Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 18, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for A. H. Stephens or search for A. H. Stephens in all documents.

Your search returned 4 results in 2 document sections:

Greeley in favor of A. H. Stephens for United States Senator. --After announcing that Mr. Stephens has declined to be a candidate for United States Senator from Georgia, the New York Tribune adds: "We would far prefer the reformatory convictions and trustful foresight of Mr. Stephens to the merely negative qualities ofMr. Stephens has declined to be a candidate for United States Senator from Georgia, the New York Tribune adds: "We would far prefer the reformatory convictions and trustful foresight of Mr. Stephens to the merely negative qualities of Mr. Johnson, who, if not quite given over to the mulisliness which characterizes a few of his contemporaries, was never a decided or wholesome actor or thinker, and is unable to digest the present condition of affairs. Georgia has a real Union party, however small, who are the most chagrined sufferers by the ruling process of reMr. Stephens to the merely negative qualities of Mr. Johnson, who, if not quite given over to the mulisliness which characterizes a few of his contemporaries, was never a decided or wholesome actor or thinker, and is unable to digest the present condition of affairs. Georgia has a real Union party, however small, who are the most chagrined sufferers by the ruling process of reconstruction; but there is no hope whatever that Georgia, more than any other late insurgent State, will select her architects from the class of tried Unionists."
t desire on the part of the Brotherhood generally to learn their views in relation to the state of affairs in Ireland. No official report, it appears, has yet been presented, and therefore all that is known of their conclusions is of an unofficial character. It is understood since their return that the impression which has prevailed here, and also apparently to some extent with the British authorities, that a concerted outbreak had been intended at the present time, and that the arrest of Stephens had prevented it, was entirely erroneous. It does not appear to have been looked to, neither was a general outbreak or open revolution now necessary to, or any part of, the plans of the Fenian Brotherhood; and that, therefore, the arrest of the Fenian chief in Ireland, while greatly to be regretted, did not, to any very alarming extent, interfere with the steady progress of the movement in Ireland. "According to another statement, published in the world, the contributions of the Fenia