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The Daily Dispatch: November 4, 1864., [Electronic resource], Stop the Runaways.--one thousand dollars reward. (search)
are very few. The loss of the enemy must have been heavy, as they advanced in range of our batteries and infantry lines. It was somewhat dark, however, and of course firing was not so effective as it would have been had our troops had a good view of the enemy. At this hour (6 A. M.) all is quiet. From General Price. The New York Herald has the following paragraph in its situation article, but takes good care not to publish any of the telegrams to which it refers: General Pleasanton's official dispatches confirm previous reports of the capture of the rebel Generals Marmaduke and Cabell. Our St. Louis dispatches show that the accounts heretofore received of the overwhelming defeat and hurried and disorganized retreat from Missouri of the remnant of Price's army have not been exaggerated. Included in the large number of his men captured by the Union troops are about one hundred commissioned officers. The Latest from Sherman. A telegram from Nashville, da