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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 3, 1862., [Electronic resource].

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Missouri (Missouri, United States) (search for this): article 1
ver form or shape our action may assume, let us do something to stop this carnage. For each year of this war at least 200,000 men are slain in battle. Millions may be said to be wounded or stricken with disease; and for every one killed, wounded, or sick, a family is in mourning. A territory larger than Europe is given up to horrors that might have figured in Dante's "Inferno." Over fair Virginian plantations, and homesteads in old Kentucky, by the rivers of Tennessee, on the prairies of Missouri and Arkansas, among the eases and rice-fields of Louisiana Georgia, red handed war strides triumphant. --What have all these people done that they should be so directly visited? The cause of this war is a thinners, a fatal infatuation. Let us not be content with muttering this to ourselves; let us tell the Americans what we think of it, and cry — hold! while something yet remains for Americans to fight about. If our Government will not do this we must held them in part responsible for t
New Jersey (New Jersey, United States) (search for this): article 1
xpression in the press, or in the proceedings of public meetings. This establishment of arbitrary power will not be met by words, which only point out their speaker as a mark for the vengeance of the Executive. We have already a specimen of the manner in which it will be met. In the State of Illinois there has arisen a secret association called the Golden Circle, which puts one in mind of the societies which kept alive a spirit of freedom in Germany under the reign of Napoleon. The State of New Jersey threatens to call out its militia to resist illegal arrest of one of its citizens. The more disastrous the war the more arbitrary and tyrannical becomes the Government. Mr. Lincoln and his friends seem really to believe that a policy which shocks the feelings of every liberal man in England and America, which tends to make the Government odious at home as well as unsuccessful abroad, and which has the direct effect of rendering inheritable a breach between the can and Democratic p
Rhode Island (Rhode Island, United States) (search for this): article 1
ut with a proposal to raise two armies, if not with the consent of the Washington Government, then without it. Then what means the council of the New England Governors at Providence? These men represent the abolitionist States. Do they, too, contemplate some course independent of the Federal Government? The nation beyond the line of the slave States has begun to slip. A Government in Washington, a committee with revolutionary notions in New York, a council of abolitionist Governors in Rhode Island--what are these but signs of incipient revolution? At this rate there will soon be more wars than one in progress. Meanwhile the slave confederacy, armed, disciplined, organized, tri- umphant the only coherent power, will have its own way. Chances of Union complications with England and France.--Napoleon's troops in Mexico may Operate in American difficulties. [Paris (Sept. 16th.) Correspondence of the London Times.] In the way of news from America, we hear that the Alaba
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 1
pressure of some sort --whatever form or shape our action may assume, let us do something to stop this carnage. For each year of this war at least 200,000 men are slain in battle. Millions may be said to be wounded or stricken with disease; and for every one killed, wounded, or sick, a family is in mourning. A territory larger than Europe is given up to horrors that might have figured in Dante's "Inferno." Over fair Virginian plantations, and homesteads in old Kentucky, by the rivers of Tennessee, on the prairies of Missouri and Arkansas, among the eases and rice-fields of Louisiana Georgia, red handed war strides triumphant. --What have all these people done that they should be so directly visited? The cause of this war is a thinners, a fatal infatuation. Let us not be content with muttering this to ourselves; let us tell the Americans what we think of it, and cry — hold! while something yet remains for Americans to fight about. If our Government will not do this we must held
Biarritz (France) (search for this): article 1
ions. Another incident which, if confirmed — and it reaches me from good authority — is not likely to improve the state of feeling between the Cabinets of Washington and Paris, is the discovery of 30,000 muskets having been from California to Mexico, with, it is po affirmed a sum of money in addition. There is to be satisfactory proof forthcoming that the arms and spacle proceeded from the Federal the Government, and not from individuals. Finally, a Paris paper, nothing the arrival at Biarritz of M. de Chasseloup-Laubat, Minister of Marine, says that his right to the Emp with the Mexican expedition, which will be raised to 60,000 men, including the Lorentz division. Without an exact number, there is reason to believe that the number of troops sent to Mexico or possibly in the first instance to the French West India Islands) will be considerably larger than was quite lately expected. You had details of about 27,000 proceeding from different French and Algerine ports. The num
