Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 25, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Lincoln or search for Lincoln in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 2 document sections:

raveled with them in many Northern States.--Gentlemen who took part in the late meeting of the National Volunteers, (a mere handful out of 60,000. who stand up for the rights of the South,) are denounced as traitors. If this is the case before Lincoln comes in, how will it be afterwards. Nearly all the Appropriation bills have been passed, leaving Congress little to do but to specify until the 4th of March. Talk will do no good, now. Action. Your Peace Commissioners may find a few Free Sell nigh extinct, and Virginia, it seems, is worthy only to play the slave to Abolition tyrants who deny her rights. Three counties in Nonblack's district, in Indiana, have openly declared in favor of a Southern Confederacy, and we in Virginia are stooping to the yoke of Lincoln, who wants to put slavery in a course of ultimate extinction, and denies the authority of the Supreme Court. Jefferson is drawing crowded houses at the theatre. It is very cold, and threatens to show. Zed.
a, arrived this morning. He had a long and satisfactory and friendly interview with the President to-day. The latter expressed the belief that there would be no collision between the Federal and State troops during the remainder of his Administration, and that he should certainly use every effort to prevent it and to preserve the peace. Mr. Tyler will probably remain here till the 4th of February, to meet the Commissioners from the States. The Senate, in Executive session, to-day, confirmed the appointment of Capt, Hack, of New Jersey, as Quartermaster in the Marine Corps. Mr. Kellogg, of Illinois, returned to-day from a visit to Mr. Lincoln, at Springfield. --In view of this fact, his expression of the opinion that the resolutions of the Border State Committee come nearer what is required by public demands, is considered significant. Mr. Rust, of Arkansas, has written the usual note to Mr. Dunn, of Indiana, relative to their difficulty in the House to-day.