Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 12, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Spotts or search for Spotts in all documents.

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less than twenty dollars, the offence could not be considered a grand larceny, and the prisoner was, therefore, remanded for indictment by the Grand Jury of the Hustings Court. Mrs. Fannie H. Ferguson, charged with obtaining salt twice from Spotts, Harvey & Co. under false pretences, and assaulting and beating a negro in said Spotts, Harvey & Co.'s store, was required to give security for her good behavior and to pay a fine for assaulting a negro. Mrs. Ferguson stoutly denied the charge oSpotts, Harvey & Co.'s store, was required to give security for her good behavior and to pay a fine for assaulting a negro. Mrs. Ferguson stoutly denied the charge of having gone to the salt-house twice on her own account; but stated that she had a sister-in-law who resembled her very much, and she supposed that they had been mistaken for the same persons. Albert Throgmorton, a soldier, was charged with stealing a horse, valued at one thousand dollars, the property of the Confederate States. Captain J. H. Rives, in whose company the accused is a private, stated that the horse was stolen from his camp, in Henrico county, near the reservoir, and brought