Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 18, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Price or search for Price in all documents.

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Tennessee says that, on Thursday last, a steamer going from Memphis to Cincinnati was fired into by our troops when near Island No.37 from the Missouri side. The engineer, a dock hand, and several horses, were killed. The Yankees estimate the force posted along the river and interfering with their commerce at two thousand, and say that they are stragglers from Price's army.--Price would hardly have stragglers now; but if the Yankee account be true, they are straggling to some purpose. Tennessee says that, on Thursday last, a steamer going from Memphis to Cincinnati was fired into by our troops when near Island No.37 from the Missouri side. The engineer, a dock hand, and several horses, were killed. The Yankees estimate the force posted along the river and interfering with their commerce at two thousand, and say that they are stragglers from Price's army.--Price would hardly have stragglers now; but if the Yankee account be true, they are straggling to some purpose.
rs. Some similar measures taken by General Washburne in the Southwest proved quite effective. Latest from General, Price. The following, in the Herald, is given as the latest from Missouri. After asserting the recapture of Pilot Knob by of the rebel Price's forces in the State are now pillaging and conscripting in the country north of the Missouri river. Price himself, with the main portion of his army, is said to be still at Booneville. The Union troops garrisoning several small detached locations have been withdrawn and concentrated at Macon. In a speech which Price recently made to the people of Boonsville, he told them that if they did not now rally to his standard, it was the last time he would come into the State toes which this invasion must carry into the districts touched by it, it has another vast strategical significance. If Price should succeed to gain a firm foothold on the Missouri river, he controls from there the whole interior of Missouri, Sout