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XIII. Prison Life in 1867 — Capture of John H. Sur- ratt in Egypt, and his Arrival in Washing- ton, 219
XIV. Prison Life in 1867, Continued — Booth's Diary Would Have Tended to Establish my Father's Innocence Had it Been Offered in Evidence — "Somebody Had to Suffer,", . . . 237
XV. Prison Life in 1867, Continued — Ravages of Yellow Fever — My Father Assumes Charge of the Hospital at Fort Jefferson, 257
, XVI. Prison Life in 1867, Continued — Garrison Re- duced by Deaths from Fever — My Father Free to Escape, but Chooses to Remain and Give "All the Hope and Encouragement Possible to the Death-stricken Victims" — Is Finally Himself Stricken Down, 274
XVII. Prison Life in 1867, Continued — The Scourge of Yellow Fever Being Ended, my Father is Again Put in Chains, 296
XVIII. Prison Life in 1868— The Withholding of Booth's Diary — Surratt's Release, 303
XIX. The Pardon — Home Coming — Spangler's Statement — The Closing Scene, 318