The free South. (Beaufort, S.C.) 1863-1864, May 23, 1863, Image 4
*
VOL. 1.
x ... ? ..- ? - ??
Thf Pri/oKi!!? Tft? linericuti ( i.&t ia
pioiifchip.
The fightbetween .Toe Ooburn, oi Tow 1
"York, and Michael MeCoole, or Sr. Louis, !
ior one thousand dollars a si lo and f.i, i
championship of America, was decid d on ;
Tuesday, the .*,lli instant, and resulted in i
the virt( ly of Cot mil, who is now the i
suknc.wlt dp< d champion of the ring in this
countiy. For s< me tin;e past this match
had created giant interest in the sporting
circles throughout the Western end Northern
States, in consequence of the f< rmor
being regarded as the pugilistic representative
of the fonm r section of the Union,
as McCcole was cf the latter. As a ncces,-ovir
/irnci niifnfp. ihp bettiimr was v*ry 1
. _ ..
heavy. not alone in this city, but in Cin- ;
oiDnnti, St. Louis, Louisville, iVc. Tlie j
!Xtw York man was the favorite from the
time the match was made, in consequence j
of his tried gamencss, science and powers '
of heavy hitting, as shown in his tight 1
with Ed. Price, of Boston. and Harry
- ^ ' Ifribbin. One hundred to eighty was freely
offered on the letter's winning the tight;
but this price, just before the tight commenced
was, in consequence of the anxiety
of McCcole's Cincinnati backers to invest
their money, reduced to even betting between
the two.
The place of hostilities was at Charlestown.
in Cecil county, Maryland, on the :
Philadelphia. "Wilmington and Baltimore j
Bailroad, about seven miles from Havre :
?le Grace. The day was Tuesday, the 5th
inst, and about three thousand people '
were assembled to witness the contest. '
2vew York, Boston, Philadelphia, Balti- j
more and Washington sent their representative
sporting nun in large numbers to |
the appointed locality. It was nnticipat- ;
< d the fight would come oft' at daybreak;
but Cobuin did not make his appearance J
until noon had passed, he having taken up ;
his qua it eis at Havre de Grace. McCoole i
was early in the immediate locality, he i
having spent the previous night at Vince (
Hammond's, at North East, about three j
miles from Charlestonn. The latter was
first to enter the ring, attended by his seconds,
Australian Kelly and Johnny ltcche, j
r while Coburn wa? accompanied by Jim j
TTc/'nnn ill lii^ !
\ UKMIViV) \> iXi vuutvi jla\ * uima <4. ..... r
fight with Tom Snyers, and Hni. Winkle J
(hip trainer), w ho acted in a similar rapae- ,
ity forCobura. Just before the tight com- j
menced the two men ir.ade a bet of ?"C0
a side on the result, /nd this was further
increased to S7G0 a side before they ,
commenced. Ed. Price was referee, anil ;
Harry Hill and Captain Mike Norton um- j
pires, the former for McCoole the latter for j
C'obtnu. From the first Cobtirn took the
lead, getting heavily onto MtCoole's face in '
the first round, under the left eye, cutting '
it severely and drawing first bleed, He !
..fought very cautiously at the commence-1
iheht, until he found cut the measure of j
his opponent's calibre, when he fcrced the j
fighting until the close. McCoole although f
bo showed himself to be n strong, powerful j
-wrestler and game fighter, was totally ig- !
norant of the science of boxing, and his j
clever and skillful opponent was able to
administer the severest punishment with- j
out receiving any in return. Indeed, his ;
scionce soon equalized the advantages of !
height and weight the other possessed in j
so marked a degree, being four inches'
talkrr and twenty pounds the heavier man. f
Hound after round McCoole came up only i,
to receive punisLmtnt, until he fell away ;
from weakness and loss of blood, the con- ;
scqumce of the terrific hitting of his an
At lUU i w...
lioiir and ten minutes, rnd ri\>y erven
rounds. Mct'oole's seconds threw up the j
*}H*nge in acknowledgement of defeat, and '
Cobmn was hailed the winner of the stakes ,
ruid the champion of America.
