Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 18, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Dix or search for Dix in all documents.

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l to both Seymour and Wadsworth, as loyal men, to withdraw from the canvass, and nominate and support some such man as General Dix for Governor We suggest General Dix because he was a candidate in both the Democratic and Republican Conventions, and General Dix because he was a candidate in both the Democratic and Republican Conventions, and is acceptable to both parties, He was defeated in the Democratic Convention by a trick which prevented a ballot. He was defeated in the Republican Convention by the demands of the radicals for an ultra candidate. Thus rejected by the worst politicians of both parties he will be doubly popular with all honest, patriotic men.--With Gen. Dix as the only candidate, this dangerous canvass will be ended. With Gen. Dix as our Governor, no party or person will have any just cause for complaint. We Gen. Dix as our Governor, no party or person will have any just cause for complaint. We ask Wadsworth and Seymour to do a sublime, a magnanimous, an unprecedented act; but this is an unprecedented crisis, and demands rare magnanimity. In the army, Thomas nobly refused to take the place of Buell; Burnside nobly refused to take the place