Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 22, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Wilbur or search for Wilbur in all documents.

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for such high- handed proceedings. The information from which Mr. Harrisson made his affidavit was imparted to him some time ago, by Messrs. Liner, Burnett, and Wilbur, the very persons whom Mr. Ellis charged, last week, with being implicated in the lynching affair. It was reported to him defendant had refused to haul down the hode Island, and President Davis to Governor Dorr. All of the Southern leaders, said Mr. Ellis, are demagogues. They ought to be hanged, said he, according to Mr. Wilbur's testimony, in order to restore peace. With this latter witness, it appears defendant had a very grave discussion on the subject of trotting rules. The proprple's Race Course was in favor of the Northern or Long Island rules, for they were adopted by the Spirit of the Times, which are authorities on that matter; but Mr. Wilbur, out of patriotism, pleaded zealously in favor of the Southern trotting rules. Mr. H. H. Heron, another witness, was Ellis's bar-keeper at the time of the