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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN'. ITAR TheMassacre at Fort Mims s i! I L..Ax h i L.'T V- - U ; . '' r f 'Mr. Final Chapter in History of Proud Yankee Clipper One Which Seamen of All Nationalities Will Hail a a Fitting and Proper End. National Topic Interpreted by William Druckart , M- . t J Closed Her Career in Glory v asliiiigton. ; or Some twenty fit But there I more to It than Juat the priqxisititin of moving goods elotig from producer lo consumer. Kerb time that the consumer erts the cycle In motion hy making a purrhase. he add theoretically at least to the probability of more Jobe for workers. He aio adds lo the possibility of a profit for alt of thoee handling the commodity. There ha not been a time In recent year Hint storks of manufactured good In warehouse of the couutry were as low a they are now. It t a condition known a hand to mouth buying. One reeult of that condition Is that when a retailer, for example, Sell a couple more ends of clothes or shoe or dresw-s- , he la out of those sixes or styles. Unleae ha goes bark to the wholesaler Immediately and buy replacement. he cannot make further aalee of those particular thing. So U Is with the wholesaler, and the manufacturer has no greet stocks piled up either. If be refills empty shrives, be has to put people to work to do It When he hires workers, the money they are paid Immediately I sent because ten of thousands of them have been out of Jobe end with no money to spend even for barest necessities. General Johnaon'a purtsise, therefore. le twofold. He le driving hard lo get people to buy now If they have money with which to do It thnt the cycle of business may be act In motion full swing again and thus. If successful, the plan will provide Jobe for workers, profit for the dealers and manufacturers and markets for the producers of the raw materials. In pleading for consumer to buy only from extahlMl-ment- s where the blue eagle of the N. It A. Is displayed. General Johnson seeks to cement the united effort for recovery and at the same time repay those who have made the concessions necessary for such a movement by turning the business to them. when every Item of mounted outside the door of the cou old American mundanC office. , , ,i -- . ,, After the Civil war he wa sold to j equare rigger Is precious. It Is a hap ' py uinniFtit when eomcboily turns up Norwegian owner and alie nailed under tho (lag of Norway for the rest V Willie j who ran add lo the story, 1 the 4 k Y start of t new stag la the national K. B, ludie of the Bethlehem FliIp of her life. V--'drive for economic recot It le building rorjionition at Fore River I v 'unfortunate there were only those I i 1 1I one of thew, with a history of hi Ocean Encroaching on few arson aide to lines that that of own almost a picturesque Little Island" a bleb I am mutlneed Is going down the Boston V 1 the ship he knew, a England I gradually alnklng Into In history as an event worthy of Globe. the eea, according to a recently pubrecollection. It Is unfortunate that He rame from Krogero, a email lished government "Blue Taper. But more person were unable to e town on the out)ieaMt coast of Nor keep your aeat. please the rate of the eieclac1 of Gen. Hugh & John-soWh n he wa a boy, the pride the auhsldence I estimated at nlno way. the recot cry administrator. In of the Iowa wa a smart old Yankee Inches per hundred years? According that moment of determination, hi rllpia-ship. It heled to build up lo the report, Felixstowe on tbe eye glaring, his Jaw et It was the thrill the boy got out of her to east coast la Buffering from that decisive. . . : know that he wa populnrly railed sinking feeling. ,i It baa aunk nearly The Incident to which I refer wa The Little llell, and her master. two Inches In the past fifteen yearn when General on at of Johnson, . Captain Ingehrethsen, waa known a The Bnnk of England, In the heart of .hls regular conferences with new the IrvU of the North 8en." the metropolis, la over nix Inches lowIng hut. worse still, ordered the two negroes IMiper correspondents, announced er than In 1895. Kt Taul'e cathedral, are These compliment flogged for causing so much alarm among the j ,hB, ,(. u,n. thing .4, D.r ift The title on the other hand, has dropped only Gate The people In the fort. The owner of on of the no-- u had Dot already arrived, people. among hardy when three Inche In the same