Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 4, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Slidell or search for Slidell in all documents.

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on, with a view to founding a basis for a common line of policy towards this country while engaged in the suppression of the Southern rebellion. The mason and Slidell case having come to an end, the "Allies'" now vehemently object to the stone first blockade of Charleston harbor, and hint that in consequence of this act the entnclines to favor the rebel cause. Liverpool still continues to be placarded with papers calling on the people not to accord any public reception to Mason and Slidell. The presence of Slidell was anxiously looked for in Paris, while the London Herald, the organ of the opposition, attempts a defence of the public character aSlidell was anxiously looked for in Paris, while the London Herald, the organ of the opposition, attempts a defence of the public character and conduct of both the envoys, in order to render them acceptable to the people of the two countries. English Notions of Federal Finances. The London Times, in an editorial on the suspension of specie payments in America, argues that there can be no comparison between the circumstances under which England resorted to simil
From France. No Americans Admitted to the presence of Napoleon — Mason and Slidell. The Paris correspondent of the London Morning Post writes as follows: "It appears that Mr. Dayton, the American Minister at Paris, sent in a list of some twenty or thirty American citizens for presentation at the Tuilleries on New YeaThe Journal des Debats thinks that Lord Primerston's intentions towards the United States are not so pacific. The Temps, in announcing that Messrs. Mason and Slidell are expected shortly to arrive at Havre, says that no obstacle will be offered to the fulfillment of their mission to France and England. The Plenipotentiaries of the South will be allowed to plead for the recognition of the South. The Presse says that the French Government will not receive Messrs. Mason and Slidell, nor any other Southern Commissioners. The Pays says that the Government of Ecuador has requested the mediation of England in Peru, and that England has accepted the