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Your search returned 10 results in 4 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: July 11, 1861., [Electronic resource], Local matters. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: December 8, 1862., [Electronic resource], From the South-side. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: December 12, 1865., [Electronic resource], Provost Court .--Lieutenant-Colonel McEntee presiding. (search)
Provost Court.--Lieutenant-Colonel McEntee presiding.
--Edward Jones, negro, charged with stealing a shirt from Mrs. Coady, was yesterday found guilty and sent to Castle Thunder for thirty days.
Patrick McLaughlin, Twelfth United States Infantry, drunk and disorderly, was sent to Castle Thunder for ten days.
John Evans, negro, charged with stealing three pounds of bacon, was released for want of evidence.
Michael Burns and Edward Hagan, charged with being drunk and assaulting a policeman, were sent to Castle Thunder for twenty days each.
John Gillboy, Twelfth United States Infantry, charged with being drunk, was sent to Castle Thunder for five days.
Louis Desendore, charged with assaulting a colored man and being a soldier dressed in citizens' clothes, proved that he was not a soldier, and was released.
J. B. Angley, charged with being drunk and carelessly firing a gun into the camp of the Eleventh United States Infantry, plead guilty and was sent to
The Daily Dispatch: December 30, 1865., [Electronic resource], Interesting to Masons — question of invasion of Jurisdiction. (search)
Serious poisoning case.--six persons the victims.
--A melancholy case of poisoning occurred at No. 2,316 Spring Garden street yesterday morning, by which six persons were the victims.
It appears that Patrick McLaughlin, his wife, two children and his nephew and niece partook of breakfast at different times during the morning, and each one was taken seriously ill within two hours afterwards.
Some two or three physicians were immediately sent for, who, upon arriving at the house and examin ought at first that he would not recover, but he gradually became better, and last evening was pronounced out of danger.
The other five suffered somewhat during the early part of the day, but at no time were considered dangerously ill. Besides McLaughlin and wife, the victims are Margaret, aged nineteen, and Michael, aged seventeen, their children; also, James McLaughlin, aged twenty-one, and Jane McDevitt, aged twenty-three, their nephew and niece.
James, after eating breakfast, had proceeded