period. where- - lw,m,.UKly le meant thnt the raptnln was a .,,U going to take one of That there la a definite movement him and a driver; the ship wn the alternative of alio Beasley gave uin blue those off window the of eagles Cy ELMO SCOTT VATSON no place for a soft man. But to ship of the land In relutlon to tbe moveIng the punishment to be meted out or leaving some business house" because that Mv HUNDRED AMI TWENTY the fort. So the next day, August 30. the owner business house failed to lit In her mount thnt a man was proud ments of the tide ha now been contip to acceded to Itcasley'a demand and the unfortunate It of hi hard nes and feured nothing firmed. A seismograph In the county jcjirii ago this monlh there occurred in the code, pledge one of the worst. perhnps the black was tied to a post. that a Mil carrier or a bucko mate hall, Westminster, displayed a move"And, General Johnson added ment of the building corresponding In point of numnrrs wur--t But he fore the whipping could take place, the with could hand out the grim determination of In with high nnd low tides. Observation slain . . . Imllun mnsMtcre I presence of a force of more than l.tmo creek the eriuy officer that he was. when years gone Ingehrethsen Captain on Waterloo bridge revealed that tho That was the Aini'rlcnn history. warriors surrounding the fort wn discovered. ago, and hits son I now a shipmaster. that happens. It Is going to he to them first and. economic death senteuce. slaughter at Fort Mims, Ala Beasley Is mild to have Sio-tlila ronncitlon with bla boy- weight of the water caulk'd the strucoutThrough That August ::(), ISKi, when a thousand shouting Indians! Indians! he dashed toward fit will be was able to ture to sink at high tide and rise hood home, Mr. nearly through." the east gate which had I wen carelessly left open I'niU warriors umlcr the leadt In the story again at low tide. Hallway and other final the write He a leveled correchapter at the finger Ith no one on guard. The commander made a h!i of Chief Itod Eagle, or WII was Flic lost In tunnels which run beneath tho the of atNightingale. that, under the Thames have been found to change hiii Weatherford, overwhelms! the deieriite effort to close t lie huge gate before spondent Newfoundof hanks on the a created by Id earlier regale cirthe yelling savages reached It but the wind had mosphere g.irr.sun of more than 5u0 whites, land In 1KI2. a fact apparently not their shape at high tide. The seemed for world all the marks, to and negroes an I left more than half of them drifted sand against It and kept It open Just known to Capt. Arthur II. Clark, who cular tunnels are slightly flattened, me like It might go off. There was dead. hut return to their normal shape as long enough for the first of the attarkers to push wrote "The Clipper Ship Era." no braggadocio. It was a positive It hnck, hurl theinaelvea u;sin Beasley, cut him Montreal Herald. the tide recedes, The mimlior of killed at Fort Mima has never true la a he aliowa Mr. that some down with their tomahawks and rush Into the fort declaration, tills assertion that him aeeurately di termlned. Different authorities ho for a nnd tho-seaman e true Norseman, of who promised to do their :! The next moment a savage torrent poured In var.ving figures. ranging from U.TO to 450 "I take great pleasure lo the part would try to cheut. Am the an): uiili the proHmloraiiee of rellalde evidence placthe toward the and dashed through 0en gate fact that she went down In hnrness added remark that such a business startled soldiers who came tumbling out of their bouse was ing the niimher lit "VI. Itut even taking this and wllhout loss of life, and that she sentenced economically lowe-It Mims at Fort tents In which they had been lounging for pro to death when their figure, give the tragedy did not share ,n the fate of many a pet blue eagle the doiihi Till distinction of being niucli worse tertinn against the hot midday sun. Many of dowo was as was taken proud Yankee clipper, of being reliiBignla than any of the other Indian massacres whose them were killed In the outer enclosure but the duced to a coal barge, wallowing as though It had been said sternly stories are familiar to most Americans. others retreated through the Inner gate, slammed an actual sentence of death from along at the nd of a tow Rne." It shut and mounted the walls to defend the InMade of tbe purest ingredients and I'.cfore discussing the