Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 6, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Mexico (Mexico) or search for Mexico (Mexico) in all documents.

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Mexican news. --We have by the Tennessee, Mexican newspapers from the capital as late as due. Affairs appear to be progressing as before the usurpation of Zuloaga.--All the old journals, the Heralado, Siglo, Estafette and Extraordinary, have made their reappearance, and none of them, during their long suspension, appear to have changed in sentiment. The expulsion, as it is called, of the Spanish Minister, Papal Nuncio, and Charge d' Affaires of Guatemala and Ecuador, is, of course, the sMexican newspapers from the capital as late as due. Affairs appear to be progressing as before the usurpation of Zuloaga.--All the old journals, the Heralado, Siglo, Estafette and Extraordinary, have made their reappearance, and none of them, during their long suspension, appear to have changed in sentiment. The expulsion, as it is called, of the Spanish Minister, Papal Nuncio, and Charge d' Affaires of Guatemala and Ecuador, is, of course, the subject of extended comments, as also of considerable excitement at the capital. Some think a Spanish war is sure to follow. But the more judicious think there will be a general acquiescence in the just right of the new Government to suspend intercourse with persons, though representatives of foreign Governments, who are personally or otherwise obnoxious to them — a right derivable not only from the practice of all Governments, but the Law of Nations. The Mazatlan correspondent of the Ext