Marshall County Independent, Volume 4, Number 31, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 July 1898 — Page 2
A Brave Coward. By Robert Louis Stevenson.
CHAPTER IX. (Continued.) And with that he was gone among the thicket. I made a fire, for I had no fear of the Italians, who had even spared all the little possessions left in my encampment; and, broken as she was by the excitement and the hideous catastrophe of the evening, I managed to bring her tack to some 'composure of mind and strength of body. Day had already come, when a sharp "Hist?" sounded from the th eket 1 started from the ground, but the vo: ' of Worth MOW 'as heard adding, in the most tranqiu. tone: "Com :iere. Cassilis. and alone; I want to show you something." I consulted Clara wi.h my eyes. pnd. receiving her tacit permission, left her alone and clambered out of the den. At some distance off I saw Northmour leaning against an alder, and. as scon as he perceived me. he beg.tn walking seaward. I had aim si overtaken him a he reached the outskirts of Ike wood. "Look." said he, pausing. A couple of steps more brought me out of the foliage. The light of the morning lay cold and clear over that well-known scene. The pavilion was but a blackened wreck. Close by the islet a schooner yacht lay to, and a well-manned boat was pulling vigorously for the shore. "The Red EaM!" I cried. "The Re.l Earl twelve ho irs too late!" "Feel in yoi.r pocket, Frank. Are you armed?" asked Northmour. I obeyed him, and I think I must have become deadly pale. My revolver had been taken from me. "You s-ee I have you in my power,' he continued. "I disarmed you last night while you were nursing Clara; but this morning here take your pistol. Xo thanks!" he cried, holding up his hand. "I do not like them; that is the only way you tan annoy me now." He began to walk backward across the links to meet the boat, and I followed a step or two behind. In front of the pavilion I paused to see where Mr. Huddlestcne had fallen; but there was no sign of him, nor so much as a trace of blood. "Graden Floe," said Northmour. He continued to advance till we had come to the head of the beach. "No farther, please," said he. "Would you like to take her to Graden House?" "Thank you," replied I; "I shall try to get her to the minister's at Graden Wester." The prow of the boat here grated on the beach, and a sailor jumped ashore with a line in his hand. "Wait a minute, lads!" cried Northmour; and then iower and to my private ear: "You had better say nothing of this to her," he added. "On the contrary!" I broke out. "she shall know everything that I can tell." "You do not understand." he returned, with an air of great dignity. "It will be nothing to her: she expects it of me. Good-bye!" he added, with a nod. I offered him my hand. "Excuse me," said he. "It's small. 1 know; but I can't push things quite fo far as that. I don't wish any sentimental business, to sit by your hearth a white-haired wanderer, and all that. Quite the contrary: I hope to God I shall never again clap eyes on either cne of you." "Well, God bless you, Northmour !'' 1 said heartily. "Ch, yes," he returned. He walked down the Leach, and the man who was ashore gave him an arm on board, and then shoved off and leaded into the bows himself. Northmour took tb tiller. Ihey cr .at yet half way to the lied Ea 1 I was still wafching ifcnir progress when the sun rose out of the sea. One word more and my story is done. Ysars after Northmour was killed lighting under the colors of Garibaldi for the liberation of Tyron. THE END. Carrie The Telegraph Girl XXX A ROMANCE OF THE CHEROKEE STRIP. XXX By Captain Jack Crawford THE POET SCOUT." I had not met Carrie Rankin. I did not know if she was long or short, blonde or brunette, sweet sixteen or crabbled forty, plump as a mountain quail or thiu and angular as a Kansas female suffragist; yet we had become the best of friends, and daily chatted with each other on terms of marked sociability. I confess that, as the days sped by and I listened to her witty expressions and bright conversation, I found myself falling in love with her. yet I had not the least tangible idea of her personal appearance, and knew not whether her voice was soft and musical, or pitched in a high key that was harsh and disagreeable to the ear I knew she was good-natured and pos sessed of a keen sense of humor, for she would laugh heartily at my re marks, and r?spond with the most bril
