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The Daily Dispatch: November 16, 1860., [Electronic resource], Reported death of Alberto Mario . (search)
Conscience Stricken at last.
--Owen Norment, the bar tender who sometime since shot young Tittermary, at a tavern in North Carolina, has given himself up to the authorities of that State.
When he committed the act, Norment was a man of large physique and in full flesh.
From the effects of sleepless remorse, he is now reduced to a skeleton.
Conscience Stricken at last.
--Owen Norment, the bar tender who sometime since shot young Tittermary, at a tavern in North Carolina, has given himself up to the authorities of that State.
When he committed the act, Norment was a man of large physique and in full flesh.
From the effects of sleepless remorse, he is now reduced to a skeleton.
The Daily Dispatch: November 22, 1860., [Electronic resource], Sentenced to be hung. (search)
Sentenced to be hung.
--Owen Norment, who shot and killed Charles Tittermany, of Philadelphia, at Charlotte, N. C. in July, 1859, and who surrendered himself a few days since, after long wandering, was tried last week, and sentenced to be hung on the 15th of February. The jury signed a petition to the Governor for his pardon.
Robert T. Wilson, convicted of murder at Greensboro', N. C. has been sentenced to be hung on the 30th inst.
The Daily Dispatch: November 24, 1860., [Electronic resource], A great reform commenced. (search)
Rev. John Smyth, a Catholic pastor at Phillipsburg, N. J., died of consumption at St. Vincent's Hospital, in New York, on the 12th inst.
Owen Norment, sentenced to be hung at Charlotte, N. C., for the murder of Chas. Tittermary, has been pardoned by the Governor.
Wm. S. Stockton, one of the earliest advocates of the Methodist Protestant Church, died in Philadelphia on the 20th inst.