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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 19, 1863., [Electronic resource].

Found 411 total hits in 199 results.

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Two hundred dollars reward. --Will be paid for the apprehension and confinement in jail of my servant John, who ran away from my mother's, in Powhatan county, Va., about the middle of July last. Said negro men is about 5 feet 14 inches high, black, features guild prominent. He is 26 years old, and was purchased in the neighborhood of Clever Hill coal miles in the winter of 1860, where no may be now loitering. Address E J Morelay, M D. Or Wm N Brandes, Sa., Box 642, Richmond, Va. de 17--7t
Two hundred dollars reward. --Will be paid for the apprehension and confinement in jail of my servant John, who ran away from my mother's, in Powhatan county, Va., about the middle of July last. Said negro men is about 5 feet 14 inches high, black, features guild prominent. He is 26 years old, and was purchased in the neighborhood of Clever Hill coal miles in the winter of 1860, where no may be now loitering. Address E J Morelay, M D. Or Wm N Brandes, Sa., Box 642, Richmond, Va. de 17--7t
Two hundred dollars reward. --Will be paid for the apprehension and confinement in jail of my servant John, who ran away from my mother's, in Powhatan county, Va., about the middle of July last. Said negro men is about 5 feet 14 inches high, black, features guild prominent. He is 26 years old, and was purchased in the neighborhood of Clever Hill coal miles in the winter of 1860, where no may be now loitering. Address E J Morelay, M D. Or Wm N Brandes, Sa., Box 642, Richmond, Va. de 17--7t
Powhatan (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Two hundred dollars reward. --Will be paid for the apprehension and confinement in jail of my servant John, who ran away from my mother's, in Powhatan county, Va., about the middle of July last. Said negro men is about 5 feet 14 inches high, black, features guild prominent. He is 26 years old, and was purchased in the neighborhood of Clever Hill coal miles in the winter of 1860, where no may be now loitering. Address E J Morelay, M D. Or Wm N Brandes, Sa., Box 642, Richmond, Va. de 17--7t
Stonewall Jackson (search for this): article 1
nd themselves from the country. They can eat, drink, and be merry in some foreign land; they can make a great show with their ill-gotten gains, and that is all they live for. Who could expect such creatures to do reverence to the memory of Stonewall Jackson, the man whose meet and drink it was to serve God and his country. We do not doubt that there are many people in this country, not included in the money-grasping classes to whom we have referred, who have failed from other causes than thoshe earth look up to the eternal stars. Nor can it add to the repose of the great warrior's soul that the multitude burn incense at his shrine, or build a costly pile in his honor. It is because we honor the good name of our country in honoring Jackson, because we save it from the deep and damning reproach of callous ingratitude to such a benefactor, that we invoke the people of the South to complete at once the proposed memorial to the departed hero. Let not the army carry off the laurels in
Stonewall (search for this): article 1
The Jackson Monument. It is impossible to repress feelings of mortification at the tardiness manifested by the non- combatants and exempts of the Confederacy in contributing to the Jackson Monument Fund. We cannot say we are surprised that the principal contributions come from the army. The army contains the cream and essence of the chivalry and generosity of this land. Stonewall was the embodiment of the military soul of the Confederacy. He had no characteristic in common with men whose souls are absorbed in the pursuit of gain, and who are of the earth, earthy. In the canker of a long peace, and the corroding influences of commerce, he might have lived and died unknown. He was a person of that rare quality, simplicity of character, of unselfishness so remarkable that he has been known to rise from his bed at night and remove part of his scanty covering to shelter a sleeping subaltern from the wintry cold; of humility so profound that he blushed like a child when made the
Peterfield Trent (search for this): article 1
Servants for hire. --The subscriber has for hire the ensuing year several servants, Women, Boys, and Girls. Two of the women are without encumbrance, and excellent cooks, washers, and ironers. The others are plain cooks, but excellent washers and ironers. The girls have been accustomed to minding children. One of the boys has lived in a store for several years, is very active, and known to be trusty. No objection will be made to homes in the country for these servants, if near Richmond. To secure good homes the hire of all these servants will be made reasonable. Apply at my office, southeast corner of Marshall and 7th streets, between the hours of 2 and 4 o'clock P. M. Peterfield Trent. de 19--1t
The cage. --James Cattion, charged with breaking into the store of Messrs. Miller &Bro., and stealing four barrels of apple brandy and five sides of leather, valued at $6,000, was yesterday committed to the cage. Also, Philip, slave of William Thornton, charged with stealing two hags of meal from some person unknown.
William Thornton (search for this): article 10
The cage. --James Cattion, charged with breaking into the store of Messrs. Miller &Bro., and stealing four barrels of apple brandy and five sides of leather, valued at $6,000, was yesterday committed to the cage. Also, Philip, slave of William Thornton, charged with stealing two hags of meal from some person unknown.
James Cattion (search for this): article 10
The cage. --James Cattion, charged with breaking into the store of Messrs. Miller &Bro., and stealing four barrels of apple brandy and five sides of leather, valued at $6,000, was yesterday committed to the cage. Also, Philip, slave of William Thornton, charged with stealing two hags of meal from some person unknown.
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