Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 14, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for David Tod or search for David Tod in all documents.

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mmanding? Q.--I understood him to say that his authority to speak to the people was higher than General Order No. 38 of that mobbing despot, Gen. Burnside. It was order No. I, signed by George Washington. Q.--Were not the three names of Tod, Lincoln, and Burnside used together, and that I didn't ask their consent to speak? A.--At another time he used these words. Q.--Were not the remarks you said I made about despising, spitting upon, and trampling under foot, expressly app Q.--Did you hear his allusions to General Burnside, and if so, what were they? A — The only allusion he made to the General was, I think, in the beginning of his speech, in which he said he was not there by the favor of Abraham Lincoln; David Tod, or General Ambrose E. Burnside. Q — Was any epithet applied to him during the speech? A.--No, sir. If there had been I should have noticed it, because General Burnside was an old personal friend of mine. I should have remembered any