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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 23, 1864., [Electronic resource].

Found 174 total hits in 102 results.

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March 9th (search for this): article 1
Twenty dollars reward. --Ran away from my house, on the 9th of March, a negro Woman, named Matilda, about fifty years old, black, a little stooped, rather low. She belongs to the estate of James B. Jordan, of Goochland, and hired from T J Jordan, his administrator. She is lurking about the lower end of Goochland, her old neighborhood, or Dover Pits, where her husband is hired. I will give the above reward if delivered to me, on 4th st, between Duval and Baker, or lodged in jail in Richmond. James E Ellis. [mh 23--4t*]
Twenty dollars reward. --Ran away from my house, on the 9th of March, a negro Woman, named Matilda, about fifty years old, black, a little stooped, rather low. She belongs to the estate of James B. Jordan, of Goochland, and hired from T J Jordan, his administrator. She is lurking about the lower end of Goochland, her old neighborhood, or Dover Pits, where her husband is hired. I will give the above reward if delivered to me, on 4th st, between Duval and Baker, or lodged in jail in Richmond. James E Ellis. [mh 23--4t*]
James B. Jordan (search for this): article 1
Twenty dollars reward. --Ran away from my house, on the 9th of March, a negro Woman, named Matilda, about fifty years old, black, a little stooped, rather low. She belongs to the estate of James B. Jordan, of Goochland, and hired from T J Jordan, his administrator. She is lurking about the lower end of Goochland, her old neighborhood, or Dover Pits, where her husband is hired. I will give the above reward if delivered to me, on 4th st, between Duval and Baker, or lodged in jail in Richmaway from my house, on the 9th of March, a negro Woman, named Matilda, about fifty years old, black, a little stooped, rather low. She belongs to the estate of James B. Jordan, of Goochland, and hired from T J Jordan, his administrator. She is lurking about the lower end of Goochland, her old neighborhood, or Dover Pits, where her husband is hired. I will give the above reward if delivered to me, on 4th st, between Duval and Baker, or lodged in jail in Richmond. James E Ellis. [mh 23--4t*]
W. E. James (search for this): article 1
Twenty dollars reward. --Ran away from my house, on the 9th of March, a negro Woman, named Matilda, about fifty years old, black, a little stooped, rather low. She belongs to the estate of James B. Jordan, of Goochland, and hired from T J Jordan, his administrator. She is lurking about the lower end of Goochland, her old neighborhood, or Dover Pits, where her husband is hired. I will give the above reward if delivered to me, on 4th st, between Duval and Baker, or lodged in jail in Richmond. James E Ellis. [mh 23--4t*]
Goochland (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Twenty dollars reward. --Ran away from my house, on the 9th of March, a negro Woman, named Matilda, about fifty years old, black, a little stooped, rather low. She belongs to the estate of James B. Jordan, of Goochland, and hired from T J Jordan, his administrator. She is lurking about the lower end of Goochland, her old neighborhood, or Dover Pits, where her husband is hired. I will give the above reward if delivered to me, on 4th st, between Duval and Baker, or lodged in jail in Richmway from my house, on the 9th of March, a negro Woman, named Matilda, about fifty years old, black, a little stooped, rather low. She belongs to the estate of James B. Jordan, of Goochland, and hired from T J Jordan, his administrator. She is lurking about the lower end of Goochland, her old neighborhood, or Dover Pits, where her husband is hired. I will give the above reward if delivered to me, on 4th st, between Duval and Baker, or lodged in jail in Richmond. James E Ellis. [mh 23--4t*]
, who are the fiscal agents of the State, without charge, and who are by law the receivers, custodians and disbursers of the revenue and other public funds. These Banks are allowed toget their whole corps of officers and clerks as necessary as well to the interests of the State as to the execution of the laws touching the public . But I have wholly refused exemptions to the employees of the independent Banks [those in which the State is not a stockholder] --officers as well as clerks. These Banks are founded upon associated surplus capital, and are operated entirely for the advantage of private interests of the stockholders, and they have no more right to Banks are founded upon associated surplus capital, and are operated entirely for the advantage of private interests of the stockholders, and they have no more right to exemption from the military service due to the country for their overseers and managers than other individual owners of real and personal estate. Indeed, capital thus associated, is less entitled to favor than when invested in land and negroes, embracing generally the whole of one's private fortune, and operated almost exclusively
William Smith (search for this): article 1
fficers who are refugees from their counties, having no civil duties to perform, are left to the requisitions of military authority. Commissioners of the revenue having nothing to do — the Legislature having forborne to lay any pages for the present year — are for the time being subject to military duty. I am now considering the propriety of withholding my certificate from all Justices of the Peace under forty five years of age. Our Constitution provides that there shall be four Justices to each magisterial district. That number is certainly not necessary to the administration of justice and the enforcement of the laws within their district and county, and I have almost concluded, as I have said, to withhold my certificate, as stated and leave it to the Confederate Government to exempt or not. I have thus very hastily stated my purposes and principles of action, and in return would gladly receive your views on the subject. Respectfully yours, [Signed,] William Smith
March 17th, 1864 AD (search for this): article 1
Exemptions by State authority — important letter from Gov. Smith. The following extract from a letter of the Governor of Virginia to a high official will be read with interest, as it affects important questions involving the sovereignty and duties of the States, and in which there are many classes in the Commonwealth practically interested: State of Virginia, Executive Dep't, Richmond, March 17, 1864. * * * * * In reply to your telegram for my principles of exemption I respectfully state that I mean to certify as exempt all persons necessary to the preservation and operation of the State Government. This, of course, includes all her institutions, such as cities, towns, colleges, banks, asylums, &c., holding that bodies politic have an inherent right of self-preservation, and that the State authorities have a right to designate, without question, all persons they may think needful and requisite for the purpose. While however, I lay down this bread proposition, I ack
Willie Ann Smith (search for this): article 1
Exemptions by State authority — important letter from Gov. Smith. The following extract from a letter of the Governor of Virginia to a high official will be read with interest, as it affects important questions involving the sovereignty and duties of the States, and in which there are many classes in the Commonwealth practically interested: State of Virginia, Executive Dep't, Richmond, March 17, 1864. * * * * * In reply to your telegram for my principles of exemption I respectfully state that I mean to certify as exempt all persons necessary to the preservation and operation of the State Government. This, of course, includes all her institutions, such as cities, towns, colleges, banks, asylums, &c., holding that bodies politic have an inherent right of self-preservation, and that the State authorities have a right to designate, without question, all persons they may think needful and requisite for the purpose. While however, I lay down this bread proposition, I ack
Virginia (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Exemptions by State authority — important letter from Gov. Smith. The following extract from a letter of the Governor of Virginia to a high official will be read with interest, as it affects important questions involving the sovereignty and duties of the States, and in which there are many classes in the Commonwealth practically interested: State of Virginia, Executive Dep't, Richmond, March 17, 1864. * * * * * In reply to your telegram for my principles of exemption I respectfully state that I mean to certify as exempt all persons necessary to the preservation and operation of the State Government. This, of course, includes all her institutions, such as cities, towns, colleges, banks, asylums, &c., holding that bodies politic have an inherent right of self-preservation, and that the State authorities have a right to designate, without question, all persons they may think needful and requisite for the purpose. While however, I lay down this bread proposition, I ac
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