Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 2, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Price or search for Price in all documents.

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Confederacy were that confidence to be diminished by unjust criticism. The men who have fought our battles know better how to appreciate our Generals than peaceful citizens who have never smelt gunpowder. Such men as Johnston, Beauregard, Smith, and others who might be named, on the Potomac; such Generals as Lee and Loring in Western Virginia; such a master of his profession as Gen. Albert S. Johnston; such accomplished soldiers and strategists as Generals Hardee, Magruder, McCulloch, Price, Hill, Polr, and others, are not to be found in any other army on this continent.--The South has shown its good sense in calling to the control of its forces educated military men, and has been fortunate in securing not only soldiers, but men of sense and character, of dignity, self-respect, and conscience, who appreciate the responsibility of their positions, and have as much to lose by disaster as any one else in the Southern Confederacy; probably more. Having selected our agents, let us
From Missouri. Mobile, Oct. 1. --The St. Louis Democrat, of the 25th, says that Siegel did not attack Price at Lexington. He was at St. Louis. There were only 22,000 Confederates engaged at Lexington, against 30,000 Federals. Ten thousae unable to resist the Confederates. The following is Fremont's dispatch to Washington: "Lexington has fallen into Price's hands. Their winter supplies having been cut off, the reinforcements of fourteen thousand had no means of crossing the forces." A dispatch from Jefferson City says that Claib. Jackson is advancing on Booneville with 10,000, and that Price is marching towards Georgetown with 20,000, the Lexington army being doubled for that purpose. The steamer Clara Beled for that purpose. The steamer Clara Bell has been re-taken by the Confederates, with $30,000 in merchandize. Price's forces will doubtless in a few days amount to thirty or forty thousand. There is nothing of interest from Lexington.