liant repartee when my humorous darts were leveled at herself. This may all seem enigmatical to the reader, but will assume an aspect of entire plausibility in the light of the fact that she and I were telegraph operators at widely-separated stations on a western railway. She kr.cw as little of the young man with whom she daily chatted as I did of herself. We had each drawn an ideal picture of the personal apjiearar.ee of tbe other, and in OW frequent conversations ever the wire each had in mind a face and figure to whom the remarks were addrtaaad. I had pictured h r as a bright-eyed, laughing, jolly little creature with golden cur's and silvery voice. I often wondered what sort of a mortal picture she bad drawn of myself. Rc;l Rock, where I we.; located, was a station on the Santa Fe railway, in the Cherokeen strip of Oklahoma, before that now famous stretch of land was purchased by the government from the Indians and thrown open for settlement. The population of the town (?) consisted of a burly section foreman, of Milesian extraction; his wife, a red-faced, red-armed woman, who had no aspirations outside the limits of her not over-clean kitchen; four section laborers, and myself, the agent and operator for the railway company. The country was at the time of which I write, a wild one, inhabited only by Indians, a few cattlemen who leased grazing lands from the aboriginal owners, the cowboys who looked after the scattered herds, and roving binds of desperadoes under the leadership of the Dalton brothers, the most famous of whom. Bill Dalton. was punctured by a well-directed Lullet from the rifle of a deputy United States marshal but a low days ago, and who died with pistol in hand cursing the shot which had laid him low. Miss Rankin was my predecessor in the position of agent and operator at Red Rock. She learnt the art of telegraphy in the train dispatcher! office at Arkansas City, whrre her widowed mother resided, and when competent to assume charge of a small station, had asked for and been given a position at Red Rock. She tired, of a white, of the lonely monotony of that obscure station, and asked to be sent to one less isolated from mankind; and when one day the operator at Edmond. further down the line, reported that his fingers had been "pinched" while endeavoring to couple two cars together, and that he must hasten to Arkansas City for surgical attention, the Red Rock agent was telegraphed instructions to lock up her depot, leave the key in the care of the section foreman, and proceed on a train then almost due to Edmond, and assume charge until the injured agent should return. I was at the time an "extra operator" on a Kansas division, and on the afternoon of the day on which Miss Rankin left Red Rock. I found myself sitting in her recently vacated chair for an indefinite stay at the lonely station. My first train report had scarce announced my presence to the operators up and down the line, ere Edmond called me up. She expressed regret that she had been denied the privilege of extending to me a personal weleome to my new home, said she hoped I would find the station a plearant one, and asked me if I would not kindly collect a number of feminine trifles which she had overlooked in packing her trunk, and then send them down to her. She would be ever so much obliged, and should an opportunity present itself, would certainly reciprocate my kindness. That was my first "meeting" with a lady who was soon
destined to play a heroic part in a thrilling adventure in which I was a prominent figure. Little by little Miss Rankin and nr - self became acquaint d over the wire. We were soon holding daily conversa tions, then semi-daily, and then our chats became so frequent that at times jealous operators at other stations would break in on our conversation with hints that some one was "mash ed" on some one else, and that we had better give the suffering wire a insi and do our spooning by mail. To these ungentlemanly interruptions we paid but little attention, but continued our long-distance intercourse I, as I be fore remarked, falling more hopelessly in love with my new friend as the days sped by, and often wondering if a reciprocatory feeling was not growing in warmth at the other end of the wire. I was a young man of but 20, very susceptible to female charms, and as I was then denied even a look at a pretty face, aside from fleeting glimpses of female passengers on passing trains, I came to regard Miss Rankin as "my best girl," and her personal telegraphic signal, "Cr," became the sweetest sound my instrument clicked into my ears. Modesty, coupled with a fear of being "guyed," had prevented hie from questioning the train men regarding the personal appearance of my inamorata, but one day when I had orders to hold a north-bound freight until a belated south-bound passenger had arrived, and the freight conductor, Tom Armstrong, came into my office and sat down for a chat, I determined to sound him and learn a little something of the idol of my dreams., "What sort of a looking girl is that now holding down Edmond -station?" I asked.
