Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 19, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Lincoln or search for Lincoln in all documents.

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r to give that active sympathy which it always yields to impracticable and destructive measures. If the war is one simply to put down what the London Times has styled an insurrection of Southern planters against their commercial masters in the North, Exeter Hall, of course, feels no interest in such a strife. It must be such's war as Fremont has proclaimed in Missouri to enlist the sympathies of Exeter Hall; but Fremont has been recalled. When we consider the enormous war debt which the Lincoln Government is running up, with no earthly prospect of ever paying the interest upon it, except by obtaining command of the cotton crops of the South, Exeter Hall may well conclude that the public creditors of the United States have not advanced their money upon the theory that an institution which is essential to the cultivation of cotton shall be destroyed. It is therefore idle to suppose that the pseudo philanthropy of Great Britain will be stimulated to any special paroxysm in be half o
A man who is supposed to entertain sentiments hostile to the South was arrested yesterday at the Navy-Yard. A review of the Light Artillery batteries near the city will take place to-morrow afternoon. There was another storm here last night.--Yesterday afternoon rain fell in considerable quantities, and a heavy gale took place during the night — the wind blowing very strongly from southeast. Lieut. Jas. F. Milligan, who has recently received a commission as Captain in the Confederate States Army, was formerly connected with the United States revenue service, and as soon as the war commenced, he took an active part in opposition to the efforts of the presumptuous hirelings of Lincoln, and showed himself very useful as signal officer, &c. He is from the noble State of Missouri, where his father resides. Capt. M. has seen hard service among the Indians of the Northwestern frontier, an is ready for almost any daring exploit in which the common enemy can be damaged.
, crossed Green river on a scouting expedition. The company advanced about twelve miles beyond the river, when they fell upon an estimated force of seven hundred Lincoln's, and, nothing daunted, gave them fight. In the skirmish seven Federals are known to have been killed, while but one Southron was slightly wounded by a spent bart distance from their encampment at Muldraugh's hill, but within a few days Rousseau's men have been seen in within close proximity of Gen. Buckner's lines. Lincoln's reply when called upon for more men, that "The Union men of Kentucky must fight their own battles," has had a salutary effect upon the more sensible portion of the residents of this State. Dr. L. W. Green, President of Center Col. lege, at Danville, and others, charge that Lincoln has betrayed Union men by inducing them to come out in his support, and then refuses to arm or aid them. On the other hand, most of the leading Union men charge the Home Guards with acting infamously in go