alTalr at Fort Mims and The Nightingale' story la romance the lips of a Jurist. I repeat. It was Andrew Jackson. ner Inclosure. some of the factors which make It unique In our wua built to finish. She from atart containing soothing and healing prop Impressive, r For a short time there was a desperate fight history. It might be well to consider first the In Iortamniith, Intended to he a erties, it protects babys tender skin I know do how not effective this The of Fort plan Mime, shown above, wa at such close word massacre" and how Inaccurately that that sometimes an IndlRn threat will be. No one does, because to to and quarters tourists end keeps it deer end healthy, free carry ship word Is used hy most Americans. For Instance found among the manuscript of General Clal and a soldier firing their guns through the same the world's fair at London In 1851. from raahea and irritation. It never has been thine In peace borne and first in Pickett his to W. refer the of annihilation published by J. they CapL porthole would kill each other simultaneously. In her original plan she was all In this country. But make With the destruction of cotton Price 25c of Alabama. Tho reference figures ere at But under the leadership of Bailey, upon whom time arid his command on December 21, 1806, staterooms and saloons, and was luxno mistake about it : the Individual crop surplus wider way In every ns the Felterinnn Massacre" or the Fort Hill follows: 1. Blockhouse; 2. Pickets cut away by the command devolved after Beasley death, the Potter outfitted. Proprietors: Drug A Chemical uriously who attempts to balk General JohnKearney Massaere and to the P.attle of the Lit the Indians; 3. Guards' station; 4. Guardhouse defenders of the fort put up such a stern resist- son Is Corporation, Malden, Maaa. to have both hands Wheat was 1.060 tons register, 178 the She agrlgoing tie Big Horn, fought June 25, 1S7G, as the "Cus Western gate, but not up; 6. Western gate, ance thnt after three bonrs of fierce fighting the fuIL To cultural adjust- feel long and 30 feet In beam, with employ a favorite exprester Massacre." shut when attacked by the Indians who cut a Indians began to draw off and plunder the house sion of a colored boy whom I know : Program a depth of 20 feet. She carried for PARKERS npnt 4jmlnIs. The late Cyrus Townsend Brady In his "In hole throuqh It to enter; 7. Captain Bailey's outside the stocknde. HAIR BALSAM a beautiful bust of JenHe ain't goln to fool wld 'em. a figure-heatlon has concentrated Hs attention WStonHHrSdlm dlan Fights and Fighters in commenting on this house; 8. Steadhams house; 9. Mrs. At a this Weatherford, point riding magnificent , Color ud on getting the wheat acreage proDyers ny I.lnd, the Swedish Nightingale," aays: Felterinnn and Custer attacked the Indl house; 10. Kitchen; 11. Captain Mims house black horse, appeared to lead his men forward Baaotr to G nr and Faded Hail General Johnson's remarks on gram started, which, indeed. It has for whom she was named. at HranvaU. gif aad l ans and fought desperately until they and tneir 12. Randon's In another attack. This time there was no hold. TTlxot Chem PntrtHnnt4.lt T. When she wns nearly completed that occasion Illustrate better than been In more than a preliminary house; 13. Old gateway, open; 14, men were all killed. I call that a battle, not a In check the savage tide. The Indians cut Ideal for qm to tLOkfcJroN SHAMPOO other words available to me the de- way. Previously, I reported that her owners fell short of money. Sam- etm 15, 16 and 17. Officers tents; 18. Captain Jack's Ing ' with Makes the Bskem. Parker iwctioe Hir massaere. When an Indian war party raided a their way through the west gate. They forced uel Hanscom, her builder, went right bur soft ind fluffy. 60 cent by milorttdnis 20 and 21. Portholes taken by In velopments thus far In the great Secretary Wallace figured a wheat settlement or overwhelmed a trnln or murdered houee; 19, the east gate and poured over the south wall. W N.Z Hitoox Chemical ork PatebagB comtut. to lift the country out of crop of not more than 460,000,000 along with her, however, and children and women, that, I think, was a ma- dians; 22. Major Beasleys cabin; 23. Captain The defenders fought desperately from house to campaign Heretowas launched contract. She hls economic would was all the next that bushels depression. pleted year Jacks company; 24. Captain Middletons com house while the roofs