Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 1, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hale or search for Hale in all documents.

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ernment, presented through Lord Lyons, relative to the Trent affair, but as nothing in regard to their character could be learned, folks could only wait and "look to the Senate," and when, this morning, the subject was introduced in that body by Mr. Hale, on a call for information from the President, no little interest was excited thereby. Very little upon which a definite conclusion might be based was, however, developed by Mr. Hale's movement, though, after that gentleman's decided war speechMr. Hale's movement, though, after that gentleman's decided war speech, the more temperate remarks of Mr. Sumner, chairman of the committee of foreign affairs, were rather reassuring in regard to the probability of preserving peace through the negotiations yet to ensue. Lincoln's patent blockade. A correspondent of the Baltimore Sun, writing from Washington Dec. 26, writes as follows: Men who are thoughtful upon public affairs see another cause of difficulty between this country and England, in the fact that the London Post declares our blockade of