He looked at me a moment in a half-quizzical, half-mischievous manner, and replied: "Say. Fred, I've heard some of tha boys on the line say you was dead gone on that piece, and I have an idea she is on your trail, too, for she made me tell her all about you while my train was lying there this morning waiting for No. 7. Did you never see her?" "Xo, I never had the pleasure of meeting Miss Rankin." "Miss Rankin? You mean Mrs. Rankin." "Mean wha-a-a-at?" "Mrs. Rankin. I thought you knew she was a widow with two kids at her mother's, up in Arkansas City. I guess she's square enough sort of woman, but when you see her, old man. I've an idea you won't want a second look. She's no spring chicken! Forty if she's a day. and she doesn't need a better protector than that face of hers. And temper! .Gee-whiz! My hindbrakeman asked her the other day if that face didn't pain her, and she grabbed up a coupling-pin and let it go at him. He'd have been a dead brakey if he hadn t been a good dodger. He never sticks his head out of the caboose window now while we are at that station, for she's got it in for him." The passenger whittled, and he hastened to his train to pull out as scon as the track was clear.
How cruelly my idol was shattered. After the trains had gone, I sat as if dazed; in fact, I was so absorbed in digesting the startling information I had gleaned from Armstrong that I neglected to report their departure, and the "jacking-up" I received from the train-dispatcher for my inattention to duty served to still further increase the ill temper into which the conductor's story had thrown me. The snappy clicks of the instruments had scarcely ceased to convey to my ears the merited reproof, concluding with the stereotyped chestnut which dispatchers always crack in such eases, "Don't let it occur again," ere I heard a call from Edmond. Heretofore I had fairly sprung to the table to respond to that call, but now I felt no desire to enter a conversation with the ogre who presided at the key at that distant station. It was with no gentle touch that I answered her call. "Say, Sd" (my personal signal), "it's too bad, but u shld tend to biz. Ha! ha! ha! Was u sleep or reading letr fm ur girl?" Thus came her consolatory message in the abbreviated conversational style of the telegrapher, and it served to fan the flames of my auger into a fierce heat. Had it been the nice little maiden of my dreams who had slung such chaff at me over the wires I would have smiled and thought it real cute, but that fright! Bah! "I dt no as it interests u wt I was doing. I'm 2 busy to talk nw." I snapped the words off with spiteful sharpness and closed my key with a thump that almost sprung the circuit breaker. "Well u needn't bite my nose off coz Dr (the dispatcher) turned you over. Call me up when u get in gd humor. I've something to sa to u." My gentlemanly instincts sharply reproved me for treating her in such an ungentlemanly manner. Had she ever led me to believe she was young and handsome? Was she to be blamed because she was a widow, wore a caricature in lieu of a face and was the mother of two children, no doubt as ugly as herself I felt a tinge of shame for having spoken so crossly to her. and with softer touch of the key replied: "I beg pardon, madam. I've got bad hedake today, and feel cross as bear. Forgot I was talking to lady. Wt u .want to sa to me?" "O, I'm real sorry ur not well, for I've been 'ticipating pleasant visit with u. The agent here is on No. 5, and I'm ordered to Ark. City, and I thought if twould be greeable to u I'd go up on freig'it trn and stop over t'r for passenger ts eveng. I want to c the old statu again." (To be continued.) The Revolutionary Tories. James K. Hosmer in the Atlantic: If George III. and his ministers were embarrassed by ooposition at home, says James K. Hosmer in the July Atlantic, the American patriots were no less embarrassed. An energetic minority, it has been said, brought to pass the revolution, which proceeding, especially from New England, was carried through in spite of a majority in the coloniesa majority in great part quite apathetic, but to some extent actively resisting. The emigration of forces, when the day was at last won, was relatively as great as that of the Huguenots from France after the revocation or the Edict of Nantes. The total number is estimated to have been at least one hundred thousand. In this multitude were comprised only such, with their families, as had been active for the king. The indifferent, who had lent no helping hand to the patriots, must have been a multitude much larger; these remained behind, inertly submitting to the new order of things as they had swayed inertly this way or that, following the power and direction of the blast of war. Ready with tli Text. From the Boston Transcript: The Maid What are you doing with the Bible, Freddy? Freddy Picking out a text for today's sermon. When I come home from church I always have to tell pa what the text was. The MaidBut how can you know the text until you hear it? Freddy Any text will do. Pa won't know the difference. The Maid - But your grandmother is going with you. Freddy But grandma will be fast asleep long before they get to the text.