There is nothing new in England relative j
to the Heenan and King mate h. The de- ,
posits are staked with regularity and punc- |
tnality at the appointed times; but neither .
men attend personally. Indeed both of !
them are traveling through the country J
with the' circuses to which they are respec- |
lively engaged. Mace, the champion, has j
310 match on the way at present, except the .
one with .Toe Goes, in which he stakes;
?30GO to $2l)tX); but the champion's belt is |
j ot involved in this. It is probable that :
rmr newly made American champion, Joe j
Cobnrn, will try conclusions with Mace, }
he has received a pressing invitation
from John Heenan to go over and try his ;
fortune in the English prize ring. His
recent victory proves that he is ? splendid j
lighter, and well wo^by of trying conclu- j
*ious with, the aeemupnsneu ooxer wi;n
now enjovs the title of champion of Eng- ;
3andl.
Ut <;e Paays.?At a public meeting in j
Hvohester, a speaker who had remarkable
hands, in a serious portion of his re- |
unarks. stretched out his hand* exclaiming: j
*;Afv hearers, pause !" The t^cct was ir- ,
a, Vrtiblc. and the audience burst into a '
jvar of laughter. j
THE FEEE SOUTH, SA^
A IBr.d
A communication from Homo, in j
y.< I <; , lias the follow ing
" Great excitement hn* been ^raised in j
this city 1 v an event which t^ok place on
tin" evening of the ?">th tilt.., at the CufTa- j
li'lli Palace, the residence of the Prussian (
?.<inister, where the Plincc and Princess !
of Prussia had invited several persons t<? :
dinner. The Minister in question, Bar- ,
on tie Cannitz, wlio 1ml not appeared unr- ,
ing the repast, suddenly presented liim- j
self, attired in a singular costume, and i
with many gesticulations cried out that he !
would not have his house nay longer
turned into an inn, and ordered the Prince !
and his guests to leave. This was said in j
such a manner as to shock the ears of the i
edits. The Princess Royal was seized j
with a fit of trembling, and whilst every- I
one was stupitied with astonishment, the j
Prince approached the Minister in an af- j
feetionate manner and implored him to i
leave ; this M. de Cannitz at last did, as he j
still retained seme feeling of respeet. M. ;
de Caunitz was then and still is stark mad. i
He was conveyed to the residence of his j
brother-in-law, Prince D. Michael Cnetn- j
ni. In un interval of reason, M. de Caunitz
expressed the desire of seeing Cardinal
Antonelli; his Eminence not being
able to go himself, sent Mgr. Berardi, but :
there was no hope of saving him. It is
said that a st rmon, preached by a minis- j
ter of the Ei angelical sect in the Chapel
of the Prussian Embassy, on All Souls
Day, was the determining occasion of an
event the origin of which must be sought
farther back. M. de Caunitz had fought '
n duel a long time ago, in w hich he killed
his adversary.
The English Soldiehh.?What must be J
admired in the battle of Waterloo is England,
the English dimness, the English ;
resolution, the English blood, and what j
England had already superb in it, is (with- J
cut offence) herself; it is not her captain, j
but her army. Wellington, strangely un- j
grateful, declares in his dispatch to ^Lord i
Batliurst, that his miny. the one which
fought on .Trne 18th. 1815, %as a " detest- j
aUeaimv." What does the gloomy pile .
of bones buried in the trenches of Water- !
loo think of tiiin ? England lias been too j
modest to herself in her treatment of Wei- }
lington, for making him so great in mak- !
ing herself small. Wellington is merely j
a hero like env other man. The Scots J
Greys, the Life Guards, Maitland and j
Mitchell's regiments, Packe and Kempt'a j
infantry, Ponsonby and Somerset's caval- !