were burning over their ssacre; hut these two Instances werp not" the ef- be necessary. during the year 1851. Accordingly, withpany; 25. Where Beasley fell; 26. Eastern gate, head. Mims house, In which a large number of fore, and it still continues, Much the same reasoning applies to the She was finally sold to Sampson & fort was to get businesses Into line, drawing of thousands of acres from where Indian the women entered. and children had taken refuge, was set Into "Dade Massacre during the Seminole war. for $75,000, and put Into to stand united and planting will be necessary. Tappan agreement on fire and there they perished mlsprahly. On IVoemher 28, 830, MaJ. Francis U Dnde of work for the common good. Those trade as one of the great fleet of Now. the adjustment admlnlstra-tratio-- 3 In a short time the whole enclosure except the agreements among the individual the Fourth Infantry, who had set out from Fort fewest Hotel has sent out orders to farm racing clippers. In 1S52 she was In Brook In Florida with a force of 110 officers and non comtmtanls. Another factor which makes north bastion was In the hands of the enemy who businesses were, and are, agreethe ocean race of seven American extension agents wherever counties men to with another detachment from the tragedy at Fort Mims unique Is the fact killed every person on whom they could lny their ments with and and British ships from China to Engpromises to the have them and has appointed temFort King In a punitive exjiedition against Osce- that the "Indian leader" In this massacre had hands. Weatherford, appalled by the murderous President of the United States that land, the race that was never deworkers where no count; porary olas Semlnoles, was ambushed near the Wlthla more white blood In his veins than did the two frenr.y of hls followers, tried In vain to restrain each will make the necessary sacand these people are cided. exist, agents coochee river and fought bravely until all hut white leaders In command of the defenders them. But he had unleashed a tempest of sav- rifices, the work for wheat required concessions, the Capt Samuel Mather had her for four were killed. In this case nil of the slnln of the fort I agery which neither he nor any other chief could that a given result may be at- laying to groundcontracts with the the years that Sampson & Tappan farmers sign were soldiers bearing arms so It seems hardly have controlled that day. The Creeks swept for- tained. Everyone hopes for better That Indian leader was William Weatherford, owned her. She made a number of government The contracts will profair to call It a massacre. son of Charles Weatherford, a Scotch trader, ward against the bastion and captured It. About times. That Is the end sought, and vide for fast passages, though she does not of acreage withholding dozen soldiers tore openings through the paliho had married a Somewhat different are the cases of the "Cherof Alexander hold the records. the signing of codes. Including the and the farmers will be paid for ry Valley Massacre and the Wyoming Valley McCilllvray, the principal chief of the Creeks sade and managed to escape. But the rest were promises of Individuals who buy Sampson & Tappan sold her to a giving up that acreage through the ho hRd bepn a British colonel during the Rev- slaughtered, fighting desperately to the last The Massacre" during the Revolution. At Cherry ValSalem firm, which sent her to Rio. things or deal only where the blue funds obtained by the processing ones who were women were some men. and chll olution and later became a brigadier general only spared negroes ley 32 Is displayed, was Just the pretax on wheat as it is milled Into There she was bought and put Into who were carried away as slaves by the Creeks. eagle dren, were slain hy the Indians and Tories who In the United States army This Alexander the African slave trade under the work. liminary flour. also killed Id Continental soldiers of the garwas the son of Iehlan McOlllivray, Afterwards the fort was burned to the ground Rrnzlllnn flag. And on April 21, 1861. Now, however, the national re1,100 like agents, Something rison at Fort Alilen and their commander. Col another Scotch trader, who had married Seho.v nnd the bodies of all the slain were left lying administration has reached either permanent county agents or In the harbor of Kabenda, near the covery on the ground. For desjieratlon In de- the Ichahod Ahlen, whose negligence