Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 21, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Prentice or search for Prentice in all documents.

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Prentice's opinion of A. H. Stephens. --The Louisville Journal, which opposed secession from the beginning, and was a thoroughly Union paper throughout the war, has the magnanimity to speak as follows concerning the ex-Vice President of the Confederate States: "Mr. Stephens is one of nature's noblemen; and from our heart of hearts we believe that every throb of his soul is in favor of the Union, of his country, and of his whole country. "Mr. Stephens ought to be in the Senate of the United States. Let Congress repeal the test oath and receive into its body again with acclamations the great and good Georgian, one of the noblest Romans of this or any other country. Oh, we do abhor that narrow spirit and that short-sighted policy that keep from the councils of the Republic such a man as Alexander H. Stephens."
A sensible remark. --Rev. Dr. Goss commenced his discourse in the Free-Will Baptist Church, New York, last Sunday, by declaring that that city was the great missionary field for the world. John Y. Mason, Jacob Thompson, J. P. Benjamin and Colonel Fuller are in London. Mr. Slidell, Mrs. Gywn and daughter, Judge Rost (rebel commissioner to Spain) and Major Huse, agent to the rebels for the purchase of arms, are in Paris. Rev. Dr. Verner's church, in New York, is called the "Pretty Waiter-Girl's Church. " Reason — pretty girls take up the collections. We haven't any late advices from Maximilian, and we are glad of it. We don't want advice from that quarter.--Prentice.