Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 26, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Belmont or search for Belmont in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

te of themselves and their readiness for any movement promising a wholesome change. What is to be done?--the perplexed Democracy may well inquire. The short interval of sixteen days remains between us and the Presidential election. The late election results, especially in Indiana and Ohio, disclose the fatal weakness in the Democratic programme. It lies in its peace-at-any-price Chicago platform and its affiliations. How is this evil now to be remedied? This is a question which Mr. Belmont is the man to answer. Rightly and promptly considered and acted upon, he may yet accomplish wonderful things in strengthening and uniting the masses of the Democracy and other conservatives, east and west, upon General McClellan. But there is no time to be lost; for the tide is evidently setting in the opposite direction, though still it may be turned. A summary of Burbridge's expedition to the salt Works. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Inquirer, in a letter from James riv