Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 14, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Pope or search for Pope in all documents.

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s worth, and we doubt whether it will effect any change in anybody else's opinion about the matter.--What he intended, to do was doubtless very grand; but what he really did amounted to nothing. In his letters to Mrs. Fremont the General hints at obstructions and impediments thrown in his way by the War Department; but if these hints mean anything they should have been made more plain and direct. All the fighting in the book is done by Major Zagoni and his company of cavalry, though Hunter, Pope, and Sigel, with their armies, were under Fremont's command. As a tribute to the memory of the fifteen soldiers of the body guard who were killed at Springfield, the book will interest many readers. We do not see, however, how it at all defends or explains the shortcomings of Gen. Fremont. New England's rights Considered — her Undue preponderance Objected to. A New York paper, taking up a subject that is receiving general attention in the North--the propriety of leaving New Englan