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The Daily Dispatch: October 25, 1862., [Electronic resource] 6 0 Browse Search
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ty. The meeting was called to consider the late emancipation proclamation of the President, and was addressed by Messrs. Thomas A. Lindsay, Lysander Morde, George W. Craddock, John Rodmay, D. B. Sayce, Lewis E. Harvre, and others, all of whom were severe in their denunciation of the President, and positive in their declaration ofhe views of Southern Rights men, were proposed, but subsequently an amendment was offered and passed proposing all sorts of resistance to the President's plans. Craddock declared himself an original secessionist, and his fellow speakers wished to be considered quite as rebellious as Craddock. We will await the official proceedinCraddock. We will await the official proceedings of the meeting with much interest. The Louisville correspondent of the Chicago Times says of this: To the readers of the Times it may not probably be necessary to say that Frankfort is the State capital, or was so until this invasion, when the capital was temporarily removed to this city. It may not be so well known