hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Matching Documents
The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 26, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for S. P. Chase or search for S. P. Chase in all documents.
Your search returned 11 results in 2 document sections:
The gold bill at the North.
Chase's gold bill, which he got through Congress, has not been effective in keeping gold do ven knows we should like to keep the price of gold down.
Mr. Chase's inflated irredeemable paper currency reduced our profit dit of the nation.
It is the one prop left.
Other props Mr. Chase and his co-laborers have knocked away.
It is the grosses ession will be less than the measure of its lavation when Mr. Chase comes to want the gold again.
What he may gain now he mu nt debt, to say nothing of its enormous rate of increase, Mr. Chase has not had, has not now, and will not have, any too much aise the price of the paper, which, except in California, Mr. Chase has made his financial yard stick.
And since the cost of backs.
Then gold will tall, and not till then.
But no; Mr. Chase is pouring out new issues, and more are yet to come.
Con owers believe that speculation makes the difference between Chase's paper and nature's gold; that with fresh issues of legal
The Daily Dispatch: March 26, 1864., [Electronic resource], The Presidency in West Virginia . (search)
The Presidency in West Virginia.
--A meeting in West Virginia has declared for Chase.
One of the resolutions says: "We believe either Hon. S. P. Chase, Major Gen. Fremont, Major Gen. Butler, Major Gen. Banks, or Major Gen. Grant to be far preferable as a Presidential candidate to Mr. Lincoln; but our Judgment is in favor of
One of the resolutions says: "We believe either Hon. S. P. Chase, Major Gen. Fremont, Major Gen. Butler, Major Gen. Banks, or Major Gen. Grant to be far preferable as a Presidential candidate to Mr. Lincoln; but our Judgment is in favor of a civilian rather than a soldier." Another of the series declares explicitly for Chase. .
One of the resolutions says: "We believe either Hon. S. P. Chase, Major Gen. Fremont, Major Gen. Butler, Major Gen. Banks, or Major Gen. Grant to be far preferable as a Presidential candidate to Mr. Lincoln; but our Judgment is in favor of a civilian rather than a soldier." Another of the series declares explicitly for Chase.