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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 10, 1860., [Electronic resource].

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The policy of Napoleon. It is hard to penetrate the real purposes of the Emperor of the French in regard to Italy. Many persons give him credit for the romantic generosity of desiring to emancipate that people without fee or reward. Possibly, a smile lights up some wrinkle of his saturnine visage when he beholds such refreshing evidences of juvenile credulity and confidence.--Not long before the Crimean war he issued a pamphlet sustaining his own positions by the example of the great Napoleon, who, he said, only desired to make Italy French that she might become Italian. The Italians of that day were greatly pleased with the prospect, but when they saw Lombardy and Venetian parcelled out into Dukedoms and Principalities, and bestowed on the Marshals and political favorites of the Emperor, their enthusiasm subsided. Savoy and Nice are the first evidences that Louis Napoleon does not go a warfare upon his own charges, but they are not the last.
Lombardy (Italy) (search for this): article 4
The policy of Napoleon. It is hard to penetrate the real purposes of the Emperor of the French in regard to Italy. Many persons give him credit for the romantic generosity of desiring to emancipate that people without fee or reward. Possibly, a smile lights up some wrinkle of his saturnine visage when he beholds such refreshing evidences of juvenile credulity and confidence.--Not long before the Crimean war he issued a pamphlet sustaining his own positions by the example of the great Napoleon, who, he said, only desired to make Italy French that she might become Italian. The Italians of that day were greatly pleased with the prospect, but when they saw Lombardy and Venetian parcelled out into Dukedoms and Principalities, and bestowed on the Marshals and political favorites of the Emperor, their enthusiasm subsided. Savoy and Nice are the first evidences that Louis Napoleon does not go a warfare upon his own charges, but they are not the last.
Cluses (France) (search for this): article 4
The policy of Napoleon. It is hard to penetrate the real purposes of the Emperor of the French in regard to Italy. Many persons give him credit for the romantic generosity of desiring to emancipate that people without fee or reward. Possibly, a smile lights up some wrinkle of his saturnine visage when he beholds such refreshing evidences of juvenile credulity and confidence.--Not long before the Crimean war he issued a pamphlet sustaining his own positions by the example of the great Napoleon, who, he said, only desired to make Italy French that she might become Italian. The Italians of that day were greatly pleased with the prospect, but when they saw Lombardy and Venetian parcelled out into Dukedoms and Principalities, and bestowed on the Marshals and political favorites of the Emperor, their enthusiasm subsided. Savoy and Nice are the first evidences that Louis Napoleon does not go a warfare upon his own charges, but they are not the last.
Venice (Italy) (search for this): article 4
The policy of Napoleon. It is hard to penetrate the real purposes of the Emperor of the French in regard to Italy. Many persons give him credit for the romantic generosity of desiring to emancipate that people without fee or reward. Possibly, a smile lights up some wrinkle of his saturnine visage when he beholds such refreshing evidences of juvenile credulity and confidence.--Not long before the Crimean war he issued a pamphlet sustaining his own positions by the example of the great Napoleon, who, he said, only desired to make Italy French that she might become Italian. The Italians of that day were greatly pleased with the prospect, but when they saw Lombardy and Venetian parcelled out into Dukedoms and Principalities, and bestowed on the Marshals and political favorites of the Emperor, their enthusiasm subsided. Savoy and Nice are the first evidences that Louis Napoleon does not go a warfare upon his own charges, but they are not the last.
Refusal of Federal Judges to hold Office under Lincoln. Montgomery, Ala.,Nov. 9. --The "Mail" publishes a dispatch from Apalachicola, state that McQueen and McIntosh. Federal Judges of Florida, will not hold office under Lincoln.
Refusal of Federal Judges to hold Office under Lincoln. Montgomery, Ala.,Nov. 9. --The "Mail" publishes a dispatch from Apalachicola, state that McQueen and McIntosh. Federal Judges of Florida, will not hold office under Lincoln.
Abe Lincoln (search for this): article 4
Refusal of Federal Judges to hold Office under Lincoln. Montgomery, Ala.,Nov. 9. --The "Mail" publishes a dispatch from Apalachicola, state that McQueen and McIntosh. Federal Judges of Florida, will not hold office under Lincoln. Refusal of Federal Judges to hold Office under Lincoln. Montgomery, Ala.,Nov. 9. --The "Mail" publishes a dispatch from Apalachicola, state that McQueen and McIntosh. Federal Judges of Florida, will not hold office under Lincoln.
September, 11 AD (search for this): article 4
Refusal of Federal Judges to hold Office under Lincoln. Montgomery, Ala.,Nov. 9. --The "Mail" publishes a dispatch from Apalachicola, state that McQueen and McIntosh. Federal Judges of Florida, will not hold office under Lincoln.
Appalachicola (Florida, United States) (search for this): article 4
Refusal of Federal Judges to hold Office under Lincoln. Montgomery, Ala.,Nov. 9. --The "Mail" publishes a dispatch from Apalachicola, state that McQueen and McIntosh. Federal Judges of Florida, will not hold office under Lincoln.
American killed --Pope's Troops.--Among the Pope's troops at the battle of Castelfidardo, was a volunteer New Yorker, Alfred de Nanteull, who fell after having received two bayonet and four gunshot wounds. The Freeman's Journal publishes an obituary notice of the young "martyr," from which it appears that he was only 22 years of age. Says the Journal: "Our sorrow for his sad fate is mingled with horror at the treachery to which he and many more of his companions in arms have fallen victims. There was a wide-spread defection on the part of the Italian troops, in the Pontifical service. Com. Bedelievre, in a letter addressed to the 'Esperance,'published at Nantes, states that the 2d regiment of Chasseurs (Italians) not only fired on the foreign levies that went into action with them, but also on the aides-de-camp whom General Pimodan sent to disarm them. The Italian artillerymen (so we are informed by a private letter,) abandoned their guns. All the Pontifical cavalry fl
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