Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 28, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for James Tyler or search for James Tyler in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

Passing counterfeit money. --James Tyler, wearing the garb of a soldier — a middle aged looking man, thin face, sandy hair, and sallow complexion — was brought before the Mayor yesterday for passing a $100 counterfeit Confederate Treasury note to Geo. Guvenator, keeper of a liquor saloon, No. 62 Main street, between 14th and 15th, as true and genuine. It appears that on Wednesday night the lithographic establishment of Hoyer & Ludwig, in the Enquirer building, was broken open by thieves, who proceeded to print for their own use a number of the issue of $100 Treasury notes. The case being given to Detective J. W. Goodrich to "work out," he succeeded in tracing the possession of one of the notes so printed to Tyrer, and establishing the fact of his having passed it as true and genuine. As the offence committed by the prisoner was against the Confederate Government, the Mayor directed officer Goodrich to take the party before Commissioner Wm. F. Watson for examination, which