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The Daily Dispatch: March 3, 1863., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
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tion to smooth the thing over, and to proceed to business with all the of good faith possible under the circumstances. Senator Asa P. Graver, who had left his seat in the Senate to attend the Convention, arose and suggested that in order to facilitate purposes the call for delegates be made, and as the lists were handed in they could be submitted to Col. Gilbert. The Secretary then proceeded to call the counties in their alphabetical order: Jefferson, Campbell, Henry, Olden, Owen, Scott, Shelby, Mason, Oldham, and Woodford counties, and the city of Louisville, sending the largest number of delegates. During the call David Merriweather arrived in the hall, and was invited to the chair. He is an Ex-Governor of New Mexico, and has been a very active Secessionist from the first. It soon became known that the place was guarded by Federal soldiers, and several of the more timid began to evince signs of and commenced to move toward the door, but no one was allowed to p
Cage cases. --The city police made a number of arrests yesterday, an enumeration of which we subjoin: Margaret Williams, arrested by officer Bibb, says she is free, no papers, from Norfolk, put in for abusing Mrs. Caphert's children in the street; Martha J. Scott, a colored individual, circumstanced like Williams, and charged with the same offence, was put in with her; James F. Shelley, a white man, was put in the cage by officer Morris for cheating and defrauding James McNulty out of $100 by selling him a watch pretending it was gold when, in point of fact, it was anything else. Capt. John C. Bentley was put in for getting drunk and abusing and assaulting John P. Ballard in his own house; James M. Lilly was caged for getting drunk and stealing a knife and fork belonging to the proprietor of the American Hotel.