Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 5, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Lincoln or search for Lincoln in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 2 document sections:

The very latest Lincoln's message. Petersburg Dec. 4. --The New York Times, of the 2d, is received here Lincoln's message was read on Monday. It makes seven columns of the Times, and is a very sorry document. It opens by saying that since the assembling of the last Congress another year of health and bountiful harvest has passed. While it has not pleased the Almighty to bless the United States with a return of peace, we can but press on, trusting that in God's own good time all wilLincoln's message was read on Monday. It makes seven columns of the Times, and is a very sorry document. It opens by saying that since the assembling of the last Congress another year of health and bountiful harvest has passed. While it has not pleased the Almighty to bless the United States with a return of peace, we can but press on, trusting that in God's own good time all will be well. He calls his famous proclamation a contemplated emancipation scheme. A Captain of a Texas regiment, and a clerk in the Quartermaster's department at Richmond, deserted near Fredericksburg Friday night. He makes all sorts of disclosures, as usual. A Washington dispatch says it is no longer a question that the army of the Potomac owes its failure to cross the Rappahannock promptly on its arrival to an inexcusable delay in furnishing the means of transportation. It is rumore
as you may well imagine, the development of the Napoleonic idea on that subject. It is said in high places that the desire of the Emperor is to obtain from Mr. Lincoln an armistices of six months, and the opening of one of the Southern harbors to allow French vessels to take a supply of cotton. The "so-called" Confederat of the cabinet table the beginnings and the causes of all our past disasters and our present hopelessness? The evils which the men who now away the mind of President Lincoln combined with Southern extremists to bring upon the nation, the same men now labor to make irremediable.--But for them the country would never have been plun may not be shipped is practically sealed for all ordinary purposes. The probability is, that as the Confiscation act, by which all the disloyal subjects of President Lincoln are to be stripped of their property, was to come into operation at New Orleans on the 23d September General Butler thought fit to disregard what might inter