and Ineompe Marehand, who In turn was the daughter of a mouth of the Congo river, she was the Depoint where the enterprise must tence was mainly responsible for the tragedy French captain named Marehand and a Creek fense, persistency In attack and absolute courage either succeed or fall. There are temporary appointees by captured by the U. S. S. Saratoga, at are of Agriculture, partment on the of both a the was case of an Indian woman. So In the veins of William Wenth affair was, and to be no more soft words. The depart there. At Wyoming Valley it parties, In twenty-threstates. They which found 1,000 slaves aboard of writes one cisive moment has come. General work armed force, about 50 Continentals and some 250 erford ran Scotch. French and Creek Indian remains, almost without parallel, her. In organiz Initiative the are taking soldiers enrolled as militia, taking the field blood and geneolngical experts have figured out historian. 200 Rooms 200 T3e Baths The slaves were liberated and the g he determination that Johnsons to them the farmers, The usual wave of horror and Indignation" ing white and against the enemy, Tories and Indians, being that he was a to was New York fool wid em," has what the purposes to by aint ship brought the goln Radio connection in every room, acreage hlch throughout the course of our history defeated and suffering a loss of approximately Indian. prize crew. re and how placed the entire power of a sovreduction program RATES FROM $1.50 100 killed In action or slaughtered by the In But that was enough to give him swept the country after every major calamity ereign nation behind that which has sent In to was the the 1864, ship they will be compensated by Joindians after being taken prisoners and disarmed. the name of Red Eagle or "Red Warrior in Indian warfare, from St. Clairs defeat to the Juit oppotil Mormon TabemncU Boston navy yard at Charlestown. At been done. ing In the plan. In that respect (the killing of prisoners) It was among the Creeks, whose war chief he became Custer battle, resulted In a stern determination time her figurehead was a carvthat ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. to But despite the exaggerations when the Red Sticks," or war party among the punish the Creeks. So Gen. Andrew Jackson a massacre." The blue eagle Insignia Is a powing meant to represent the head and Chester C. Davis, director of the and myth leaking of the early historians of the (reeks, east their fortunes with the confed- took the field and began the campaign which, neck of an American eagle. It was erful weapon. It may later fall wheat production division in the t battles, resulted In the Wyoming Valley alTalr who painted It as a di- eracy of the great Shawnee chief, Tecumseh, after several removed from the ship and was WNU W s 3433 disrepute, agriculture abolical slaughter of both sexes nnd every age, and rallied to the cause of the British at the breaking of the power of the Creeks on the however that administra-Assurebut, ment field Is of bloody or research has established the Horsethe Great nsulern historical Tohopeka outbreak of the War of 1812. The Gregorian Calendar may be, the disGrinding Action of Blowing Sand entertains no shoe Bend of the Alabama river. lact that only one man, a British deserter, was For many years there had lived near Lake The Gregorian was calendar play of that postdoubt at all about Blowing sands are an important1 A short time later Jackson raised his put to death nfter the surrender of Forty Fort Tensaw In Alabama a wealthy man named Samover flag er uow is having an enormous ef- the ultimate success of the pro factor in reducing rocks to dust. ulopted by England Hnd her colo . nnd that there was no massacre of Fort Toulouse Jack-sonwhich was rechristened Fort uel Mims, and His house fect For Instance, General Johnules in 1752. Dates about that time Evidence of this cutting action of M. I Wilson, There one day a tail, Indian sons attention was called to the gram. Nor does Dr. was a large and substantial wooden building of were reckoned In two ways Old sand is afforded by the transformawho same been the of has group, into alked Jacksons headquarters. To three other historic affairs, the term mas one story, with several outbuildings. Around status of public utilities operating In close touch with actual wheat and New Style." Tims tion of window-glass- , In a few years, 8tyle 'General Jackson? he Inquired. Racre