Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Forney or search for Forney in all documents.

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Things generally in-yankeedom. From an article attributed, no doubt justly to Forney, extracted by as yesterday from the Washington Chronicle, it seems plain that, notwithstanding the professed satisfaction of Lincoln with the condition and prospects of Grant and his army, very serious alarm is felt in Washington for the resof all attempts to suppress it, that the slaughter around Petersburg has been terrific beyond all example, and so well is the truth understood by all parties that Forney contents himself with attempting to palliate the effect he knows it must produce, instead of boldly denying it. His man topic of consolation is that the slaughternia or that of Cold Harbor. While, therefore, he lets us into the secret of the Yankee losses, we console ourselves by contrasting them with our own. Nor is Forney the only witness to the troubles that have beset Grant in his hazardous and disastrous march from the north side of the Rapidan to the south side of James river.