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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 5, 1861., [Electronic resource].
Found 615 total hits in 280 results.
James Green (search for this): article 10
Green corn, for table use, has made its appearance in the Savannah (Ga.) markets.
Savannah (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 10
Green corn, for table use, has made its appearance in the Savannah (Ga.) markets.
Anderson (search for this): article 10
Affairs at the Northwest.
--A dispatch from Louisville, Ky., contains the following items:
It is supposed that Col. Anderson came to Kentucky officially, but alone, and will probably endeavor to swear in the Home Guard or accustoming Kentuckian to the sight of Federal buttons, and gradually bring the State into the condition of Missouri.
It is rumored that the Nashville Railroad will be embargoed, in which event the Tennesseans say they will consider Kentucky's neutrality violated, and will advance (on Kentucky?) The Union and Southern Rights men of Kentucky, however, seem determined to repel aggression from either side, and the Tennesseans will gain thousands of supporters by waiting.
The Marion Rifles, an intensely Union corps, have refused, by a majority of one, to be sworn into the Home Guard.
The N. Y. Times, received here by mail, has a bitter article on the attitude of England and France.
It says:
"Without circumlocution it is plain they will f
Missouri (Missouri, United States) (search for this): article 10
Affairs at the Northwest.
--A dispatch from Louisville, Ky., contains the following items:
It is supposed that Col. Anderson came to Kentucky officially, but alone, and will probably endeavor to swear in the Home Guard or accustoming Kentuckian to the sight of Federal buttons, and gradually bring the State into the condition of Missouri.
It is rumored that the Nashville Railroad will be embargoed, in which event the Tennesseans say they will consider Kentucky's neutrality violated, and will advance (on Kentucky?) The Union and Southern Rights men of Kentucky, however, seem determined to repel aggression from either side, and the Tennesseans will gain thousands of supporters by waiting.
The Marion Rifles, an intensely Union corps, have refused, by a majority of one, to be sworn into the Home Guard.
The N. Y. Times, received here by mail, has a bitter article on the attitude of England and France.
It says:
"Without circumlocution it is plain they will fo
United States (United States) (search for this): article 10
Louisville (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): article 10
Affairs at the Northwest.
--A dispatch from Louisville, Ky., contains the following items:
It is supposed that Col. Anderson came to Kentucky officially, but alone, and will probably endeavor to swear in the Home Guard or accustoming Kentuckian to the sight of Federal buttons, and gradually bring the State into the condition of Missouri.
It is rumored that the Nashville Railroad will be embargoed, in which event the Tennesseans say they will consider Kentucky's neutrality violated, and will advance (on Kentucky?) The Union and Southern Rights men of Kentucky, however, seem determined to repel aggression from either side, and the Tennesseans will gain thousands of supporters by waiting.
The Marion Rifles, an intensely Union corps, have refused, by a majority of one, to be sworn into the Home Guard.
The N. Y. Times, received here by mail, has a bitter article on the attitude of England and France.
It says:
"Without circumlocution it is plain they will f
France (France) (search for this): article 10
Alexander (search for this): article 12
Charles M. Furman (search for this): article 12
The Southern Telegraph Line.
--It will be seen from the subjoined proceedings which we take from the Charleston Courier, that a proper movement has been commenced.
The attention of the stockholders in this city is directed to these proceedings:
"A meeting of the stockholders of the Washington and New Orleans Telegraph Company, in relation to the interest in the line of the stockholders in this State, was held in the hall of the Bank of Charleston yesterday.
"Charles M. Furman, Esq., having been called to the chair, stated that a meeting of those who held stock in the company had been called with a view of adopting or ascertaining what measure was necessary for the protection of their interest in the company under the new order of things.
He did not know how far the company extended North, but certainly a portion of the line is out of the limits of the Confederate States.
A large amount of stock is held under the old patent right of the United States, which, perhaps
Matthiessen (search for this): article 12