Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 11, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for October 18th or search for October 18th in all documents.

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stion. We submit the following extracts, which we think worthy of the attention of our readers: Prince Napoleon reports in favor of a recognition of the Southern Confederacy.[Paris correspondence of the New York Herald, November 2] Paris Oct. 18. --I was not mistaken in the information I gave you in my last, as to the favorable report Prince Napoleon had given to the Emperor of what he conceived to be the chances of success of the South. The fact is now notorious, and the languageernment in order that foreign nations may be forced to take a side in the quarrel.--It would ill become England to make herself the tool of such machinations. The Attorney General of England on the Cotton crisis. [From the London Herald, Oct. 18.] On Tuesday night Sir William Artherton, Attorney General, and M. P. for Durham, addressed a meeting of his constituents in the Town Hall in that city. The chair was occupied by Mr. John Henderson. The Attorney General observed in his
The Daily Dispatch: November 11, 1861., [Electronic resource], Bitterness of feeling against the Northern Government. (search)
Bitterness of feeling against the Northern Government. A Earls letter, dated October 18, says: If we may judge of the feeling against the North among the commercial people of England by that manifested by the English commercial people located at Paris it must be terrible indeed. No slander is too absurd to be told, none too gross to be believed. Whether from commercial rivalry, from the menacing growth, or from what they call the impertinence of the Yankee race, we seem to have no friends left in this particular class of the English people, Not that they love the South or slavery, but they are furious at the idea that the North should even attempt to avert the threatened rupture of the great Republic, and will be still more furious if the North be successful. The doctrine of free trade which England is forcing on all Europe, and which she has failed to force on the United States, has turned away the sympathies of the commercial classes from the race to which they are al