RECITALS OF CAMP ANP BATSorrlvon of tho Rebellion Rotate Many' ■ • ' ' ' • .’ • ' ’ .i ;* • • J • • * ‘ 1 ’• r'“ '• •. '• ‘ . • ’■ '*•'Amtiflny and Startling Incidents ofMarches* Camp JUfe, Foraging Expert-* * .1 * * • • • # . • • •'t/I* ' * * • • * • * v f ' ' / iraces aalt;t Battle Scenes.Too Much for the Major*FTER the terrible slaughter on the battlefield of Gettysburg had ceased Col. A. S. Seifert, of New York, ;jiy:ho had gone to / vthe front with the Thirty ~ki ilith Regiment, was one of the men detailed to go over the field under a flag of truce to remove the wounded and bury the dead. In going over the ground Col. Seifert, who was not, however, a-colonel then, came across' a wounded Confederate, who was moaning with pain and begging for something to stop his agony. Col.Seifert at once pulled out his whisky flask, handed It to the man, received a “God bless you!” from the poor fellow*, and passed on. ..i;Immediate!# after the elds* .oft the war Col. .Seifert was made postmaster of Macon, Ga., under the tecdfistt'tfction act, and w*ent to live in a boarding house. Here he had his first experience with a boycott. No ohe would speak to the Yankee, and when he sat down to meals all the young w'omen would arise and leave the table with the men.He had grit, however, and determined to do his duty, although lie felt mighty lonesome. One night, while seated on the piazza in silent meditation, a well-built man stepped up and . said: