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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 21, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for February or search for February in all documents.

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ts, against Gen. Stone, for, as is alleged, compelling the troops from that State to assist in the restoration of fugitive slaves. The Provost Marshal has determined to revoke all passes which have been transferred, and to punish those transferring them. A number of arrests have already been made. Seward called to account. The St. Louis Republican, notwithstanding its abolition proclivities, takes Seward and his prophecies off as follows: The prophetic Mr. Seward, who in February last said all the troubles of the country would be settled in sixty days--who three or four months ago predicted that the blockade of the rebellion would be broken in ninety days--and who on divers occasions since has promised important and highly interesting developments within specified periods, has again tried his hand at soothsaying. A few days ago he prognosticated that something grand, something, gigantic, something that would have a direct and very strong influence in restoring peac
The Daily Dispatch: December 21, 1861., [Electronic resource], Testaments and Tracts for the army in Missouri and Kentucky. (search)
Editors Dispatch--I have made an arrangement with a publishing house in Nashville, Tennessee, by which the Confederate forces in the West may be supplied with religious reading. In no division of the Southern army is the destitution so appalling as in this — many regiments being almost entirely destitute of God's inspired word. The Colportage Board, at its recent meeting, directed me to make an appeal for funds with which to supply our brave men in the West. I expect to spend January and February in visiting some of the prominent points in the South, and the amounts which may be contributed will be used for this purpose, unless the donors wish them to be appropriated in some other way. Almost every day brings us some new instance in which the printed page has been of service to our soldiers. Thus far, more than three millions of pages have been published and distributed; but the fields are still white unto the harvest. Let all who have a heart to aid in such a cause send by mail t