Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 15, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hale or search for Hale in all documents.

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opular, and Wilson is relieved from the necessity of continual outcry and exertion against "the peculiar institution," he is becoming stout and portly. This may be one of the benefits of "the anti-slavery legislation of Congress." Talking to him just now is his colleague in the lower House, George S. Boutwell, former Commissioner of Internal Revenue. He is a tall, thin, dark-haired, dark-skinned man, said to be one of the hardest workers and profoundest thinkers in Congress.--There, too, is Hale, of New Hampshire, one of the old original abolitionists, the candidate of that organization for the Presidency in 1852. George W. Julian, who was then his associate on the ticket, is now a member of the lower House. General James Lane does not by any means look like the ferocious "jayhawker" he has been painted. He is about the most quiet member of the Senate. He sits at his desk reading or writing, paying little attention to what is going on around him. His colleague, Mr. Pomeroy, is