Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 14, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Lincoln or search for Lincoln in all documents.

Your search returned 6 results in 2 document sections:

pression in the neighboring States, and if no fresh disaster awaits the arms of the Union, it will completely override the efforts of the malcontents in Kentucky to get up a feeling in favor of the Confederate cause. It would seem that President Lincoln has moved in the anti-slavery path quite as fast as public opinion would permit; but now that the commercial classes of the North, who were afraid of injuring the "Almighty Dollar" by too exact a conformance with the dictates of Christianitsake, would have pleased us better had it been more direct. No doubt the plea of ill health is perfectly valid. But it looks like an evasion. It is, in fact, too much like the fashionable "not at home" to an unwelcome visitor. As it is, President Lincoln may hug himself in the belief that but for a twinge of rheumatism Garibaldi might have immortalized him, and handed him down to grateful posterity a second Washington. [Turin (Sept. 16) correspondence of the London News.] The Mini
The Daily Dispatch: October 14, 1861., [Electronic resource], The danger of rebellion in the North! (search)
through the North. Under these circumstances it is the duty of the conservative elements to come forward and sustain Mr. Lincoln and denounce the Abolition traitors, who are the prime cause of the present misfortunes of the country, and are doing destruction of the Government. Our admonitions were unheeded, and the consequence is a bloody civil war. We now warn Mr. Lincoln that there is a disaffection to his Government in his own party at the North; that it is every day gaining strength, ais ground that the Herald and the conservative press of the country called on President Buchanan, and after him on President Lincoln, to put down the rebellion in conformity with the oath of office. Unlike the monarchies of Europe, in our Governmecountry, without regard to party politics. But, meantime, it will be only an act of prudent precaution on the part of Mr. Lincoln's Government to arrest the leaders of a conspiracy equalling in atrocity that of Cataline and his Confederates in anci