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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 5, 1864., [Electronic resource].

Found 457 total hits in 192 results.

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Cherry Creek (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): article 3
Capture of Confederates. --On Tuesday night last a party of sailors from the Yankee steamers Minnesota and from Barney, numbering about 150, landed in the darkness at Cherry Creek, in co. Va. and captured a party of 2 Confederates, who have been stationed about there for some time as scouts. Lt. Rov and seven men were absent, and thus escaped capture. The Yankees, says the Petersburg Express, were piloted by Bill Cross, a Baltimore blockade runner. The night was dark and stormy, and the surprise complete.
Jefferson Davis (search for this): article 1
wing additional intelligence: Proceedings in the Yankee Congress — the last Protest of Kentucky about slavery. In the Yankee Senate, on Wednesday last, Senator Davis, of Kentucky, made a speech against Lincoln's proclamation abolishing slavery. We give it as a matter of history: The general reason assigned for this acwhat a name he would now have in the breast of every lover of his country. After his repeated violations of his promises, was he to trust the President? Never. Mr. Davis arraigned the President at great length for military interference in the elections in Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland, and Delaware, to promote the election of Reprto secure his re-election, and that these successful usurpations will be up by him and his supporters in justification of his crimes against the constitution he Mr. Davis,) believed that the highest interests of our common country demanded his defeat in his attempted usurpation and re-election, and so far as his feeble will and ac
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): article 1
In the Yankee Senate, on Wednesday last, Senator Davis, of Kentucky, made a speech against Lincoln's proclamation abolishing slavery. We give it as a matter of history: The general reason improve it, the country demanded to know the mighty reasons therefore.--The professions of President Lincoln were moderate enough in the beginning, and if he had not listened to the whispers of fanaton any party, any power, any candidate on God's earth, except a negro, for the overthrow of Abraham Lincoln. He would take Fremont or Chase. He believed, them to be plain and candid men, and he lovan member don't seem to be a unit. In the house, Mr. Ashley, of Ohio, (Rep.) protested against Lincoln's plan of reconstructing the States on his own account. He advocated the bill for the reconstron. The Committee on the Conduct of the War will in their report completely exonerate President Lincoln from all responsibility for the recent defeat in Florida. The evidence adduced shows that
McPherson (search for this): article 1
that the efforts of Wilkes to catch the rebel privateers were unceasing. Commander Clary, of the Tigra, testified to the unfitness of his vessel for sea service, and the untiring efforts of the Admiral to catch the rebel pirates Postmaster-General Blair is pressing Gen. Grant very hard to place Gen. McClellan in command of the defences of Washington. It was his influence that procured the cancelation of Frank Blair's resignation, and his reassignment to Major General's command under McPherson. The Committee on the Conduct of the War will in their report completely exonerate President Lincoln from all responsibility for the recent defeat in Florida. The evidence adduced shows that be neither ordered, consulted or was cognizant of the movement that so disastrously culminated at Clustee. Over twenty-six thousand tons of coal were sold at auction in New York Monday. The descriptions sold were steamboat lump, grate, egg, stove, and Chesnut, all of which showed a consider
McClellan (search for this): article 1
ngton, Commander Schufeldt testified that he was Consul General at Havana during Admiral Wilkes's cruise, and that the force of the command was totally inadequate to the duties required, but that the efforts of Wilkes to catch the rebel privateers were unceasing. Commander Clary, of the Tigra, testified to the unfitness of his vessel for sea service, and the untiring efforts of the Admiral to catch the rebel pirates Postmaster-General Blair is pressing Gen. Grant very hard to place Gen. McClellan in command of the defences of Washington. It was his influence that procured the cancelation of Frank Blair's resignation, and his reassignment to Major General's command under McPherson. The Committee on the Conduct of the War will in their report completely exonerate President Lincoln from all responsibility for the recent defeat in Florida. The evidence adduced shows that be neither ordered, consulted or was cognizant of the movement that so disastrously culminated at Clustee.
