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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 11, 1862., [Electronic resource].

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Maryland (Maryland, United States) (search for this): article 1
ms acts that are not crimes, that they resort to the high handed measures they do. A few days since some Black Republican speculators in the substitute business, who had violated the orders of the War Department, were sent to Fort Lafayette. The Abolition papers, however, made a great howl over it, and they have been released. There are, however, scores of better men and truer patriots in there than those released, in whose behalf not a word is uttered. There is Judge Carmichael, of Maryland, Guilty of what! Why, of the gross crime (1) of telling the Grand Jury of his county what the law in relation to arrests was. For months has Judge C. suffered the horrors of the Bastile, for simply doing his duty. Is it possible, therefore, that the recent Republican outburst of indignation against arbitrary arrests proceeds from any regard for the principles of civil liberty? No, it is the grossest hypocrisy. They wish only Democrats to be imprisoned. If they are sincere, why do they
Michigan (Michigan, United States) (search for this): article 1
ns? "The names of those confined" must not be revealed. Who knows, then, how many people are languishing there, or for what trivial offences? We know of one man who was kept in Fort Lafayette last year for six months because his children raised upon a pole a rag through which he had been straining black berries! Some neighbor, who was at enmity with him, started the report that he had raised "a secession flag," and suddenly he was arrested, hurried off hundreds of miles, (he resided in Michigan) and incarcerated in Fort Lafayette, and kept there more than half a year without any attention being paid to his case. He was finally informed that there was no charge against him, and allowed to go. Six ladious months of cruel imprisonment, simply on account of a little harmless playfulness of his children!--Can that be called a free or just Government under which such shameful outrages are perpetrated. And yet this is but a sample of what arbitrary arrests must and will ever be. If any
Austria (Austria) (search for this): article 1
ls are in their reach, and they are under constant surveillance." Dr. Olds, of Ohio, it is said, has been placed in close confinement, and, what is most remarkable of all, the Express report also states that "every prisoner released from Fort Lafayette, and every visitor thereto, is bound not to reveal anything of the discipline of the prison or the names of those confined, and hence the press knows something, and can report but little, of what is going on." Was there over anything in Austrian or Neapolitan dungeons that could exceed the despotic character of such regulations? "The names of those confined" must not be revealed. Who knows, then, how many people are languishing there, or for what trivial offences? We know of one man who was kept in Fort Lafayette last year for six months because his children raised upon a pole a rag through which he had been straining black berries! Some neighbor, who was at enmity with him, started the report that he had raised "a secession fl
Thomas Cox (search for this): article 1
Acquitted. --Mr. Thomas Cox, of Chesterfield county, who cut Mr. Lemuel Snellings (of the same county) in the arm with a pocket-knife, on Wednesday, from the effects of which he died, was carried before two of the country Magistrates on Thursday, and, after undergoing an examination, was acquitted.--It appeared in evidence tparties were at a neighboring store they commenced a friendly game of cards for liquor. In the course of the game a misunderstanding arose between the two men, and Cox got up and went towards the door. Snellings advanced and seized him by the collar. Cox then said to Snellings, seeing one hand in his pocket, "You intend to cut mCox then said to Snellings, seeing one hand in his pocket, "You intend to cut me, do you?" and drew from his own pocket a pen-knife and cut him across the arm. Seeing the blood flowing, (the main artery having been severed,) he started after a doctor. By the time he got back Snelligs had bled to death, two other men who were present being too much alarmed to bandage the wound and stop the bleeding.
Lemuel Snellings (search for this): article 1
Acquitted. --Mr. Thomas Cox, of Chesterfield county, who cut Mr. Lemuel Snellings (of the same county) in the arm with a pocket-knife, on Wednesday, from the effects of which he died, was carried before two of the country Magistrates on Thursday, and, after undergoing an examination, was acquitted.--It appeared in evidence tommenced a friendly game of cards for liquor. In the course of the game a misunderstanding arose between the two men, and Cox got up and went towards the door. Snellings advanced and seized him by the collar. Cox then said to Snellings, seeing one hand in his pocket, "You intend to cut me, do you?" and drew from his own pocket aSnellings, seeing one hand in his pocket, "You intend to cut me, do you?" and drew from his own pocket a pen-knife and cut him across the arm. Seeing the blood flowing, (the main artery having been severed,) he started after a doctor. By the time he got back Snelligs had bled to death, two other men who were present being too much alarmed to bandage the wound and stop the bleeding.
Chesterfield (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Acquitted. --Mr. Thomas Cox, of Chesterfield county, who cut Mr. Lemuel Snellings (of the same county) in the arm with a pocket-knife, on Wednesday, from the effects of which he died, was carried before two of the country Magistrates on Thursday, and, after undergoing an examination, was acquitted.--It appeared in evidence that while the parties were at a neighboring store they commenced a friendly game of cards for liquor. In the course of the game a misunderstanding arose between the two men, and Cox got up and went towards the door. Snellings advanced and seized him by the collar. Cox then said to Snellings, seeing one hand in his pocket, "You intend to cut me, do you?" and drew from his own pocket a pen-knife and cut him across the arm. Seeing the blood flowing, (the main artery having been severed,) he started after a doctor. By the time he got back Snelligs had bled to death, two other men who were present being too much alarmed to bandage the wound and stop the bleedi
October, 10 AD (search for this): article 1
Jacksonville, Fla., Evacuated. Augusta, Oct. 10. --A special dispatch to the Savannah Republican, of this morning, dated Baldwin, Fla., 9th, says: "The Federal at Jacksonville embarked yesterday, and went down the river this morning early. Two large gunboats are still lying off the town. The Yankees have taken off all the negroes they could get, both slave and free."
Jacksonville (Florida, United States) (search for this): article 1
Jacksonville, Fla., Evacuated. Augusta, Oct. 10. --A special dispatch to the Savannah Republican, of this morning, dated Baldwin, Fla., 9th, says: "The Federal at Jacksonville embarked yesterday, and went down the river this morning early. Two large gunboats are still lying off the town. The Yankees have taken off all the negroes they could get, both slave and free." Jacksonville, Fla., Evacuated. Augusta, Oct. 10. --A special dispatch to the Savannah Republican, of this morning, dated Baldwin, Fla., 9th, says: "The Federal at Jacksonville embarked yesterday, and went down the river this morning early. Two large gunboats are still lying off the town. The Yankees have taken off all the negroes they could get, both slave and free."
Baldwin, Fla. (Florida, United States) (search for this): article 1
Jacksonville, Fla., Evacuated. Augusta, Oct. 10. --A special dispatch to the Savannah Republican, of this morning, dated Baldwin, Fla., 9th, says: "The Federal at Jacksonville embarked yesterday, and went down the river this morning early. Two large gunboats are still lying off the town. The Yankees have taken off all the negroes they could get, both slave and free."
els per acre on an average, and many fields were damaged to such an extent by the "bug" that they were not worth cutting. In Wisconsin the crop is also short. In the northerly counties the quality is good, but the quantity is much below that of last year's crop; while in the centre and southern counties the wheat is very deficient both in quality and yield. In Iowa the quality will average better than in Illinois and Southern Wisconsin, but the yield is not over half of the crop of 1861. In some of the northern counties the crop is excellent in quality, and the yield, though not as heavy as last year, is satisfactory. In Minnesota the crop is excellent as to quality, and there is not much complaint about the yield.--The rapid increase in the farming population of this State within a year will insure a much heavier surplus this year then ever before. With regard to the corn crop there is not so much certainty, but the late planting, owing to the wet spring, will do
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