Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 14, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for N. M. Lee or search for N. M. Lee in all documents.

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Six Hundred Dollars Reward. Ran away from my residence a Woman, named Caroline, thirty-five or forty years of age; black, medium size, owned by Stephen Davis, of Charlotte county; and one named Charlotte, bought of Lee & Bowman, who came from Petersburg, and is about twenty years of age, gingerbread color and middle size. They have with them Confederate money and specie. I will give the above reward for their arrest and delivery to me, at N. M. Lee's, or $300 for either of them. R. S. Reward. Ran away from my residence a Woman, named Caroline, thirty-five or forty years of age; black, medium size, owned by Stephen Davis, of Charlotte county; and one named Charlotte, bought of Lee & Bowman, who came from Petersburg, and is about twenty years of age, gingerbread color and middle size. They have with them Confederate money and specie. I will give the above reward for their arrest and delivery to me, at N. M. Lee's, or $300 for either of them. R. S. Pollard. ja 9--1w
o be. He says that Augusta is the next point to be taken, and adds: Sherman's ultimate objective is nothing less than Lee's army, now held tight in Richmond by Grant. But between his present position and his ultimate destination lie the Statesn moves up into Virginia, where he joins Grant in dealing the death blow at the rebellion, the head and front of which is Lee's army at Richmond. This programme may, to some, seem rather a wild sally of speculation than an outline of operationorked out by Sherman, that the military situation in Virginia assumes a wholly new aspect and relations. The expulsion of Lee's army from Richmond, so far from being, as hitherto, a desideratum, is now an event to be prevented. Indeed, it is presumable that it will for some time be Lieutenant-General Grant's chief aim to hold Lee in Richmond, while Sherman presses forward in the execution of his great design. Viewed in its most general aspect, Richmond assumes the character of a pivot, towa