Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 3, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Seward or search for Seward in all documents.

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y more active in inventing than its industry in discovering this electrifying food for the morbid appetite of Gothem. What the New York Herald is in journalism Mr. Seward is in his high office of Premier. He is constantly striving after sensations. His ambition delights more in a successful sensation than in a masterly feet of ve that ever reached a high place in diplomacy. Recent facts have shed a flood of light upon transactions that heretofore seemed explicable. The circular of Seward issued to the Northern Governors now turns out to have had some other object than the sudden running down of stocks in Wall street to the great gain of the few fr, he had instructed Mr. Adams two weeks before, that he held the prisoners subject to the orders of Her Majesty's Government." Such in the statesmanship of Mr. Seward What the North at large will say to the proceeding remains to be seen. The House of Representatives had passed a resolution of thanks to Commander Wilkes.
The Daily Dispatch: January 3, 1862., [Electronic resource], Our ladies — their patriotic efforts. (search)
The Trent Affair. The position of the Lincoln Government in regard to the seizure of Messrs. Mason and Blidell has at length assumed definite shape, and the world is no longer held in suspense. Lord Lyons, on the 26th ult., sent to the State Department the demand of the British Government for their surrender; and a day or two afterward Secretary Seward replied in a lengthy communication, signifying the assent of the abolition Administration to the demand. Messrs. Mason and Slidell will therefore be restored, and the long agony is over.