Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 19, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Driscoll or search for Driscoll in all documents.

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t thought it was all settled, as for a week or two they had been very friendly, and going together all the time. Mrs. Driscoll sworn: knew nothing about the affair heard a noise, and then that a man had been killed, and kept out of the way hearut the door. I shoved a whole lot men out as I was about to shut my door. I looked it. Don't know one of them. Mrs. Driscoll (recalled).--I saw a man with Clancey and Murphy at my house last night, and I warned Clancey to have nothing to do w in jail last week. I heard him say that no one in Richmond knew his name. Patrick Larkin, sworn I know the man Mrs. Driscoll speaks of. He calls himself Burns. He often calls himself "the old man's son," and he is best known by that title, I saw him last night about the time of the murder, in Mrs. Driscoll's yard. He tried to get into her house, but couldn't Then he tried at another house, and finally escaped through the back part of the yard, but whither he went I don't know, nor jus