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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: November 9, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 14 total hits in 4 results.
United States (United States) (search for this): article 5
France (France) (search for this): article 5
Interesting from France.
We published yesterday morning a short paragraph respecting the return of Prince Napoleon to France, stating that he had advised the speedy recognition of the Southern Confederacy.
We copy the following extract from a Paris letter, dated Oct. 18, which we find in the New York Times:
If we may France, stating that he had advised the speedy recognition of the Southern Confederacy.
We copy the following extract from a Paris letter, dated Oct. 18, which we find in the New York Times:
If we may judge of the feeling against the North among the commercial people of England, by that manifested by the English commercial people located at Paris, it must be terrible indeed.
No slander is too absurd to be told, none too gross to be believed.
Whether from commercial rivalry, from the menacing growth, or from what they call the s from the race to which they allied by blood, and directed them into new and strange channels.
The Morrill tariff falling upon English commerce at a moment when France was opening her ports to this same commerce formed a contrast too striking for even English tenacity, and to-day we see the unnatural and unusual spectacle of Fre
Morrill (search for this): article 5
October 18th (search for this): article 5
Interesting from France.
We published yesterday morning a short paragraph respecting the return of Prince Napoleon to France, stating that he had advised the speedy recognition of the Southern Confederacy.
We copy the following extract from a Paris letter, dated Oct. 18, which we find in the New York Times:
If we may judge of the feeling against the North among the commercial people of England, by that manifested by the English commercial people located at Paris, it must be terrible indeed.
No slander is too absurd to be told, none too gross to be believed.
Whether from commercial rivalry, from the menacing growth, or from what they call the impertinence of the Yankee race, we seem to have no friends left in this particular class of the English people.
Not that they love the South or slavery, but they are furious at the idea that the North should even attempt to avert the threatened rupture of the great Republic, and will be still more furious if the North be successful