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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 17, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Maryland (Maryland, United States) or search for Maryland (Maryland, United States) in all documents.
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Important case in the Confederate States District Court.
--The attention of this Court was occupied on yesterday with a long argument with reference to the right of the Confederate States to conscribe citizens of Maryland who have been here since the commencement of the war. The case was that of Robert F. Hobbs, a citizen of Maryland, who came to the Confederate States in the month of May, 1861 , and who, from that time to the present, has been engaged in various peaceful occupations, but Maryland, who came to the Confederate States in the month of May, 1861 , and who, from that time to the present, has been engaged in various peaceful occupations, but who has never performed military service.
The petitioner was an able-bodied man, between the ages of eighteen and forty-five, but denied that he was a resident of the Confederacy.
It was contended by the petitioner's counsel that he was like thousands of other Marylanders, an exile, whose right of asylum in this country should not be disturbed by the enrolling officers.
The counsel for the Government contended that he was a resident, having voluntarily cast his lot in the Confederate
More of Hunter's tyranny.
Mr. J. W. Baughman, editor of the Frederick (Maryland) Citizen, has arrived in Richmond.
He was ordered out of Maryland, and into the Southern Confederacy, by General Hunter because his paper stated that the Yankee loss at the battle of Monocracy was two thousand; or rather, that was the immediate commended to the most kind and respectful consideration of our people and Government.
He affects not to have suffered for defending our cause more than his and Maryland's. But it is proper and just that; as far as possible, he should here find sympathy and the right hand of fellowship.
Mr. Baughman represents the state of feeling in Maryland as stronger than ever for State Rights and the South.
The measures of oppression from Washington, which bear so heavily on Marylanders, making them the most oppressed of all under Lincoln's sway, but increases the spirit of hatred for the Northern Government and the determination ultimately to throw off the yok