Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Wicks, Mr. - 1860

LOCAL MATTERS.
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Stolen Hogs.-- On Sunday morning last Mr. Robert G. Walton, who lives near the Brook church, in Henrico county, discovered that one of his out-houses had been broken open and two of his hogs killed and carried off.  Getting the assistance of a neighbor, the two readily tracked the bleeding swine to the place from which Mr. John B. Young's ice cart started for this city, and following up the trail they soon found the drivers of the carts, and learned from them that the stolen hogs had been conveyed to the grocery of Henry C. Williams, on 2d street, near the Poor-House.

Mr. Walton next obtained a search warrant and gave it to Constable Wade to serve, but that officer being set at defiance by Williams, Watch {illegible} Wicks was sent for, and the suspected premises searched.  Mr. Wicks discovered in an out-building that parts of nearly two hogs, which had just been badly dressed and cut up, and which Mr. Walton said belonged to him.  Officer Wade {illegible} saw a negro man, said to belong to John ?orman, {illegible},of Hanover, drive up with a mule cart and deposit six bags of corn which were also taken into custody, and believed to be stolen property.

Williams stated that he purchased the pork from a white man, whose name he did not know, and accounted for the possession of the corn in the same way.  Yesterday morning he was arraigned before the Mayor to answer, and after a partial hearing was remanded until Thursday next, when other witnesses will probably be forthcoming.
~ Richmond Daily Dispatch, 01 May 1860 Page 1, Column 5


Williams, Henry C. - 1860

LOCAL MATTERS.
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Stolen Hogs.-- On Sunday morning last Mr. Robert G. Walton, who lives near the Brook church, in Henrico county, discovered that one of his out-houses had been broken open and two of his hogs killed and carried off.  Getting the assistance of a neighbor, the two readily tracked the bleeding swine to the place from which Mr. John B. Young's ice cart started for this city, and following up the trail they soon found the drivers of the carts, and learned from them that the stolen hogs had been conveyed to the grocery of Henry C. Williams, on 2d street, near the Poor-House.

Mr. Walton next obtained a search warrant and gave it to Constable Wade to serve, but that officer being set at defiance by Williams, Watch {illegible} Wicks was sent for, and the suspected premises searched.  Mr. Wicks discovered in an out-building that parts of nearly two hogs, which had just been badly dressed and cut up, and which Mr. Walton said belonged to him.  Officer Wade {illegible} saw a negro man, said to belong to John ?orman, {illegible},of Hanover, drive up with a mule cart and deposit six bags of corn which were also taken into custody, and believed to be stolen property.

Williams stated that he purchased the pork from a white man, whose name he did not know, and accounted for the possession of the corn in the same way.  Yesterday morning he was arraigned before the Mayor to answer, and after a partial hearing was remanded until Thursday next, when other witnesses will probably be forthcoming.
~ Richmond Daily Dispatch, 01 May 1860 Page 1, Column 5


Young, John B. - 1860

LOCAL MATTERS.
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Stolen Hogs.-- On Sunday morning last Mr. Robert G. Walton, who lives near the Brook church, in Henrico county, discovered that one of his out-houses had been broken open and two of his hogs killed and carried off.  Getting the assistance of a neighbor, the two readily tracked the bleeding swine to the place from which Mr. John B. Young's ice cart started for this city, and following up the trail they soon found the drivers of the carts, and learned from them that the stolen hogs had been conveyed to the grocery of Henry C. Williams, on 2d street, near the Poor-House.

Mr. Walton next obtained a search warrant and gave it to Constable Wade to serve, but that officer being set at defiance by Williams, Watch {illegible} Wicks was sent for, and the suspected premises searched.  Mr. Wicks discovered in an out-building that parts of nearly two hogs, which had just been badly dressed and cut up, and which Mr. Walton said belonged to him.  Officer Wade {illegible} saw a negro man, said to belong to John ?orman, {illegible},of Hanover, drive up with a mule cart and deposit six bags of corn which were also taken into custody, and believed to be stolen property.

Williams stated that he purchased the pork from a white man, whose name he did not know, and accounted for the possession of the corn in the same way.  Yesterday morning he was arraigned before the Mayor to answer, and after a partial hearing was remanded until Thursday next, when other witnesses will probably be forthcoming.
~ Richmond Daily Dispatch, 01 May 1860 Page 1, Column 5
 
 
LOCAL MATTERS.
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Punished.-- Abram, a slave to John B. Young, was convicted before the Mayor yesterday of hauling to this city two hogs stolen from Robert G. Walton, on Sunday last, knowing the same to be stolen, and sentenced to be well flogged for his conduct.
~ Richmond Daily Dispatch, 01 May 1860 Page 1, Column 5
 


Tavern, Licensed - 1860

Potter county, Pa., has not had a licensed tavern for several years.
~ Richmond Daily Dispatch, 01 May 1860 Page 1, Column 4

Vassar, Matthew - 1860

Matthew Vassar, of Poughkeepsie, New York, has devoted $100,000 to the endowment of a college for girls in that city.
~ Richmond Daily Dispatch, 01 May 1860 Page 1, Column 4

You can visit the memorial page for Matthew Vassar.

Ralston, unknown - 1860

Melancholy Incident.-- a little girl names Ralston, was burnt to death in St. Louis on Wednesday, through playing with friction matches.  While the physician was dressing the wounds of the little sufferer, her father entered, and being much intoxicated behaved so boisterously that he had to be arrested.--
While he was confined at the station-house his daughter died.
~ Richmond Daily Dispatch, 01 May 1860 Page 1, Column 4

Walsh, J. Walter - 1860

A California Editor Sentenced To Imprisonment For Libel.-- J. Walter Walsh, editor and proprietor of a sheet called the Sunday Varieties, published in San Francisco, was recently convicted of libeling a liquor seller in that city, and sentenced to one year's imprisonment in the county jail.  Walsh is a coarse Irishman, and was formerly connected with the Press of Louisville, Ky., under the nom de plume of “The Recluse.”  The carrier of his paper was also sentenced to 30 days' confinement in jail.
~ Richmond Daily Dispatch, 01 May 1860 Page 1, Column 4