Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 21, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for 18th or search for 18th in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

ille, between the forces under Gen. Hardee, 1,500 strong, and the forces under Gen. Ward, 2,000 strong. At Camp Andy Johnson the latter was repulsed after a sharp engagement. No particulars received. There has nothing been heard of Gen. Roussean this side of Nolin, where an advance arrived a week ago. The Federals are making no advance movements. The Louisville Journal, of yesterday, says four car-loads of arms, destined for the Kentucky armies, arrived at Jeffersonville on the 18th inst. Gen. Smith, who is commanding at Pajucah, issued a proclamation on the 10th inst., forbidding the outposts to pass out persons without written permission from headquarters, and those permissions are only given to persons of approved loyalty; nor will goods or stores of any description be permitted to pass without the same permission. Senator Bingham, of Michigan, is dead. [Second Dispatch.] Nashville, Oct. 20. --The Bowling Green correspondent of the Union and Amer
Fatal Mistake--death of a Cederand --The Memphis Appeal, of the 18th inst., thus announces the death of Dr. Lewis Shanks, formerly of Virginia, but at the time of his death a resident of that city: Seldom have we taken up our pen with more melincholy feelings than we experience in fulfilling the duty of announcing the death of one of our oldest, most amiable, and most respected citizens--Dr. Louis Shanks. It was stated in our paper yesterday that the doctor was in a dangerous condition in consequence of having taken morphine, a deadly oplate, for quinine. On Wednesday morning at eight o'clock, in consequence of illness he took from medicine he had in the house a dose from a paper marked "quinine,"--This drug and morphine are alike, in appearance and similar in taste. After taking the medicine, the doctor experienced symptoms which led him to fear that it was not quinine, but morphine he had taken. On referring to the label, and finding it bore the word "quinine," he w