may be Justly applied. One of them wiir these was built a stockade enclosing about an wholly within a state, a unit unto farmers. They are agreed that It Washington's birthday used to be into ground glass, and even by holes Yes. In 1757 acre. On the southwest corner a the "Fort William Henry Massacre Itself and not subject to the juriselelirated on different dates. The cut completely through it One who will go over Just as rapidly as the 'I am Bill Weatherford. when some 50 soldiers, women and children of was begun hut never completed and there were diction of the federal government excalendar was not adopted has seen strong sand blasts used to can have the farmers Gregorian in thing the were an of words Then, the fol slaughtered the by the Rngiish garrison two large gates In the center of the east and He that the blue eagle plained to them. liy Japan until 1S73, by the Chinese clean dingy store and brick buildlowing conversation took place. Said the Indian knowsreplied Indians after the surrender of the fort to the the west sides of the storkade. no state lines. in 1912, by Turkey In 1917, by the ings, can readily appreciate the cutIn the meantime, however, the I am come to give myself up. I can opFrench before Montcalm, the French commander, Such was Fort Mims Into which settlers from leader; This blue eagle doesnt know millers of wheat are Russians In 15)18, by Rumania in ting power of sand. suffering, and pose you no longer. I have done you much Incould restrain the ferocity of the savages. An- the surrounding country began to about Interstate or Intra- the Department of Agriculture Is 1919 and h.v Greece and Greek gather when other was the Fort Dearborn Massacre in the Creeks, under Weatherford, went on the war- jury. I should have done you more bnt my war- anything If the riors are killed. I am In your power. Dispose of state commerce, he said. President aa Travelers hying tag with the grain ex church in 1923. 1S12 when the Pottnvvatomles, after Cnpt. Nathpath early in 1813. At first Fort Mims had a gar me as recovery act fails to reach corporaand boards of trade. The The late President Wqrren G. you please. an ITenld had evacuated the fort, attacked the rison of 16 soldiers, commanded I'nnges by Lieutenant tions, the blue eagle will re You are not, said the general, In my millers obviously are kicking about Original Version of Bible Harding traveled widely throughout power. retreating Americans among the sand hills of Osborne, and some 70 militia commanded h.v The original manuscripts of the United States. His one trip beyond had ordered yon brought to me In chains. But them. the burdensome processing tax I.ake Michigan and killed 20 regular soldiers. Capt. Dixon Railey. a half breed. To aid In their And so the stage is set for the which you have come of your own accord. Yon see m.v 12 militia, a frontiersman, two women and 12 defense Oen F. L. they say Is difficult to pass Rilile are not preserved In their en its continental borders to Alaska-en- ded Claiborne, the United States drive to to buy on to the consumers fully. The tirety. The three great original In hls tragic death. Calvin children, a total of 53 The third was the River military commander of the territory, sent 175 camp, yon see my army, you know my object I now and toencourage people buy only from those diswould gladly save you and your nation, hut you boards of trade and the Department versions of the Bible still in exist- Coolidge visited Havana while in' Raisin Massacre in 1S12 when after the Bat- volunteers, commanded by MaJ. Daniel Beasley, the blue do not even ask to be saved. If yon think you playing eagle. ence are the Ieshito, the Syriac and office, and Herbert Hoover, as Presof Agriculture are snarling and bit tle of Frenchtown the British commander, Proc another who assumed the position of Let us look Into this program. can contend against me In battle go and head tlie Aquiiea. These Rre respectively ident Elect, swung around almost Ing at each other over a different tor, by failing to provide adequate protection commandant The call to buy now represents a in the possession of the Vatican at the entire for some 30 wounded American prisoners almatter, but settlement of their dif circuit Soon afterwards General Claiborne visited the your warriors. more to get people to let loose of ferences will affect the results of Ah, said Weatherford, "well may such lanlowed them to fall victims to the scalping