Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 1, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Thomas C. Reynolds or search for Thomas C. Reynolds in all documents.

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From Trans-Mississippi. A Government courier has arrived from the Trans-Mississippi with dispatches of importance. He reports everything quiet in that department. General Price left Missouri with five thousand more men than he entered the State with. He claims to have accomplished all the objects of his mission and to have harassed the enemy sorely. A dispute has arisen in the newspapers at Shreveport between General Price and Governor Reynolds, of Missouri, with regard to the results of the campaign. In a military point of view, everything is quiet in the Trans-Mississippi. The rivers are higher now than they have been for many years; but no apprehension is felt of a land incursion by the Yankees. Blockade-running between Galveston and the West Indies is carried on very successfully; perhaps rivalling, in this respect, the ports of Wilmington and Charleston. Quite a number of steamers ran in and out of Galveston harbor in the course of a fortnight.
A card from General Price. --The Shreveport News contains the annexed card from General Price: In the Texas Republican of the 23d of December, 1864, there appears a communication over the signature of one Thomas C. Reynolds, who pretends to be, and styles himself in it, the Governor of the State of Missouri. The communication purports to defend two gallant and distinguished officers against charges alleged to have been made against them; but which I had never heard made by officer or soldier. In reality, it was intended to be a violent and malignant attack upon myself, as the officer in command of the late expedition to Missouri. So far as the communication pays tribute to the gallantry displayed by the officers and soldiers engaged in that expedition, I heartily concur in it. So far as it relates to myself, however, I pronounce it to be a tissue of falsehood. Sterling Price.