Two Important Letters by Jefferson Davis Discovered—Prove that He Was in No Way Responsible for Conditions at the Andersonville Prison, and Prof. W. L. Fleming Shows that He Never Saw the Chandler Report until after the War
The Last Charge of the 14th Virginia Cavalry at Appomattox C. H., Va., April 9, 1865, and its Battle FlagInteresting Incidents of the Retreat. Contributed by Capt. E. E. Bouldin
Barksdale's Mississippi Brigade at Fredericksburg, Read at 17th Annual Reunion, Louisiana Division, U. C. V., Monroe, October 15, 1908. By Capt. James Dinkins
The Virginia Convention of 1788—An Address Delivered to the Virginia Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, at the Westmoreland Club, February 22, 1908, Richmond, Va. By Josiah Staunton Moore
The Real Jefferson Davis in Private and Public Life, Some Facts Never Before Printed Concerning the Confederate President, and His Lineage, Family and Descendants—Physical Likeness to Abraham Lincoln. By T. C. DeLeon
History of Chimborazo Hospital, C. S. A. Abstract of address of Dr. J. R. Gildersleeve, President of the Association of Medical Officers of the Army and Navy of the Confederacy at Nashville, Tenn., June 14, 1904
Tribute of Love to her Noble Dead, Impressive Services in Old Blandford Cemetary, July 31, 1908. Address of Hon. Charles T. Lassiter, "Battle of the Crater."
On Historic Spots—A Visit to the Battlefields around Fredericksburg, Marye's Heights, Salem Church, Chancellorsville and The Wilderness—Recollections of Officers
Southern Historical Society Papers/Volume 36/Monument to Captain Henry Wirz, Earnest Effort toward, at Richmond, Va.—Mortality of Confederate and Federal Prisoners Contrasted and Causes Explained. By J. R. Gibbons. [Note, see ante, p. 1.]
Brilliant Eulogy of Gen. Wm. H. Payne, on the Presentation of bis Portrait to Lee Camp Confederate Veterans, December 18, 1908. Presentation speech by Col. Thomas Smith