Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 21, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for November 30th or search for November 30th in all documents.

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time since there appeared in this paper resolutions purporting to be passed by a Convention of Unionists at Hatteras Inlet, which Convention, it was intimated, largely represented the feelings of the population in that State, it being attended by delegates from forty-five counties. The New York Sun, (a Union paper,) of the 10th inst., however, pronounces the whole affair to be a farce. This it does on the authority of a private letter received in New York, dated Camp Wool, Hatteras Inlet, Nov. 30, which says: As for the Union Government in N. Carolina, I fear it is nothing but a big farce. The resolutions which you no doubt have read in the papers, began with something like this: "We, the people of North Carolina, &c."--Now, the fact is, the whole of the said people amounted in all to about 120 Hatteras fishers and voters, the rest being boys, women and children. This grand convention, representing North Carolina, "free and independent." was addressed by a Tribune reporter, (
Ranaway--$200 reward --From the residence of the subscriber, on the 30th Nov., Negro Boy Isaac, about 30 years old, 5½ feet high, ginger bread complexion, of pleasant and polite manners, hair short and happy, and is left handed. I will give the above reward for the apprehension and delivery of said boy in the jail at Orange C. H. This negro ran off in consequence of having committed a most brutal and unprovoked murder upon the person of my overseer, and it behooves the community at large to be on the look out for this criminal. He may be in the vicinity of Fredericksburg, where he has acquaintances. Louisa C. Taliaferro, Rapid Ann P. O., Culpeper county. Va. de 12--d3t&eodts