Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 6, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Lincoln or search for Lincoln in all documents.

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en. Zollicoffer is now securely entrenched, the precise point is not necessary to be known; and we learn that in the portion of Kentucky in which our army has been stationed, the sympathies of the batter class are with our cause. The message of Lincoln, indicating that the war is one for the extermination of slavery, has given much dissatisfaction, and it is said that the officers in the Federal army in that section of the country evidently contemplate resigning. Gen. Crittenden has gone r kindred people. Will you play this unnatural part, Kentuckians? Heaven for bid!--the memories of the past forbid! The honor of your wives and daughters, your past renown, and the fair name of your posterity forbid that you should strike for Lincoln and the abolition of slavery, against those struggling for the rights and intelligence of your kindred race. Strike with us for independence and the preservation of your property, and these Northern invaders of your soil will soon be driven acr
Lincolns set system Abroad --The London Herald had recently an indignant article on the presence of Lincoln spies in England. It makes complaint that the New York and Washington directives, in plain clothes, infest the Liverpool Exchange; that in dining saloons, and -rooms, and counting rooms, Englishmen must be careful what they say about the Federal or Confederate States, they compromise some one or other, open Lafayette to their business partners in New York or elsewhere." It speaks scornfully of suspicious characters," who follow people about and thrust themselves into situations, where they may listen to conversations, and act as spies for the Government at Washington. This infamous system is pronounced to be unbearable, and the Government is called upon to put it down in England.
Important from Europe.Lincoln's message in England.Warlike preparations continued.Great Britain likely to Provoke a war even after the Surrender of Mason and Slidell.&c. &c. &c. The Asia arrived at Halifax at 5 o'clock on the morning of December 31. She left Liverpool at 11 o'clock on the morning of the 21st ult., and Queenstown on the 22d, and she has on board five hundred troops, with stores, &c., and is consequently under Government orders. She has 28 passengers for New York, and ils and passengers. The steamship Borussis, from Hamburg via Southampton 18th ult., also arrived at this port yesterday. In England public feeling was for the moment so engrossed with the death of the Prince Consort that, although President Lincoln's message was regarded with the greatest interest, it received less attention than would have been the case under other circumstances. Warlike preparations continue unabated. Additional troops are ordered to be ready to embark; but th
The American question in England — Lincoln's message.the opinion of the London Times. [From theblic, how any one placed in the position of Mr. Lincoln could have taken the trouble to produce so e is silent. It is not easy to see why Mr. Lincoln should have omitted from his speech all nce We have nothing to say for slavery, but if Mr. Lincoln's description of the South is indeed true, ruin. But the most remarkable part of Mr. Lincoln's speech is that in which he touches the rel courtesy, than the language with which President Lincoln repays the consideration extended to himy the meanest and most selfish motives, and Mr. Lincoln is content, as he cannot deny that we have he great lakes and rivers. After all, says Mr. Lincoln, "the safety and stability of the Republic ese hollow or enigmatical, phrases in which Mr. Lincoln boasts that the American Navy, created since of renown claimed for the Federal navy by Mr. Lincoln. Mr. Welles himself seems to think some fur[3 more...]