Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 30, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) or search for Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) in all documents.

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there was war between the North and the South, and the Senator from Indiana aided the South, he would, of course, be guilty of treason. Mr. Sumner, (Rep.,) of Mass., said that he did not understand there was such a war, but that Jeff. Davis and his confederates had levied war against the Government, and they were traitors. on trial was unfit for parliamentary duty. It is well for this Senate that this doctrine had not been promulgated at an earliest day. If so, the Senator from Massachusetts (Mr. Sumner) would never have been permitted to hurl his polished, burning shafts against the barbarism of slavery, and the clarion voice of the veteran Senatoer's Ferry. Allow me to introduce my friend Coppic, who recommend and reliable in every truly. I Summer. How long would the Senator from Massachusetts have held his seat, and how soon would the Senator from Indiana have voted for his expulsion? If an open rebel ought to be expelled, ought not the person to b
Andrews and Butler. The Governor of Massachusetts and the heroic Butler have been engaged of late in a controversy, in which charges of immorality in certain appointees have been freely bandied about, and each has endeavored to hold up the other to the indignation of a virtuous public. The moral sense of the North must be gre or idea of propriety, is a far more respectable person. It would be impossible to find in all heathendom two such caitiffs and yahoos as Governor Andrew, of Massachusetts, and the magnificent General Butler; yet these two men are gravely and valiantly impeaching each other before the delicate Massachusetts public, as if any one ble person. It would be impossible to find in all heathendom two such caitiffs and yahoos as Governor Andrew, of Massachusetts, and the magnificent General Butler; yet these two men are gravely and valiantly impeaching each other before the delicate Massachusetts public, as if any one had ever suspected either of them of virtue.