Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 13, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for January 29th or search for January 29th in all documents.

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News from Europe. By the arrival of the Australasian from Liverpool, January 28, via Queenstown, January 29, we have seven days later news from Europe. A London merchant, who was in Savannah two days prior to its occupation, writes to the London Times that the bulk of the cotton in Savannah belonged to the Confederate Government, and would be burned, and that the Federal capture would prove to be no more than five or six thousand bales. He also thinks that the blockade-running business is nearly played out. The London Times opposes the new scheme of an Arctic expedition, proposed by Captain Sherard Osborne before the Royal Geographical Society. A new steamer, named the Louisa Ann Fanny, and destined for blockade running, had been exhibiting extraordinary speed, running at the rate of nearly eighteen knots an hour. A letter which the Queen of England had addressed by Sir. Charles Phipps to the railway companies is attracting attention. The Daily News regards