iptildpetfit.«■ndiuaennt1.”lidofnS.■nrIWor-ea-■.SV.10-cUr«.hi1J al-m-It‘CliC-aaofedatrg n 9liefor?roDgin-eU or-de into tformed into battleoracr, hilt way between the Union and Confcrdlt;*te armies. It took an hour and a half andmore for Sickle* corps to get into |o-sition and immediately after a furious attack was made on its ten thousaud men. The sharp and continuous rattle of musketry and the booming of many cannons within a short half mile from us told that the 3rd corps waa heavily engaged in tremenduous battle and we waited expecting every moment our turn would ccme The firing, seemed to approach and get nearer proving that Sickles was being driven back and soon the word was repeated from mouth 10 mouth that Gen. Sickles was shot and his army defeated. At six o’clock our division received the call, fall in men, fall In, attention, left face, forward, double-quick, march,M and we were speeding to check the victorious enemy. In haste we were thrown into line of battle, left in front, which means that the rear rank was in front and the front rank in rear, and charged fipon Long'ttcct’i veterans, formed in ihree lines. Advancing in to the famous whcatficld, already soaked with the blood of blue and grey, ftringt| loading and firing, we soon broke the enemy’s first line, capturing many, the rest falling back to re-enforce the second line. Capt Ixwisof Co. “D” had been killed and many of the men killed and wounded.