Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 11, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for George J. Sumner or search for George J. Sumner in all documents.

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th the issue in their hands, and the question should be left to them, and to every other slave State of the present day, as it was left originally to the slave States of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and others. This is the policy of "Honest Abe Lincoln;" and as it has been consistently pursued in the reclamation of Maryland, Missouri, Kentucky, and Tennessee, from the gripe of this rebellion, we may venture the opinion that it will still be adhered to, all the emancipation schemes of Sumner, Trumbull, Lovejoy, Cheever, Beecher, and Greeley, to the contrary notwithstanding. It is this policy which has broken down the stronghold of the rebellion in the West, and which, if not disturbed, will speedily break up the whole concern. We expect shortly to find it fully developed in the complete restoration of Tennessee to the laws and benefits of the Union. In this connection we would suggest, however, that no State convention is necessary. Tennessee is not in the condition of a
"House for the Camp." --This is the title of a neat little volume of 127 pages, just published by the Baptist Colportage Board, in this city. We understand that the book is old at the low price of $15 per hundred opted by the agent, Geo. J. Sumner.