Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 22, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for E. P. Davis or search for E. P. Davis in all documents.

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Southern Volunteers. --The Southern Volunteers of Washington city have one hundred and fifty men enrolled for service under the Southern Confederacy, and are holding in readiness to await the acceptance of President Davis. It is said that nearly six hundred have left Baltimore, and that a regular rendezvous is opened in Market Space for their enlistment. They enlist for three year's service.
Sentenced. --Ed. Trent, convicted of shooting E. P. Davis, in Prince Edward county, Va., was sentenced, on Saturday, to two years imprisonment in the Penitentiary. On Saturday night he succeeded in making his escape from jail.
s an unconstitutional act, you can appeal to the Supreme Court. Here is a great difference. I wish to pay my respects to Brother Davis. My old friend missed the point, not withstanding his logical research. He put the old Baltimore Conference before this community on the passage of her character here, in the midst of her friends.--The question is not one of character, but of duty. Brother D. went back, say, 80 years, to show that the Baltimore Conference up to 44 was anti-slavery. Mr. Davis,--She was anti-slavery, but has changed, and is not so now. I brought in other Churches to show that we are not the only Church that had legislated on this subject — that at that time public sentiment demanded it — that we have repudiated our antecedents. Mr. Start.--The question is not what we were, but what we are. The Laymen propose to go out now from the jurisdiction of the General Conference. Some ask you to defer the matter, and I think the Convention propose a just, right, and
call to Major Anderson. The Major and Col. Watts are old acquaintances, having known each other for over thirty-five years. --At the time when Major Anderson's brother was Minister to Colombo, Republic of Bolivia, Col. Watts was then Secretary of Legation. --The meeting was a very pleasant one, reviving many reminiscences of the past. The Savannah Republican, of the 18th, contains the following news: It is stated on the street that Governor Brown received on Saturday, from President Davis, a requisition for two thousand troops. It is surmised that they are intended for Savannah and Pensacola. A company of the first Regiment of the Georgia Army, numbering 67 men rank and file, left on the steamer Ida, for Fort Jackson, on Saturday morning last. They carried with them two twelve pound howitzers, which were brought down from the Georgia Military Institute at Marietta. The Charleston Mercury, of Wednesday, has the following: The Congress, before adjourning