ry, the Highlander playing the bagpipe.^,
under the shower of canister, Kyland's ;
battalions, the fresh recruits, who could j
hardly manage a musket, and yet hold i
their ground against the old bands of Ess- j
ling and Kivoli? all this is grand. Wei- j'
Jington was tenacious, this was his merit, |
and we do not deny it of him ; but the J
lowest of his privates and his troopers was , ;
quite as solid as he, and the iron soldier is j
as good as the iron duke. For our part, ,
all our glorification is offered to the Eng- i
lish soldier, the English army, the Eng- j
lish nation ; and if there must be a trophy, i
it is to England that this trophy is owing. ;
The Waterloo column would be more just, .
if, instead of the figure of a man, it raised *
to the clouds the statue of a people.?Lts I
../ /... / LV . 77 i'
.wtci \j>t f ti.n i iiri/i/, j
( ottox.? 77. f.' Xambn' of So d-< ?n0 [ '
Puot.'s U> //, .l. vr.?According to the authority
s quoted in the Farmers' and Plan
ters' Lucyclopiedia, on the cultivation of,
e(/tton, one bushel of scul per acre is the
usual quantity planted in the cotton state# *
where seed is plenty and cheap. Wtttn ,
they consider the plants out of danger, 1
they thin it'villi the hoe to from six to j
twenty-four inches apart. But as no per- ;
son would recommend leaving the plants i,
closer than a foot in the row where the 1
land is good, and adapted to the plant, j
and the row# three feet apart?this would |
require less than fifteen thousand plants !
per acre. I have received from th? Pa- 1
tent Office several bushels of cotton seed, }
weighing twenty-six pounds to the bushel, j
and, in numbers, four thousand seed to i
the pound. If fifteen thousand plants arc
all that can grow on an acre to advantage,
twi ntr thousand seed, if good, will suffice
to plant that acre?or one bushel to five
acri s will be sufficient, where the seed is j
scarce.
An Englishman had heard of the Yankee
habit of bragging, and thought lie would
cut the comb of that propensity. He saw
km me huge water-melons on a market woman's
stand, and walking up to her and j
pointing to them with a lock of disap- I
pointment, said, "what, don t you raise
bigger apples than these in America ?"
The woman looked at him one moment,
and then quickly retorted. "Anybody
nu'gnt easily h 11 you was an Englishman.
Them's little huckleberries."
t'p starts the devil looking very solemn
and sets these lines to till out the column. '
UKDAY.'MAY 23, 1863.
The Americas* Vi'atcli Company*
Wi.rcr.es, which were foitueily 1 r.t the decorations rf
the ( patent. huve become ifce common necessity of ths
muni. 'Ihft subtiivisi i ? of nice in laborinvolveaccurate
sr.hdivis.os* c. time: uud the merchr.ut, the
?rt:ran, the [roftf icnul man. even the lounger, must
be able to summon irem lr* fobgt: will the instrument
which points the hour. '. 1 .is is t?;e agr of exactitudes.
Kerry one of this 1 usy generation must know, a dozen
times a day, precisely where he ?lr.nds chronologically.
The note, for inttat.ee, must fcc met by;; p.m. rlhe
ciiffercnce between that boar and the fr?' ilea of a minute
later is the liifTerescc between untainted commercial
repute r.r.d damaged credit. '1 he cars shirt at <>.
t'nlefs the watch oe at hand to adinotiish the traveler,
he reaches the station breathless, in a state of eager
perspiration, just in time to see the exasperating train
driving awey under a foil press of steam. A thousand
times between sen and sun is felt the need of consultation
with the patient little familiar, which hived in the
waistcoat pocket, ticks away unceasingly as the hours
of all the days traverse its dial, 'lbe fact that it has
become so general a necessity gives importance to the
circumstance that we arc no longer dependent upon a
foreign market for a supply. The American Watch
Company, of Waitham, .'f.assachnsstts, established in
l>s>'0. hat grown into proportions which entitle it to a
first rank among the manufacturing enterprises of
America. It employs between four hundred and fire
hundred artisan*, and produces sn aggregate of nearly
fifty thousand watches per snnnm. 'I he quality of
the*" instruments has been thoroughly tested by minute
comparisons, and the result Is decidedly in lavor of the
home-made ever the imported article. 1 he constitnent
parts of the American watch are fashioned by machinery.
