Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 20, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Argyle or search for Argyle in all documents.

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innocence was, he contended, monstrous and illegal. Earl Russell warmly defended the course taken by the Government, and submitted that it was owing to the vigilance of the Government that the Lairds had not succeeded in plunging England into a war with the United States. Earl Russell closed his speech by expressing an earnest hope that the war would result in the final destruction of slavery. Lord Chelmsford contended that the course of the Government was illegal. The Duke of Argyle, vindicated the Government. The subject was then dropped. A dispatch from Egypt announces that the Commission in the matter of the Mersey rams had finished its labor, and the commissioners would return to London by May 7th. At the Shakespeare Tercentenary celebration at Frankfort ill feeling was manifested at the banquets given on the occasion between the English and Germans; but the American Consul and others made conciliatory speeches, and restored amity. The British ex