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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 13, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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Seward's Foreign policy. --The following is the conclusion of an editorial in Forney's Press, of Friday last: "Mr. Seward has established a new foreign policy, a truly enlightened American policy. Instead of adherfug to the old diplomatic routine of red tape, and the pernicious precedents of circumlocution, he has directed the representatives of the American government to go before the bar of the world, in order to unmask the traitors against the American flag, to show the hollow insincerity of every minister who attempts to tolerate them, and to lay down, in strong and explicit language, the only terms upon which the American Executive will ever hold intercourse with other governments — that is, a distinct repudiation of the whole Southern Confederacy, and an equally distinct recognition of the integrity, the power, and the influence of the National Government.
Seward's Foreign policy. --The following is the conclusion of an editorial in Forney's Press, of Friday last: "Mr. Seward has established a new foreign policy, a truly enlightened American policy. Instead of adherfug to the old diplomatic routine of red tape, and the pernicious precedents of circumlocution, he has directed the representatives of the American government to go before the bar of the world, in order to unmask the traitors against the American flag, to show the hollow inMr. Seward has established a new foreign policy, a truly enlightened American policy. Instead of adherfug to the old diplomatic routine of red tape, and the pernicious precedents of circumlocution, he has directed the representatives of the American government to go before the bar of the world, in order to unmask the traitors against the American flag, to show the hollow insincerity of every minister who attempts to tolerate them, and to lay down, in strong and explicit language, the only terms upon which the American Executive will ever hold intercourse with other governments — that is, a distinct repudiation of the whole Southern Confederacy, and an equally distinct recognition of the integrity, the power, and the influence of the National Government.