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The Daily Dispatch: April 25, 1864., [Electronic resource], Additional particulars from the Plymouth fight. (search)
He would shortly take his departure for Vera Cruz. In the House of Lords, Earl Russell incidentally referred to the spurious report of Mr. Mallory, the Secretary of the Confederate States Navy, and intimated that he was originally led by Mr. Seward to accept the report as genuine. But, said the Earl, Mr. Seward states that, having made further inquiry, he finds it to have been altogether a forgery. Still Later. Dalton, April 23 --Northern dates to the 21st are received here.Mr. Seward states that, having made further inquiry, he finds it to have been altogether a forgery. Still Later. Dalton, April 23 --Northern dates to the 21st are received here. New Orleans papers of the 16th were received in New York on the 20th. Banks's headquarters was at Natchitoches. Rebels are burning all the cotton on Red river and Ouachita. In a skirmish with the rebel cavalry near Shreveport we had some wounded. Another slight skirmish occurred near Natchitoches on Wednesday without results. Chicago, April 20. --The Journal says that the day after the disaster to the 13th army corps Gen. Corse engaged and defeated the enemy, capturing two th
The Daily Dispatch: April 25, 1864., [Electronic resource], Capture of a gunboat — official Dispatch. (search)
th the accelerated pace of the multitude, they are pushed out of their places and left by the wayside. When this conflict first commenced as a war of opinions, Mr. Seward was the radical whom constitutional and moderate men shunned as the most dangerous fanatic of the day, although his fanaticism was only a cold blooded calculati was left behind when the man of action was wanted. Mr. Lincoln was taken up in preference as the representative man of Northern designs against the South, and Mr. Seward, taunted and suspected, was dragged after Mr. Lincoln into excesses such as he had pronounced to be calumnies when imputed by his adversaries to be the inevitab the sordid appetites of the greedy. Now comes another brood of fiercer and greedier chiefs of furious factions, who are clamoring to set aside Mr. Lincoln, as Mr. Seward was set aside for Mr. Lincoln, for some more "advanced" prophet and statesman — the more violent faction always coming in to displace and absorb their rivals wh