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Updated: June 17, 2025


These were frequent and, as Judge Reese declared, abounded with wisdom which caused him years of reflection and observation. He had been reared upon a farm. His interests, as his sympathies, were with these people. He remained in active management of his large plantation, Roanoke, in Stewart County, during the period when he was a member of Congress and even when he was in the army.

Garver, the court reporter, would swear that Reese had made an initial statement to the defense counsel and that the same had been taken down stenographically and sworn to.

CAPT. JOEL R. MOORE, "M" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. J. R. DONOVAN; "M" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. ALBERT M. SMITH, "B" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. GORDON B. REESE, "I" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. HARRY S. STEELE, "C" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. GEORGE W. STONER, "M" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. CLARENCE J. PRIMM, "M" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. F. B. LITTLE, Med. Corps, 339th Inf. LIEUT. W. C. GIFFELLS, "A" Co., 310th Engrs.

"On what charge, Captain?" he got out. "Attacking a United States soldier." "In performance of his duty, Captain?" Reese Topham cut in. "I hardly think you can say that. Your men were apparently off duty. At least they were in here, drinking, too. You did serve them, Fowler?" "Sure did, boss! Let’s see now ... Helms, he had whisky; so did Stevens. Mitchell, now, he had a beer——"

LIEUT. ALBERT M. SMITH, "B" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. LAWRENCE P. KEITH, "M.G." Co. 339th Inf. LIEUT. GORDON B. REESE, "I" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. HARRY S. STEELE, "C" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. W. C. GIFFELS, "A" Co., 310th Engrs. LIEUT. HARRY M. DENNIS, "B" Co. 339th Inf. LIEUT. JOHN A. COMMONS, "K" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. H. D. McPHAIL, "A" Co., 339th Inf. LIEUT. CHARLES B. RYAN, "K" Co., 339th Inf.

That is how much of a devil and a beast in man-shape he is." Again Reese Beaudin laughed in his low, soft voice. "And his wife, mon ami? Is she afraid of him?" He had stopped smoking. Joe Delesse saw his face. The stranger's eyes made him look twice and think twice. "You have known her sometime?" "Yes, a long time ago. We were children together. And I have heard all has not gone well with her.

She but I think perhaps she'd rather tell you herself." "Betty," broke in Nita Reese, "you must hurry and get dressed. You'll have to appear at chapel, if you never get that skirt hung." "Yes," said Betty, meekly. "And I'll go and bribe the new maid, who hasn't learned the rules yet, to send you up some breakfast," put in Madeline, the watchful.

Jem would have sailed right in and made Dan eat his words with bitter sauce. Ritchie Warren would have overwhelmed Dan with worse "names" than Dan had called Faith. But Walter could not simply could not "call names." He knew he would get the worst of it. He could never conceive or utter the vulgar, ribald insults of which Dan Reese had unlimited command.

"Then right away they got their other emissaries at work, Reese and Smith, down here with two fingers out of the door of a darkened cell, deciding for the State of Washington who should be prosecuted in this case, and H. D. Cooley, who surely then was not a prosecuting attorney, giving them legal counsel and directing their energy, taking out the men, preparing statements, and getting ready for the work he was going to do in this case, because his employers wanted it.

I remember that one of our regular soldiers, named Reese, in deserting stole a favorite double-barreled gun of mine, and when the orderly-sergeant of the company, Carson, was going on furlough, I asked him when he came across Reese to try and get my gun back.

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