Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 25, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Medill or search for Medill in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 1 document section:

The Tribune and Mr. Kellogg. The New York Tribune is down upon Mr. Kellogg, M. C., of Illinois, for pummelling Mr. Medill, editor of the Chicago Tribune. It says that Kellogg is a large and powerful man, and Medill much his inferior in size and weight, and so crippled by rheumatism in the spine as to be a mere child in his hands. Therefore the Tribune speaks of Kellogg as a "ruffian and a bully." The Tribune is always reporting the South as "a mere child" in the hands of the North, and cMedill much his inferior in size and weight, and so crippled by rheumatism in the spine as to be a mere child in his hands. Therefore the Tribune speaks of Kellogg as a "ruffian and a bully." The Tribune is always reporting the South as "a mere child" in the hands of the North, and calling out lustily for coercion. Is there anything of the "ruffian and bully" in that? It does not like its own medicine applied to its friends or to itself. If Mr. Kellogg should take the editor of the Tribune in hand, he would consider it a very great outrage, on account of the disparity of physical strength. But it is all right every day of your life to excite eighteen millions to make war upon half their number. That is a very heroical and humane proceeding, worthy the consistency and c