Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 3, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for John Taylor or search for John Taylor in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 3 document sections:

y.) King William--Harrison B Tomlin. Marion — A S Haymond and Stephen A Morgan. Monongalia — Evans, Stewart, (?) Montgomery — Douthat. Nansemond — N E Riddick. Nelson — J M Shelton. Petersburg — A M Kelley. Pittsylvania — A Buford and John Gilmer. Prince George and Surry — Taylor. Richmond City — Wyndham Robertson, D J Sounders, and D J Burr. Roanoke — Dyeric. Rockingham — Harris, Kinney, and, Walker. Southampton — Joseph H Prince. Taylor — Robinson. y.) King William--Harrison B Tomlin. Marion — A S Haymond and Stephen A Morgan. Monongalia — Evans, Stewart, (?) Montgomery — Douthat. Nansemond — N E Riddick. Nelson — J M Shelton. Petersburg — A M Kelley. Pittsylvania — A Buford and John Gilmer. Prince George and Surry — Taylor. Richmond City — Wyndham Robertson, D J Sounders, and D J Burr. Roanoke — Dyeric. Rockingham — Harris, Kinney, and, Walker. Southampton — Joseph H Prince.
ds in custody, and the restaurant bill thus made entirely secure. But the proprietor of "Congress Hill" did not stop here. Whilst eating is break act yesterday morning he picked up one of the city papers in which appeared the advertisement of Mr. Taylor, of Charleston, offering $1,000 for Edie's arrest, and one fourth of the money receiver.-- Down went the breakfast, and off went the proprietor, partly in quiet of his $100 and partly in search of Edie, who must either be in Richmond or en routing him that he had the money, and dated his note on board the steamer Brittania, which left Charleston that evening. He stated that his purpose was to visit Europe, and this may have been his design in attempting to pass the Confederate lines Mr. Taylor, from whom the money was taken, at once advertised him, and offered a reward of $1,000 and one fourth of the money recovered for his arrest, and it was this advertisement, copied in nearly all the newspapers of the South, which led to his detec
Bad name. --A young man who gave his name as Francis P. Blair, son of the notorious F. P. Blair, of Missouri, appeared before the Mayor yesterday to answer the charge of stealing a coat and other clothing, valued at $100, from John Taylor. The prisoner, it is said, deserted the Yankee army at Chancellorsville, being disgusted with the Abolition service, and proposed to join that of the South. He expects to prove his innocence when his examination takes place, which was postponed yesterday because of the absence of witlessness.