Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 30, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Marshall or search for Marshall in all documents.

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Convicted. --Sydney Wicker, indicted for the murder of Gen. P. Wright, alias Doyle, has been tried before Judge Lyons, of the Husting Court, found guilty, by the jury, and his term of punishment ascertained at seven years in the penitentiary. Gen. Marshall, his counsel, will argue his motion to set aside the verdict to-day.
From Bay St. Louis. Pascagoula, Oct. 29. --A courier from Bay St. Louis says that one hundred Yankees, under cover of the gunboat Commodore, landed at that place on the 23d, surprised and attacked our cavalry, wounding one man slightly, and Capt. Marshall severely though the body. They recaptured four prisoners previously taken, burned four houses, plundered the place, and carried off some negroes.
Anecdote of Judge Marshall. --The Petersburg Register, in an article about suppressing the vice of gambling by legislation, introduces the following anecdote: Richmond, has always been a terrible place for gambling. Years ago, it and Augusta, in Georgia, were noted the country through as the headquarters of the sporting fraternity. In this connection an anecdote is told of the late Chief Justice Marshall. While on his way to hold the Federal Court at Augusta, he was overtaken in tChief Justice Marshall. While on his way to hold the Federal Court at Augusta, he was overtaken in the sandy country of South Carolina by a sallow- looking chap, riding a flea-bitten, sand hill tacky. With the curiosity characteristic of his class the wished to know all about the "stranger"--what mout be his name, and what mout be the place he come from, and what mout be the place he was going to. The "Old Chief" good-naturally "played off" his catechize for a while, but at last permitted him to ascertain that he was from Richmond, in Virginia, and was going to Augusta, in Georgia, "Well," sa