Valley of the Shadow
Page 1
Page Description:

Advertisements, columns 1-3; letter sent by telegraph to Colonel Buford at Kentucky from the telegraphic operator at Hickman, Kentucky, column 4; story of a fight between a Southern regiment from Kentucky who were preparing to go home and an Alabama and Tennessee regiment that attempted to prevent them from doing so, column 4; account of the battle at Winchester, Virginia, including a number of official circulars, column 5

Page 2
Page Description:

Article tracing the use of reserves in history, column 1; reports of the appointment of General Caldwell as a Major-General of Volunteers, of the death of "noted rebel chief" Ben M'Culloch, and of a railroad accident involving a Wisconsin regiment, column 1; report of the explosion in Philadelphia of the building that housed Professor Samuel Jackson's fire works and cartridge factory, columns 2 and 3; further reports of the fight at Island No. 10, columns 3 and 4; news from Fortress Monroe, column 4; report that Union troops are advancing on Knoxville, columns 4 and 5; news from Arkansas, column 5

Page 3
Page Description:

News from the Potomac, columns 3 and 4; article about the theft of two rings from the body of a woman who had been buried near Alexandria, Virginia, information about how mortars are discharged, news of an attempted assassination of Billy Wilson, column 4; advertisements, columns 4 and 5

Thunder and Lightning

(column 1)

The Growing Grain Crop

(column 1)

Promotion

(column 1)

Rev. Alexandr [sic] Owen

(column 1)

Female Volunteers

(column 2)

Excerpt:

"The same love of country and desire for fame actuate our female volunteers, who don male attire and present themselves at the various recruiting stations in the North for enlistment."

A List of Jurors

(column 3)

Exports in War Time

(column 4)
Page 4
Page Description:

Incidents of the battle at Pea Ridge, Arkansas, column 1; anecdotes, column 2; prices current, column 2; advertisements, columns 2-5;

A Terrible Weapon

(column 1)

Excerpt:

"Thirty shots were fired in a minute and a third, at a distance of one hundred yards, and the thirty bullet holes in the target could be covered by a piece of paper six inches square."