Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 5, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hallock or search for Hallock in all documents.

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expenses of the World are said to be $1,500 a week in excess of the receipts, the old Courier advertisements being by the year, and paid for in advance, proving a loss, instead of a source of income to the World concern. The experiment of publishing a daily religions newspaper has cost the proprietors $200,000 in cash, and their journal the very slight reputation for piety which it established at the start. The Journal of Commerce will probably announce this morning the retirement of Mr. Hallock, his half of the paper having been purchased by Mr. D. M. Stone, the commercial editor, and Mr. Wm. C. Prime, the "W" correspondent of the Journal. The other half is still owned by the heirs of Mr. David Hale. Here after the Journal will be independent of politics patriotic in sentiment, and a first-class medium of the commercial community. Its circulation through the mails, under the new regime, will be unimpeded, and many of its old friends and patrons have already returned and promi