Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 28, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Slidell or search for Slidell in all documents.

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ed the Confederation of the Southern States. Mr. Murphy, suspecting some trick, sent the document to the Burgomasters, who at once declared that their signatures had been rather cleverly imitated. Nature of the English demand for Mason and Slidell. The London correspondence of the Independence Bells, of January 2d, gives the following statement of the nature of the English demand upon Lincoln and his Government in the Trent affair: Lord Lyons's instructions enjoin on him not to send in his ultimatum until three days after he shall have received it. During these three days he is to see Mr. Lincoln and his Ministers, and to endeavor to make plain to them the motives which have caused the demand of Messrs. Mason and Slidell; to prepare them for the tenor of the ultimatum itself, and to bring to their notice the consequences of a refusal. If these preliminary counsels are not regarded, he will send in his ultimatum, after three-full days passed in negotiations, like thos
Times asks why the decision should be delayed if favorable for peace, and says that the immediate surrender of Mason and Slidell would have been a greater blow to the Confederates than a victory in the Potomac, and worth millions to the Federal exchorrespondence to the London Times, predicts that the Cabinet at Washington will refuse to surrender up Messrs. Mason and Slidell. He also says that a victory over the Confederate army has become a political necessity, and that General McClellan is isks at Lloyd's The Paris Patrie and Pays say that the Government at Washington offered to restore Messrs Mason and Slidell on condition that England would not recognize the Southern Confederacy. The Daily News says that any recognition ofeceived with the greatest satisfaction. Consols immediately advanced from 1a1ΒΌ per cent. The rendition of Mason and Slidell to the custody of Lord Lyons was received with the greatest satisfaction, but some journals complain of the ungracious m