hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
The Daily Dispatch: March 27, 1862., [Electronic resource] 8 0 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 8 results in 2 document sections:

of hunting up the news. Yesterday the Mayor presided with his usual grace and dignity, but as our report shows, did not do anything specially brilliant, the material for any clever performance being non est. Case of Wm. Reynolds, for an assault (characterized in the bench warrant as "violent,") on Benedict Simon, was continued until the 29th.--Martha, slave of Jas. Bolton, was ordered twenty-five lashes for assaulting and attempting to cut Mrs. Harvey with a knife.--Gabe Smith, Sue Mosby, Joe Adams, and Kate Hall, free negroes, here without permission from a neighboring county, were sent to jail to be transported back.--Bill Scott, free, charged with an attempt to swindle, was again brought up and remanded, and Wm. White a black man, who had pestiferously obtruded himself on the proprietor of the Exchange Hotel, was set to work on one of the batteries near the city.--Edward Keeling, the Baltimorean charged with aiding to stab Fred Smith and break into Mary Waden's house in the Valley
resented at the British, by man of distinguished annuity, but we question whether the United States over had an abler diplomatic or a more skillful speaker than Mr. Adams, and his eloquence and fully curtain the reputation enjoyed in their day by his father and grandfather. In this moment of his country's fate, Mr. Adams made aMr. Adams made a speech which contains an admirable summary of Washington's career, and the moral which it points, bearing as the speaker so skillfully made it do, on the present position of affairs on the other side of the Atlantic. But it is worthy of notice that this appreciation of America's greatest historical personage is not confined to that, if not defeated, must, in the end, be fatal to freedom, he made a happy hit at those who are striving to destroy the integrity of the Union. The civil war, Mr. Adams subsequently described as "fire of purification," to "gather," he added, "the moral fruits of self devotion to honorable ends." The speech of the American Minist