Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 26, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for April 24th or search for April 24th in all documents.

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ined by the forces of the Confederate States at Charleston over the troops of the Federal Government, and believing it to be the purpose of the Federal Government to reduce the Southern States to subjection Therefore. Resolved, That we tender our heartfelt sympathy to the Confederate States, and unanimously pledge our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor, to the maintenance of the rights of Virginia and the South. North Carolina. A Raleigh correspondent, writing on the 24th of April, gives us the following information from the Old North State: Our people are wide awake, and we are responding nobly to the call made for volunteers to defend the rights of the South. The ladies, ever foremost in good works, held a meeting in the basement of the Baptist Church yesterday morning, for the purpose of making up the necessary clothing, &c., for our volunteer companies. There was a general outpouring of the ladies of the city, and they will provide our volunteers wit
From Washington. Washington, April 24. --The Administration is evidently alarmed. Troops are being enrolled in all sections of the city, the fidelity of whom is by no means certain. The U. S. Government still persist in making Federal appointments. Of the office seekers, those in favor of coercing and subjugating the just and lawfully seceded States are in high favor. Nearly all the Southerners in office refuse to take the oath of allegiance to the Government which is proposed to them by those who now hold control of the appointing power. Resignations are pouring into the Departments from every quarter of the land. They are not published in the city papers. Gov. Hicks, of Maryland, who was sometime since in high favor with the Administration, is now looked upon with distrust. Provisions in the Federal Capital are becoming daily dearer. The Government are now selling flour from the Capital, where a large quantity of it is stored, to those prof