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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: December 20, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 34 total hits in 14 results.
Preussen (search for this): article 6
United States (United States) (search for this): article 6
West Indies (search for this): article 6
Austria (Austria) (search for this): article 6
J. B. Hopkins (search for this): article 6
James Williams (search for this): article 6
Percy Gregg (search for this): article 6
Gladstone (search for this): article 6
The Confederacy and its advocates abroad
A private letter from London furnishes the Mobile Register with some little items of interest not likely to find their way into the Northern papers.
The writer says:
"Though recognition is deferred, public opinion unanimously locks upon our admission into the family of nations as a foregone conclusion.
I met Mr. Gladstone, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, at a dinner party some time since, and found him not only most friendly, but in a discussion which ensued after the ladies had retired, he came to my aid on the subject of slavery.
I found afterwards that his father was a great West India proprietor, and had been ruined by English emancipation.
Is not this a sign?"
The Index, we are glad to learn, has proved a great success, and produces a political effect far beyond the most sanguine hopes of its friends.
It has already taken its stand as a first class weekly.
A gentleman, formerly of Mobile, and whose liberality in aid
Henry Hoste (search for this): article 6
London (search for this): article 6
The Confederacy and its advocates abroad
A private letter from London furnishes the Mobile Register with some little items of interest not likely to find their way into the Northern papers.
The writer says:
"Though recognition is deferred, public opinion unanimously locks upon our admission into the family of nations as a foregone conclusion.
I met Mr. Gladstone, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, at a dinner party some time since, and found him not only most friendly, but in a discussion which ensued after the ladies had retired, he came to my aid on the subject of slavery.
I found afterwards that his father was a great West India proprietor, and had been ruined by English emancipation.
Is not this a sign?"
The Index, we are glad to learn, has proved a great success, and produces a political effect far beyond the most sanguine hopes of its friends.
It has already taken its stand as a first class weekly.
A gentleman, formerly of Mobile, and whose liberality in aid