Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 28, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Trumbull or search for Trumbull in all documents.

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ast becoming wide awake to our actual and imminent cause for anxiety, concludes an article on the subject thus: But there are other considerations than this life and death question of the Territories which are now maddening the South. Senator Trumbull declares the late election will bring about a Northern "Pacific Railroad, a judicious tariff, the admission of Kansas into the Union as a free State, a reform in the financial department of the government, and, more than all, the verdict of of the slaves by the force of circumstances. The South sees absolute ruin staring it in the face from such measures; and, whether it secedes immediately or not, attempt to secede it must shortly in defence of its very existence. We repeat, Senator Trumbull declared that such would be the new President's policy, and he declared it, too, almost within hearing of Mr. Lincoln, and in answer to the threats of secession. Furthermore, Mr. Lincoln himself has stated how Southern attempts at disunion