DEAD AND WOUNDED, Official List of American Casualties Before Santiago
Following is the official revised list of the dead and wounded so far as known: The. dead and wounded officers so far as reported are as follows: The killed: ORD, JULES G., f.röt lieutenant, Sixth infantry. SMITH, W. H., lint lieutenant. Tenth cavalry. SHIPr, WILLIAM, first lieutenant. Tenth cavalry. SATER, WILLIAM, second lieutenant. Thirteenth infantry. HAMILTON. JOHN, lieutenant colonel. Ninth cavalry. FORSE, ALBERT G., major. First cavalry. BRl'XCKET, E. N., second lieutenant, Sixth infantry. W E AT H BR LL, eap'ain. Sixth infantry. MICHIE. DENNIS M.. second lieutenant. Seventh infantry. DICKINSON, W. N., first lieutenant. Nineteenth infantry. The wounded: ROBERTSON. JOHN, second licu'enant Sixth infantry. GROSS. L. H. second lieutenant. LUSCUMB, B. E. K.. lieutenant colonel Twenty-fourth infantry. TORRANCE. JAMES, taptan Thirteenth Infantry. CARROLL. HENRY, lieutenant colonel Sixth cavalry. TOREK Y, ZEMAS W. EL, captain Sixth infantry. WOODBURY, C. E.. captain Sixteenth infantry. BPENCE, A. C. L.. second lieutenant Sixteenth infantry. SCOTT. W. B., first lieutenant Thirteenth infantry. WINT, THEODORE J., major Tenth cavalry. ROBERTS. THOMAS A., second lieutenant S!xt- nth cavalry. WALTER, G. B captain Sixth infantry. PERDY. CLARENCE D., second lieutenant. Sixth infantry. MILLS, A. L... first lieutenant First cava! rv. M COY. W. S. V. R. E.. second lieutenant. Tenth cavalry. SIMONS. W. H., cend lieutenant. Sixth infantry. PATTERSON. JOHN H.. lieutenant colonel. Twenty-second infantry. BRODMAN. JOHN R.. captain, Twentieth infantry. BRETT. JAMKS E.. captain. Twentyfourth infantry. WOOD, W. S.. first adjutant. Ninth cavalry. SEYBOERN. J. P., fit st lieutenant. Eighth infantry. ELLIS. P. A., major. Fifteenth infantry. NORTH. J. S., lieutenant colonel, Fifteenth infantry. ESKRIDGE, R. Y.. major. T. nth infantry. DAEFORTH, DR.. acting asis'ant surgeon. U. S. A. FI RMAN, R. E., second lieutenant, Sixth infantry. DUCAL, H. C, capta n Twenty-fourth infantry. EGBERT. H. C, lieutenant colonel. Sixtli infantry. PARK H ERST, CHARLES D., c aptain Third artillery. HAPWOOD. J. J. E.. second lieutenant. Second Massachusetts. MONAHAN. D. J., second lieutenant. Second Massachusetts. laws, albert, second lieutenant, Twenty-fourth infantry. JONES, J. R., captain. Twenty-second infantry. LESSITER, W. N.. captain Sixteenth infantry. DAY. R. C, first lieutenant (battery) cavalry. HENRY. M. J., captain. Second cavalry, brigade. BARN EM, M. H. first lieutenant and adjutant. Tenth cavalry. MILLARD. B. H., second lieutenant, Tenth cavalry. LINCOLN, S. II.. major. Tenth infantry. WARRIMER, W. S.. captain. Second Massachusetts Infantry. VAN VLIET, R. C, captain, Tenth infantry. COOP, CARL, first lieutenant, Tenth Infantry. DOVE. W. E., first lieutenant. Twelfth infantry. BASTEL. J. T.. lieutenant colonel. Seventh infantry. JACKSON, JAMES B., capta n. Seventh infantry. LAFFERTY. H. A., second lieutenant. Seventh infantry. HAWKINS. HAMILTON S., brigadier general, U. S. A. The following privates and non-commissioned officers are among the wounded : CARROLL, E. J., Second Massachusetts. BLACKMORE, , Second Massachusetts. REVERE, . Second Massachusetts. SHORT. . Second Massuciiu.seLs. JENSKE, FRED. Seventh Infantry, in head. BITE, , sergeant battery A, Second artillery. CORNFIELD, , sergeant battery A, Second artillery. KEAN, , corporal battery A, Second artillery. POOR, . battery A, Second artillery. PEVEREUX, . troop K. rough riders; through the arm. PAUSTER. JACOB, trcop II, Third cavalry; in the head. M'DONALD, F. R.. rough ridtrs; in the head. WAONER, . company F, Thirteenth Infantry, in the lfg. JONES, CHARLES, c mpany B. Twenty-fourth infantry; hurt by bursting of a shell. DORCFTT, A., company B. Sixteenth Infantry; In the arm. KUHLEN. JACOB, Second Infantry: Bhot twice, on r'.ght of client and l'ft leg. ERSTEIN. E. H.. Second infantry. THRO. E. F.; in the throat. BONNER. JOHN. Third .r fantry; in the right aide. Hl' NT ER, GEORGE K.. captain Tbiid cavalrv; In the right leg. BARTON, C. AUGUSTUS, troop E. Sixth cavalry; In right hand. BI RR. JOHN H.. troop E, Sixth cavalry: in right hand. win h all, . corporal, troop e. Sixth cavalry: in rijrht shouldrr and back. TURNER, William J . company E, Tenth Infantry; shot tr u; had.
