Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 25, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Horace Greeley or search for Horace Greeley in all documents.

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Ex Senator Clay, of Ala., Prof. Holcombe, of Va, and George N. Sanders, on the one side, and Horace Greeley on the other. On the 12th, Sanders addressed a note to Greeley asking safe conduct for MessGreeley asking safe conduct for Messrs Clay, Holcombe, and himself, to Washington. His letter is dated at the "Clifton House," Canada. Greeley, understanding they were the bearers of propositions from Richmond looking to peace, tGreeley, understanding they were the bearers of propositions from Richmond looking to peace, tendered a safe conduct from the President. They replied that they were not accredited with such propositions, but in the confidential employ of the Government, and felt authorized to declare thae be communicated to Richmond, they or other gentlemen would be invested with full powers. Greeley answers that the state of facts being materially different from that supposed to exist by the Psafe conduct both ways. Abraham Lincoln. Clay and Holcombe, in a closing letter to Greeley, refer to the repeated declarations of the Confederate authorities of their willingness to nego