Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 20, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Dalton, Ga. (Georgia, United States) or search for Dalton, Ga. (Georgia, United States) in all documents.

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Yankees arrived last evening on the Central train, being the unprofitable portion of the spoils arising from Mosby's raid on Duffield station.--They have no greenbacks. Manassas gap railroad. The Yankees have left the Orange and Alexandria railroad and concentrated their force on the Manassas Gap railroad. This puts an end to any probability of their approaching Gordonsville from that direction. From Georgia. The Yankees seem to have heard the rumor that Hood had captured Dalton. This we know. Nothing further has been heard from him. We are assured, however, that he is not idle. From Missouri. In Missouri, Price is having everything his own way. The old General said, when he started on his campaign, that he went there to maintain the Confederate Government in the State, and on his own dear soil, or his bones should be there to whiten on the prairie. He is treading with a determined step. Jeff. Thompson, the wily swamp fox, is on his old trail. He will
ak of his little grey cap, which rested upon his grizzled moustache. Mr. McRae was habited in a highly-unmilitary garb of threadbare black, swallow-tail coat and stove-pipe hat, and had his shoulders swathed in a dingy-white blanket. General Butler assured these poor old soldiers that they should be treated as prisoners of war, and in the morning they were sent off with a number of their fellow patriots to the prison camp, Point Lookout. From Georgia — communication with Sherman out — Dalton surrendered to General Hood. Stanton no longer pretends to receive dispatches from Sherman. The Herald says nothing can be heard from him, and the Times thinks it is because he is "closing in upon the rebels." The latest intelligence from Georgia is the following dispatch, dated Chattanooga, the 15th: The reports of our scouts fail to show the presence of any considerable body of the enemy north of Turinel Hill. Walter and Whitfield counties have undoubtedly been scoured by a sm