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en the gentlemen came; saw that there was a crowd; told them they couldn't get in Heard a pistol, then, and said to myself, "they are mad, now, because I wouldn't let them in." In fifteen minutes or more, the guard came, and searched the house and yard. When Mr. Hiltzhimer and party knocked and couldn't get in, they went away. I have no idea who did the shooting. There was a gentleman in the house previous, who left an hour before. Don't know his name. I never saw deceased; never heard Miss Ann say she saw him. No one could get out the back way through the alley; the fence is very high. Dr. L. R. Waring: Was called to see deceased about 12 o'clock Saturday night. Found him lying on bed in No. 218, suffering a good deal of pain.--Examined the body, and found that the ball had entered the back near the spinal column, a little below the right kidney. The ball passed almost directly through the body, and was extracted near the navel. Death was the result of the shooting.--The d
Runaway --$100 Reward.--The above reward will be paid for the apprehension and delivery to me, at C Inmaden's, No. 96 Main street, Richmond, of my servant, Mary Ann, who left my premises, on Grove road, the 1st of March. Said girl is 21 years old, low and stoutly built, of a dark brown color, broad full face, good looking, has a slight scar on the forehead. She is supposed to be harbored in or around this city by washerwomen. S Pence. je 17--1t
Ten dollars reward. --Ran away from the subscriber, about the 1st inst, my servant girl Agues, 18 years old, gingerbread color. I will pay the above reward if delivered to me in Sidney. Mrs. Ann L Staples. se 29--2t
Robberies. --A few evenings store the millinery store of Mrs. Ann. W. Traylor, on Broad street, between Third and Fourth, was entered and robbed of several ladies' hats. Mrs. Traylor was sitting in her back room, with the front door open, so that the breeze might pass through her house, when the fellow, who was a white man, deliberately stepped in and snatched the hats from her counter. The audacity of the act so much confused her that some time elapsed before she recovered her composure, when she hurried to the door to me whose he went, but in the meantime the thief had gotten out of sight. Between eleven and twelve o'clock Saturday night Mr. N. Tinsley Pate's store, on Cary street, between. Eleventh and Twelfth, was entered by some four or five negroes, who attempted to carry off two bag of coffee; but before they succeeded in getting away with their plunder, they were discovered, pursued and made to drop it. One of them left his hat behind, which may lead to his detect