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The Daily Dispatch: may 7, 1861., [Electronic resource] | 29 | 1 | Browse | Search |
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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 7, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for G. N. Lincoln or search for G. N. Lincoln in all documents.
Your search returned 15 results in 9 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: may 7, 1861., [Electronic resource], The British press on American Affairs. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: may 7, 1861., [Electronic resource], Terrible earthquake in South America . (search)
A Lincolnite caged.
--Sunday night a fellow calling himself John Frost got into a rather warm place by declaring on the streets his incendiary proclivities in the hearing of loyal citizens.
Among his assertions was one to the effect that no army the South might muster could move Lincoln from Washington, or take him in custody for his flagrant violations of constitutional obligation; also, that he was a Black Republican, and did not care who knew it. As a matter of course, the fellow was deposited in the watch-house.
The Mayor yesterday put him in jail, though he might with equal justice have ordered him thirty-nine lashes, the case coming under that provision of law authorizing the Mayor to inflict stripes on blacks, whether Republicans or otherwise.
No doubt a term in the chain gang will in the end serve to cool the ardor of the incendiary refugee.
The Daily Dispatch: may 7, 1861., [Electronic resource], Wants his name changed. (search)
Wants his name changed.
--An excellent citizen of Memphis, Mr. G. N. Lincoln, has petitioned the Legislature to have his name changed.
The petitioner alleges that his father and grandfather were first-rate people, but he now deems his patronymic unendurable.
The English press.
We give extracts, to-day, from the English press.
They cry out with one voice against civil war in America.
If they pronounce Lincoln's threats of coercion "diabolical," what will they say when they hear of the hellish proceedings in New York?
We are strongly of opinion that Lord Lyons will be instructed to offer the mediation of England, and, if that is not effectual, that, in the end, the interests of England will require a more effectual intervention.
A war of subjugation or extermination.
An intelligent gentleman who arrived lately in this city, from Washington, states that he heard Lincoln make a speech on Thursday night last, in which he declared that the present war must end in the subjugation or extermination of the South.
That is the purpose of the Administration, beyond all doubt.
The Daily Dispatch: may 7, 1861., [Electronic resource], Glorious News from Northwestern Virginia . (search)
Spies in the South.
We have little doubt that Lincoln has his agents in every Southern locality, and a strict look-out should be kept for them.
Strangers, especially, no matter how pacific the pretenses on which they profess to come, should be closely watched, and, if necessary, prevented from leaving.