Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 14, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Vienna (Virginia, United States) or search for Vienna (Virginia, United States) in all documents.

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French, who gave them every encouragement to proceed with their motion in Parliament for the recognition of the Confederacy. Mr. Roebuck's motion, it is further stated, was to have come up on the 30th June. The latest date is the 28th. From Vienna comes the strange statement that Lord Palmerston will endeavor to have the American question submitted to the King of the Belgians for arbitration. The repeated recurrence of the press and the statesmen of Europe to the question of the recogs to the time when this is done they must decide. All we ask is that they shall take their step upon their own views of what is proper, and not from any idea that we are depending upon them or looking to them for aid. The point put forth in Vienna, that Lord Palmerston will seek to have the American question submitted to the Belgian King for arbitration, has no probability about it. It is certainly not to be thought of by the South.--Lord Palmerston, who is so much opposed to all interfer
sterday, carried instructions to General Forey to issue a proclamation immediately on arriving at the city of Mexico, to the effect that the French Government will recognize the Government of Mr. Jefferson Davis. The General Correspondent of Vienna, 23d, has the following: We have received intelligence from London which, if confirmed, would appear of the highest importance. Lord Palmerston is reported to have conceived the idea bf submitting the American quarrel to the arbitration of the Brazilian conflict, has probably some connection with the American project. A New York adventurer, named Wm. Cornell Jewett, is making a tour of Europe, on the subject of peace between the Confederate and United States. A dispatch from Vienna, the 25th, has the following about his movements: Mr. Jewett, who came to Europe on a mission the object of which was to restore peace in America, had a private interview to-day with Count Rechberg, on the subject of mediation, on the basis