Wheels, pinions, springs, screws, absolutely uniform
in weight, clrcnmference, dimensions, and in every
i?ossible particular, are turned out in myriad* by
nnerrine iron hands. The difficulty of manufacturing
by haml such trivial miracles of metal must be trident
It involves such digital cunning, such superlative acntenrf
s of eye. such unnatural patience of effort, that it is
almost a wonder how tht workshops of (ieneva and
La Chaux de bonds continue to replenish their armies
of operator*. Put in the Waitham manufactory these
delicate particles ;tro producsd by machinery, for example,
a eoil of fine wire weighing a pound is divided
and worked out into some one hundred thousand
screws, each the counterpart of every other, and a curious
fact in relation to this mazieal transformation is,
that fKw oesf r\f fbw vr'se Ivwfnse ?t onfen the* mifikSno It
aboutifiTC dollars, and that whon it emerge* its prodnrt
Is Talued at three thousand live hundred dollar*. The
exquisitely-finished, though almost invisible particles,
are pal away in tiny glass rials, like those in which
phjsicuiLS carry the pallets wherewith they exaspcr at
the intestines of mea. 'J he wheels r.nd pivots are (Tested
similar methods, The jewels, likewise, are drilled
by unerring machinery. Scarcely larger than grains
ol' sand, they must ye; each be probed withk:t clean
round orifica to admit the dainty shaft npon which the
wheels of the watch revolve. This is accomplished hy
means of dril's so delicate that they almost elude the
unfamiliar r;sion. They are as fine as the filaments of
a spider's web. yet so vtronc and hsrd that they tunnel
out these iilipiuian crystals with the wriest precision.
With equal regularity sud tuaformity the process continues
to the end. .V ftsr the hole is bored us interior is
subjected to a perfect polish which :s imparted by rapidly
revolving drills i>d with diamond ilust. T he jewel
is then ready to take its. place iu the watch. the correctness
of it* aperture being measured by gr.sges so delicate
as to indicate tha ten thousandth part of an inch.
After such and similar adjustment, the various part* are
all divided into classes, each bearing sn nmvaryiag relation
to the rest. As one practical and easily-appreciated
result of this perfect correswudence, it may beinstumrd
that the cwicr of a watOi of which hy accident any
part gets lost or ii jnred. has but to address the company,
inclosing the nnmber of his watch, ar.d stating the
organ wanted, scrusv. wheel, jewel, spring, or what not,
and forthwith by return mail comes the desired article,
whicli any watchmaker may adjust to its place.
It will hcrdly be credited that some of the watches of
foreign manufacture contain six hundred or sevsn hundred
more parts.
Waltham watches are made without the and
chain, the uses of which are fully answered by proper
isochronism. and the evil* of which am Irremediable.
It is neediest to say that the more intricate the works
of a tima-piece the greater the probabilities of injury,
sud the lees the chance of uniform a? cnrscy of performance.
The first duty of a watch Is to keep good time.
Its other uses are decorative and subsidiary. The simpler
its mechanism the more trustworthy its action; and
the system upon which watches are constructed by tha
Ameiicau company is the very perfection of simplicity.
The motive power is applied directly to tha purpose, and
ia not dissipated amid a useless complication of machinery.
The rmportancc of thia mtrerae simplification of
structure must be apparent. '1 he motive force has 110
longer to vitalize cumbrous aud unnecessary impedimenta,
friction is lessened one-half, and the liability to
eKUi)* A ImnflS wvoow haa iftoru'PfPfl
11 lut i; mu-iu.iui. .iiaiuvk wiut .... r. v . ..
with bewilderment the interior of those plethoric bulb?
of britiah origin, known as bull's eyes, aud noted for
neqpr beiri?j right. 'Ihey dlicloee when opened to the
light of day, nightmare of recondite machinery, propelled
with altercate vigor and languor by some iraprisoned
force, tire origin of which defies investigation.
