. The Photographic history of the Civil War : thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities . Gen. Heintzelman copyright, ish, revew of bevews eo. voluminous draperies that one wonders how they could get about at all. These were the days of the hoop-skirt and the polonaise. In the photograph to the right they have removed their quaint small hats, andlook less like premature little women. The little boys, in their cunning Kate Greenaway costumes on theleft-hand page, have evidently just come up to get into the photograph. The officer lounging in the chairhas tu


. The Photographic history of the Civil War : thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities . Gen. Heintzelman copyright, ish, revew of bevews eo. voluminous draperies that one wonders how they could get about at all. These were the days of the hoop-skirt and the polonaise. In the photograph to the right they have removed their quaint small hats, andlook less like premature little women. The little boys, in their cunning Kate Greenaway costumes on theleft-hand page, have evidently just come up to get into the photograph. The officer lounging in the chairhas turned his profile to the camera. A great change in the type of womens faces can be seen since thattime. Women have changed more than men. The change is deeper than mere dress, and involvesalso her outlook upon the world. But she is as ready as ever to relieve distress and suffering in PERMANENT AND GENERALHOSPITALS By Deeeing J. Roberts, Surgeon, Confederate States Army THOUGH the writer was never on the staff of a generalhospital, he visited a large number of them, knew per-sonally many medical officers assigned to duty in them, andwas familiar with their general plan of operation. The mostvaluable information concerning them, however, is to befound in a remarkable series of addresses and papers pub-lished in the Southern Practitioner, many of which had beendelivered before the Association of Medical Officers of theArmy and Navy of the Confederacy. This series is an inval-uable mine of information, and from it most of the facts givenin the following pages are drawn. It must be remembered, of course, that the men fromwhom I quote, whose writings are abstracted, or whose suc-cess is described, were among the most distinguished officersof the service. Added to professional skill they possessed ex-ecutive and administrative ability which would have won suc-cess u


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