Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 23, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for S. Grant or search for S. Grant in all documents.

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ed, pithy, and to the purpose. Next came the report of General Grant --equally brief, equally decided, quite as clear, and erophilism. The Senate was electrified by the report of General Grant. It was spread to all quarters of the United States as er" His usual arrogance failed him entirely. He abused General Grant, but had to back out; he abused the President, but handscrap-book in hand, the honor and the veracity of Ulysses S. Grant ! "General Grant has seen the South. Mr. Charles SuGeneral Grant has seen the South. Mr. Charles Sumner never has ventured beyond the line of our national bayonets arrayed for war. General Grant defeated the gallant armies wGeneral Grant defeated the gallant armies which, for four long years, held at bay the whole power or the Union. Mr. Charles Sumner was ignominiously thrashed with a cae fanatic more sharply brought face to face than here. General Grant fought to save the Union and the Constitution. Did the heroic Americans who fought under General Grant, and with him, fight to salve the welts and scars scored upon the broad back
The Freedmen's Bureau — Reform. Washington, December 22. --General Grant said in his recent report that the Freedmen's Bureau was a present necessity, but seemed to be operated by the different agents of the Bureau according to their individual notions. General Howard, the Commissioner of the Bureau, in view of this assertion, has issued a stringent order that the most thorough inspection shall be at once made, and the errors complained of corrected. Any agent or officer who presumes to act contrary to such instructions will be forthwith removed or reported to the Department Commander for trial by court martial.
misrepresentation upon President Johnson in the message sent to the Senate respecting the condition and feeling of the South. If he had it in his power to show that the President had been misinformed, the country would have been obliged to him for the correction. But when he charges the President with a deliberate intention to white-wash and deceive, he affronts the good sense and the decent sentiments of the people. President Johnson was sustained in all he said by the report of Lieutenant-General Grant; but his bare representation ought to be enough of itself to shield him from all such aspersions as this Senator has vented upon him. Mr. Sumner is fond of alluding to his long Senatorial experience. Well, there are two kinds of lessons which may be learnt by experience. The one is most commonly expressed by the proverb that experience makes fools wise. But experience has also another teaching. It has its evil as well as its good side; it tends not only to eradicate errors,