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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 11, 1863., [Electronic resource].

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Fifty dollars reward. --I will pay the above reward for the apprehension and delivery, or confinement in jail, of my man George Rucker, who ran away in December last and was last heard of at the farm or Mr. Morson, in Goochland, where his wife lives. George is well known in Richmond and on the Canal, having been Captain of a freight boat for twenty years. He is about 50 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches high, gingerbread color, and has remarkably short hair, closely inapt. Clifford Cabell, Greenway P. O. Nelson co., Va. mh 11--10t*
George Rucker (search for this): article 1
Fifty dollars reward. --I will pay the above reward for the apprehension and delivery, or confinement in jail, of my man George Rucker, who ran away in December last and was last heard of at the farm or Mr. Morson, in Goochland, where his wife lives. George is well known in Richmond and on the Canal, having been Captain of a freight boat for twenty years. He is about 50 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches high, gingerbread color, and has remarkably short hair, closely inapt. Clifford Cabell, Greenway P. O. Nelson co., Va. mh 11--10t*
Clifford Cabell (search for this): article 1
Fifty dollars reward. --I will pay the above reward for the apprehension and delivery, or confinement in jail, of my man George Rucker, who ran away in December last and was last heard of at the farm or Mr. Morson, in Goochland, where his wife lives. George is well known in Richmond and on the Canal, having been Captain of a freight boat for twenty years. He is about 50 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches high, gingerbread color, and has remarkably short hair, closely inapt. Clifford Cabell, Greenway P. O. Nelson co., Va. mh 11--10t*
Fifty dollars reward. --I will pay the above reward for the apprehension and delivery, or confinement in jail, of my man George Rucker, who ran away in December last and was last heard of at the farm or Mr. Morson, in Goochland, where his wife lives. George is well known in Richmond and on the Canal, having been Captain of a freight boat for twenty years. He is about 50 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches high, gingerbread color, and has remarkably short hair, closely inapt. Clifford Cabell, Greenway P. O. Nelson co., Va. mh 11--10t*
Goochland (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Fifty dollars reward. --I will pay the above reward for the apprehension and delivery, or confinement in jail, of my man George Rucker, who ran away in December last and was last heard of at the farm or Mr. Morson, in Goochland, where his wife lives. George is well known in Richmond and on the Canal, having been Captain of a freight boat for twenty years. He is about 50 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches high, gingerbread color, and has remarkably short hair, closely inapt. Clifford Cabell, Greenway P. O. Nelson co., Va. mh 11--10t*
Nelson (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Fifty dollars reward. --I will pay the above reward for the apprehension and delivery, or confinement in jail, of my man George Rucker, who ran away in December last and was last heard of at the farm or Mr. Morson, in Goochland, where his wife lives. George is well known in Richmond and on the Canal, having been Captain of a freight boat for twenty years. He is about 50 years of age, 5 feet 8 inches high, gingerbread color, and has remarkably short hair, closely inapt. Clifford Cabell, Greenway P. O. Nelson co., Va. mh 11--10t*
se of Mr. Greeley; that he, too, is convinced of the uselessness of prosecuting the war any longer; and that he will faithfully carry out Mr. Greeley's programme in May next, namely: a separation of the North from the South, and the recognition of the independence of the Southern Confederacy. But the plots of Greeley and the relter" tent, or crouching over his fire, or pacing his lonely round, who does not sigh for peace. It is idle to think that the 300,000 troops whose time expires in May next will re-enlist. I have conversed with hundreds of them, and I know what I say. No offers of bounty will tempt them. They sigh for peace, and for the repose of their quiet firesides, and the latter, at least, they will have in May--as many of them as are alive. And how will their places be filled? Let the attempt now being made in Congress to raise 110,000 negro troops answer. Let the failure of the draft answer. Let the public meetings now being everywhere held answer. Let the res
verge of ruin. We are staggering under a load of financial embarrassments such as no nation ever before experienced All the schemes of Mr. Chase have been no more than the temporary shifts resorted to by spend thrifts who put off the evil day from time to time by raising loans on exorbitant and compound interest, and who find themselves at last bound hand and foot and at the mercy of their Marcile a creditors. The crash is approaching surely, but not slowly. It may come before the ides of March are past. And when it does come, the war is over. Another cause that is hastening the termination of the war is the disgust of the people at the hideous complexion which it has assumed, and their indigestion at the revelation of the deceit which has been practiced upon them by their rulers — They never would have given their sous, their brothers, their husbands, to be butchered in a war the sole object of which it now disclosed to be the abolition of slavery and the extermination of th
e to be a war for he Union, would he willing to continue it after it should become evident that it was really a war to prevent the reconstruction of the Union. 4th In forgetting that the internal tranquility of both France and England depends upon their full and regular supply of American cotton, and that these countries will not permit a war to continue long which would deprive them of it. The conservative statesmen here also see that for reasons set forth at length in my letter of Jan. February 31, the Union can never be restored as long as the war continues; while, on the other hand, as soon as the war is stopped and guarantees for their rights offered to the south, the Union will be restored. Anxious, therefore, to repair the blunders of the Administration and to restore the Union, the conservative statement here will oppose the further continuance of the war. Mr. Conway, of Kansas, a Republican member of Congress, and heretofore a supporter of the Administrat
Forty-five transports, conveying troops to Nashville, have, within the past week, passed up the Cumberland river. The force is Gen. Franz Siegel entire corps, numbering 20,000 men, recently transported by rail from Virginia to the Ohio river, and sent thence in transports to Nashville, for the purpose of reinforcing Gen. Rosecrans at Murfreesboro'.--The entire corps has now reached Nashville, and the larger portion of it have been thrown out on the line of the Central Southern Railroad to Franklin, in the direction of this place and, as before stated, midway between the two latter points. Thus it will be seen that by a rapid and secret movement, 20,000 reinforcements have been skillfully placed at the disposal of Rosecrans, so that he may build his large army upon Bragg and crush him out; and, if successful in doing this, cross a large flanking army through the country via Corinth or Columbus, Mississippi, upon the rear of Vicksburg. A letter to the Savannah Republican, from Columb
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