Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 21, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Pleasanton or search for Pleasanton in all documents.

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n fine condition, and ready to follow rapidly. Pontoons were across the river last evening, and we have no doubt that his advance is already on Virginia soil. It would not be proper to state the point of crossing; but it will be a satisfaction to know that our army is in pursuit. We also learn that the delay in attacking the rebels was owing to the differences of opinion among the corps commanders, to whose views Gen. Meade yielded in opposition to his own judgment, sustained by Gens. Pleasanton and Warren. They were all for an immediate attack on coming up, before the enemy had time to entrench. A Northern view of intervention. The New York World seems to think this war a most hopeless sort of business. If the Confederates are successful the North must yield, and if they meet with disaster it fears foreign intervention. It says: If the war drags on, as hitherto, the same result will follow, since the prolongation of the war is confirmation of hope to the rebe