Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 15, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Canada (Canada) or search for Canada (Canada) in all documents.

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sides. The armies of the Holy Alliance and of Napoleon sink into insignificance beside them. Now Yankeedom is bitterly exasperated against Great Britain, and could she subdue us, and become the possessor of our resources in addition to her own, would take the very first opportunity to make war on her. How that war would end is, we think, not in the least doubtful, and it will not appear so to any man who looks at what has been lately done here. In the first place, Great Britain would lose Canada. Her fleets would next be swept from the ocean. Next, all the rest of her colonial possessions — the West Indies, Australia, India--would assuredly follow. Next, again, she would inevitably lose Ireland, and, lastly, she would find her own soll invaded by a million of men. No man will think those recurrences at all improbable who reflects that the old United States was wont to double its population in twenty-three years, and that, if these States ever become reunited, they will in forty y
Increase of the military force in Canada--a meeting in England. --The Montreal Advertiser has the following significant paragraph: The military force in Canada is about to be increased by some batteries of artillery and a brigade of infantry. Large additions have been recently made to the stores of arms, ammunition, and material in military depots, which are now equal to equipage and maintaining in the field a force of 250,000 men, should the necessity arise for it during the seasonCanada is about to be increased by some batteries of artillery and a brigade of infantry. Large additions have been recently made to the stores of arms, ammunition, and material in military depots, which are now equal to equipage and maintaining in the field a force of 250,000 men, should the necessity arise for it during the season when navigations closed. At a public meeting, held at Oldham, resolutions were offered calling on the Government to recognize the Confederate States. An amendment was offered, declaring such recognition impolitic, and likely to lead to war with the North. After some uproarious proceedings, the original motion was declared carried, although the meeting was about equally divided.