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ook up for consideration the bill to provide for the payment of horses lost, captured, killed, or permanently disabled in the service. The question was upon the substitute to the committee's bill, offered by Mr. Boteler, of Virginia, which was adopted. The bill provides payment for horses which have been killed in battle, or which, having been wounded in battle, have since died or become permanently disabled by said wounds; also, for horses lost by unavoidable accident or capture, or by abandonment by order of a commissioned officer. On motion of Mr. Goode, of Va., the bill to authorize the impressment of meat for the use of the army, under certain circumstances, was taken up, and after some discussion, adopted. [This bill provides that under proper regulations and restrictions, one half of the bacon laid in for family use, amounting to the customary supply, may be taken when the necessities of the army require it.] On motion, the House went into secret session.
The Daily Dispatch: February 12, 1864., [Electronic resource], Gen. A. P. Hill, and his Columbia friends. (search)
is a list of their names: Col S P Spofford, 97th N Y reg't; Capts C J Gates, 3d Ohio; F Irch, 45th New York; G Slarr, 104th New York; Adjutant M R Small, 6th Md; 1st Lieuts A Moore, co E, 4th Ky; C S Edmond, co D, 67th Pa; W B Pearce, 11th Ky cavalry; H Schroeder, 82d Ih; C H Morgan, 21st Wisconsin; F Moran, 13th New York; W L Watson, 21st Wisconsin; E Schroeder, 74th Pa; A B White, 4th Pa cavalry; W A Daily, 8th Pa cavalry; H H Hindes, 57 Pa; 2d Lieuts J P Brown, 15th U S regulars; G S Goode, 84th Pa; G Gamble, 63d Pa; J M Wasser, 40th Ohio; P A White, 83d Pa; Isaac John, Engineer, gunboat Satellite. Since our publication yesterday we have obtained some further particulars of the escape. The work was mostly carried on by one Capt. J. D. Johnson, of the 16th Kentucky regiment, who is among those still at large. On several occasions this man had been absent at roll call, which puzzled the clerk considerably to account for it. At one time, soon after the count of the prisone