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ignorance of the topography of the country, and the management of the troops, whose through every line of his interview.  General Grierson's character as a man and reputation as a dashing cavalry soldier are too well known to the public to suffer injury by any such statement as that contained in "Frontier Affairs" and I am surprised you would assit in its circulation.
ignorance of the topography of the country, and the management of the troops, whose through every line of his interview.  General Grierson's character as a man and reputation as a dashing cavalry soldier are too well known to the public to suffer injury by any such statement as that contained in "Frontier Affairs" and I am surprised you would assist in its circulation.

Revision as of 22:06, 27 May 2019

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ignorance of the topography of the country, and the management of the troops, whose through every line of his interview. General Grierson's character as a man and reputation as a dashing cavalry soldier are too well known to the public to suffer injury by any such statement as that contained in "Frontier Affairs" and I am surprised you would assist in its circulation.