Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 25, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Tyler or search for Tyler in all documents.

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Confiscating beef. --Early Corbin and John Jaiser were summoned before the Mayor yesterday to show cause why they should not be fined for buying beef in the city and offering the same for sale within the market limits. Mr. Tyler, the Clerk in the Second Market, stated that Jaiser had the beef on his stall, which he was cutting up for Corbin to retail in his grocery, near the market. Corbin took the ground that he kept a licensed grocery, and had a right to buy and sell beef as well as other articles. He had not offered the beef for sale, and had not purchased it in the market, as he could prove, but of a commission house on Cary street. The Mayor ordered the beef to be confiscated, and fined the parties $20, telling them that they could take an appeal from his decision to the City Council. Mr. Crane, the counsel of the defendants, said he would as soon appeal to a "militia muster," and urged that his clients had violated no ordinance by their acts.