IirSSTER, WILLIAM A., company C. Seventy-fourth infantry: in wrist. FRANKLIN. BENJAMIN. Tenth cavalry: in side and wrist. BERGNER. PETER. company C, Fourth infantry: in the chest. CONRAY. W. T.. Ninth cavalry: struck by a shell. COOPER. GEORGE C. company C. Twenty-fifth infantrv; hand shot off by shell. JORDAN. CHRISTOPHER P.. Second infantry; in th wrist. WHITE. J. O. S.. trcop E. Tenth cavalry, in the left hand. M TOR MACK. HENRY. SOUipan E. Tenth infantry; in the right foot and left leg. TAYLOR. SERGEANT JOHN J. T,., troop E. Tenth cavalry: in the right foot. ANDREW. CHARLES, company K. Seventy-tirst Now York: in the right elbow. HARDY. THOMAS G.. troop G. Tenth cavalry: in the right arm and side. WASHINGTON. V.. eompanv E. Twenty-fourth infantry; through the right arm. RIDGELLY. FRANK, trocp C, Tenth cavalry: in the left leu. HIP8HUR. W I LEY. troop A. Tenth cavalry; through the foot.
HIGGIN8, ALEXANDER. Twenty-fourth infantry: in DO! 'GLASS. H. L., troop romp my G, the thicrh. C. First uvalry: in the left arm. WELCH, SERGEANT PATRICK, company G. Ninth Infantry: in right leg. I 'ALRIGO, GIDEON, iroop B. First cavalry; in the right thigh. QUINEZ, DENNIS, corporal, A. Sixth infantry: in left knee MOLKE. CHARLES, troop company E, Third cavalry: in left arm and 1, ft leg. POPP:. C Lb, company A, Twenty-fourth infantry; in left thigh. ACHE. NATHANIEL. company H. Thirteenth infantry: in the right thigh. TÜRNET, JAMES. Sixth Infantry; in the right leu: also hurt by shell. DOUGLASS. GEORGE P.. c mpany C, Tenth Infantry; run over by cannon. MEYERS. WILL ARD, (on'pany D, Sixth infantry: in left ankle. SULLIVAN, JOSEPH, company A, Sixtli infantry: in left foot. NICHOLS, EDGAR, company F. Sixth infantry: in light hip. TAPHORN. WILLIAM, company A, Sixth infantry: in the left fcot. PA RAM. JOHN, company B, Sixteenth infantry; through the shoulder. TEN N A NT. CHARLES, c, mpany K, Sixteenth infantry: through the hip. JEFRORED FRANK H.. company E. Sixteenth infantry: in the head. DIVEAN, LAWRENCE, company E. Thirteenth infantry; in the right arm. MINING. MOUNT, company E, Sixth infantry; in the right hand. MINVEN, JAMES, company E, Sixth Infantry through the shoulder. ENTEMMAN. HARLES W.. company D, Sixteenth infantry: in the right kne M'MILLA N. E. L.. trocp D, rough riders: in the left shoulder. RADDER. HUSTON, trcop I. Tenth cavalry: in the left shoulder. ROBINSON. ROBERT W., eompanv E, Twenty-fourth infantry: in BARNES. .1. R., company fantry; in the right knee. LEEDY. CLARENCE B.. the left hip. C, Sixth inrompany A, Sixteenth Infantry; in the ba k. BLEDOVE. J. A., -ompany B. Sixth in- : fantry: in the right foot. GUMP, T. (L A., company E. Sixth infantry: in the foot. BALL. F., company II, Thirteenth infantry; in the ankle. MILLER. JOHN J., company R., Eighth Infantry; in the wrist. O'MALLOY. H. R.. company B, Sixth infantry: in the right hand. M'CLURE, JAMES, company A. Sixth infantry; in the right leg. ARMS. WILLIAM, company A. Sixth infantry: in the left leg. CHRISTIAN. CORPORAL FRANCIS. company C, Sixth infantry; in the right leg, twice. RH KM AN. R. H.. company E, Eighth infantry; in the right shoulder. GANDS, JAMES, troop C, Ninth cavalry; in the foot. JAM