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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: May 26, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 7 total hits in 5 results.

Vallandigham (search for this): article 5
Unfair. --The New York Herald complains that while Vallandigham has been tried and sentenced for making a speech against the Administration, Wendell Phillips, who had made a worse speech against the Government, insulting to Lincoln and his Cabinet, was still at large, and none dispatched to arrest him. This is indeed unfair, but the humorous tyrant will attend to them all in good time. He nicks them in order. If he carries the day with Vallandigham he may try Seymour and Hunt next, and sbeen tried and sentenced for making a speech against the Administration, Wendell Phillips, who had made a worse speech against the Government, insulting to Lincoln and his Cabinet, was still at large, and none dispatched to arrest him. This is indeed unfair, but the humorous tyrant will attend to them all in good time. He nicks them in order. If he carries the day with Vallandigham he may try Seymour and Hunt next, and so on down to Phillips, unless he chooses to spare him for his amusement.
Unfair. --The New York Herald complains that while Vallandigham has been tried and sentenced for making a speech against the Administration, Wendell Phillips, who had made a worse speech against the Government, insulting to Lincoln and his Cabinet, was still at large, and none dispatched to arrest him. This is indeed unfair, but the humorous tyrant will attend to them all in good time. He nicks them in order. If he carries the day with Vallandigham he may try Seymour and Hunt next, and so on down to Phillips, unless he chooses to spare him for his amusement.
Unfair. --The New York Herald complains that while Vallandigham has been tried and sentenced for making a speech against the Administration, Wendell Phillips, who had made a worse speech against the Government, insulting to Lincoln and his Cabinet, was still at large, and none dispatched to arrest him. This is indeed unfair, but the humorous tyrant will attend to them all in good time. He nicks them in order. If he carries the day with Vallandigham he may try Seymour and Hunt next, and so on down to Phillips, unless he chooses to spare him for his amusement.
Wendell Phillips (search for this): article 5
Unfair. --The New York Herald complains that while Vallandigham has been tried and sentenced for making a speech against the Administration, Wendell Phillips, who had made a worse speech against the Government, insulting to Lincoln and his Cabinet, was still at large, and none dispatched to arrest him. This is indeed unfair, but the humorous tyrant will attend to them all in good time. He nicks them in order. If he carries the day with Vallandigham he may try Seymour and Hunt next, and sbeen tried and sentenced for making a speech against the Administration, Wendell Phillips, who had made a worse speech against the Government, insulting to Lincoln and his Cabinet, was still at large, and none dispatched to arrest him. This is indeed unfair, but the humorous tyrant will attend to them all in good time. He nicks them in order. If he carries the day with Vallandigham he may try Seymour and Hunt next, and so on down to Phillips, unless he chooses to spare him for his amusement.
Unfair. --The New York Herald complains that while Vallandigham has been tried and sentenced for making a speech against the Administration, Wendell Phillips, who had made a worse speech against the Government, insulting to Lincoln and his Cabinet, was still at large, and none dispatched to arrest him. This is indeed unfair, but the humorous tyrant will attend to them all in good time. He nicks them in order. If he carries the day with Vallandigham he may try Seymour and Hunt next, and so on down to Phillips, unless he chooses to spare him for his amusement.