Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 2, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Seward or search for Seward in all documents.

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ound. Commodore Stockton, who was appointed a Major-General last winter, has taken command of the division of the New Jersey State soldiers which is being raised for the defence of Pennsylvania. Gen. Dix has restored civil law and government over Norfolk county and the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth, to a certain extent. George W. Jones, late Minister to New Grenada, who was arrested in November, 1861, by the Government, and kept four months in Fort Lafayette, has sued Secretary Seward for $50,000 damages. The case is just entered in the Supreme Court of New York. Each district Marshal of New York has 50 men engaged in enrolling the names of persons subject to the draft, and it is said that up to Saturday, the 20th, 150,000 names were down on the several lists. The inauguration of the bogus Government of Western Virginia took place at Wheeling on Saturday, the 20th. The enrolling officer of Sullivan county, Indiana, was shot dead on the 18th June, whil
have been received. A dispatch Petersburg, dated the day the Canada sailed, says that the Journal de St. Petersburg, of that date, published a dispatch, dated June 4, addressed by Gortchakoff to Mr. the Emperor's satisfaction at the reply or Mr. Seward to the proposal of France to mediate in the case of Poland, which dispatch concludes as follows: "Such facts draw closer the bonds of sympathy between Russia and America. The Emperor knows how to appreciate the firmness with which Mr. Seward mMr. Seward maintains the principle of non intervention." In the British House of Commons, on 11th inst., Lord Palmerston said that as the United States have no relations except those of war with the Confederate States, it would be useless to apply to that Government concerning the suppression of the slave trade. The Confederate States had made that trade a penal offence, but their independence not being recognized by England, "and not being established in a way" to justify England's interference, no a