LS. CHARLES, company I, First cavalry: in the right leg. THOMPSON. ALFRED, company A, Twenty-fourth Infantry; hurt by bursting of a shell. WEAVER, W. T., company A, Twentieth Infantry; in the leg. MFLLER. T. JOHN, troop E, rough riders; in face and shoulder. MASON, JOHN, corporal, troop E, Ninth eavnlry: through the back. DAHLSBORZ. CHARLES, ormpany A, Twenty-flrst infantry: in the right knee. MAl'RER. HENRY, company A. Sixteenth infantry: in the right leg, twice. JUEROUESON, EDWARD, troop I. Firt cavalry: through the left hip. R1PBEROER. FREDERICK, company H, Sixth infantry; in the left arm. WADDINOTON. J. L., company A, Twentieth infantry: in the right foot. PAYNE. WILLIAM, troop E. Tenth cavalry: in the left foot. FARNELL. WILLIAM, company B, Thirteenth infantry: in the right ankle JOHNSON. SMITH, troop A. Tenth cavalry; in the left arm. WILLIAMS. FRED J, company F. Twenty-fourth infantry; in the left leg. HAVES. QEORGE B.. company C. Sixteenth Infantry; in stomach. GOLDEN. JOSEPH A., trop K. Thirl cavalry; in thf right shouhler. ARC AN. HURLEY H., tJop I. Tanth cavalry; in the left leg.
GUNTER. N. G., troop I. Tenth cavalry : in the left arm. MEYER. O. B.. first lieutenant, Third cavalry; flesh wound in the hip. TAYLOR. CHARLES W.. captain. Ninth cavalry; in the neck. LI6EUM. E. H.. colonel, Twenty-fourth infantry: In the shoulder. CREELMAN JAMES, correspondent; in the shoulder. O'BRIEN. JAMES, private. Eighth infantry; seriously hurt by bursting of hell. DYALS. GEORGE, sergeant, troop D. Tenth cavalry: in head. TAYLOR. I SHAM T., company F, Tenth cavalry: in right arm. WATSONS. LINTON, company G. Twentieth infantry: in the head. KECALLANI (MVLELLAND?). DONALD C, company E, Seventy-tirst New York: in right knee. ALLSHLZ. MILTON, troop II, Third, cavalry: in right arm. QRUNE8. JAMES, company B, Twenty-fourth infantry: in the lft arm. MORGAN. FLANK, company B, First cavalry: in right shoulder. Dl'NNARA. JOHN C. company A. Sixteenth cavalry: in right arm. MORGAN. FRANK, company D. First cavalry: in right shoulder. WIELD, WILLIAM A., company E, Thin! cavalry; in right hip. REDMOND. BARNEY, company E, Twelfth cavalrv: in 'eft arm. LAR8EN. J 0 1 1 N H.. company I. Eighth infantry; in right ethOW. TUNER, WILLIAM, troop D, Ninth cavalry: in right leg. ALSON. DAID, company E. Twentysecond infantry: in right hip and arm. GORDON, THOMAS P.. company K. Third cavalry: in loft hip. MILLER, WILLIAM H.. company F. Sixth Infantry; in rürh! leg. ADDISON. RICHARD T.. company F. Sixth infantry; in right shoulder. BE ABOARD, ALFRED, company D, Sixteenth infantry; in the groin MITCHELL, a. A., Third cavalry; tn the right arm. GROG AN, MICHAEL, company D. Thirteenth infantrv: in th right log. KOOH. MICHAEL. company H. Sixteenth infantry: in the lft should-r. CAMPBELL, JOHN H.. company D. Tenth cavalry: In the. light leg. WATSON. JOHN, troop E. Tenth cavalry: In th left anklp. W ATTERS, THOMAS. c mpany E. Sixth infantry: in the left foot. PARKES. WILLIOS. eompanv E. Tenth
