January, brings two days later news. The English press continue to comment on the St. Albans raiders and the order of General Dix. All the papers declare against allowing the Confederates to infest the United States from Canada. The Confederate loan has declined six per cent., and further news from America was expected with great anxiety. A meeting has been held at Dublin, Ireland, for the purpose of forming an association for the reform of the law of landlord and tenant, and for obtaining the abolition of the Church establishment. Nearly all the Catholic bishops take a leading part in this association. The French Government is said to be greatly annoyed by the Pope's letter. A desperate encounter has taken place between French troops and a band of brigands near Veroll, in the Papal States.
st show. What concerns us most nearly in the news just received is the tone which the Americans have assumed towards Canada, and the acts of their Government with respect to the late disorders on the frontier. With respect to these mischievous he outrage at St. Albans was barbarous in the extreme, and we are sure there is not one person in a hundred in England or Canada who would not be glad to see the perpetrators dealt with according to their deserts. But the threats of the Americans wients should have altogether turned away the attention of the public from the result of the liberation of the "raiders" in Canada was, however, not to be expected. There is in the comments of the American papers on the subject some of that hasty geneo shoot any persons who may attempt to make again such an attempt; and if they should escape, to pursue and seize them in Canada. The former part of the order we are not concerned with, though we may observe that it is one fully justifiable if the "