12 . 
with General Wood. Left camp at 7 A. K., moved east up tkraoe River on 
left bank. Friendly Moros had their property respected, but downs 
of oottas (forts) wre burned, end there was a good deal of shooting with 
little result. No casualties on our side exoept a bamboo wound of 
a soldier who fell in a ditch. About 10 o’clock we rested and sent a 
force farther up the left fork of Thraoa River. I was slightly burned 
on leg by a falling bamboo cinder, but chiefly injured in pants and drawers. 
13453 Large Brown-breasted Kingfisher female adult, Taraca River. 
Our advance now firing on cotta upstream. Birds seen: 
Orioles, 
Brown Rice-birds 
Naked-headed Starlings 
Caged Parrequet & Civet found in cottas. 
Grelt°Blue r Heron8 (too tame to even fly as column passed near) 
No wild parrots were seen. 
Ring-neoked Doves less oomraon than on lower stream. 
A few large bronae-green baoked Pigeons 
Hairy-baoks 
Ring-necked Towbee-tail 
on. and e.w many large brown-and-blu. Kingfisher. (Ho. 1533!) 
-STS irSrs-r: 
Khan we hnd followed th. left fork of Tarao. River to a point further 
than which hor.e. oould not bo safely handled th. General remained and 
rested while the greater part of th. command wa. sent forward to octroy 
fort, and house.. Buy saw four Korea entering the foothill, who .topped 
to fight, but probably all oeoapod. I went out In an open marsh to .hoot, 
and soon discovered tree*, of fleeing Hero, end et last the main trail 
of men, women,carabao and pedis,, msd. by their beaten forces. Returning 
to oamp 1 found that Col. Harbord and Capte. Dwroh and Saltsman had brought 
me In a Civet (Viverra tagelunga) female adult. In a oegej also a huge 
I at onoa showed General Wood the main Moro trail which 
wooden bowl. 
