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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 29, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for June 25th or search for June 25th in all documents.
Your search returned 11 results in 8 document sections:
Guerilla War.
--The agent of the Northern Associated Press telegraphs from Wheeling, June 25th;--"Parties who have come in tonight from the interior counties represent them to be in a state of guerilla war. Great anxiety is felt here."
Death of a Chief Justice.
--Chief Justice Storrs, of Connecticut, died on the 25th June, aged sixty-six years.
Postal Instructions.
--A telegraphic dispatch from Louisville, Ky., June 25, says:
Our postmaster here has been directed to forward letters from the South to loyal States, after removing the postage stamps, but to send foreign letters, on which prepayment is compulsory, to the dead letter office.
The Daily Dispatch: June 29, 1861., [Electronic resource], The circulation of the Dispatch . (search)
The Daily Dispatch: June 29, 1861., [Electronic resource], Notice to our Subscribers. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: June 29, 1861., [Electronic resource], Feeling on the battle-fields. (search)
From Europe. Halifax, June 25,P. M.
--The Europe sailed this afternoon, and will be due at Boston to-morrow (Wednesday) evening.
In the House of Commons, Mr. Gregory moved the appointment of a select committee to inquire into the circumstances attending the termination of the Galway contract.
He charged the British Government with being actuated by an envious spirit towards Ireland.
Lord John Russell said that he did not intend to oppose the motion, and trusted that the investigation would be satisfactory.
The Times, in an editorial on American affairs and the indignation of the North towards the attitude of England, asserts that the British public have given much sympathy towards the Federal cause, more than it ever gave to the cause of British sovereignly and union in any of its trials.
France.
The Corps Legislating had finally agreed to hold to the budget by a vote of 242 against 5
M. Thouvenel had addressed a courteous letter to the Turen Cab
The Daily Dispatch: June 29, 1861., [Electronic resource], Starch of home manufacture. (search)
Arrival of the Angle-Saxen. Farther Point, June 25.
--The steamship Anglo-Saxon has passed here, on her way to Quebec, with Liverpool dates to Friday, the 14th instant.
Her advices have been anticipated by the arrival of the steamer Europa at Halifax.
The following weekly report of the Liverpool cotton market is not included in the dispatch by the Europa:
Liverpool, June 14.--The sales of cotton for the week have been 57,000 bales, of which speculators took 6,500 bales, and exporters 7,500 bales. The market closed quiet.
Inferior grades had declined 5/8d., and were firmer, with an improved demand.
The sales on Friday were 10,000 bales, including 2,000 bales to speculators and exporters.
New Orleans fair 8 5/8, middlings 7-15-16; Mobiles fair 8¼ middlings 7 5/8; Uplands fair 8 ¼, middlings 7 5/8.
The stock in port is 1,130,000 bales, of which 872,000 are American.
London--The Bullion in the Bank of England has increased £71,000; the Bank of France i
Later from California. Fort Kearney, June 25.
--The pony express, with San Francisco dates to the 15th, states that the Breckinridge Convention adjourned, without nominating a Governor, to meet on the 23d of July. Their platform is "the Union and the Constitution, but disunion rather than war."
A Union Convention was held on the 13th to ignore party, but the result indicates that they will adhere to party ties.
The attendance was slim and insufficient to transact business.