. he wished to see all usurpers struck down by the voice of the people at the polls. He was for any organization any party, any power, any candidate on God's earth, except a negro, for the overthrow of Abraham Lincoln. He would take Fremont or Chase. He believed, them to be plain and candid men, and he loved a man who acted in God's open sunshine. With his convictions of the Presidents policy, of his ambition, his sinister purposes for the future, his determination to clutch all the powers." The utmost prominence is given to the working men's strikes for higher wages, and the woes of the poor needle women are as usual made the burden of elaborate lamentation The gold Speculators' telegraph — a rich Invention The efforts of Chase to keep the trading in gold down are unavailing; the Yankees are too smart for him. He tried to stop telegrams being sent from Washington with the following success, as described by the Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazettes: Wh
et looks squally." His paper announced, the next morning, that the main body of Lee's army had crossed the Maryland line, and was moving into Pennsylvania; and his chief rival got very mad and complained to the War Department that he was bribing the telegraph company; but it was whispered about among his friends that so and so was neglecting his business and going into very rash speculations, and -- he changed his cipher! Miscellaneous. Governor Bramlette, of Kentucky, and ex-Senator Dixon, of the same State, are still in Washington. Their business with the President is with reference to the draft. Those who profess to be well acquainted with that subject, says a telegram, confidently say that no difficulty is apprehended as to the execution of the draft under the amendatory enrollment act in that State, and that all proper measures will be taken by the Government to prevent military excesses or any contravention of the rights of the citizens; and, moreover, they assert
sion. No effort should be made to forestall the action of Congress by the exercise of the military power. He protested against the carrying out of any policy in the reconstruction of States by the Executive Irrespective of the control of Congress. He wanted no such executive precedent established; no such exercise of doubtful constitutional power. He opposed it now as he would were his opponents in possession of the Government. In the course of his remarks he reviewed the conduct of General Banks, saying that officer's proclamation as to politics in Louisiana was an assumption of power and an outrage on civil rights. The policy of that General was in disregard of the wishes of the free State men of that State. The condition of affairs in New York. A New York letter in the Philadelphia Inquirer gives the following account of the mad folly reigning in that city: If the condition of New York society is correctly indicated by the tone and drift of our public journals j
was bent on the destruction of the Government if he deemed that necessary to continue himself in power, though he grieved to say it. He did not know which Government threatened the people most — that of the rebel Jefferson Davis or the usurper Abraham Lincoln. he wished to see all usurpers struck down by the voice of the people at the polls. He was for any organization any party, any power, any candidate on God's earth, except a negro, for the overthrow of Abraham Lincoln. He would take Fremont or Chase. He believed, them to be plain and candid men, and he loved a man who acted in God's open sunshine. With his convictions of the Presidents policy, of his ambition, his sinister purposes for the future, his determination to clutch all the powers he could grasp to secure his re-election, and that these successful usurpations will be up by him and his supporters in justification of his crimes against the constitution he Mr. Davis,) believed that the highest interests of our common
Hotel New York. Do come home at once — Mary cannot live twenty-four hours longer. Laura Montgomery." How can be stop, that? But George H. Montgomery is a myth, and Mary's illness means Hooker's defeat, and the hotel clerk has been instructed to send any such dispatch by the speediest means to somebody's bank down town; and the firm makes the money, and the Government censors keeps blinking like an owl over the dispatches, and rigidly stopping "everything relating to the war;" and Mr. Stanton felicitate himself over having made those newspaper pests send their accounts by mall rather than by telegraph! "How little sense it takes to run a Government," said some wise man. Once, during last summer, a leading newspaper editor got disgusted, and determined that the gold gamblers should not monopolize all the early news. So he went into the cipher business too, but being rather raw at it, his first effort was not quite so good as some subsequent ones. He forwarded the cipher
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