Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 4, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Chase or search for Chase in all documents.

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s task. To call a people who possess more men and more guns, and more means of raising men and guns, than another, rebels, and to call those who are inferior in all these points, the only true men, is to talk nor Lincoln and his Cabinet must see this were they either statesmen or honest men, or men of common humanity, they would put an end to the shedding of blood, and the situation which they cannot make better by a century of war. But neither Lincoln, nor Seward, nor Cameron not Chase, is a wise statesman or patriot. Their whole character and the cause of the whole war, may be dispatched in four words. They Are All Speculators and lock upon the war as a The feeling exclamation of Lincoln, What is to become of my revenue! gives a key to the history of his whole reign. It is a war for money — a war of contractors for army supplies — a war of sharpers and stock brokers — a war in which every man who can get the ear of the Cabinets hopes to make himself a and from<