Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 30, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Seward or search for Seward in all documents.

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soners, &c. A few evenings since Marshal Murray was unexpectedly summoned to Washington, and he left by the first train this morning. Orders were received this morning to discharge Mr. R. R. Walker, confined in Fort Lafayette. He was a resident of this city and was implicated with the speculator, Millner, in sending arms to the South. Mrs. Walker, convinced of the innocence of her husband, went to Washington a few days ago and succeeded in obtaining interviews with the President and Mr. Seward, and earnestly pleaded the cause of her husband before them, giving proofs of his loyalty. Twenty prisoners selected on Thursday from among the North Carolinans on Bedloe's Island, were to be sent to Fortress Monroe yesterday, there to be released upon taking oath not to bear arms against the United States Government. This is done in response to the recent release of fifty- seven of our wounded soldiers at Richmond. As nearly all the persons released by the rebel authorities are dis
that it be avoided by quiet submission to their demands; others again second Mr. Seward's recommendation for timely preparation. The Executive Government has, in fagn intervention may be expected. Character of the correspondence between Mr. Seward and Lord Lyons. "Aga," another correspondent of the sun, writes from Washrstood in diplomatic quarters that a sharp correspondence is going on between Mr. Seward and the British Minister, touching blockades, the arrest of Her Majesty's sublutionary States of South America, say positively that Lord Lyons's letter to Mr. Seward is precisely of the same domineering and offensive stamp as the former. was never before addressed to the American Government, and the moderation of Mr. Seward's reply its accounted for upon the supposition that the British people will n Affairs. Under the circumstances, it is no longer a matter of surprise that Mr. Seward issued his recent circular to Governors of loyal States, touching seaboard an