Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 11, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Nassau River (Florida, United States) or search for Nassau River (Florida, United States) in all documents.

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Four days late from Europe Cave , June 6. --The sonship City of Washington, from Liverpool, May 28, via Queenstown, 29th, was boarded at 7 P. M. off this point. The steamers Southwick and Gladiator, from Nassau, with cotton, curpaniten, etc., had arrived at Liverpool. The Sumter continued at Gibraltar. The American crisis. The London Morning Post understands that the demand for the restiantion of the Emily St. Pierre cannot be complied with, as municipal laws take no cognizance of the set of the three men who re-captured her as an offence, or recognizes it as an injury suffered by the Had an American cruiser fallen in with the ship, she might have her, but there is no municipal law which can warrant the English Government in giving her up, and it is therefore bound to refuse compliance with the request. The London Times in an editorial on the surrender of Norfolk, the destruction of the Merrimac, etc., says the conquest of the South, as far as the water is
Captured --The schooner Harriet Lowndes, Capt. Dexter, from Nassau, for Charleston, was captured or Thursday last near Santee by the enemy's launches. She had on board a cargo of salt and sundries.
A young man's motto. Count Maurice, of Nassau, second son of william the Silent, Prince of Orange, found himself at seventeen years of age fatherless and poor, with a mother and ten younger brothers and sisters looking to him as the only one fitted to take the place of him who was gone. His father had fallen by the dagger of the assassin, his eldest brother was a prisoner in Spain, and the family fortunes were at the lowest h. The Prince of Orange had devoted everything to his country, and in the stormy times in which he lived had parcelled and lost his wealth. After his xth, as the his cairn tells us, "carpets, tap tries. LI n, may even his silver spoons, and the clothes of his wardrobe, were disposed of at public suction for the benefit of his creditors. It was a hard time for young Maurice, the more respectfully as the Netherlands Republic, then in the several siress of its struggle with the Philip, was looking to him as his father mate successor in its councils and at