United States (United States) (search for this): article 1
nce the arrival of the news of the first battle at Run there has not been so much excitement by dispatches from the United States as was the result of those which reached here on Saturday evening up to the 4th of September. We were in hopes at f point of view of European interests, the present situation be prolonged! We not. The separates existence of the Confederate States is a fact as weighs a necessity; the impossibility of reducing them is demonstrated. Can Europe wait any longer be of the, Confederates--recognition to be won by themselves. [From the London Times, Sept. 16.] The people of the Confederate States have made themselves famous. If the renown of brilliant courage, stern devotion to a cause, and military achievemereedom, turns the most fertile portions of the earth into wilderness--but it can fight. Arbitrary arrests in the United States--the alleged tyranny of the Lincoln Cabinet. [From the London Times, Sept. 16.] There is not one-tenth part of th
Bull Run, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
the three Federal armies are hemmed up in their besieged capital."--That is the end of eighteen months incessant and sanguinary warfare. * * * * This defeat of the Federal is equal to the loss of half a million of men. Mr. Lincoln may order a conscription, but men are justified in resisting the orders of statesmen whose incompetency loads but to death and disgrace. The law Irish, undisciplined and caring little for the Union, will not replace the troops slaughtered at Centreville and Bull Run. The Union has no fresh fields to fall back upon; there are no new States to pronounce in favor of the Federal, and to send 50,000 men to die. The Confederates are differently placed. But there is matter of still more consequence. How can England and France now gently reject the demand for recognition made by the South? On what plea can we refuse to acknowledge that independence which is a fact? It is not now the capital of the Confederacy which is beleaguered, but of the Unionists.--It
New England (United States) (search for this): article 1
ays the blockade has not in anything more severe than temporary privation on the South, as it is a self supporting section, This is not the case with the New England States, to them a blockade would be ruinous, and the interruption of foreign trade would destroy the chief, if not the sole source of their prosperity. But we mmittee cames out with a proposal to raise two armies, if not with the consent of the Washington Government, then without it. Then what means the council of the New England Governors at Providence? These men represent the abolitionist States. Do they, too, contemplate some course independent of the Federal Government? The nationbjugation. These are the present prospects of the civil war. Well may the New York press begin to despair of the Union cause, and well may the Governors of the New England States take counsel at Providence. If such reverses do not teach the North to reconsider its course, we do not see how political wisdom is to be learned or pol
Arkansas (Arkansas, United States) (search for this): article 1
hape our action may assume, let us do something to stop this carnage. For each year of this war at least 200,000 men are slain in battle. Millions may be said to be wounded or stricken with disease; and for every one killed, wounded, or sick, a family is in mourning. A territory larger than Europe is given up to horrors that might have figured in Dante's "Inferno." Over fair Virginian plantations, and homesteads in old Kentucky, by the rivers of Tennessee, on the prairies of Missouri and Arkansas, among the eases and rice-fields of Louisiana Georgia, red handed war strides triumphant. --What have all these people done that they should be so directly visited? The cause of this war is a thinners, a fatal infatuation. Let us not be content with muttering this to ourselves; let us tell the Americans what we think of it, and cry — hold! while something yet remains for Americans to fight about. If our Government will not do this we must held them in part responsible for the continuanc
Gulf of Mexico (search for this): article 1
as where she was to be mot, it is said, by another Confederate armed steamer, which would place herself under the orders of the Alabama's commander, the renowned Captain Semmos. These two steamers, it is considered, will be imply sufficient to give an account of the Federal cruisers which have been allowed literally to blockade Nadean. So we may expect soon to have the account of the war varied by details of an action at sea. It is further stated to-day that French cruisers in the Gulf of Mexico, on the lookout for Mexican vessels, have captured some Federal craft, which, it is though, may lead to complications. Another incident which, if confirmed — and it reaches me from good authority — is not likely to improve the state of feeling between the Cabinets of Washington and Paris, is the discovery of 30,000 muskets having been from California to Mexico, with, it is po affirmed a sum of money in addition. There is to be satisfactory proof forthcoming that the arms and spacle
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