Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 28, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Thomas B. Lincoln or search for Thomas B. Lincoln in all documents.

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at rascal, and we have no doubt that he is, His general reputation among Western Virginians is that of a sharper and cheat. He acquired very considerable knowledge of the country, and learned all the high-ways and by-ways of the mountains. It was possibly this knowledge, more than any real merit, that placed so unmeritorious a man in a position of command. It was, no doubt, thought that a man so well posted on the topography of the country could easily find his way to its heart, and desolate the hearth-stones of those kind and hospitable people who had shared so often their fare with him, and whom he had so often cheated of their property. Such a man for such a purpose was a marvellous proper one for Lincoln, and, of course, was promoted from, his occupation to go a coloneling among the people he had so often defrauded. It is to be hoped the Colonel will fall into the hands of some who remember him for past offences. If he does, he may thank his stars if he saves his own skin.
and, not having returned, it is supposed that she had been detained by order of General Wool. The steamer went for the purpose of conveying down the Captain and a portion of the crew of the ship A. B. Thompson, which was condemned recently at Charleston, S. C. Oh board the Kahukee were Captain Huger, son of Gen. Huger; Lieut. J. F. Milligan, from this city, and Mr. J. B. Cary, of Hampton; also, Mis. Williams, wife of John Williams, agent of the Boston steamers, taken prisoner at Boston by Lincoln's authorities, and Mrs. Hutchinson, whose husband holds some office in the Federal Navy. The ladies are bound North--Mrs. W. hoping to get her husband released. If the Kahukee is held by Wool, and those on board imprisoned or detained as prisoners of war, a speedy retaliation should be forthwith commenced. The affair causes much excitement here, and many think that another great outrage has been committed by the Federal authorities.--It is possible, however, that an accident has
to relieve them. Without entering into the questions at issue, I feel confident that if they are assured by their Southern fellow-countrymen of their disposition to treat them with kindness, and to respect their manly feelings, (while they are making provision for the protection of our own Tennessee soil against invasion from the North,) they will have no reason to be aggrieved by the presence of troops in their midst. They must see that the policy of the U. S. Government, or rather Mr. Lincoln's Government, is to overrun and subjugate us, and they also know that it is threatening to do this through the passes of the Tennessee mountains. What are we to do, then? But one thing is left us, and that is to place troops at all of these points at which we are most exposed. This, assuredly, in the face of the facts alluded to, should form no just ground of compliant on the part of any candid man of sense. It is upon every account desirable that no irritating language, o
Dr. Adam Converse. --Among the refreshing evidences of freedom lately experienced by the Abolition population of Philadelphia, is the spectacle presented by the seizure by "Marshal Millward," (a creature of Lincoln's make,) of the "office and appurtenances" of the Christian Observer, a Presbyterian journal, owned and edited by Rev. Adam Converse, D. D., a native of Vermont, but well known in this city as a former resident, where his walk and conversation as a Christian gentlemen endeared him to many. It is stated in extenuation of this outrageous proceeding, that the Observer had been recently repudiated by the New School Presbyterians, "on account of its pro-slavery proclivities." It may be that Dr. Converse will be driven by the robbers who have stolen his property to seek an asylum again in our midst.
in the General Assembly of Maryland, at their indignant protest against the usurpations of President Lincoln and his advisers. The arrest of a French subject. The telegraph some days ago anhe Administration occupies towards Maryland. New, we have the right to know upon what theory Mr. Lincoln is governing this State. Does he assume to rule us as one who has been lawfully set up over braham Lincoln, of Illinois. An arrest in Cincinnati — U. S. Senator Implicated. Thomas B. Lincoln was arrested in Cincinnati a few days ago, and on searching his trunks the following documion of States:-- My Dear Sir: --Allow me to introduce to your acquaintance my friend, Thomas B. Lincoln, of Texas. He visits your capital mainly to dispose of what he regards a great improvemenhern lines: Confederate States of America, War Department, Richmond, Aug. 1, 1861. T. B. Lincoln has permission to visit Nashville upon his honor as a man that he will not communicate in wr