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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: December 9, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 17 total hits in 3 results.
United States (United States) (search for this): article 5
Montreal (Canada) (search for this): article 5
Reward's Threat.
--The Montreal (Canada) Advertiser, in speaking of Mr. Seward's threats in case the foreign nations recognized the South, and the good effect recognition will have, remarks thus:
Mr. Secretary Seward, eighteen months ago, threatened the Powers of the word with war if they dared to recognize the South, or treat them other than as rebels to the just authority of the Federal Government; he has since moderated his tone and the Federal press is instructed to declare that recognition amounts to nothing, making the position of the Confederate States no better, and Federal no worse, and that therefore it is not to be made a cases betti against the nations that may recognize the Confederacy.
Recognition, however, will not only inspirit the South, but it will depress the North; it will give an entirely new character to the war by removing from it the stigma of revolt and by raising the Confederate States to an equality on all respects with their adversaries, and wil
Seward (search for this): article 5
Reward's Threat.
--The Montreal (Canada) Advertiser, in speaking of Mr. Seward's threats in case the foreign nations recognized the South, and the good effect recognition will have, remarks thus:
Mr. Secretary Seward, eighteen months ago, threatened the Powers of the word with war if they dared to recognize the South, or treat them other than as rebels to the just authority of the Federal Government; he has since moderated his tone and the Federal press is instructed to declare that rMr. Secretary Seward, eighteen months ago, threatened the Powers of the word with war if they dared to recognize the South, or treat them other than as rebels to the just authority of the Federal Government; he has since moderated his tone and the Federal press is instructed to declare that recognition amounts to nothing, making the position of the Confederate States no better, and Federal no worse, and that therefore it is not to be made a cases betti against the nations that may recognize the Confederacy.
Recognition, however, will not only inspirit the South, but it will depress the North; it will give an entirely new character to the war by removing from it the stigma of revolt and by raising the Confederate States to an equality on all respects with their adversaries, and will