. Our army nurses. Interesting sketches, addresses, and photographs of nearly one hundred of the noble women who served in hospitals and on battlefields during our civil war . (Fenmak) Barron. EUUEKA, CaL. OUR GRAND ARMY OF THE DEAD. Fast asleep the boys are lying in their low and narrow tents,And no battle-cry can wake them, and no orders call them hence;And the yearning of the mother, and the anguish of the with their .magic presence call the soldier back to life;And the brothers manly sorrow, and the fathers mournful give back to his country him who for his country
. Our army nurses. Interesting sketches, addresses, and photographs of nearly one hundred of the noble women who served in hospitals and on battlefields during our civil war . (Fenmak) Barron. EUUEKA, CaL. OUR GRAND ARMY OF THE DEAD. Fast asleep the boys are lying in their low and narrow tents,And no battle-cry can wake them, and no orders call them hence;And the yearning of the mother, and the anguish of the with their .magic presence call the soldier back to life;And the brothers manly sorrow, and the fathers mournful give back to his country him who for his country died:They who for the trembling nation in its hour of trial , in these its years of triumph, with our army of the the reign of Time is ended, and Eternity begun ;When the thunders of Omniscience on our wakened senses the sky above shall wither and be gathered like a scroll;When, among the lofty mountains and across the mighty sea,The sublime, celestial bugler shall ring out the reveille,—Then shall march with brightest laurels and with proud, victorious their station up in heaven, our grand army of the dead. / 138 OUR ARMY MRS. RENA MINER. <nypRS. RENA L. MmER, formerly Miss Little-/f\ field, is a grand-daughter of old Squire Little-I ^ field, who was widely known throughout^ ^^ N^orthern Indiana and Southern Michigan,in the early settlement of that section. He was aman of iron constitution, indomitable will, strongconvictions, and gruff manners; yet possessed of agenerosity so broad, and a sympathy so ready, thathe was instinctively sought as a champion of theoppressed. With what he saw to be wrong he held nocompromise, but was its open, bitter, implacable foe. Albert Littlefield, his eldest son and Mrs. Minersfather, was a man of wide mental attainments, studi-ous, conscientious, and of an exceedingly retiringnature. It was said of him, He never wronged afellow-being; a poor man himself, he has oftendivided his last dollar wit
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