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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: March 9, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 37 total hits in 8 results.
April, 11 AD (search for this): article 1
Stonewall Jackson (search for this): article 1
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): article 1
President (search for this): article 1
U. S. Presidential (search for this): article 1
The U. S. Presidential election.
The people of the United States, not being sufficiently drunk with military excitement, are preparing to work themselves up into a grand furore over the election of a President.
The present incumbent is desirous of re-election, if indeed it can be called a re-election, seeing he has never yet enjoyed the coveted felicity of being President of what was once the United States, but which ceased to be the United States when he assumed the reins of power.
We are not at all surprised that Mr. Seward insists on Mr. Lincoln holding his place till all the States over which he was chosen to preside, acknowledge his benignant away.
If he holds on till that period he will have a longer reign than all the monarchs of all time together.--It is natural that he should desire some compensation for being kept out of his own, the whole term for which he was originally elected.
What a sorry time he has had of it!
The votes of the Black Republicans could make him
Seward (search for this): article 1
Austria (Austria) (search for this): article 1
United States (United States) (search for this): article 1
The U. S. Presidential election.
The people of the United States, not being sufficiently drunk with military excitement, are preparing ed the coveted felicity of being President of what was once the United States, but which ceased to be the United States when he assumed the rUnited States when he assumed the reins of power.
We are not at all surprised that Mr. Seward insists on Mr. Lincoln holding his place till all the States over which he was ch votes of the Black Republicans could make him President of the United States, but not of the South.
In all that time he has no more been ou as their votes.
Still he is not President of what he calls the United States.
He is now about to make another effort, combining ballots and he tool of any party under the sun.
What the result of the United States election will be it is impossible to predict.
If its people we cal campaign.
It remains for the armies of the South to say whether Lincoln shall or shall not be the next President of the United States.