Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 11, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Crouch or search for Crouch in all documents.

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ndow of the saloon kept by McGee, on Main street, opposite the Spotswood Hotel, a party of gentlemen standing at the bar, while behind it was a negro mixing up whiskey toddies or juleps. These were drunk by them, and afterwards a young man named Crouch gave the bar-keeper money to pay for them. Crouch was then sworn. He denied the charge that what the gentlemen alluded to were drinking was liquor, but said that it was soda water.--Since the passage of the anti-liquor law by the last LegislatuCrouch was then sworn. He denied the charge that what the gentlemen alluded to were drinking was liquor, but said that it was soda water.--Since the passage of the anti-liquor law by the last Legislature he had never taken a drink of whiskey or other intoxicating liquor in McGee's house, nor had he seen any one else take any. John Ford was charged with stealing one hundred dollars from Patrick H. Seymour, on the 20th of last September. Mr. Seymour testified that about that time Ford came into his store and purchased a pack of playing cards for four dollars, presenting a hundred dollar note in payment. He (S.) went to the money drawer to get the change, which he threw upon the counter ne