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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: March 3, 1865., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 12 total hits in 8 results.
Napoleon (Ohio, United States) (search for this): article 5
Quaker (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 5
Elihu Burritt (search for this): article 5
William Penn (search for this): article 5
The New York Tribune expresses its confidence in the "fighting muscle" of General Sherman's army.
A few years work great changes.
Who would have expected, some years ago, ever to see such language of the ring in the editorial columns of the New York Tribune?
We should as soon have looked for it in an address of William Penn.
We were led to believe by the old Tribune that wars and fighting had come to an end, and that the millennium was at hand.
And now, not even the New York Herald exhibits more fighting gusto and science than the New York Tribune, which once was full of excellent Quaker reading, and gladdened the heart of Elihu Burritt with its humane and persistent antagonism to war.
But the Tribune, it must be confessed, and all other philanthropists of the peace order, who once abounded not only on this continent but in Europe, neither understood the nature of mankind in general, nor their own in particular, when they ignored the inextinguishable instincts of the t
Nelson (search for this): article 5
Wellington (search for this): article 5
Victor Hugo (search for this): article 5
Sherman (search for this): article 5
The New York Tribune expresses its confidence in the "fighting muscle" of General Sherman's army.
A few years work great changes.
Who would have expected, some years ago, ever to see such language of the ring in the editorial columns of the New York Tribune?
We should as soon have looked for it in an address of William Penn.
We were led to believe by the old Tribune that wars and fighting had come to an end, and that the millennium was at hand.
And now, not even the New York Herald exhibits more fighting gusto and science than the New York Tribune, which once was full of excellent Quaker reading, and gladdened the heart of Elihu Burritt with its humane and persistent antagonism to war.
But the Tribune, it must be confessed, and all other philanthropists of the peace order, who once abounded not only on this continent but in Europe, neither understood the nature of mankind in general, nor their own in particular, when they ignored the inextinguishable instincts of the