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The Daily Dispatch: January 18, 1861., [Electronic resource] 13 1 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: February 5, 1861., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 18, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for C. Y. Thomas or search for C. Y. Thomas in all documents.

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others, participated, when Mr. Wickham withdrew his amendment, and Mr. Thomas, of Fairfax, offered an amendment as an independent section, providing that tock. Petitions.--The following petitions were presented and referred: By Mr. Thomas, of Fairfax, of a large number of citizens of Fairfax, in reference to the coy Mr. Pate, of incorporating the Home Mining and Manufacturing Company; by Mr. C. Y. Thomas, of refunding to George Hairston, Jr., of Hardy county, a certain sum imprMcGehee Mong, Newton, R. K. Robinson, Rives, Rutherfoord, Seddon, Henry Smith. Thomas. Tomlin, Tyler, Edwin Watson, Wilson, and Witten--33 Nays.--Messrs. Crutcohnson, Keen, Knotts, Kyle Leftwich, Lockridge, Lucas, Magruder. J. G. Martin, Thomas Martin Wm. Martin, Massie, Matthews, Maupin, McGruder, McKinney, McKensie, Medltgomery, Nelson, Newton. R. K. Robinson, Rives, Rutherfoord, Seddon, H. Smith, Thomas, Tomlin, Tyler, Ward, E. Watson, Wilton, Witten and Woolfolk--52. Nays.--
Congressional. Washington, Jan. 17. --Senate.--After the transaction of some unimportant business, the Senate took up the Deficiency bill, which was amended and passed. The Pacific Railway bill was called up, and pending its reading the Senate went into Executive session. House.--The House was engaged all day on the Army bill. Mr. Thomas, of Tenn., took moderate Southern grounds. He said that, had the Government pursued a less hostile course, there would probably now have been only one State out of the Union. If coercion were used against secession, all the Southern States ought to meet it as a blow aimed at their common bosom. Mr. Sickles, in the course of his remarks, counselled the preservation of the status quo by the Government; but said if peace were to be preserved, the South must act in a friendly spirit. It won't do to take the forts, ships and arsenals. He denounced the firing into the Star of the West, eulogized the magnanimity of Anderson,