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CONTENTS.
vii
XXIX. | 294 |
XXX. | 314 |
XXXI. | How the Soldiers Kept House During the War (cut of the useful cow), a paper read before Pickett Camp, C. V., Feb., 1896, by Dr. W. W. Parker
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318 |
XXXII. | 328 |
XXXIII. | 330 |
XXXIV. | Stonewall Jackson; his dread of the Use of Stimulants by his Soldiers
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333 |
XXXV. | 335 |
XXXVI. | 336 |
XXXVII. | Protest of R. E. Lee Camp, C. V., against the Bill in the House of Representatives, by P. J. Otey, for the Relief of Confederate Soldiers
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337 |
XXXVIII. | The Longstreet-Gettysburg Controversy—Who commenced It? Review by Rev. J. William Jones, D. D.
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342 |
XXXIX. | Stuart and Gettysburg—Defence of the Cavalry Leader, by Col. J. S. Mosby
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348 |
XL. | The Museum of the South, Instituted by the Confederate Memorial Literary Society—A Noble Conservatory Dedication of the Historic Building at Richmond, Va., February 22, 1896. Prayer by Rev. M. D. Hoge, D. D. Oration by Gen. Bradley T. Johnson; eloquently introduced by Governor Charles T. O'Ferrall. Illustrated by cuts of front and rear views of the "Mansion;" a war portrait of President Davis, and one of Mrs. Joseph Bryan.
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354 |
XLI. | Tribute to the late Joseph Jones, D. D., LL.D., the First Secretary of the Southern Historical Society
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382 |