knives post and ordered Beasley to ;une, the Museum of Great Britain, blockthe complete have been money back they holding of his Indian allies. the acreage reduction campaign. So and in the possession of the Soviet Great Poem house and strengthen the defenses of the fort guage be addressed to me now. There was a time on account of uncertainty (if they the whole thing makes one :overnment of Russia. Information is characteristic of great poems picture. It But lest it be thought that the slaughter of as much as possible. Beasley was a brave man when I could have answered you. I could anihave had such money) and thus to rom Russia is that the version is that The grain exchanges have been whites hy Indians were the only "Indian mas hut a poor commander and he allowed the work mate my warriors to battle; but I cannot anithey will yield of their Bense mate the dead. General Jackson, I have nothing provide the distribution agencies criticized without end by Secretary housed In the museum at Moscow. In due proportion to the hasty and sacres, let us remember what took place at on the fort to lag after many minors of the ap such as retail stores to with for business I But request in to myself. heg you send for Wallace and the others Gnnddenhutten In Ohio In 17S2; at Sand Creek proach of the enemy turned out to be false positions deliberate reader. To the practical of course, profit If the retailof responsibility on the farm prob In Colorado In 1801 and at Wounded Knpe creek alarms. So the blockhouse was never completed the women and children of the war party, who and, Longest Riverside Motor Drive they will be common sense, and to er he have must been to hls from driven the woods ithout an ear sells, buy cases of and except at night no sentries were posted. The lem. Secretary Wallace has told The province of Quebec, Canada, the w ise, wisdom ; as either the travin Smith Dnkota in 1800. Those Is source, corn. of which the wholesaler or the grain dealers they have to come They never did any harm. But kill me, has the longest riverside motor drive eler may wet his lips or an army an Indian massacre In which the white men people In the fort, some 550 In number, were soon the jobber, and when they have dis- - under a code like other businesses n tlie world; were the murderers and Indian men, women to pay a bitter price for the negligence of their if the white people want it done." a thousand miles may fill its water casks at a full Whereupon Jackson gave his promise to help ri,l'ed r their stock they must seek and they have submitted a code for along the St. Lawrence. Tlie mail stream. and children were the victims. commander. Thoreau. women , the manufactur-fordand children from the and William replacement Weather his consideration which he does not onneets with the On August 29, 1813, two negroes who had been Ierron To return now to the massacre at Fort Mims In turn. If he is going to Indian er. the lender who was He, like at all. The secretary wants to highway which circles Gnpe pen it will be seen from the foregoing that the herding cattle In the woods came rushing back white Yosemitea Popular Highway man, strode from the tent vanishing from toll of death there was greater than that at any to the fort with the news thut they hud seen a the view of the keep the little fellows" out of the insula. Guspe was almost isolated Wavvona road In Yosemite Nationastonished and from soldiery, the whites of of Indians approaching. The foolish from the world until the Perron al park is Indians, espe- large body by other "massaere" grain speculation. approximately 23 miles history, a not entirely graceless figure. C), 1933. Western Newspaper Union. road was completed in 1928. cially If that term is limited to the killing of commander not only refused to heed the warn- in length and exteuds by Western Newspaper Union ) U A' jt: 1 thirty I J . Y; nrws(icr cormjMindt-nrriHt Am t Com . Heged the to F ool WiJ Em" oilier day to i - ! fj p7 '' !f ( , , VrA v'rVfe; K ; V4 Attack at the vr I ... 11 half-breed- s i General In day thi-b- the hUlory of the Tight r r Ik-lie- s CuticuraSoap Best for Baby'sDaily Bath Hie-tor- y cotton-growin- g Acreage, Salt Lake Citys 1 n half-siste- r HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE e expi-'nin- seven-eighth- s h hard-fough- Into adjust-Succes- d half-Cree- half-whit- light-colore- block-hous- e wind-drive- n 1 1 half-bree- n j j 553-mil- e seven-eighth- s |