Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 27, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for McDonald or search for McDonald in all documents.

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of our ability in and under the law. As long as they leave us the ballot-box our victory is sure, and if they do not, leave us the ballot box, said Mr. Brooks, by the eternal God I will be willing to lead any army, if you will trust to my leadership, to resist all such tyranny in active opposition. Demonstrations in Indiana. Indianapolis, May 20, 1863. --The Democratic mass meeting to-day was largely attended. D. W. Voorhees presided. Messrs. Merrick and Edon, of Illinois, and McDonald, of Inidiana, were the principal speakers. A good deal of excitement prevailed during the day, and forty or fifty arrests were made for carrying concealed weapons, shouting for Jeff. Davis, &c. A military guard was placed in different parts of the city, and patrolling the streets in the vicinity of the square where the Convention was held to prevent disturbances. The speeches consisted principally in opposition to the war measures of the Administration. It is said that the Conven