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Your search returned 32 results in 15 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: April 20, 1861., [Electronic resource], Important Correspondence. (search)
$15 reward
--Will be paid for the apprehension and delivery of a servant girl, Mary Jane, calls herself Mary Jane Jackson She is a small, delicate-featured woman, of a dark ginger bread color, about 20 or 25 years of age, and generally dresses in black.
She was hired to Mr. Joseph Jackson this year, and left her home about July last.
She has been seen in the city within a week past.
Lucy H. Wharton,
Grace street, be wean Adam and Foushee.
Mrs. W. has some very valuable servants for hire the ensuing year.
de 23--3t*
Ranaway
--From the undersigned, on Sunday night last, the 8th inst., my negro boy Jos. Said boy is four feet seven or eight inches high; quite sprightly, and of a ginger-bread color, and 14 or 15 years of age. I will give a reward of $10 for the apprehension and delivery of Joe to me, at my residence, corner of Main and Foushee sts.
je 11--6t* John D. Quarles.
The Daily Dispatch: August 16, 1862., [Electronic resource], Meeting of Congress. (search)
High Prices for real estate.
--The following real estate was sold at auction yesterday afternoon by Jas. M. Taylor & Son: Two three story brick tenements on the south side of Broad, between 2d and 3d streets, at $8,000 each; a brick tenement on the south side of Grace, between 1st and Foushee sts, at $9,700; a brick tenement on Franklin, between 3d and 4th streets, at $10,200; a brick tenement adjoining the last-named at $9,700; amounting in the aggregate to $45,600.
For Hire.
--Two Boys, one 10 and the other 17 years old — the former a good cook and house servant the latter a good house and office servant.
Apply at my residence, Marshall street, between 1st and Foushee. G. W. Langhorse. ap 6--3t*
The Daily Dispatch: April 9, 1863., [Electronic resource], Confederate cavalry Raid in Gloucester . (search)
For Hire
--Two Boys, one 19 and the other 17 years old — the former a good cook and house servant, the latter a good house and officer servant, Apply at my residence, Marshall street, between 1st and Foushee. G. W. Langhorne. ap 6--3t*
The fire at the C. S. Bakery.
--The fire which occurred at the Confederate States bakery, on Clay street, between 1st and Foushee, on Sunday afternoon last, destroyed about seven hundred barrels of hard bread, ready packed, and the whole loss, including that of the building burnt, will probably not exceed $60,000. The property formerly belonged to Mr. Adolph Dill, of this city; but about two years ago was purchased by the Confederate Government, since which time many improvements in the buildings have been made, and, under the superintendence of Peter Tinsley.
Esq., of this city, it has been the principal establishment from which the armies of the Confederacy have drawn their supplies of bread.
In the basement of the building destroyed were a number of bread-cutting machines, which were slightly damaged by large quantities of rubbish and water falling on them.
During the early stage of the fire Mr. A Dill, Jr., a young man employed in the bakery, who had been on the roof of t
Fire.
--At a late hour on Saturday night. two stables on the premises of Thomas J. Bagby and Jesse White, on Leigh street, near the corner of Foushee, were destroyed by fire, together with a few hundred dollars worth of hay and oats which were on hand.
The fire was the work of an incendiary.