Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 30, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for October 26th or search for October 26th in all documents.

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ch, and I thank God I have none. Gen. Baker was the tool of a vile despot, to curry out the subjugation--tation--of a people that never harmed him. We all recollect his boasted threat in the Senate. But he has fallen; we therefore, let him rest. Our loss has been published in the Dispatch as 300. Let me say that is too large. It is not more than 100, and I have the means of knowing. The brave Col. Burt, of the 18th Mississippi. Volunteers, is dead. He died Saturday evening, the 26th October. A braver and more popular officer belonged not to the Southern army — his men were devoted to him and his loss is severely felt not only by the soldiers immediately under his command, but also by the citizens of this place. By his gentlemanly deportment he had won upon the affections of all with whom he was associated; and the writer, who had the pleasure of his acquaintance, would pay a passing tribute of respect to his memory, and plant a flower upon his grave, and, without another
Affairs at the South. Our Southern summary will be found below. It is necessarily short, but we hope will be none the less interesting: Affairs in Kentucky. The Bowling Green (Ky.) correspondent of the Memphis Argus (Oct. 26th) has the following in regard to affairs in Kentucky: By the news just in from Owensboro', Davies county, Ky., I learn that Colonel J. S. Jackson is occupying that place with about 300 Yankees and Dutch, some forty of them wounded. He has made numerous arrests, and permitting unprovoked outrages and robberies of Southern-rights families, in which pursuit he has an able adjutant in Brigadier. General T. L. Crittenden, who is similarly employed in the town and county of Henderson, he having some 3,000 Lincolnites in that section, mainly brought from Indiana and Illinois. Both these leaders have signally failed in obtaining recruits in Kentucky. Since my last another accident, the result of the careless handling of fire-arms, has occurred