Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 24, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abe Lincoln or search for Abe Lincoln in all documents.

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he shameless display of selfishness and greed at a time like this, when the great mass of the people are making the grandest sacrifices ever recorded in history. Worst of all, most brazen and infamous of all, is the ravenous pertina city of old Lincoln office-holders, office seekers, and office-expectants, of men who stood by the flag of Lincoln till he himself booted them into resistance, now endeavoring to assuage their disappointed appetites by jumping and snapping at everything in the shapime like this, when the great mass of the people are making the grandest sacrifices ever recorded in history. Worst of all, most brazen and infamous of all, is the ravenous pertina city of old Lincoln office-holders, office seekers, and office-expectants, of men who stood by the flag of Lincoln till he himself booted them into resistance, now endeavoring to assuage their disappointed appetites by jumping and snapping at everything in the shape of an office which the new Republic has to give.
ates alone. It is true, as we have often heretofore shown, that the taste for Louisiana sugars is mainly in the free Western States, where the great market for them was, before the Revolution, found; but now the people in the planting States, having no choice, will very soon acquire a liking for them, and their price in these hard times will commend them to favor over the refined or partially refined, with the great body of consumers. If this war continues through the Presidential term of Lincoln, as we very unwillingly are constrained to believe, so far as the permanent interests of the sugar grower are involved, he will be the gainer; for the taste for his product existing already in the West, and rendered more craving from deprivation, and a similar taste being created by the war in those Confederate States where refined sugars were mainly used previously, it follows conclusively that he will have an enlarged field to supply, and a choice of markets for customers. It will be, ho
ession that there was something very much like the retribution which awaits all men, either on this side of the grave or the other, in the death of Col. Baker. He was an Englishman by birth, but had been in the United States many years. He had fought bravely in Mexico, us his countrymen, with very few exceptions' have always done, wherever they have served. In the last Congress he made the most violent speech that was made, even in that assembly of blood-hounds. He was in favor of making Lincoln a Dictator, as if he were not already one. He wished him to have the name as well as the substance of power. He was not content with his being merely CÆ--he wished him to be king. He desired to place a thousand million at his disposal. He would give him a million of men to enslave the revolted States. He would subjugate them completely, though it could only be done by exterminating the whole population. He would set Yankee taskmasters over them. He would hold them as colonies, subjec
l correspondent of the London Times. Seizure of a Virginia vessel. The Baltimore Sun of the 17th says the schr. True American, at Light street wharf, having on board 700 bushels of sweet potatoes, alleged to have been brought from Accomac, Va., was seized in that city on Wednesday, by Deputy Marshal Williams. Gen. Shields. The New York Irish American states, positively, that Gen. Shields has not declined the commission of a Brigadier General, recently tendered him by President Lincoln: but that as soon as the intelligence of his appointment reaches him in Mexico where he has gone on private business, he will hasten to the seat of war, to devote himself with all his might to the duties of his new command. Stopping the work. According to the New York Tribune, the Secretary of War, on his late visit to St. Louis, ordered Gen. Fremont to discontinue, as unnecessary, his field works around the city, and that which he is erecting at Jefferson City; to suspend wor
[written for the Richmond Dispatch.]the flag of Secession. the Star-Spangled banner O, say, can't you see, by the dawn's early light, What you yesterday held to be vaunting and dreaming? The Northern men routed, Abe Lincoln in flight, And the Palmetto flag over the Capitol streaming. The pumpkins for fare. And the foul, fetid air, Gave proof through the night that the Yankees were there. Now, the Flag of Secession in triumph cloth wave O'er the land of the freed and the horse of the brave. bist the dust that is raised by the fugitive's feet, His acts of coercion new bitterly ruing, See the rail-splitter running in panting retreat, And gallant Virginia in laughter pursuing; Now he catches a beam Of the bayonet's fierce gleam, And he hurries away with a jump and a scream. And the Flag of Secession in triumph doth wave Oe'r the land of the freed and the home of the brave. But where is the despot who came to our soft. In the garb of the soldier his m