A. No, sir; I think one of them lost his foot. Seven of them, altogether, were struck.
Q. How many were killed in the conflict that took place that evening?
A. Said to be eleven, those that were killed, and fifty odd were wounded. When I was there they had torn up the track. I saw that. They had torn up a rail or two out of the track, and overturned the watchman's box there, and had stone piled up. There was certainly no attempt to make a barricade—there was not much of a barricade.
Q. How large a force was assembled there of the rioters when you got there?
A. There were only a few men standing round.
Q. Were they railroad men that were standing about—railroad employés?
A. That I don't know. Of course there were a great many people on the streets, and there were crowds walking around.
Q. What night was it that the conflict took place between Reeder's troops and the rioters?
A. Monday night. The bridge was burned on Sunday, I think—Sunday night.
Q. Did they gather in any considerable force after your arrival in the city?