Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 14, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for June 28th or search for June 28th in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

s not the whole duty of nations. It fully endorses Napoleon's views on the American question. Believing there is no chance whatever of restoring the Union, it says England is not bound to bear the obstructions to commerce and shipping — vexations so long as it appears she would endure greater exiles by taking action to end them — but she is not bound to endure them any longer. There is no principle which should prescribe to her for an indefinite period a national silence and immobility, if by speaking and moving she can exert a pacifying influence on the combatants, who have lost their independence and power of self control. A dispatch from London, of the 28th June--the very latest — says: "The Persia's advices excited attention so-day." The impression prevails that Lee has made a mistake in invading the North; that it will give President Lincoln great assistance in raising men and means, will again excite a warlike feeling throughout the North, and tend to prolong the w