Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 8, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for North or search for North in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

all that the rebellion has yet a sharp struggle before it, there is no longer any hope, as I sincerely wish there was, of its being starved into submission. You cannot think how bitterly the North is ridiculed here, and all my efforts to defend it only end in mortification and consciousness that those who think otherwise have the best of the argument. It is now the regular habit to send so called "deserters" into the Union lines along the Potomac, whenever we want to get a mail carried North. These "deserters," who are generally the bravest, sharpest and most unscrupulous enfants perdus in the rebel army, enter McClellan's lines, tell him just such stories as they have been told to take the oath, and are immediately dismissed. They then go to Baltimore, post their letters there get a return mail, and are back in Richmond within three or four days from the time of leaving the managers of this mail line of Baltimore. It is thus the — and--[Two papers are mentioned here, one pub