53
Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.
3 revisions | AnnaH at May 20, 2020 10:46 AM | |
|---|---|---|
5343 the romance, the poetry, and history of their each distinctive work forever. The same spirit and circumstances have furnished journalists innumerable, who in the West imbibed the sterling qualities they afterward used to such effect. Notably Henry M. Stanley, who (in 1866) saw the rising sun of the young empire that stretches to the Rockies; Gen. Greely, of Arctic fame (now of Signal Service), and the equally scientific explorer, Lieut. Schwatka, passed their early career in the same school, and often followed "the trail " led by "BUFFALO BILL"; Finnerty (of the "Chicago Times ); “Modoc" Fox and O'Kelly (of the " New York Herald ), 1876; while later on new blood among the scribblers was initiated to their baptism of fire by Harries (of " Washington Star "), McDonough ("New York World "), Bailey (of " Inter-Ocean "), brave young Kelly (of the "Lincoln Journal "), Cressy (of the Omaha Bee "), Seymour ("Chicago Herald "), and Allen (of the New York Herald "), present in the battle, who were honored by three cheers from "Old White Top" Forsythe's gallant Seventh Cavalry, the day after the battle of "Wounded Knee," as they went charging over Wolf Creek to what came near being a crimson day, to the fight "down at the Mission." UNITED STATES CAVALRY PRACTICE DRILL. HIS MILITARY RANK AND REFERENCES. | 5343 the romance, the poetry, and history of their each distinctive work forever. The same spırıt and circumstances have furnished journalists innumerable, who in the West imbibed the sterling qualities they afterward used to such effect. Notably Henry M. Stanley, who (in 1866) saw the rising sun of the young empire that stretches to the Rockies; Gen. Greely, of Arctic fame (now of Signal Service), and the equally scientific explorer, Lieut. Schwatka, passed their early career in the same school, and often followed "the trail " led by "BUFFALO BILL"; Finnerty (of the "Chicago Times ); “Modoc" Fox and O'Kelly (of the " New York Herald ), 1876; while later on new blood among the scribblers was initiated to their baptism of fire by Harries (of " Washington Star "), McDonough ("New York World "), Bailey (of " Inter-Ocean "), brave young Kelly (of the "Lincoln Journal "), Cressy (of the Omaha Bee "), Seymour ("Chicago Herald "), and Allen (of the New York Herald "), present in the battle, who were honored by three cheers from "Old White Top" Forsythe's gallant Seventh Cavalry, the day after the battle of "Wounded Knee," as they went charging over Wolf Creek to what came near being a crimson day, to the fight "down at the Mission." UNITED STATES CAVALRY PRACTICE DRILL. HIS MILITARY RANK AND REFERENCES. |
