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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 22, 1863., [Electronic resource].
Found 409 total hits in 190 results.
Henrico (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Fifty dollars reward.
--Ranaway from my residence in Henrico four miles north of Richmond, on the 13th of June a negro man named Billy.
He is 20 years old, light complexion, has a scar on his face from a burn, all his front teeth out and has on dark clothes.
He has a wife in the city, and has been seen several times going to the Fair, Grounds, where I suppose he is cooking for the soldiers.
I will give the above reward if brought to me or lodged in jail so I can get him. C. Mouryer. jy 22--1t*
Jas McGee (search for this): article 10
The Hustings Court was engaged last Saturday in the trial of misdemeanor cases, a large number of which were disposed of, but none of them of any public interest.
In the case of Jas McGee, charged with violently assaulting Alotzo Travers, the jury were unable to agree and were therefore discharged.
The trial will come on at the next term of the Hustings Court.
Alotzo Travers (search for this): article 10
The Hustings Court was engaged last Saturday in the trial of misdemeanor cases, a large number of which were disposed of, but none of them of any public interest.
In the case of Jas McGee, charged with violently assaulting Alotzo Travers, the jury were unable to agree and were therefore discharged.
The trial will come on at the next term of the Hustings Court.
William Gambell (search for this): article 13
Caught again.
--Wm. Gambell, a deserter from the Washington Artillery, charged with various other offences, who has escaped from Castle Thunder several times, the last time by bribing the sentinel, was recaptured Saturday afternoon in a house near the corner of Cary and 13th streets.
Henrico (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 15
The county poor
--we allude particularly to those living on the city suburbs — are being sided from the city charity funds of Richmond, because they have no other source on which to rely.
Many of the needy are soldiers families, and the County Court of Henrico ought to make provision for them.
If the Courts had the power they ought to make the men who remain at home contribute liberally to the support of the families of those who take the field, and thus equalize the burthens of all. This might readily be done by special levy, and justice demands that it should be done.
Montague (search for this): article 17
Richmond (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 19
New Companies of infantry, artillery, and cavalry, are to be formed at once by that class of citizens upon whom the President is now calling to take the field.
In Richmond, if we except the mere sojourners and others who have foreign protection papers in their pockets, there are comparatively few men of the age indicated who are able to bear arms. --Already the metropolis has sent to the field her entire conscript force; but there are scores of others, not contemplated by the President's call, who are ready to defend their homes and firesides with their lives, and who will used no second summons to "shoulder arms." Let the enrollees bestir themselves at once, and thus double the armed force of the South; and let the class of men called upon loss no time in organizing their companies.
Seymour (search for this): article 2
Governor Seymour.
We are at a loss to know what became of this functionary after the advent of the Federal troops, which, we learn by a gentleman who saw the Herald of the 18th, came from Harris cided that the law is unconstitutional, Lincoln is still determined to enforce the draft. --Has Seymour, then, backed out, and given up the ground to Lincoln?
After using such determined language, w ute any unworthy act or motive of which he may be innocent to any man; but we hear nothing from Seymour, and now is the time for him to show his mettle.
Now is the time to take the lion by the beard n the footsteps of John Van Baren and other peace Democrat of that stripe.
The duty of Governor Seymour is so plain that he cannot miss it. The draft is plainly unconstitutional, as anybody may s Judges know anything about the law they profess to interpret.
But it will be considered especially wonderful if Governor Seymour fail to do what he has been so long and so loudly threatening to do.
Lincoln (search for this): article 2
John Baren (search for this): article 2