Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 1, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Seward or search for Seward in all documents.

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Reported surrender of Messrs. Mason and Slidell. The following telegram was received in this city yesterday from a reliable source: "Centreville, Dec. 31. --Seward has surrendered Mason and Slidell." We ascertained last night that no official information of this report had been received, though it is more likely to be true than otherwise. The abolition administration, having mostly more to attend to on this side of the Atlantic than it can manage, will not hesitate to kiss the paw of the British Lion, if any so doing it can avert the blow which threatens to demolish its own polluted cargoes.
t itself, that it is almost impossible to avoid suspecting that there had existed previously in the public mind a foregone conclusion that war would be necessary, sooner or later. The Times sedulously fosters the relief that the President and Mr. Seward hear "of malice aforethought" done their best to force England into it. The Observer makes loud complaints about the system of espionage practised by American agents in the different ports. It seems that the Federal Government has persons owe) was not going to take his exposition of international law against that of the law officers of England. (Applause.) The speaker, after expressing himself in favor of the principles of Wendell Phillips, rather than those of "Lincoln and Seward," went on to say: The North was like the "dog in the manger" When he saw the Northerners sitting upon five or six million bales of cotton which it could not eat or manufacture, and which it did not know what to do with — when he saw the peo