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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 7, 1862., [Electronic resource].

Found 894 total hits in 429 results.

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E. L. Chinn (search for this): article 1
Wanted. --negro Labor — The james River and Kanawha Company wants to Hire negro Carpenters and Laborers, to work on the repairs of the canal during the present year. Liberal wages will be paid, and rations, clothing, and medicine and medical attendance furnished. For further information address the undersigned, in this city, or see the Company's Agents along the line of the canal, who are authorized to hire. E. L. Chinn, Sup't. J. R. and K. Canal. ja 15--dtz
Wanted. --negro Labor — The james River and Kanawha Company wants to Hire negro Carpenters and Laborers, to work on the repairs of the canal during the present year. Liberal wages will be paid, and rations, clothing, and medicine and medical attendance furnished. For further information address the undersigned, in this city, or see the Company's Agents along the line of the canal, who are authorized to hire. E. L. Chinn, Sup't. J. R. and K. Canal. ja 15--dtz
Charles Y. Morriss (search for this): article 1
Wanted. --to Sell my Teams, Formerly used at the Refinery. Also, a fine riding Mare, and a good buggy Horse, Spring-Drays;a alone-horse Spring Wagon, nearly new, and eight Carts. Ten negro men for Hire--one of them a No. 1 Blacksmith. Apply at my office, under St. Charles Hotel, between the hours of 10 and 12 o'clock A. M. Chas. Y. Morriss. mh 5--ts
Mare (Papua New Guinea) (search for this): article 1
Wanted. --to Sell my Teams, Formerly used at the Refinery. Also, a fine riding Mare, and a good buggy Horse, Spring-Drays;a alone-horse Spring Wagon, nearly new, and eight Carts. Ten negro men for Hire--one of them a No. 1 Blacksmith. Apply at my office, under St. Charles Hotel, between the hours of 10 and 12 o'clock A. M. Chas. Y. Morriss. mh 5--ts
Wanted. --negro Laborers to out Timber. They should bring their axes. Wages, one dollar per day and found. For further information, apply to Captain Maury, C. S. Navy, Belvin's Building 12th street. mh 4--1w
, and Slidell had been unattended by an apology for the outrage committed on the British or by the slightest compensation to the victims themselves." The noble barrister deeply regretted that the "doctrines of international law should have been scouted and repudiated by Mr. Seward on the part of the American Cabinet." In the House of Commons, the Hon. Mr. Portman, of Dorsetshire, moved the Address, and in the course of it deprecated the existing feeling in the United States. Mr. Western Wood, of London, said that "the redress for the insult to the British flag had not been conceded as promptly as was consistent with the character of this country, and, he would add, with the character and dignity of the United States." Mr. Disraell endorsed the action of his Government regarding the Trent affair, and, in conclusion, peremptorily insisted upon the immediate production of all the evidence relating to the inefficiency of the blockade. This demand, also, could not have been made out
etween Her Majesty and the President of the United States have therefore remained unimpaired. Her Majesty warmly appreciates the loyalty and patriotic spirit which have been manifested on this occasion by her North American subjects." As Mr. Seward in his letter was very careful to repudiate the idea that any "act of violence" had been committed, the words grace harshly upon sensitive ears, and most decided exceptions are taken to them by Federal diplomats; white the press accuses Lord Patended by an apology for the outrage committed on the British or by the slightest compensation to the victims themselves." The noble barrister deeply regretted that the "doctrines of international law should have been scouted and repudiated by Mr. Seward on the part of the American Cabinet." In the House of Commons, the Hon. Mr. Portman, of Dorsetshire, moved the Address, and in the course of it deprecated the existing feeling in the United States. Mr. Western Wood, of London, said that "t
he Earl of Carnavon, late Secretary for the Colonies, asked for the production of all evidence tending to show the inefficiency of the blockade. Such a demand could not have been prompted by mere curiosity. The debate was closed by Lord Kingsdown, a strong conservative, formerly known as the Pemberton Leigh. He was exceedingly bitter against the United States, and declared that to his mind the quarrel with America "had been anything but satisfactorily settled because the surrender of Messrs. Mason, and Slidell had been unattended by an apology for the outrage committed on the British or by the slightest compensation to the victims themselves." The noble barrister deeply regretted that the "doctrines of international law should have been scouted and repudiated by Mr. Seward on the part of the American Cabinet." In the House of Commons, the Hon. Mr. Portman, of Dorsetshire, moved the Address, and in the course of it deprecated the existing feeling in the United States. Mr. Wes
von, late Secretary for the Colonies, asked for the production of all evidence tending to show the inefficiency of the blockade. Such a demand could not have been prompted by mere curiosity. The debate was closed by Lord Kingsdown, a strong conservative, formerly known as the Pemberton Leigh. He was exceedingly bitter against the United States, and declared that to his mind the quarrel with America "had been anything but satisfactorily settled because the surrender of Messrs. Mason, and Slidell had been unattended by an apology for the outrage committed on the British or by the slightest compensation to the victims themselves." The noble barrister deeply regretted that the "doctrines of international law should have been scouted and repudiated by Mr. Seward on the part of the American Cabinet." In the House of Commons, the Hon. Mr. Portman, of Dorsetshire, moved the Address, and in the course of it deprecated the existing feeling in the United States. Mr. Western Wood, of Lo
mediately following the Queen's speech, came the opening addresses, delivered by the most celebrated and leading men of the country, not one of whom spoke in complimentary terms of the United States, or uttered a word against the South. The moving address was by Lord Dufferin, an Irish peer, generally considered a representative of the more aristocratic clubs. He spoke with great severity against the Government of the United States, and mentioned its disruption as an accomplished fact. Capt. Wilkes he characterized as "a blundering sea Captain, besotted with a vulgar lust for notoriety," and condemned the "unsound and exceptionable explanations which dimmed the grace of reparation," in the Trent affair. This address was seconded by the Earl of Shelburne, who bore at length upon the hostile feeling existing in the United States towards England, while he denied that either the English Government or the English people had given occasion for such animosity. The Earl of Derby was the n
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