Tfcere r.re labyrinth* of wheels and itiLcmerable radii
of cogs. and slender chain? and coiled spring*, and
extensive axles, and a bla/.u of highly ostentatious
brats. The special vices of this primitive time-piece have
not yet been altogether repealed in any of the instruments
of continental mr. infju lure. Their complexity
continues unabated, &iui il ilfctite cvidcr.ee of precisely
this fault to which the attention of the .\ir.c titan Manufacturer
is. in * grer.t degree, directed. IIow entirely
tip American manufacturers are justified !:i the t hinges
they have nt .de is jt:e?t? I by the rcco<x:::u<? they have
rw-ived ivum Itu-e who--' ,;tfu?? merit may be taken'as
oroniete and final. '1 he advantage* o. simplicity in
10: structioii having be. n secured to tuc luilest extent
that is expedient, tlx-se of pencil nniformi:? are, of
course, more easily attained. And it is probably to
these latter, more then any other cause?, tlrr.t the real
ralue ot the Wnlthtnn watches must be attributed. The
important fact that there is virtually no variation in
even the minutest details of ail these iuslrumeats, i*
the one upon which most reliance is placed. They
iau?t all inevitably be equally jwod. Exact unity is
the first quality which watches, by whomsoever produced,
can poe.-es*. Exact unity "is sisnply unattainable
by the European processes. Of two instruments,
simultaneously completed in a foreign workshop, it
i? impossible to expect iltai thev will bear more than
a general and superficial relationship to oue another.
Thsre ia no tie between them to hold them to
exactitude. Deviatious ia regularity are always counted
upon to a greater or less degree, in imported watches,
their harmony beirc coutingent npon the most doubtfttl
conditions. 1 he dexterity or the good faith of individual
workmen i? all that can be trusted to for correct
ru-ulta. Here, however, nothing i* left to the discretion
of the artizans. From beginning to rod, all is carefully
wrought ont by uavaryiuy mechanical rale. The ieo
laird j>artic!es mutt or neccs-tty De iatnncai in wry
watch, since they are modeled by force of machinery,
and not by labor of hand. The most practiced eye or
delicate touch mltrht somctimea err, but the oj>erationa
of machinery are without a flaw. The ^rand result of
this verisimilitude is that in rejard to time-keepintr the
Waltbam watches are all alike. Thia fact bein^ established,
as it baa been with the Americaa company, front
the very birth of their enterprise, there needs no serious
argument to prove the gtnrral superiority of their
watches. The only question that conid arise would be
in regard to particular possibilities In certain instances,
there mi^ht b? single instruments of foreign production
flnished with nn accnracs beyond even "the rejrnlar
workinps of machinery, hut "to meet this, the
American company hare devoted one department of
their factory to the construction of a much more elaborate
article than their usual average. There the advantages'
of strict identity in component part# are combined
with those of the most dexterous workmanship. The
parte are still produced by maiicblncrr, hut they are adjusted
by workmen of i>eculiar skill.*who throajh ex
N
NO. 20.
