Bamboo Tales
Copyright, 1900, Hudson-kimberly Publishing Co., Kansas City, Mo.
Respectfully Dedicated To the “First Man up San Juan Hill.”
“It happened that we left such a hidden retirement and we went into Taal. We employed more than a whole day on the road, more than half of which we passed in a lagoon with water up to our waists. We arrived on the seventh.
“After six days of rest, on guard every other day, we embarked the thirteenth for Paranaque, where we arrived the fourteenth in the morning, and on the following day we left with rations of sea biscuit for three days, and at the end of the day we arrived at the camp of St. Nicholas, where we found encamped the Division La Chambre, which we joined.
“On the eighteenth we set out with a convoy for Salitran, and after passing a whole day in the water, we had to halt, because neither the darkness of the night permitted us to go any further, nor did the fire of the enemy permit us to follow the road.
“Next morning at dawn we took up the march, arriving at half-past nine. We sent away the convoy, and at one p. m., after having eaten our ration of rice and ham, we started out again for camp, arriving at eight p. m., with some firing.
Ira L. Reeves
---
Bamboo Tales
Contents.
“Cougar” Daly.
A Dying Spaniard’s Request
Benito.
The Army Mule.
Comedy and Carnage.
The “Sky Pilot” and the “Dutch” Corporal.
The Mule that Sounded the Charge.
“Bull’s-Eye” Kelley and the Fire-Bug.
What the Wounded Say and Do.
Camp Alarms—False But Startling.
The Red-Headed Recruit and the Cuban Dog.
The Charge of the Hospital Corps.
Private Timmons and the Carabao.
Colophon
Availability
Encoding
Revision History
Corrections