Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 29, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Edward Everett or search for Edward Everett in all documents.

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Edward Everett. The following is an extract from Edward Everett's letter accepting his nomination for the Vice-Presidency by the Union Convention at Baltimore. After expressing his regret that Edward Everett's letter accepting his nomination for the Vice-Presidency by the Union Convention at Baltimore. After expressing his regret that by the acceptance he shall have to retire from any further labors in behalf of Mount Vernon be refers to the angry state of feeling in the country and the necessity for the revival of the kindly sentiomment on the above is unnecessary.--Contrast it with the Fourth of July speech of this same Edward Everett, in which he out Greeley's Greeley in his wild hurrah for the entire subjugation of the Souton of the South has caused, the South will do the North no such injustice as to suppose that Edward Everett is a fair specimen of her people.--There are some whose voices have not joined the rabble shwing in fierce passions, it cannot be said that they are inconsistent and hypocritical. But Edward Everett, the cold, selfish, false pretender, who cannot plead ignorance, and who has sported his but