; perience or natural cleverness. have the faculty of dele
-ting the minuter qu:.iiti< s essential to perfect harmony
ami evenness of movement, delicate rlutdes of e\i
cellcnce in the jewels, or other materials used are tint*
discovered ami taken advantage ?>f; and the watch
pat -ea through sympathetic hands, which assort and
i regulate its details with more par ieular consideration
1 ol their bearing toward each other than is deemed nej
rosary in the ordinary instrument. In this way, watchi
en of absolute equality with the finest result" of F.ttroI
pean manufacture, are, in such quantities as demanded,
j regularly produced
't he manufactory itself is situated at Waltham, a few
: miles distant from Eoston. it stands upon th<- border
i of the itiver Charles, and in the midst of a fresh and
I open meadow land. Within it- walls the spindles and
wheels are whirring-, not with unseemly clangor, but
1 with " a Summer sound as of dotes in quiet neighbor
j hoods." Deft hands are moving, too, with switt and "*
! dainty celerity. There is nothing rude or rydopcan hi
I the forging of these frail mysteries of machinery. The_
| triumphs here are those of subtlety and ennning, not ot~
r ** n%~ *k~ tlw* w.'fltf
f lurcr. iu uic uiipnuuxm uucutaw^ *?v
elements stem to silently aggregate themselves Into
organism?. The watches are built like thr.t Temple hi
the reariug of w hich no found of hammer or of ax was
heard. Little trays containing the myriad fragment*
pass from hand to hand, e ch successive tramfer snbtracting
something from the dainty order in which the
particles gradually arrange themselves. Finally, aftertraversing
numberless hands the perfect instrument
emerges and is laid aside for registration. There i*somcthing
exquisitely light and graceful in all the processes
through which it moves from its inception to the
completion. As its elements are tiny and fragile, so thehands
which combine them tire light, and swift, and
noiseless. Microscopic atoms coalesce; gossamer filaments
thread the embryo organism; by and by life ?*
| breathed into the completed structure, and it palpitates
forever with passionless iteration. The artificer* arr- <Jk
j not exactly like other artificers. The work upon whkh
j thev are occupied involves acute intelligence and dexterous
touch. The lightness and the cheer of the faeto|
ry itself must donbtless hare its wholesome inflnenceupon
the operatives. Certainly the impression which
they leave upon the mind of the viaitor is T? ry different
from that which follows a visit to workshops in which
grosser wares arc manufactured.
The success of the Walt hat n Company helps to solvean
interesting problem. It is a kind of Declaration of
Independeacc of old world ingenuity and skilL If we
can make our owu watches, we should certainly be ableto
excel in the other branches of manufacture tn whichKumpe
has hitherto led us. The fuctcry at W<haxn is ?
the-promise of other factories innumerable, which shall
stud New England as thickly as hor spire* and sehoolhotise*.
and in which the gla?? ware of Fohamia, thecarpets
<>f Berlin, the china of Sevres, the silks of Lyons,..
the jewelry of Paris, and countless other articles of luxury
and use, shall bo produced upon our own soil awl
by our own skill.
List oC Officers Killed and Woundfil
in the Fight ut Chanrellorrille.
Mt.jor-General Perry, killed, while gallantly fighting
his division. " V
Gen. Dexens, of Massachusetts, commanding PirvS
Division, Kleventh Corps, severely wounded ia fool. Ni ^
lien. Mott, severely wounded. \
Col. .McKnlght, lhf th Pennsylvania, killed.
Col. l,iley, V -th Ohio, wonmied. /"Hx
Col. Lancaster, IThth Pennsylvania, killed. J^AJ
Col. Pierson, 1st New York, wounded. ol
Col. stainrook. 10?th Pennsylvania, killed. V,
j Col. Stevens 4ih Excelsior brigade, killed. si
Col. Parks, fid New York, wounded. v
' v?l Rni*Hn?> ttrh Ww .f, r>ev. wouillhll. V
Col. Willin, 12th New .'ersej, wounded. ^
rol. Potter, 12th New Hampshire, wounded. 1*
Lieut, Col. Scott, 3d Wisconsin. killed. K
Li?at. t'ol. (hapia, SCtb New York, killed. A
Lient. t'ol. Cogswell, 2d Massachusetts, arm. V
Lieut, t'ol. t'aok, 14.' tb New York, foot. % *k.
j Major keesian, *th Pennsylvania cavalry, kilktL.
Major Stronsc, 41th Pennsylvania, killed.
Major Angrll, J.th New Jersey, left shoulder. As.
Lieut, t'ol. Lounsbury, ith Excelsior, face. \ V\
tapt. Hampton, .Pittsburg battery, kg shot off.
Major Willooghby, 137th New York, severely. \*1
Major Hippies Wth New York, lep.
Lieut. Collins, 149th New York, wounded.
Lieut. Eckel 14i>ih New York, wounded. ^S,
t'apt. Ellsworth, xlth New York, killed.
Capt. Allen, Co. (', 14,' rh Naw York, ini>Kinp. C\
t'apt. Smith, Co. C, 7th New Jersey, neck. 6 %
. Capt. Withered, Co. K, 7th New Jersey, leg.,
" Capt. Hart. Co. E, 7 th New Jersey, leg. ,
Lient. Cephart, Co. E, 7th New Jersey, womdcdl. *
Lieut. McDonald, Co. I, 7th New Jersey, head.