infantry; in the left arm, in the neck and right shoulder. HOFFMAN. ANDREW, company I. First infantry: in the right foot. KEY ES. PAT. company D. Twentyfourth infantry: through both thighs. BYRNE. P. S.. company F, Thirteenth infantry: in the right leg. SWIFT. ALBERT B., company E, Tenth infantry: in the elbow. WITLL. FR VNK. trocp A. First cavalry; in the lef- hip. TUCH Y, PAT. company B. Third cavalry: in the righi hand. SMITH, JAMES C, company C. Sixth cavalry; in the left hand. SLOGHEM. HENRY, sergeant troop E, Third cavalry, in groin. TRTON, MILSON E.. company C, Ninth infantry: in right leg. M ALLISTER, ARTHUR, company C, Ninth infantry; in left shoulder. M Al'PON. A. R., company F. Seventh infantry: in shoulder. SMITH. HARRY, company F, Thirteenth Infantry; in right leg. HINTENCH, CHRISTIAN, troop B. Sixth United S ates cavalry; in right arm. GRAHAM. GEORGE, company B, Thirterth infantry: in left arm. STARK. DAN R.. company L. Thirtythird Michigan; right aim shot off and hip injured. CURTIS. CLEMENT, company L. Thirty-third Michigan; Kg shot off by bursting of a shell. RAW80N, DR. F., Thirty-third Michigan; In left arm. DKVEREAUX, LIEUTENANT HARRIS, troup E, First volunteer taalry; in left arm. LEAK EL. THILO, company E, Sixteenth infantry; in left le. TILLY. WILLIAM .1., company E. Sixth infantry: in groin. JOHNSTON. W.. iroop D, rough riders; in right thigh. HENDERSON. RICHARD, troop D. rough riders: in rieht thigh. HENDERSON, RICHARD, company I, 'Twenty-fourth infantry: in left hand. KIN;. WILLIAM H .. company C, Tenth infantry: in left hip. KLINE, JOSEPH, troop L, rough riders; in left hip. WRIGHT, JOSEPH N.. troop F, Sixth cavalry: in left leg. WIiJKKI.i.ICZ, JOSEPH r... company F. Third Indiana; in left arm. DAYIS. S. R.. company L, rough riders; in left kmv. rledsoe. wade, company D. Tenth cavalry; in left hip. TAYLOK. JOHN J. L.. trcop E, Tenth cavalry: in right ankle. coNWAY. HENRY, company II. Twen-ty-tifth infantry; in rlgiit hip and in groin and hand. BEACH, GEORGE J., cmpany D, Sixteenth New York; in riyht arm. BAKT1NI0. PAIL, company r. Sixteenth New York; through t lie neck. LONO. MATTHEW. J . a mpany E. Sixteenth New York: in the neck. FARKELL, T KOMA 8, company B, Sixth infantry: in right breast. LANE, CHARLES, company Ti, Thirteenth Infantry; in r'ght leg. GIRARD, COLON, company B. Sixth infantry: in lft k g. IHM I NO EOF. JOHN, company B, Sixth infantry: in the chin. OOLCLY. JULIU8, e:Kcant company C. TWMlty-flrat infantry; in left breast and arm. TAINSON. WALTER, company G. Sixteenth infantry; in left ankle. TOSER. JOHN P.. company C. Thirteenth infantry; In the breast. SH.M:: T . Jr.. company C, Seventeenth Infantry: in the br ast. WINTER, JOHN Q., Jr.. troop F. rough riiler, in right elbow and left leg. ELY BR8, HENRY, cc mpany d. Thirteenth Infantry; in lett uh adder. ROBINSON, MASON, ompany D. Twenty-fourth infantry; in I a k. i ALL1S. R H.. sergeant, eompanv D, Twenty-tonrth infantry; in right foot MOOMH. WILLIAM, trocp E. Third cavalry; In left foot. MOOR, A. H. H., company B, Twentieth infantry; in right arm. BROADMAN, J , captain, battalion commantler. Twentieth infantry; tn neck. RISK I "TS. BASIL s r-eant. rwafll ilders; in ri,-,ht shoulder. BARNES, Ii. m.. oompany c. Sixth infantry; sunstroke. I M. nt o. HoHERT C, company D, Sixth Infantry; spralnnd back. THOMPSON, FULLER J., troop A, Sixth cavalry, sui s luku.
