hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Matching Documents
The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 23, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Maryland (Maryland, United States) or search for Maryland (Maryland, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 30 results in 9 document sections:
[10 more...]
Twenty Dollars reward will be paid for the return or for information resulting in the return to me, of my cook Harriet, who ran off to Richmond, August. 6. She is a bright, thin breasted, tall, sneaking mulatto.
She can read, is a Methodist, sings very loud, and is disposed to argu as severely whipped August 1st.
Supposed to have on a black skirt and red body, colored straw bonnet and blue ribbons — Shows fine teeth when spoken to. I bought her of Dr. Dorsey, of Maryland.
Age 35.
H. P. Taylor.
Henrico, August 20. au 22--19t*
The Daily Dispatch: September 23, 1862., [Electronic resource], A heart dislocated on the battle-field. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: September 23, 1862., [Electronic resource], Interesting Foreign news. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: September 23, 1862., [Electronic resource], Interesting Foreign news. (search)
A Mendacious Press
The Northern papers are running riot in their fabrications over recent events in Maryland.
Such reckless prodigality of lying threatens to bankrupt even their inexhaustible treasury of invention and mendacity.
It is needless to put the Southern public on their guard against the monstrous fable which are now piled up mountain high in the Northern journals.
With a natural proclivity at all times for lying, they consider it, in a state of war, a virtue of the first water.
They look upon Truth as a Southern rebel and traitor, who must be kept in close confinement or given up to the gibber.
Fortunately, no one believes them in the whole world.
Not one sane man in Europe or America attaches any credit to one word that is uttered by a Yankee journalist.
An Irreclaimable Clatterer.
The New York Herald.
commenting on the battle of Sharpsburg, declares that "the country will surely expect Gen. Halleck to cut short the session of the rebel Congress at Richmond, while Gen. McClellan is gathering up the fragments of the late great Maryland liberating rebel army."
The people who can swallow the nauseating absurdities with which they are daily drugged by this Sawney of the Herald, must be the most credulous of mankind.
The "on to Richmond" of that braggart journal has been repeated every month for the last year and a half with the same confident and blustering arrogance, and it is forthcoming again now, after repeated trials and failures, with as much assurance as if it were asserted for the first time.
Nothing could inspire even Bennett with such unparalleled audacity but the boundless gullibility of the Northern mob to whose vicious passions he panders for his livelihood, and upon whose amazing credulity he plays as upon a ha
The Daily Dispatch: September 23, 1862., [Electronic resource], "The rebellion Crushed." (search)
"The rebellion Crushed."
Every trifling success achieved by the enemy is announced by their journals under the head of "The Rebellion Crushed." This is the flaming title of one of their late flourishing accounts of an alleged Federal advantage in Maryland.
What must the world think of such braggarts?
If it be true that the "Rebellion is crushed," they would better disband their armies, and save the millions a day they are still expending for an object which their lying journals pretend is already accomplished.