Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 14, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Randolph or search for Randolph in all documents.

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admission of wills to record upon proof of the handwriting of the attesting witnesses, in certain cases. Also, a bill amending the act of Oct., 1863, entitled "an act to authorize the arrest of deserters by the civil authorities." A bill for the relief of families of soldiers living in counties within the lines or under the control of the enemy was reported, by leave, and appropriately referred. A large number of resolutions of inquiry were adopted; one of them, proposed by Mr. Randolph, for increasing the compensation of the Commonwealth's Attorney of the Circuit Court of Richmond city. Mr. Taylor, of Montgomery, introduced joint resolutions for the final exemption from the Confederate army of such persons as have been found incapable, from permanent physical disability, to perform the services of a soldier in the field; whether such disability arise from natural causes, or wounds, or disease contracted in the service. Mr. Collier offered a resolution referrin
Two hundred dollars reward. --Ran away from my residence, on 5th street, between Main and Cary, on the morning of the 5th instant, my man Randolph. He is about forty years of age, of gingerbread color, thick set, and about 5 feet 8 inches in height. He has a wife at Mr. Valentine Walker's, in the lower part of Charles City, where I think he has gone, with the intention of making his way within the Yankee lines. I will give the above reward if arrested and delivered to me, in Richmond, or confined in any jail, so that I get him again. E H Poindexter. de 7--5t*