Lient. Herdait, ?th New Jersey, killetL
Lient. t'oop-r, Co. P, 7th New Jersey, wounded,. ? >
Lieut. Dingle, Co. F, 7th New Jersey, wounded..
mxtii saw ?:efk\.
Lieut. Joseph Note, wonrded.
Lient. John liogland, wounded.
Lieut. Hcweth, severely wonndetL V
Capt. Thomas M. K. Lee, head. , ,
I Lieut James H. Tallon, hij^ * \j
rn.iitii nkw juisr.v. c
Col. Kar.isay. wounded. x
< apt. Stelle, Co. F, severely wounded.
('not. Stes enson. Co. K. wounded.
I it-lit. Peer, Co. K, wounded.
Lieut. Beaketi, Co. (', wounded. ,
f rtrrit xrw .rEa^tr.
( apt. Gamble, mortally wounded,
j Lieut C. H. l.'ogeis, arm.
Lieut. Clancy, neck,
| l.tfiit.< ' "tffj.k-Lawyer, mortally wouudtd . ??>
[ I icnt. Austin, ankle. "
Lieut. M??ore, killed.
Lieut. Nu.ew, wounded.
Lieut. F. Field*. Cth New Jcrsaf! wounded.
Lieut. Avres, .".th New Jersey, wounded, slightlyl.ieat.
'1 nomas, ?<en. MotlYi Sta& wounded.
Capt. Cromlev, Co. C, 11- th Penusvlvan'a, kil!ett?
Cant. Con lev* Co. li, llf?th Pennsylvania, killed.
Capt. Dillon, Co. B, ll.Vth Pennsylvania, woundesi.
Lieut. Mtilloy, Co. 1L 11.' th Pennsylvania, wonude?d.
Lieut. Davis, Co. I), U-'th Pennsylvania, wounded.
Lieut. Ash, Co. C, ll.'th Pennsylvania, ankle.
Adjutant Stevens, 110th Pennsylvania, wounded.
Capt. K. J. Murphy, iiilh NewY'ork, wounded.
Capt. J. W. Bailey, liTth New York, wounded.
Lieut. Kearuin, tifth Now York, wounded.
Lieut. J. 11. Marker, iiTih New Y ork, wounded.
Capt. Temple, -.'d 1 tegular In/antry, killed,
j Lfeuf. Miller, 4th Maine, killed
dpt. .uorenean, mn iimnurj. ?>n.<iUW
( apt, Ann-*, - ? - ltcyalar*. wounded.
Lieut. Huestcd, 4-l!;i New York, wounded br shell.
Adjutant Thomaa, 1' th ludiama, badly, in back.
Cap!. Walker, kfth Now York, wouuded.
Licat. Morand, >th JJcW York, mis^iag.
Lieut. Martin, -sth Now Y'ork, knee.
Capt. J. It. O'Bicrne, kTth Now York, wounded.
Capt, Elvrood, -'d Ex<-tl?ior. leg.
Lieut. Felncy, Co. 11, 4th Excelsior, wouuded.
Capt. Falcn, Co. A, 4th Excelsior, wounded.
Liont. Penman, Co. C, 4th Excelsior, wounded.
I.ieut. Ii. M. Ailer, Co. C, .'.th Excelsior, wounded.
Lieut. C. S. Preston, Co. A. , shoulder.
Capt. Grafton, 2d Massachusetts, leg.
Lieut. FitzgerahL 2d Massachusetts, killed.
Lieut. F. P. Crosby, Katterv F, 4th I nited states artill.-O-,
killed.
Capt. Marry, 140th New Y'ork, lee.
Lieut. Priestly, ifith Pennsylvania, mortally wounded.
Col. Miles, tilst Net|- York," fatally, in -tomnrh.
Col. E. M. Gregory, iUsI Pennsylvania, wounded seTerely.
Jft&f'Tis little trouble to brew beer, but
' beer brews much trouble.